8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1933 ESTABLISHED by hevrt i pittouk Published by The Oregonian Pub. Co.. 135 Sixth Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. MORDEN, E. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the As ociated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance. , (Sy Mail.) Baily. Sunday Included, one year . . . .$8.00 Daily, Sunday included, six months . . 4.25 Dally, Sunday included, three months 2.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month .. -75 llly, without Sunday, one year .. ... 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months . . 3.25 Daily, without Sunday, one month.. .60 ounaay. one. year 2.00 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year S9.00 Dally, Sunday included, three months 2.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month... .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year .... 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months. 1.85 Daily, without Sunday, one month.. .65 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk, flive postofflce address In full. Including cour.ty and state. Postage Rates 1 to 10 pages, 1 cent; IS to 32 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 04 pages, 4 cents'. 66 to 80 pages. 5 cents; .s'-l to 96 i-ai;efl. 6 cents. Foreign postage double rate. iSaNtern Business Offices Verree A Conklin, 300 Madison avenue. New York: Verree & Conklin, Steger building, Chi cago; Verree & Conklin. Free Press build ing, Detroit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Monadnock building, San Francisco. Cal. THE HEREIN MASSACRE. Responsibility for the barbarous massacre of nonunion miners at Herrin, HLt cannot be escaped by the United Mineworkers by making a simple denial that it was author ized or countenanced by the union's officers. An armed mob of 5000 men could not have assembled and perpetrated so monstrous a crime without the knowledge of the local officers of the union at least. The union's state officers must have known that the spirit which would prompt the members to acts of lawless violence was abroad, and they evidently did nothing to re strain it. So ill informed did the national officers profess to be that only a few days ago President Lewis boasted that the miners' . strike had continued for many weeks without disorder. Repudia tion of responsibility, expressions of surprise and even detestation, will not suffice. Nothing can clear the miners union of the odium of an inaction that had horrifying results unless as a body it arrays itself decidedly on the side of the law, indeed of civilization, for the deeds which a great body of its members have committed were an offense against civilization itself. The nation has a right to demand that the union expel all the guilty members and exert all its power to aid the offi cers of the law in bringing the murderers to justice. The union must clean house thoroughly before it can make good its boast of being a law-respecting body. Unquestion able proof on that point must be furnished before it can expect at tention to its claim to conduct a struggle for the betterment of the condition of the miners. Citation of lawless acts of employers will be considered no palliation, will be given no heed, until the union purges itself of murder and savag ery and becomes an active force in support of the law, in order that it may come before the court of pub lic opinion with clean hands. This is the more necessary be cause on many occasions labor unions have denied that they au thorized or approved crimes of vio lence committed by their members, even their officers, and have pro vided funds and hired lawyers to prove accused men innocent, pro claiming that these men were vic tims pf a capitalist conspiracy to destroy unions. A notable example is the case of the McNamara brothers. When they were accused ' of dynamite outrages and when a " mountain of evidence against them was found. President Gompers of the American Iffederation of Labor raised the old cry of persecution and collected a national fund for their, defense. He closed his mind to all proof until he was con founded by their confession. The rule has been that no aid has been - given by unions to the law in dis covering and bringing to justice perpetrators of violent deeds ac companying strikes, and in some in stances these acts have been open ly defended as offset by similar acts committed on behalf of em ployers, on the long since exploded meui y mat wo DiacKs make a white. Even when the heads of labor unions in New York and Chi cago have created a veritable reign of terror by shooting, bombing, dynamiting and arson, and have been convicted of committing these " crimes for the purpose of black mailing not only employers but large bodies of workmen, no help has been given by labor leaders to the law. On the contrary, the speeches and writings of labor leaders have been full of attacks on the courts, ' the burden of which is that labor cannot get justice. Mr. Gompers recently, m testifying before the Lockwood committee in New Tork Ecorned the idea that courts should ' redress the wrongs done by unions or their officers to their members or to other workmen. He held that unions should be left to purify ..themselves from within, though he was hazy as to the prospect of any reform. His and other attacks on the impartiality of the. courts are a slander on a body of judges which with rare exceptions maintains as ... high a standard of justice as the ; judiciary of any country judges to whom labor unions owe con firmation of all the rights that they enjoy. Within a few days after the United States supreme court ren . dered its decision in the Coronado case, , the Mineworkers' Journal - specified circumstances under . which the right of injunction could be exercised by the unions, and an ". injunction was lately granted to a union in New York against the em. - ployers. - The idea has been sedulously in stilled into the minds of union workmen that the courts and offi cers of the law are their enemies, ;and always administer the law to their injury unless frankly elected to serve the union interest against that of any other body of citizens. It has been preached that employ ers are natural enemies of work men, and that there is an irrecon cilable conflict between the two classes. Such teaching naturally bears fruit in deeds of violence, the climax of which has been reached in Illinois by an act of barbarism equalled only in Turkey or Russia. The teachers cannot escape blame for the deeds into which their gospel Is translated by men Tn have little or no education, who rely mostly on force as an argument, many of whom are im migrants from countries where re form by constitutional agitation is unknown, where government is re garded as the poor man's natural enemy and where men trust only in force to redress wrong. The teaching of labor leaders cultivates the opinion that union labor consti- tutes a privileged class, not amen able to the law, whose own defini tion of its rights must be accepted without question, and who may, in defense of those rights, do any deed which, if done by others, would be punished aa a heinous crime. The massacre at Herrin can be traced back to such doctrine, Those railroad men who contem plate a strike and an alliance with the miners' union in furtherance of it would do well to draw back in time. If they should now form the alliance, the brand of murder which the miners have put on themselves would extend to them and they would incur public con demnation by the association. Not until the miners' union has purged itself of the murderers and has given convincing proof that crime is not in its armory by active aid to the law in prosecuting the guilty can any labor union which wishes to preserve its good repute safely associate with the organization that has the Herrin massacre on its record. It is the custom of those who uphold every labor union, no mat ter what it may do, to denounce as enemies of the principle of union ism any one who condemns mis deeds done in its name or in its cause. Such men are the worst enemies of unionism, for they in effect assert that the most brutal crimes are necessary to its exist ence. There are many unions which scrupulously respect the law and the rights of others, with which employers gladly make contracts because they are observed. They are the oldest and strongest, and they stand high in public- esteem, though they do not often figure in the newspapers. To them the prin ciple of unionism owes its vitality, for they truly represent it. Their worst shortcoming is their silence when loyalty both to their country and to unionism summons them to condemn violence, fraud, black mail and breach of contract as wrongs to the whole system of la bor organization. They have noth ing in common . with the Herrin murderers and torturers, and they should say so. PUT THE BEST MEV AT THE HEAD. No doubt exists that the seniority rule is the chief cause of the dis agreement on questions of policy between President Harding and the men in congress who are leaders of the republican majority by vir tue of their positions as chairmen of important committees. The present congress has given several examples of the pernicious working of seniority. The main body of republicans in both house and senate was convinced that the national welfare required emer gency legislation for relief of the farmers from the effects of de pression in 1920, but it had to begin by overcoming the opposition of the men whom seniority had made the party leaders, to reject the leader ship of these men ahd to compel them to follow. Another example was the fight in the house on the naval bill. The chairmen of the naval committee and the appropriation committee recommended a smaller number of men for the navy than the presi dent considered necessary, and the event proved that the house agreed with the president, not with its putative leaders. Again the nom inal leaders were repudiated by the party vhich was supposed to fol low. If chairmen of committees were chosen on the ground of their abil ity, their fitness to lead and their holding opinions on party and na tional policy in harmony with the party majority, such incidents would rarely happen. Electing its leaders because it recognized these qualifications in them, the ruling party in each house would on each occasion show high regard for their judgment and would incline to sup port them. As matters now stand, the nominal leaders have no such claim to the respect of members, and a challenge by men of higher quality is taken up generally and causes a revolt. RELATIVE POVERTY. News that the price paid by the successful American bidders for the publication rights of the kaiser's memoirs $225,000 i regarded by that formerly royal personage as a m.pre pittance, wholly inadequate to his needs, . is a reminder that poverty is a relative term. ; We know of no precedent in literary history for the downright payment of so large a sum. The former emperor, it goes almost without saying, has no claim to literary skill. The valuation put upon his writings is almost wholly advent! tious, depending neither on his reputation as a philosopher and historian nor on his .training in interpretation, but altogether on certain melancholy events asso ciated with his career. We confess to a deeper interest in his theory that he ought to have received $1,000,000 for his manu script because he happens to need that much money than in the sub ject matter of the forthcoming book. The latter has been rather heavily discounted; the former sets an ingenious standard for the ap praisement of service to society.- It will be suspected nevertheless that it is not altogether novel. On no other ground can w account for certain charges made by other in dividuals than the ex-kaiser than that they "need the money." The royal exile of Doom is more can did, that is all. ' Prudently invested to yield, say, 5 per cent, the sum to be paid for the book will yield $11,250 per annum, or only a little short of $1000 a month. It is a tidy sum, such as even a plumber would not disdain, but to one accustomed to having a national treasury behind him ll is but chicken feed. One must imagine himself in his situa tion in order to understand why it was that he felt compelled recently to refuse a subscription to a fund to provide a dinner for the poor children of war victims in a Berlin war suburb. Or why he has been pressing for another remittance from the Prussian government, which already has advanced him some 60,000,000 marks. If he had been reared in poverty, if he had wrung a living from literature at current rates of compensation for matter of ordinary merit, he would feel as rich as Croesus with a $225,000 book in press. A reason able amount of poverty has its ad vantages, after all. DEADLY NOT MTRTHFCt. Moonshine has entered the casual category of comical terms. The stealth by which the law is evaded, the frequency with which other wise excellent citizens contribute to that evasion have created no little merriment among the Joke smiths. But' the abruptness of the moonshine tragedy at Plainview, with its toll of three lives, must serve to awaken the suspicion that we have jested about a matter not in the least subject to jest. He is a merry moonshiner, indeed, or a mirthful patron of moonshiners, who can discover the trace of Jocularity in such a finis. It Is idle to condemn the dead though he took two lives, and worthier ones, before he killed him self. That which concerns us is that the elements for similar trag- edies are brewing even now. The still of the moonshiner drips a deadlier .concoction than any liquor, however vicious. It drips despite of law and anarchy and death. Such has ever been the product of the distillery, but now that the still Itself is outlawed there exists no reason In law or conscience why this should be. And very far from being an argument against prohi bition, the Plainview murders and suicide serve as reminders of the spleen and passion that are asso ciated with liquor. Plainly the pre vention of other tragedies rests not alone with the law, but with the individual citizen. There is no mirth In moonshine. The man who makes, buys or drinks it is indirectly, but cer tainly, contributing to the creation of tragedy. Broaden the field, if you like, until it embraces the en tire Illicit traffic in liquor, and sets tramp and tradesman cheek by jowl. There is still no mirth in it PEACE ON THE WATERFONT. Settlement of the longshoremen's strike is a subject for congratula tion to all parties directly con cerned and to the public also. By Joint control of the hiring system the rights of both employers and workers, non-union as well as union, will be assured. Efficiency and good citizenship being the standard according to which men will be hired, fair treatment of all men is to be expected, and the employers should secure good re sults. With the same wage scale as other ports and with this stand ard as a guide, Portland will be able to handle cargo with the same economy in money and time. While employers will profit in the amount of business done, workers will profit in steady employment and in constant additions to their number as more ships come. It is to be hoped that the co operation arranged will cause both parties to the dispute now happily ended to realize that they have a common interest in the success of the business in which they are jointly engaged. In these days of big ships of high cost, quick turn around in port is an important point in deciding whether they will come to this port and at what charter rate. Efficiency in loading and discharge reduces time in port and adds to the time In which -a. ship is earning freight. It thus attracts both ships and cargo, mak ing more business for shipping men, more work for longshoremen, and more business for the whole community. A3 longshoremen are solid citizens, many of them own ing their homes, they profit by the general prosperity which results. As this view of their relation be comes clear, it is to be hoped that shipping men and longshoremen will come to regard themselves as in a sense' partners in the same business, and that they will work together as closely as do lumber men and their employes in the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumr bermen. The peace and harmony now prevailing in the lumber in dustry have mainly been produced by that organization, and in the Interest of all concerned like con ditions should hereafter prevail in the shipping business. OUTGUESSING THE STORK. . A homeopathic prophet has won headlines through her assertion that, in the not distant future, the secret of determination of sex will be ours to apply. That tricky old visitant, the stork, shall then be made to understan-dHhat he cannot foist something just as good on the erudite parents. Nor shall the quandary presented in those fine old lines, hereto appended, ever recur: O if it be a girl, she shall stay at home wltbj me; But if ,it be a boy, he shall plow the raging sea With his tarpaulin hat and his round about so blue Ha Bhall pace the quarterdeck as his daddy used to do. Nature's law of checks and bal ances, which has served since the origin of life in primeval ooze, is not so readily flouted, however; as long continued experiment with lower forms has demonstrated. Science has appeared not one but several times to be nearing the so lution of sex determination, but the convictions of successive savants, each, with a new theory, have uni formly been discarded as inconclu sive. It is highly probable that we shall never know enough about the marvel to make certain that the arrival from far shores shall have ourls or freckles. There is, indeed, no urgent necessity why we should. Fads and preference might in the light of such knowledge prove meddlesome beyond endurance. The wish that the first-born should be a boy, an almost unanimous prefer ence, would if fulfilled completely destroy a reasonable sex ratio. Experiments in the determina tion of sex have seemed at times to prove that external influences con trol the mystery, If we are to ad mit that the sex of life is not existent from the first But the application of these doubtful reve lations to the race, through the most favorable observation, has failed of - proof. Nutrition- is the lane along which science has groped for the most part, holding that the most favorable conditions of climate and sustenance tend to induce a preponderance of the fe male. Famine and cold, it would appear from this, should be coo- ducive to many males. Yet when actual famine conditions were found, and the births therein noted for comparative purposes, the the ory failed. The authenticity of findings in the lower forma of life cannot, however, be doubted but that such discoveries are-- catholic in the application is more than, doubtful. Nature does not always employ the same formula, and quite evidently has made an exception of the hu man race. It may be that similar exceptiona are many and varied. The aphides, we are told by one experimenter, incline toward ; a numerical predominance of females during the clement summer sea son, when warmth and food are common. Cold and barren autumn alone restores the balance by de creeing that hunger and hardship shall summon males to the roster. What then? One might reasonably expect, if the rule were effective from aphides to men, that a race of Amazons would dwell in the tropics, and that the polar regions would be frequented by tribes of hardy males. Yet nothing of the sort is evident. They called the tadpole into eon- ference an otd And valued ally. It appeared that under normal conditions one hundred random tadpoles were -as 43 to 57 in male and female membership. But. an increase of warmth to the water and rations of the richest food materially altered the ratio by cre ating an even greater preponder ance of females, A like response fto pampering resulted among the juveniles of the Crustacea. From these and kindred experiments it was rather hastily deduced that plenty and hardship served to de termine sex, the one inducing the female, the other the male. It may have been so with the tadpole and the aphides, and equally true of the Crustacea though there was room for error in each research' but even the investigators had to admit that it did not apply to man. ; Is it too much to suggest, apropos of this particular field of inquiry, that the idea of sex deter mination at will is an unnatural one? It has been safe for count less centuries to leave the matter to nature, who is after all a most kindly, tolerant and capable mid wife. Somehow or other the sug gestion that babies be regarded solely as the wards of science is not one to waken enthusiasm. It is nearly akin to the communistic be lief that children are the property of the state. ; TOO MANY RESOLUTIONS. The month of June is as good as any other . month in which to call attention to the futility of making New Year resolutions in quantity and breaking them in inverse ratio to the will power of the resolver. Henry Hazlitt, who has just written a book on the psychology of the subject, reminds us that momen tary good intentions are worse than none at all and that the habit of forgetting or disregarding them at convenience has a serious effect on character. "To break a resolve," says Mr. Hazlitt, "is to lose faith in your self. But with every resolution kept, be it ever so small, your faith in yourself grows. The keeping of the next resolution becomes tre mendously easier. Will power comes into its inheritance. The moral is that you should make fewer reso lutions and keep more." Not even the. practice of relat ing everything to "psychology" that touches upon the commonest voli tions can obscure the truth in this engaging bit of pedantry. There is no conflict of principles in the sug gestion that while New Year ought not to be an exclusive day for re solving to rid ourselves of bad habits, neither should it:, be made the occasion for taking on a load of virtues greater than we can possibly carry. An excellent and vital resolution on an average of once in, say, every three years, if persisted in by every other citizen, would bring us in an. almost in credibly short space of time in full sight of the millennial dawn. The young man employed in a piano house ' should - have" known better than accept a challenge to fight an old man, no matter how "cocky" the latter was; anyway, he should have ... "pulled his punch." Now the old man lies near death and the other has left the city. Pussyfoot Johnson says he is ashamed. of the ynited States, The country probably can worry along and continue to pay dividends of life, liberty and the pursuit of hap piness to its citizens, even under the terrific burden of Mr. Johnson's disapprovals The 350,000 people of Portland (except those -participating) and the 25,000 visitors were of one opinion as to a Portland parade. Great!" is the word. A law by congress is not needed to make "The Star Spangled Ban ner" the national anthem. It's the first" real song a child learns and he never forgets. , If a park employe want3 to pray in a-park during" the noon hour, that should be his privilege. This is a. case for Mayor Baker to handle. . It will be time enough to think of granting independence , to the Filipinos when they show a little less of it on their own account. Before Will Hays was appointed nobody ever would have dreamed that the movies would turn to a politician for uplift inspiration. : There was honored yesterday the man who brought the first rose bush to Portland. Or was it a woman? Most likely. The boy of 18 and the girl of 15 who elope will come home in the by and by, much wiser. Dae "reason there is such lack of respect for . the ' law is the great number of fool laws. The Portland rose is perfection until . some genius develops, an edible bloom. , Nicolai Lenine won't even die conventionally as per schedule. Here's your umbrella and come again. . - All tired, but happy. WELFARE RULES ALL PROPER Charge of Red Tape and Neglect Ungrounded, Says Investigator. PORTLAND, June 23. (To the Editor.) It seems to have become quite the fashion to point arrows and fling stones against the man ners and methods of the Public Welfare bureau, and some of these missiles are so far from carrying the truth that I am minded to say a few words in defense, although I hold no brief for this intention ex cept as. a- firm believer in fair play and a square deal. I am an eastern woman who has been given the privilege of adopt ing this fine country as her future home, but before coming here I, as a young woman, had served a long term of apprenticeship in social and humanitarian welfare work in two of the largest cities of the east, under the direct instruction of the ablest exponents of philanthropic enterprises. I have been connected with the local bureau for the past two years in the capacity of a vol unteer worker, i. e., one who puts much heart, conscienoe and genuine sympathy in her work with no fi nancial remuneration. If I have any official title it may be said to oe mat oi intercity invMupwor, denim shirt, such as honest work in which capacity I have been called sDort. and he was sans necktie. on to visit persons of both high and low degree and several of our pub lic institutions. Had I been so dis posed there is not a single one of the latter In which I could not find several more or less flagrant ex amples of shortcomings of .various degrees of importance. These er rors exist in our own bureau with out a doubt, but It has been my own inviolable policy to go directly to the executive head with my com plaints or criticisms and sometimes I have found them not well founded and in other cases changes were im mediately inaugurated. So far as charges of "red tape are concerned, as spoken of in an item in a local paper, it was my Own im pression when I first began my work with the bureau that there was a great deal too much of it, and far too much time was spent over records than was necessary, but I have had occasion to see that I was mistaken, and I am of the firm belief that records cannot be too full of information nor too ac curate in this detail. I have had occasion to run down statements of neglect on the part of the bureau furnished me by peo pie who almost invariably state that they know what they are talking about and have facts as proof. In none of these instances have I found any evidence of bona fide neglect on the part of the bureau, wuite often kindnesses have been shown that were gratuitous on the part of the worker in charge and could not be measured by money. People have been reported to me as being in a "starving condition and the bureau will not do one thing for them." "On a visit I have almost invariably found food in the pantry, or an order for it In hand, and heard few words of complaint from the beneficiaries. There are some people who will not be satis fied with the fit of their wings when they are1 translated, and we meet some of this kind of course. But, by and large, I believe the ef forts of the bureau are directed to wards relieving all of human misery within their power, and that most of their rules of pro cedure are made necessary by the fact that not yet is everyone truth ful. honest or deserving. Long, long ago I put these few lines from one of Will Carlton's poems in my commonplace book. and I wish we all could be more guided by them than we apparently are: Boys flying kites haul home their -white-winged birds, You can't do that way when you'rs fly in words: Thoughts unexpressed may often fall back dead. But God himself ean't kill them when they're said. MARIAN D. MERRY. WHY HAVE SEVEN DIRECTORS f Suggestion Made That School Affairs ; Be Pot In City Department. ' PORTLAND, June 23. (To the itor.) it is a matter for amaze ment the number and variety of no tions, ideas and suggestions as well as criticisms, constructive and de structive, that the careful reader of The Oregonian finds in your "letters from the people." Here is one we picked up the other day, and which we are sending you for your exhibit. A fairly well posted man on city affairs, especially as they pertain to school matters, calls attention to the fact that the school director serves without pay, and therefore the handling of this vast business with all its responsibilities is but incidental or a sort of side line to his private business, which he is often under a very heavy obligation to place nrst in nis consideration. This gentleman's criticism was that it was remarkable that the school -affairs under the circum stances were as well handled as they are. His suggestion was that the schools be placed under the city commission as a department with a real civil service and a paid com missioner under heavy bond in charge, and devoting all his time to the work. He put up quite a strong argument in favor of his idea. What is the reason it would not work? What reason have we in logic or common sense to expect more or better work on the part of the school board than we are getting at present under the system in use? O. G. HUGHSON. Hon to Be Happy. PORTLAND, June 23. (To the Editor.) One way to be happy is to keep busy.. If not working for yourself, do something for another, if only to coax a smile from a little child. Another sure way is to forget yourself. Do not make out a list of your failings to ponder over, or repeat them to an unwilling or un fortunate listener. Never attempt to "remove a mote" from thy broth er's eye while the "beam in thine own" is forgotten. Then be very sure to bar the door to the past. . If you peep in you will find some dreadful skeletons. Then it is quite as important to lock the door to the future, for you can dig up all kinds of worries and fears. But just quietly cultivate poise, and "be still and know" that the present is,good: Right now is your opportunity. Be content to let your blessings unfold. Each day will prove the value of listening to the "still small voice" which is ever ready to cheer and comfort those who will accept the "ever-present help." Never for a moment forget to be grateful for the blessings that are always available. MATTIE BORNE ROSS. A Missouri Landmark Passes, Aurora Advertiser. A century old postoffice at Boy ler's Mill, in Morgan county, has been discontinued following a fire which destroyed the place. The place was settled in 1819 at the big spring 25 miles from the famous Ha-Ha-Tonka spring. A mill was established there by a man who in troduced wheat bread to a section which had known only corn and rye Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotel. "People are feeling ' better than they were a year ago," says William Pollman, who owns a couple of banks in Baker and is deeply in terested in the livestock market Mr. Pollman came to Portland on business but when he arrived dis covered that the meeting which he came to attend had been post poned for a week, so in the mean time he will visit Puget sound. Mr. Pollman explains that some of the growers who were hard hit a couple of years ago have not yet been straightened out, but that people as a rule are getting back on their teefc, Mr. Pollman paused long enough to say that Baker will have an Old Oregon Trail celebration on July 4, which will be worth travel ing a week to see. In Baker the old-fashioned costumes are being worn and Bill, himself, is sporting a whale of a Stetson for the first time in years. On the spur of the moment, Frank Sloan left his sheep camp, jumped a train and came to Portland to see the Rose Festival parade. He cared not that he was wearing a blue men sport, and he was sans necktie, but that didn't bother him any. Hav ing seen the show Mr. Sloan took the night train for his camp In eastern Oregon. "Sheep and stock business is getting better," stated Mr. Sloan. It was Mr. Sloan, as a member of the legislature at the special session, who organized the farm bloo which prevented the house of representatives from adopting the idea of a state prop erty tax as .one means of financing the 1925 exposition. The lumber industry Is looking up, our way, reports S. S.. Smith of Medford, registered at the Benson while attending the republican state central committee. "W. H. Olds, who bought the 50-cent govern ment timber, has been rebuilding the railroad to Butte Falls from Medford and has provided new roll ing stock. An extension 12 miles beyond Butte Falls is under way and of this three miles have already been graded and arrangements are being made to get the road . in operation. I also hear that the S. S. Bullis sawmill may be sold.1 Mr. Smith has returned recently from an extended visit to Kansas. "Banking business 1 good," ad mits W. H. Gore, banker of Medford. "General conditions in that vicinity are encouraging and crop prospects are excellent. Mr. Gore was for merly a member of the legislature and was a member of the house committee on roads and highways and also on the banking committee. The bank with which Mr. Gore is connected has been reconstructing its building at the expenditure of many thousands of dollars, and the building will be ready for occu pancy In August, It Is hoped. The largest order for metal flume ever given in the west was awarded by the Tumalo irrigation district a few days ago. The order is for 12, 250 feet of flume, 10 feet 10 inches wide at the top, and the job went to the Portland Coast Culvert & Flume company, a local concern. The cost of this flume material amounts to $125,000. Fred N. Wallace, who has long been closely Identified with the Tumalo project, is in the city for a few days. Jesse Winburn of Ashland taid formerly of New York crushed into town yesterday while the parade was in progress and could not reach a hotel, and, in addition, lost his car and driver for hours. Finally he wound up at the Benson with Bert Moses, also of Medford. Mr, Winburn has been driving across the continent and rolled up 4000 miles on the trip, lie continues on to Med ford today. Chauncey Butler, formerly In the office of secretary of state and now operating an abstract office at The Dalles, is at the Imperial for the rose show. Mr. Butler is another of the numerous former residents of Mountain City, Tenn., who have set tled in Wasco, Sherman, Morrow and Gilliam counties. Each of the former Mountain City men is a red-hot re publican and is prepared to tell the world. Robert Zeverly they call him Bob the tonsorial artist of Prine ville. Or., Is . in Portland. . With about all the live wires in Crook county coming to Portland to march in the Rose Festival parade as mem bers of the Irrigators, there was little use of Bob remaining home. Owner of ten acres of prune trees, County Chairman Hall of the Uma tilla republican committee, is in town from Freewater and is regis tered at the Hotel Oregon. Mr. Hall, although not a member of the state committee, came to Portland to see what he could do about helping or ganize it. - Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Krebs of Rock away, Or., are at the Imperial. Mr. Krebs is deputy coroner, water agent, notary public and general leading citizen of Rockaway beach, and he is the proprietor of the El more hotel. Lloyd L. Low, sheriff of Klamath county, arrived in Portland yester day. He came at the request of the federal grand jury and managed to get out on the streets long enough to see the Rose Festival parade. . Mike Kelly, the big lumberman of Duluth, who owns more timber land in Oregon than most . residents of thi3 state, arrived at the Hotel Port land yesterday from the east. Clarence Reames, formerly United States attorney for Oregon, and who looked after (he "wobblies" and others during the war in Se attle, is in Portland from Puget sound. Mr. and Mrs. William Lippltt of Spokane are at the Nortonia while spending a holiday in the Rose City. Mr. Lippitt is a. Spokane business man. Harold Baldwin, cashier of the First National bank of Prineville, Or., is in Portland with Mrs. Bald win. They are attending the Rose Festival. . . . Among Salemites in town for the festival week are Dr; and Mrs. H. C. Epley, who are at the Nortonia. Componnd Words Defined. TRENHOLM, Or., June 22 (To the Editor.) Kindiy tell me if words like the following are com pound words or not, and what a compound word is: Homeliness, houseless, ' armlet, aerometer, an other, assail, assimilate. AN OLD SUBSCRIBER. A compound word is one made up of two or more words which, retain their separate form and significance. Words to which are attached obvi- ous prefixes or suffixes, such as "houseless" and "homeliness" are not compound words. Examples of compound words are "housetop," "blackberry," "hilltop," '"washtub," "lifelike," "always," "herein." Only two of the words given by the cor respondent "aerometer" and "an other" are compound words. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague A RAW DEAL. We munch the sublimated stews And rare ambrosial hashes The menu tedl-s us are ragouts Or entrees -or goulashes. We smack our Hps and call them time, Expressing fervent wishes That we possessed the skill divine To frame such savory dashes. But he wihose Heaven-lnispined brains, From caviar to etiiton, j Conceived the perfect meals remains a mute, inglorious Milton The artist, loMirtg at his ease Amid a field of daisies. Paints half a score of soraggly trees And earns prodigious -praises. The sculptor, who from senseless stone A human form has poiuroded. Is pleased to bear, from zone to zone. His merits loudly sounded. The poet, for a few brief lays The world considers clever. Receives a horseshoe framed of bays Arid fame that lasts forever. But ah! the chef! all day he stands Amid his steaming kettles. And often burns his snowy hands On overheated metals. His soul is in whate'er he cooks, . But no one sings his glory. In vain to search through all the books To find his epic story. For other artists people shout Their eager approbation. And leaving such a genius out Is plain discrimination. Used to It. . Henry Ford will not care if his boom for the presidency collapses. Making one more flivver will be nothing in his life. Any Way Will Do. The drys want the Volstead law executed. The wets don't care how it is put to death. -Bfo Donbt About It. The college graduate thinks he Is going to run the world some day, and the irritating thing about it is that he is. Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Honguton-Mlttlln Co. Can Yon Answer These Questionsl 1. What is the biggest animal that ever lived? 2. Do any Insects take care of their young? 3. Is it DOssible that I saw a belted kingffaher in. a city park? Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to. Previous Questions. 1. How far south does the Canada goose go for the winter? Some members of ihe tribe go no further down than the inlets along the coast of Virginia and the Caro linas. Others go to Texas and Mex Ico, along the gulf shores. 2. Is the buffalo about extermi nated? Not as a species, though really wild herds are negligible, compared with their natural estate. The Can adian government has a good wild herd on protected land in Alberta and we have smaller ones in Kansas and South Dakota. The New York Zoological society maintains a small but healthy herd jusU out of the city, demonstrating that underprop er management wild buffalo tan Be bred in absolute captivity. This herd has actually furnished the nucleus for the two western heras. 3. What can. I feed a pet chame leon? We have constant inquiries for this, and recently had a letter in reply to one o our answers, sup plementing it helpfully. We listed the chameleon's food as flies, cock roaches, not earth worms, and pleaty of drinking water, supply to be sprinkled on a lettuce leaf or celery top. A correspondent writes she has found minute shreds of liver will be taken. She fed them on a toothpick and poked them down the chameleon's throat. Dan gling them on a thread might teach it to snap for the food as in nature Another correspondent has had suc cess with condensed milk fed. in drops. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of June 24. 1897. NASHVILLE. The annual reunion of United Confederate Veterans is being held here. Camp Jackson, the national guard encampment near Hood River,, will be occupied Tuesday by the state soldiers. POUGHKEEPSIE. Yale freshmen smash all records as they defeat Harvard and 'Cornell in the annual crew classic. LONDON. Queen Victoria passed a wearisome day receiving In con nection with her diamond jubilee. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian ot June 24. 1872. The second annual hortlculaural fair being held here is proving a great success. The Congregational association of this city had adjourned after trans acting much business. , BELLEVILLE, Canada. Sixty lives were lost when a train on the Grand Trunk railroad jumped the track near here. NEW YORK, -r- Labor strikes, which have been prevalent here lately, are dying out. , Germany Can Pay, UNIVERSITY PARK, Or., June 23. (To the Editor.) That Germany is comDetent to pay in run me sums of money .justly imposed by the allies is evident from two points of view. First, her territory, her towns, her manufactories, her soil have not been devastated and ruined by war. France and Belgium must. unlike Germany, recuperate. Sec ondly. the increase of German pop ulation is marked, which took place during the war, and has gone on with speed since tfte close oi nos tilities. Germans have come mainly from Alsace-Lorraine, Poland pos sessions and Russia to make the laree increase within the father land. The coming Into Germany of Germans, and of people with Ger man sympathies, from several parts of the old empire, and from unset tled Russia during the war and since, amounts to a round million of souls. While the death rate is in ad- , vane 01 'f'ZZV 1' " i st h rri rift tx i h winh in unr many. The great oenent Brought to the German people by the war in the broken neck of Prussianism and the birth of their republic, should stimulate to prompt pay ments of. the money due to allies to partly repay the damage - received by them in defeating inglorious aims. B. J. HOADLEY Rose Pete Views in Tomorrow's Oregonian j Four full pag-es in the Sun- ! day paper will be devoted to photographs illustrating the outstanding features of the Rose Festival. In the Magazine Science Discovers Tears Kill Germs Cry if you would save your life, for this releases most powerful germicide, says physician. Mountain Climbing at City's Border Portland fails to boast enough of unique scenic advantages, declares timely article by DeWitt Harry. Fiction Feature by W. L. George "Efleen," interesting story, hitherto unpublished, tells how a modern girl met with some modern problems. Honor Memory of General Meade Memorial to commander at Gettysburg under erection now at national capital. '' The One Time Glorious Fourth Clever page of cartoons by W. E. Hill shows intensely human views of people in humorous light. Common-Law Union Does Not Pay This is declaration of woman who tells of tragic life of wedding without benefit of clergy. Thought Photography Startles Scientists French criminologist trans fers mental impressions to highly sensitized plate. Love Troubles of Perfect Lover How 10,000 flappers spend anxious day or two because sheik has wife. Other Features Tennis Frocks Now of Silk Fashion department declares that country club entertain ments require special cos tumes. North Bank Highway Work Is Under Way Article by H. W. Lyman tells how this roadway will be made complement 'to Colum bia river highway. Apple Pies Like Mother Made rtecipes lor delicious goodies and problems of home baking told in special department by Miss Tingle. How to Make Those Outing Clothes Problems of dressmaking and the arrangement of wardrobe solved by Madam Richet. Vancouver Radio Regular Broadcaster Vocal and instrumental mu sical talent to serve audi ences two nights each week. Page of Cartoons on Topics of Day Current happenings pictori ally presented by Darling in interesting manner. Woman Gives Opinion on Bolshevik Problems After tour of Europe Mrs. Hamilton "Wright advises re fusal to recognize bolsheviki Papers Surprise M argot Asquith r . Another of the series of in teresting articles by talented Englishwoman on American life. The Oregonian Is Paper of Features News of type to appeal to all members of the family are to be found m the Sun day issue. All the news of all the world found in Thi Sunday Oregonian Just 5 cents