THE MOEXIXG OREGOXIAN. TUESDAY. MAY 0. 1922 10 f"f."r"b.T.le maintained by constant struggle j the year they have added .to this re 133 Sixth street. Portland, ofeson. j to prevent the laggards from falling ' serve a net total of 23,4iiu,4iSt. C. A. jiorden. E. B. piper, 'too far behind. i These sums will remain at-the dis- Macifer. Editor. The Oresonian is a member of the Asso- i ciated Press. The Associated Press is ex- cluaively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise' credited in this paper and also the local newa published herein. A.l rights of publication of special dispatches herein re also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (By Mall.) Dally,' Sunday included, six months... 4.2.1 KrW- ucay lnclr?a', ' to have a competent chief, supported JDa.lI', Sunday included, one month.. .i5 -. . "7 , Dally, withofft Sunday, one year 0 00 I by his superiors in the city adminis- Dally, without Sunday, six months... 3 .23 ; tration and accepted by the members without Sunda' one month.... 60 f h f, department as the dis- ounday, one year i . - . . (By Carrier.) j ciphnary, order -giving executive. Dally, Sunday included, one year. 00 I Commissioner Bigelow had but one DUly, Sunday included three rr.onths. 2.25 j before him which he COUld Daily, Sunday included, one month. . .5 j . Ty Ily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 t properly pursue in view of the corn- Daily, without Sunday, three months. 1.93 piete breakdown ofvthe charges filed Dally, without Sunday, one month 65 against Chief Young. That was to How to Remit -Send postofftce money hi mnfiripnpp in tho rhief order, express or personal check on your : arilrm nis conrmence in me cniei local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are j and discipline hi9 detractors m an ar owner's risk. Give postoffice address in othpr denartmenr. Hp has affirmed ihi, inciua :ng county ana sitiie. to Tage" 2 cents: 34 to 48 Pages. 3 thority of the fire chief to the de cents; 50 to 84 pages, 4 cents: 68 to so partment where the trouble was rages. 5 cents: 82 to 96 pages. 6 cents. , brewed and he has disciplined the Eastern Business Office Verre & Contt- 300 Madison avenue. New York; erree 4c Conklin. Steger building, Chicago; Vcr- ree & Conklin, Free Press building. De troit. Mich.: Verree & Conklin. Monadnock building, San Francisco, Cat. EVILS EXCHANGED FOR EVILS. When the people of Oregon voted to adopt the direct primary method f nominating: party candidates, they did not intend to abolish the repre sentative system in conducting; party affairs. If that had been their in tention, they would have gone on to abolish the legislature and they would have joined other states in propos ing to abolish congress, for both are representative bodies. They became so incensed at certain evils that had grown up in the convention system of nominations lhat in their haste to cure those evils they swept away that system itself, because the evils had made conventions unrepresent ative. The evils were not the product of the convention, but of the manner in which delegates had been elected. Parties were regarded as voluntary associations cf citizens." free to con duct their affairs in their own way. Their customs grew up before the secret ballot was adopted, so they had open voting for delegates. The men who kept the organization go ing naturally had much influence and took control of primaries and precinct caucuses, naming the men who should conduct the voting and count the votes. If the rank and file, which paid little attention to politics between elections, wanted other delegates and other candidates than those favored by the men in control of the organization, they found them selves at a disadvantage. Election boards uncontrolled by law but con trolled by the organization could count out their men. Bribery and intimidation wore often practiced, being promoted by open voting. Al most a small revolution was neces sary to elect delegates against the will of the men composing the or ganization. Discouraged by failure and disgusted with the methods that prevailed, a steadily growing num ber of citizens withdrew from parti cipation in party affairs, and these were left to the organization, leaders of which often degenerated into bosses. These evils were the result of the manner in which conventions were constituted. Great reform in general elections was effected by the secret ballot, and it suggested the means of improving methods of nomination. In 1901 a law was passed establish ing methods of conducting party pri maries for election 6f delegates to conventions. Voting was secret, and election boards were appointed by the city or county, were sworn officers of the law and were amenable to the law for acts of bribery, fraud or other misdeeds. The pimaries in Portland of 1902 and 1904 were held under that law, and they resulted in genuinely representative conventions. But in 1904 the people were stam peded into adoption of the primary for direct nomination of candidates as distinguished from the primary for election of delegates to a nomi nating convention. Not content with reforming conventions, the people abolished them. That the present system has pro duced new evils no less than those which accompanied the convention system is now generally agreed. There are undisputed merits in a di rect primary conducted under legal safeguards. Conventions preseve to paties the representative principle which is the foundation of our form of government. The problem is to avoid both the evils which formerly existed in the convention system and those which are now recognized as inherent in the primary system as now established by law, while restor ing representative government in party affairs. This can be accom plished by repealing the present ban on party conventions and the pro visions for direct nominations except when one candidate has a majority of all votes, and by then applying the primary system to election of delegates to conventions. By reviving the representative sys tem in nominating candidates and officers of parties and in adopting platforms, we should restore party integrity and the responsibility of parties for the candidates they name and for the conduct of officials elected by their efforts. With these principles we should restore reason able discipline in parties, the lack of which is apparent in congress. The statement of President Smith of Berea college. Kentucky, that the principal cause of poverty and crime among the mountaineers is isola tion can be taken with reserve as to crime, in view of te historical fact that the period of minimum crime in Oregon was coincident with the time when it was most com pletely cut off from the outer world, but it will hardly .be gainsaid that isolation tends to foster poverty under modern conditions. The people whom Berea is trying to teach are handicapped by their archaic meth ods of production, they are unable to compete with communities with whom they ought to be in a position to exchange goods, and by compari son with others they are desperately poor, though they may not be worse ! off than the average American was. st after the revolution. The appeal Berea's president is a reminder .1 . n.. : i..: i i J THE OVLT WAY. j fire fighting is one thing that doe3 not lend Uself t the referen. 7, , dum. It is utterly impracticable- for j firemen to meet while a building how best to subdue the flames. There .IS.oojis only one practicable way to con- j duct a fire department and that is his confidence by extending the au- ; trouble brewers. i ! We are confident that the well-be ing of the fire department has been promoted. There will, or should be, less running to the commissioner with complaints that ought to be dealt with by the fire chief. The au thority of the chief is made broader and more secure; his responsibility more definite. It is up to him to maintain the efficiency of both fire department and fire prevention bu reau so far as intelligent direction by himself and insistence on willingness and obedience by those under him can do it. Chief Young, is respon sible to Commissioner Bigelow in these particulars and Commissioner Bigelow is responsible to the people for the efficiency of Chief Young. It is the only way in which the depart ment can be successfully conducted. .4KIS OF LONG AGO. A lesson not commonly taught by modern science is that notwithstand ing our acquisition of new7 arts and crafts and our constantly increasing knowledge of natural phenomena there arc still a number of secrets that were held by the ancients that it is beyond the capacity of modern men to solve. The recent addition to a London museum of a gruesome specimen of the work of cmbalmers who labored some hundreds if not thousands of years ago is a reminder that a good deal of the artisanship of so-called primitive peoples is still unapproachable and that many of the processes which were compara tively common then are now not only unknown but undiscoverable. The specimen in question is a human head from Ecuador, which scientists have pronounced genuine, which has been reduced to the size of a small orange and notwithstand ing its shrinkage has retained its original form practically in perfec tion. It is insufficiently accounted for by reference to the mummifying art of the Egyptians, whose civiliza tion was probably far in advance of any that the ancient people of the western continent attained, but it is a reminder that another of the col lateral arts of Egypt has never been rediscovered. Another British mu seum has acquired a wrapping from a mummy believed to be 6000 years old which consists of a linen of such exquisite fineness that the most deli cate fabric that Belfast can produce is coarse by comparison. The famous Portland vase, the bronze Mercury of Epirus and other ancient works of craftsmanship are but of two of many others which serve a high moral purpose as a check upon the cocksureness of the present age. For that matter, the secret of the construction of the pyramids is as deeply hidden as it ever was. The cubic contents of the greatest of the pyramids is equal to 7.000,000 tons, sufficient to build a city of 22,000 houses of ordinary size. But the method by which the materials of the pyramids were trans ported, and in particular the founda tion stones, which are thirty feet long and five feet high and five feet wide, in a time when modern power facilities were unknown, is as far from being understood as it was when research first began. In our own country the secrets of the artisanship of the mound build ers, who are not known to have had blast furnaces but who fabricated metal objects which required enor mously intense heat to reduce the metals of which they were made, still defy detection. These present an al most exact parallel to certain Roman bronzes found in England, which were made in a period when charcoal is believed to have been the only fuel known by the people. The recent re viva! of antiquarian research prom ises to unearth a specimen of a lost art to match each new discovery of the present age. THE NEW WATCH DOG TREASVRY. OF THE Director Dawes has neatly turned an attempt to deprive the adminis tration of credit for any economy under the budget system against the man who made it. When the budget bureau asked for deficiency appropriations of over $1S0,000,000 Representative Byrns, a democrat, offered a resolution stat ing that President Harding claimed to have saved $136,000,000, asking why this saving could not be trans ferred to meet the deficiencies, and requesting the president to tell how the savings had been made. General Dawes, replying to the president's request for this informa tion, shows that during the present fiscal year savings on expenditure over which the president has control will exceed a quarter of a billion dol lars. Down to March 31 the depart ments had saved by reserve from their appropriations almost $136, OfO.OOO, but he shows that this sum is not available for expenditure under new deficiencies appropria tions, for money not spent is not nec essarily in hand. shows that a large proportion of the deficiency appropriations consists of sums cut out of the budget bureau's estimates which congress afterward found nec essary, while congress also made further large appropriations in ex cess of budget estimates. He thus reduces the amount by which defi ciency appropriations may possibly exceed the nuaget estimates made last December to a little over $43. 000,000, which Is "more than off set by reductions in expenditures under other appropriations." Any question as to the reality of the effort to save money is answ-ered by the detailed statement of the sum i which each department undertook to I save. They agreed to reserve sums ,..nl Hlfl ;H B9f o n A Hurmir I nnsa! nf the rfenji rt m en t until the end of the year, when the balance re maining, which may be still larger, will leave the treasury so much richer than it would otherwise have been. Illustrating the economy effected by close co-ordination between de partments is a detailed statement of supplies purchased by one depart ! ment from another which would have been bought in the open market under the former practice of con ducting each department as a dis tinct business organization. For ex ample, the emeregncy fleet corpor ation sold a great variety of goods to all branches of the government. If sold to the public at forced sale these goods would have brought $216,742, so they were sold at that valuation. If purchased in the open market at their fair value, they would have cost 8492,596. Thus the departments , which bought them saved J275.S54 and the fleet corporation lost noth ing. The total of economies thus ef fected runs into many millions. The budget bureau has been in op eration less than a year and it could only influence expenditures for the fiscal year ending June 30 after ap propriations had been made. What it has done is a foretaste of what it will do in holding down expense from th; initiation of estimates on ward. It is the watchdog of the treasury. NEED OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION, Few will dispute the statement made by ex-Governor Brumbaugh of Pennsylvania, m a recent number of World's Work, that there is a gen era! relationship between physical and mental efficiency. This is likeiy to be proved true by wide observa tion, notwithstanding that some ex ceptional individuals have performed remarkable intellectual feats under the handicap of partial or complete invalidism. Mr. Brumbaugh, who is by profession an educator and who is writing in support of the federal measure to aid the states in promot ing physical training in the schools, believes that the value of the system has been sufficiently demonstrated by results which he observed while superintendent of schools of Phila delphia. "Here," he says, "during the first year in which it was adopted, I an increase of 9 per cent in the in tellectual average of 230,000 children was reported." This is easily credible, nor does the thought that already there are a superfluity of federal agencies en gaged in supervising activities that formerly were left to private indi viduals and more recently have been regarded as functions of the states make it less true that both individu als and the states have failed to ob tain the results that advocates of the system believe would flow from fed eral direction and co-operation. The draft board statistics of the late war showed an unexpectedly low state of physical efficiency for the country as a whole, a condition that was all the more surprising because Americans had always plumed themselves on being more than commonly fit. It was the draft that gave new impetus to the movement for physical train ing in the schools, by showing that some millions of young men are growing up in ignorance of the laws of hygiene. The people of the United States are only partly committed to healthful outdoor sports; larger num bers neglect t6 take proper exercise and a large proportion are the vic tims of minor disabilities which could be easily removed if they were known. As Mr. Brumbaugh points out, physical education as it is understood today is not a mere dumb-bell drill, nor Is it a process for training pro fessional gymnasts or strong men. Its primary purpose is to give nor mal children the sort of training that will enable them to avoid the acqui sition of physical defects. Definite recognition that provision of abun dant opportunity for wholesome rec reation under proper supervision may be an effective counteractant of juvenile delinquency also has in creased the interest of humanitarians in this aspect of the question. The system which its advocates hope to establish, however, is somewhat more comprehensive than a mere programme of sports or play would be. It would include education con cerning the growth and use of the body and in right habits of eating, sleeping, clothing and personal sani tation. These purposes are set forth in detail in biils now pending in con gress. "The modern tendency," says Mr. Brumbaufh, "is not to give this instruction in the dry method of the old-time physiology, with emphasis upon learning the number of bones in the body, the course of the circu lation and similar lessons. Children are taught nowadays that a lunch composed of baked beans, milk and cheese does not furnish a well-balanced diet. . . . The plan of ad ministration proposed in the physical education bill before congress rec ognizes the responsibility of each state to administer the programme, but provides that the educational and health agencies of the federal gov ernment shall co-operate with the states." The proposed measure is interest ing, too, because it is the first ex ample of two government bureaus attempting to co-ordinate their ac tivities for the public benefit. It also in all probability embodies the idea that if th? states do not act on their own account the federal gov ernment will be even more strongly urged to do so. Mr. Brumbaugh says that only thirteen of the states now require and promote physical educa tion, that only eight have compul sory education and that five have pnysical education laws which are as yet only slightly effective. Twenty eight of the forty-eight states have laws which in some degree relate to the subject, but many of them take little practical interest in the sub ject. Twenty states have no physical education laws of any kind. Universal recognition by the col leges of the necessity for establish ing physical as well as mental stand ards, and for the promotion either of athletic or collegiate sports in some form, has been arrived at by the same process which has now induced educators to take up the problem for the schoolsas a whole. The large body of young men and women who do not reach college in all probabil ity require physical training as much as those who do. There is evidence in any event of widespread desire to apply the lesson of the war to the uses of peace. The tragedy in the disclosure that more than one-third ; I 01 me jounj men summouea uy me I drait were pnysicany unm ior ser vice was only half told by those fig ures. Mr. Brumbaugh draws an ven more thought-provoking con clusion in the statement that "in our lack of physical fitness we were equally unprepared for the peace that we sought so long to retain." j PLAX TO ABSORB IMMIGRANTS. t The feature of the immigration I bill introduced by Senator Shortridge ! which will commend it to most peo ple is that it requires immigrants themselves to provide funds with which to defray the cost of their in struction as preparation for citizen ship. The bill contains much more, for it is a general codification of the immigration laws and it removes several serious defects and anachron isms. The senator proposes that each alien be required to enroll and pay a fee of $24 a year, these funds to go into a special state school fund for establishment and maintenance of citizenship- schools. The naturaliza tion bureau, which he would change to the bureau of citjzenship, would prepare text books, to be supplied free, and the courses would consist of American history, American civics and the common school branches. Attendance would not be compul sory, but it would be difficult to ob tain citizenship without the instruc tion thus provided and as soon as an immigrant became a citizen he would cease to pay the fee. An ap plicant for citizenship would be re quired not merely to speak English, as under the present law, but to "speak, read and write the English language upderstandingly." He must also have greater knowledge of American history and form of gov ernment than is at present de manded. Minors between 18 and 21 must enroll and pay a fee of $10 a year. Wives might be registered by their husbands, but would pay no fee unless gainfully employed. Regulation of immigration at the source is proposed by a provision that immigrants register with the American consul abroad before start ing and to state their destination in this country. The registrar in that city would be notified of their ar rival and would demand that they register. The citizenship law would be brought into harmony with the new status of women by doing away with the present law which gives auto matic citizenship to women whose husbands become naturalized, but it permits an American woman who marries an alien to retain her citi zenship. Children born abroad to an American woman may secure citi zenship by registering at an Ameri can consulate on reaching the age of 21. A complete census of aliens resi dent in the United States would re sult from this bill. It should prove an effective means of moral compul sion to qualify for citizenship by educa'tion and then to become natur alized, especially as the penalty for refusal to enroll is deportation or an additional fee of $2 for each month of delinquency. Education is the best solvent for undigested masses of .alien population. A foreigner ignor ant of the language of the country is naturally reluctant to wander from settlements of his own people, but when he has learned English he is apt to overcome this feeling, to ven ture forth, mingle with the general population and thus acquire Ameri canism by association as well as from schools. The annual tJx will goad him to qualify for citizenship, both by its exaction and by the an nual reminder that he is a stranger in a strange land, but has the oppor tunity of escaping the tax and be coming a citizen in one act. The body proud to call itself the "Klick" is typically democratic in its estimation of women. Despite the law of it, the members do not give womah the right of candidacy. Its antipathy toward medical men is temporary under pactional defeat; but women make them stay at home and cook and raise babies. Yet just before election day they will shout for help of the woman voter typi cally democratic in that, too. A prominent Portland man uses a most fitting term for plan or project in which he has little or no faith -"a great bunko game." That might be applied to the tender solicitude for the welfare of the state mani fested by democratic newspapers when they refer to an incumbent seeking renomination in a republican primary. Know-any? Polygamous-minded men may find comfort in the statement of the psycho-analyst that a man can love two women at the same time; but if they try it they better would hide the" fact of either woman from the other. Some genius has devised a means of sending pictures by radio. Never theless it will be a good many cen turies before other folks can enjoy the scenery of the Columbia river highway without coming to see it. There are Portland people who have been "going" to Al G. Barnes" circus since his first trip this way with the delightful little dog and pony show and the older they get the worse the habit. So many mothers find it necessary to bring the babes in arms to town to see the parade that the Order of Grandpas taken to the show by little fellows is being backnumbered. "Scientists to seek Nebraska fos sils," said a headline. Why waste the time of the expedition in Nebraska when exhibit A has migrated to Florida! Another man with defective hear ing has been killed by a fast train. Despite example, men with this af fliction are most obstinate to warn ing:. The guards in charge of Abe Evans, due for the gallows, display a pernicious activity in preventing Abe's premature departure. "When radio develops visual as well as present aural possibilities the circus will have charms for the bed ridden. Among other evidences of increas ing prosperity, the bootleggers ail re port that business is picking up. Auto-suggestion to most persons means a hin 10 be selectin the 1923 niodeL The Listening Post. By DeWitt Harry. o X CIRCUS day big cities seem to relax and step back to their childish days. The glamor of the metropolis the hurry and bustle is hushed while the population throws off years and takes on childish roles once more. Stenos and clerks cluster in the windows, messenger boys for get their errands, staid business men get as close to the parades as they can and help children to the best places. Hard-faced old bankers have even been known to listen to the ballyhoo tones of the calliope during the course of their arguments over the renewal of a note. From miles around the suburban dwellers flock in. It's something like "fair day" in some ways. Bright dashes of color betray the Indian strain in some of them. Yesterday one woman walked down Broadway garbed in a loose-belted cerise gown girdled with a wide gold embroidered belt and a brilliant crimson cloak flying with the winds. Her costume was crowned by one of the reddest turbans that ever invaded the city and right in the center of the hat, giving a real barbarous note to the getup, was a huge crescent with a large brilliant. (Some description for mere man.) Yet, at that, she did not have any thing on the old gent of abotrt 60, soft, furry, cream-toned hat cocked at a jaunty angle, long cigarette hclderheld with a rakish droop, cham ois gloves with wide black stitching, tan button shoes, white spats and a lavender colored suit and yellow tie. The woman could be spotted for a stranger, the man for a regular, both types and oddities proving that the sights are not all in the country or vice versa. A correspondent in a local weekly takes Julius Meier severely to task for an alleged intent to import a cou ple of pagodas. After rehearsing the sad history of the Scotch broom and the hold it has obtained on the coast tine about Coos county, the writer goes on to arraign the public-spirited resident of the state who brought in the first sparrow and to scorify the importer of the dandelion. Recalling the experience that Oregon has had with these other innovations, this alarmed resident visualizes a state 20 years hence covered with pagodas. It serves to once again bring to mind the resolution offered in the city of New York council by one of the ward representatives some years ago. This alert representative took exception to a series of appropriations for gon dolas for Central park and suggested 'that a male and female gondola be purchased, let nature take its course and stop this waste of the people's money." "I met with a peculiar kind of citi zen yesterday," writes Charles O. Ol sen of Oswego, "and the experience moved me to the picturing of an ex tinct (almost) species of bird that used to infest the jungles of Oregon in the old days. The Side-Hill Chaw. "The darnedest bird I ever saw Was a bird they called the side-hill chaw; It hadn't a wing and it didn't sing. And it couldn't walk straight it walked in a ring 'Round and 'round the same mountain top, With the funniest kind of a foolish hop That made me laugh though I ought to have cried For the leg it had on the downhill side Was twice as long as its uphill mate, Which gave it a rollicking, comical gait. "P. S. It must have been tough to be born that way To hop round in a ring till your dying day. And never be able to turn at all, 'Cause if you did, you'd surely fall, 'Count of the way your legs were made To fit the slant of a side-hill grade." CHARLES O. OLSEN. One circus incident that will stand out occurrred Sunday as the show moved on the lot when a certain busi ness man escorted three of his neigh borhood children to see the sights. Nearby was a poor old horse, one that had evidently seen many a better day. The old fellow was peacefully crop ping grass and could hardly stand up. he was so weak. "What's that horse for?" came the first childish inquiry. "Lion feed," the heartless human brute assured the children. "They have to have fresh meat for the lions, so they feed them old horses like that one." If ever a man was scorched by the fire of youthful scorn this one should have been. Of all the indignation in the world it would be difficult to im agine stronger or more vitriolic stutf than that the children looked and voiced. The kids trembled in fear at the mention of the lions and other savage beasts, but they just could not make themselves believe that men would be so cruel as to feed a nice old horse like that to lions. While the statement was likely a little exag gerated, the fact exists that lions do get meat and that some animal has to furnish the necessary food. Intense rivalry exists between fraternal organizations that have adopted animals for trade-marks. A couple of weeks ago one of these so cieties began to raffle off an automo bile on the streets, selling chances by means of uniformed members of their drill team, both male and female. Not to be outdone in this firce competition the opponents have now made their appearance in a similar role. It might be said thfl they saw the first, bunch and went them one better, raised the ante, for the second car seems to have much more red paint and wire wheels and all that stuff, while the first one was just an ordinary car. Mrs. Jared Moore of Seaside went out on the beach to search for clams, according to the Signal. She noticed a silver gleam in the surf and on investigation found a big Chinook salmon floundering in the shallow water. "With her clam shovel she managed to push the fish up high I and dry and when she got it home jit weighed 18 pounds. Those Who Come and Go. Talcs of Folks at the Hotel. No wonder Editor George K. Aiken of the Argus at Ontario, Or., is wear ing a smile. Conditions in Malheur county are so improved that the newspaper publisher is happy. "There will be a 2,000.000-pound wool clip in Malheur county this year," says Mr. Aiken, who is in Portland, "and it is practically all sold now at prices ranging from 30 cents to 35 cents, which means more than $600,000 in the county. We will ship 1500 car loads of spuds and a few hundred carloads of lettuce. And then there is the lamb situation. February and March lambs in Malheur are selling at 10 cents a pound for June delivery and the buyers are not cutting, but taking everything, in Harney county the lambs are selling at 9 cents a pound for September delivery and no cutting. There is no hay left, all having been consumed during the winter. Bankers and stockmen say that hay will be bringing $10 a ton, and be hard to get at that. The al falfa farmers in our section will not raise much hay. as the weevil has been doing damage, just as it has been in parts of Idaho. Over in southern Idaho 70 per cent of the wool has been contracted for at prices running from 27 cents to 33 cents." Road matters are moving along in Malheur county, according to Gilbert W. Dean, one of the commissioners of that county, who is here to attend the state highway commission today. The market road into Jordan valley is being pushed as fast as possible. Two miles of road are under contract and bids are now asked for six more miles and a survey is planned from the point where the work stopped last year to the end of the road. When this road is finished it will keep much of the trade of Jordan valley in Oregon which now goes t Idaho. Mr. Dean is here to ask the highway commission for work between Vale and Ontario and to finish the John Day highway in Malheur county from Unity to Cow valley, which will wind up that highway. The commission will also be requested to survey and locate the section of the Central Ore gon highway between Burr ell ranch and Harper. Malheur county has some rnOney to spend on this high way, but does not want to use the funds until the commission has des-i ignated the proper place to spend it. Hopping between Medford and Camas valley, William Stone has been very busy of late. He hurried into Pftrtland yesterday and began preparing to bid on some of the road work to be let by the highway com mission today. Mr. Stone has the contract for SJ miles from Medford toward Eagle Point, on the Crater Lake road, and will be running gravel next week. Two miles of the job are now graded. On the Camas mountain job, a section of the Coos Bay-Rose-hurg highway. 6.6 milee of the clear ing has been finished, with two milos more to do. A mile and a half of grading has been finished. Three weeks ago there were seven inches of snow on the mountain, and while the weather is warmer now than it is in Portland, the weather has held back the work considerably. Many have been the improvements in the great packing houses where hams are prepared for, the market. Wonderful machinery has been in vented to take the place of laborers, but the hickory stick and sawdust still give flavor and color to the ham as in the days of old when early set tlers jn New England discovered that hickory wood supplied the flavor when used in the smokehouse. J. H. Deering, northwestern manager of Morrell & Co. registered at the Multnomah, says that is why his firm is glad to get even hickory shavings from mills where ax handles are turned out in order to get the right flavor. Sawdust from such mills need never be dumped into the river or used to make steam in boilers, as it has a higher calling. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Wilson of Chi cago, who are registered at the Mult nomah, state that they are the first touring party this season to come over the northern route from the .east by way of the Yellowstone trail to Missoula, Mont. At the latter place they detoured to Sand Point, Idaho, as the pass over the mountains was closed by snow. From Spokane to Portland they found the roads in ex cellent condition and made Portland from Dayton, Wash., in one day. "This is our seventh trip west by auto and we find a big change in the roads since our first trip," said Mr. Wilson. "We are also converts to the closed car and had more comfort in our coupe this trip than we ever had in a touring car." "This is one of the finest times in the year to travel," says Sidney Steam, who is at the MuUnomah from Cleveland, O., "and we have enjoyed motoring from California over the fine roads, and especially through Oregon. It is a wonderful sight to pass through. the valley around Med ford and Ashland, as the orchards are in bloom." Mr. Stearn is out on a vacation trip and now that he has caught trout in Oregon he is anxious to try his luck for salmon at Oregon City. After a couple ot days in Portland confabbing together and with friends, Roy W. Ritner, president of the state senate and,- by virtue of that office, heir apparent to the -governor, and Jay Upton, senator for a flock of counties,- checked out of the Benson f is a wheat grower of Umatilla county and Mr. Upton, although a lawyer, likes to refer to himself as a dairy man. Carl A. Johnson of Bend is at the Hotel Portland. There is no resident of Bend who is not an optimist and a firm believer in his town, which is one reason why Bend has been mov ing along rapidly and has made re markable gains in population as com pared with other Oregon communities. Major and Mrs. Charles Steinhauser, who have an apple orchard in upper Hood river valley, are registered at the Benson. The snow was so deep this winter that it was an easy matter to stand on the crust and prune the fruit trees, said Major Steinhauser. L. Li. Lewis, salesmanager for the Booth-Kelly Lumber company at Eu gene, is at the Hotel Portland. J. D. Hoge, owner of the Hoge building in Seatje, Wash., is among the arrivals at the Benson. Score One for KnglfMli. Philippines Herald. For the first time in the history of the Philippines a political campaign wil' be carried on in English this com ing election'by Juan B. Alegre, who is running for senator for the sixth dis trict, comprising the Bikol province. "I will make my appeal directly to the people through the English lan guage," Allegre stated yesterday to a Herald representative. "I will de liver all my speeches in English." The reason why Allgre has decided to use the English language In the coming campaign is his belief that the Bikol region has advanced so mucn in public education that those who have been educated in the public schools will now control the political situa tion of the district. "I will cot .speak Bikol; neither Spanish," Allegre continued. I have told Governor wood about tnis ana he was very much pleased with my decision." i Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Hons hton-Mlffll Co, Can Yon Ansvrer T! e Questions? 1. How do toads drink? 2. Where did the potato come from? 3. Why do roosters always crow between 11 and 12 every night? Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. AnNwrrg to Previous Question. 1. At what season are young minks oorn, ana is there more than one litter. In April, either in a burrow or hol low of a ltg or stump. One litter. Young are tiny, blind like kittens. In captivity the litter has been known to number as high as ten kits, but five to six is the natural family. 2. Does the ostrich have any note? Yes, a loud one, somewhat re sembling the voice of the lion. In spite of the fact that the ostrich has an imperfectly developed syrinx, or set of vocal rings. The explorer Liv ingston noted that the voice of the lion and that of the ostrich were easily confused in the wilderness. I have a fern which this winter has been infested with a small black fly. I find lots of little- white Insects in the plate on which the fern stands. What are they, and what is the rem edy? Probably the "fly" is the winged male of one of the aphids that infest many indoor plants. The smaller light-colored creatures may be the grub or immature form that keeps hatching out. Impossible to identify without a specimen. A slow but good way to treat is to use either soap suds or nicotine solution, with a camel's hair brush, and patiently swab off the insects. Be sure to ex amine the under sides of. the leaves. LAW VIOLATIOV IS INDICATED Mr, Fin I,. y Condemn Btilrk Stunt. Manager Deniew . Chara;e. JENNINGS LODGE. Or.. Mav 7. (To the Editor.) 1 wish to nrntent 1 against the boasted and open viola tion of the state highway laws as published In the public press. On May 2 Claude McGee, manager of the Howard Auto company, accompanied by Mrs. Z. Kathleen Ayres, drove a F.uick coupe from San Francisco to Portland in 22 hours and 43 minutes, ending, as the article states, by "dash ing up to the Howard Auto company Quarters in Portland." The account. If true, spread broad cast through the country, states that all records between San Francisco and Portland were shattered. To any one who has driven from San Fran cisco to Portland, it will be easily understood that In the brief period of less than one day and one night all records for the violation of state and county laws, town and city ordinances, have been smashed to smithereens. It was one prolonged spree of crime, menacing thousands of law-abiding tourists and citizens from the Bay City to Portland. There is evidently a certain tendency on the part of the Howard Auto company handling Buick cars to en courage open violation of state laws in the hope of building up trade by showing that a Buick is better than a Franklin, Hudson or any other car. If a Buick manager is allowed openly to violate the highway laws, as is self-evident, in going 724.1 in 22 hours and 43 minutes, there Is no reason why all salesmen should not be al lowed to turn the public highways into a speed course. Why is it necessary for any auto mobile company to countenance and encourage the violation of trafffc laws? The tendency to make speed records on state and country roads should be openly condemned because it is a menace to public safety. Sup pose the agent for the Winchester Arms company should encourage his salesmen to take a shot at some cit izen in the hope of proving that his is the best shooting rifle on the market. Suppose tomorrow the agent for the Remington should go out and shoot a deer In violation of the state law. It would not be countenanced by either the public or any sportsmen's organization. There are many organ izations interested in the public wel fare. There are many newspapers and many other publications favor able to "safety first" on the high ways. There are many officers of county and city government who are hired to enforce the laws. If this pub lic account of smashing the records from San Francisco to Portland is true, something should be done to prevent another incident of this kind. WILLIAM L. FIN LEY. According to Mr. McGee, the car did not travel at an excessive rate, and he also insists that long-distance records cannot be lowered ordinarily by spurts of high speed. The record was made by maintaining a consist ent average speed, without stops, ex cept fora few minutes each, for fuel and oil. The average speed for this trip was about 32 miltjs an hour. California law permits 35, while ar rests are not ordinarily made under 40 miles. It is asserted that the record was broken by keeping con stantly a pace no greater than the average tourist travels part of the time witliout molestation by traffic officers. PRIMARY FOR DKLKUATES ONLY Regulation Woald Provide Against Boss-Ruled Convention. PORTLAND, May 8. (To the Edi tor.) If we must have a primary election let it be held for the pur pose of electing delegates from each precinct or other subdivision of the state, to nominating conventions of the parties wishing to participate. Let these primaries be held under sanction of law, duly guarded against fraudulent voting such as is practiced under the present primary system, democrats and others falsely regis tering as republicans, or vice versa. Delegates elected at these primaries would then represent their parties and would make their nominations with the certainty of condemnation by the public at the polls If such nominees were not fit and proper men. Should anybody be aggrieved at the result of the conventions let the way be made open for them to get upon the ballot without the costly and cumbersome method Indicated in your editorial May 6. Such a plan would provide against a boss-ruled convention, and would extinguish the unfit, self-seeking, self-nominated candidates who ap pear in every primary to the disgust of the plain, ordinary voter. J. W. CAMPBELL, 1B7S East Fifteenth Street. H'hnt Her Home Locks. Judge. Small Mary returned again and again to the swing on the public playground. At last the supervisor remarked: "I guess you don't have a chance to swing at home, do you, Mary?" "Oh, yes! I have a chance, but I haven't any swing." Facta About a Position. Judge. "You said you'd never get on water wagon Gosh, man, I've got a job on It!" More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. MonUgs. POPE WAS KK.HT. We hold with Alexander Pop. Who frequently expressed The thought that man ha little hop Of befng wholly blessed. When we believe at last that all Our wishes are fulfilled. Mischance is certain to befall. And lo, the beans are spilled. I For instance, we have yearned to oB And wear upon our tie A rare and radiant precious stone To catch the public's eye. We meant to sport it on Broadway. And fondly pictured how The girls would gaxeit it and say, "Ain't that the cat's me-ow?" But years of poverty ensued While all our earnings went To meet the cost of clothes and food And pay tbe monthly rent. Our spirits fell with each advance. Despair sat on our brow; Alas, there seemed but little chance To buy the bauble now! Then lo! the cost of living fell, A tidy sum we saved, And hastened cityward pell-mell To get the stone we craved. We still are wearing sorrow's crown And wormwood fills our cup. While living costs were going down The cost of stones went UP Accounting for Absentees. The reason that the Turks snd Greeks were absent from Genoa wa that they couldn't quite make up their minds to Interrupt such an enjoyable war. Before It In Too Late. Isn't It about time that the editors and the flappers declared an armis tice? Not Playing Fair. Mr Hays says that the movies don't want to reform the people, which Is mean of them, considering the number of people who want to reform the movies. Copyright by th Ball Syndicate, Ine In Other Day. Xwrnly-KIre Yrara A ,e. From The Or.Konl.ii of May 0, 1tT. The Umatilla reef llghtuhlp. No. 7, waw launched from the way of Stef fen'a yard yesterday afternoon. Marcus Wolf was acquitted of ths charee of arson yesterday morntnt;. A mass meeting of wheelmen will be held In the courthouse Tuesday afternoon. Athens. Greece Is evacuating the Island of Crete: the Turks have en tered and burned Velestluo. flltf Years Abo. From The Orcsonlan of May I). 1B72. New York. The arrival of Immi grants In New Tork since January 1 exceed by 20,000 those of last year. Plank for the Wlllametts river bridge were submitted to city council yesterday by the officials of the Portland. Dalles & Salt Uike Ilailruad company. Tngersol. Canada. Two men wers burned to death and the entire busi ness portion of the town destroyed by fire last night. Mexico City. Mexico. A hlh offi cial snys: "It Is the universal opinion that Diaz is dead, and that the report of his being at sea with Callcas la untrue." HOW IMIIAVS OXCI TOOK MOtltT nlls in Cunoe Pmlrilra Impnlrd I i.h. Recalls Cnptnln V.rmy. PASCO, Wash., May 7. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian's editorial. "Marvel of the Smelt," reminds me of the first runs of smalt in the Cowlitz river. The Indians drove sharp point ed nails through thin paddles, and as they forced their canoes upstream through the school, or rather stream, of smelt would soon fill their canoes by shaking the smelt from tho nails In their paddles. I have not been on the Cowlitz for many years, but understand that the smelt runs on that river do not com pare with the runs of tho '60s, when steamboats did not run above Monti cello or Freeport -they now run tc Kelso. Did steamboats on the Cow litz or log booms at its mouth check its smelt runs? If so your Bandy river runs are safe, as steamboats cannot disturb them. We used to know when the smelt were in the Columbia by the number of seagulls that followed the schools. Another thought: Is there not a danger of "overpopulation" of smelt if their taking is restricted? Hun dreds of millions of egs-s ar de posited every year. Will the ftw thousands of fish captured rellers a congestion that would drive the smelt to some other stream? You are In error in saying the smelt Is properly called a candle fish. The candle flsb Is only taken In salt waters like Puget sound, and takes its name from the fact that when It Is dried lt mouth opens wide and makes a base to support the greasy bones that stand upright. A lighten matcn touencu to the tail of the dried fish makes a perfect candle. Ths flesh of ths candle fish is far Inferior to ths smelt. The Columbia seems to b tho only river that has the two distinct varie ties of the best of fish, salmon and smelt. The Yukon river salmon Is larger and compares In flavor with our Co lumbia river variety, but thers are no smelt to compare with the genuine Columbia river variety, which ssek the Cowlitz. Kalama, Bandy and other small streams every spring to spawn. W. 1 . UKAX. Date of Rerall Klectloa. OREGON CITY. Or., May 7. (To ths Editor.) (1) What are the Initials or United States Senator McNary and where would a letter reach him at this time? How should It be sd- dressed? (I) When does the public vote to fill the offices of the public service commissioners recently re called and about when will tho re sults be known? Also, when will ths successful candidate actually take of fice. Would thank you If you would answer these questions in your Tues day morning Issue. I remain yours truly, C O. a L Hon. Charles L McNary. senats office building, Washington. D. C 2. The recall election is on the day of the primaries. May 1. Tho result will be known unofficially probably the next day. Successful recall can didates will take office as soon as the result Is officially announced. Skakrspeare Staa Clab. PORTLAND, May f. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly state where the Bhake speare society or dramatic club In Portland Is located. A SUBSCRIBER. The Portland Shakespeare Study i club president. Mrs. R. E. Jones, Zt Laurelhurst avenue. Tabor MM.