s THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL 17, 1921 - his pr was included in a Bale in 1848 PettygTove of a half interest in Dronertv to Daniel H. I.nwnsrialo Esr.lBUsHLD BV UE.nrv L. riTTOCK. Jn ten years the assessed value of Pubi!f.h by Tne Oreg-onian Publishing Co.. Port land property increased to r I vA7,v." ; J2.083.420. The city, growing rap. Manager. Kditor. idly, in 1861 boasted fourteen hotels, The Orexonlan Is a member of the Awo- twelve Other eating: places. two ciaiea rret-s. 1 he Associated rreta la ex- l.unkn unH fiftv fivo L.,i. mv a clu.ively entitled to the ue for publication lanKS ana fifty-five saloons. There of ! news dlt-r-aichra credited to It or not were eleven pr.ysicians, tnree drug .i. . -i creou ki.'I 'i11; m-.J; P8ts and twenty-two lawyers. The of publication of special dispatches herein j first rea! estate boom, was noted are also reserved. j about 1863. when the following com- ; nient on the needs of the commu- Subx-ripUoa Rate Invariably in Advance. nity was made by The Oregonlan: tBy Mail. i j -'Eighteen months ago any number ially, Sunday Included, one ear fs.no , j k...... rtt, . . Vl. -,,. , Daily. SundaJ Included, .ii months... 4 .25 vacant houses could be found in Kaily. Sundav Included, three months. 2.2i te City, but today scarcely a Phell tttl&?; (un oaineJ .ufficJent to shelter Daily, without Sunday. ix months... s.M a small family. A census taken in the pop ulation of 4067. The publishers said -a,'L'i wlthout Sunda. -nt i"""0 J (1" that year by the publishers of Sunflay.'o'M ye:::::.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.".'.'.'".' aisuji'rst city directory disclosed a (By Carrier.) ciation of iJbt. The publishers Dally. Sunday Included, one year 19-00 j that while the directory was being Daliy, Sunday Included, three months. 2.2J printed this numbsr lnerorl nrnh Daitv. Sunday Included, one month 75 , l1'""" mis numoer increased, pron- Dally. without Sunday, one year .M , f.bly to 6000. The Census Of 18,60 Daily, without Sunday, three months. J .!."! vj .........j "oi7 ., v.., 1 i'ct Itailt- alth.nl W.inHaL- n mnnth ' v 1 1 V. 1. 1 h. t Rmii Krnri nMtorr.c money I w ere adult white men and 670 adul ordnr. expreMt or personal chck on your white women. The School popula t.on of the district in 1860 was 716 local bank. Ktamns. citn or currency ar ar ofner'i rink. Jie pofttorfivw adurei Id full, including- county and taje. Ptafte Rat 1 to IK pffe. 1 ont; ( HAVK IMYMUIIT. ( n h. .. rnnlc 31 In 4S nUEPl. 2 cnu; so to' 64 paRH, 4 cpnt; h to Su J Partial discontinuance of statu Foreign poMaxe double rat-. tory daylight saving, on the ground Kivtrrn Buine offire vrree & Conk- that It was a war measure only, need Conkhn. steeer bull, ilns. Chic-mo; r- not deter those who have realized re .& Conkiin. Free f'r huliilms. re-' 'ts benefits from practicing day buirding. Portland: San Francisco raire en;aliie. K. J. Bldwrll. KAR1.V PORTLAND. Tle seventieth anniversary of the organization of the Portland city government is a reminder of the n.odesrty as well as of the enterprise of Its founders. There is an inter esting letter in the archives of the Oregon Historical society in which thi tratt is brought out. In com municating to the legislature the desire of the people to obtain a charter for a city government, their spokesman said that if the legisla tors In their wisdom should regard I'ortland's aspirations as too lofty. the people would be entirely con tent with incorporation as a town or village. The law-making body, however, seems to Have been un embarrassed by doubt as to Port land's fitness for full city govern ment. The charter was granted, the first city election was held on April 7. 1851, the city was formally or ganized'some days later, and It has ever since then continued to in crease in Mature. It will be recalled hy only a few pioneers that almost the first ksue that confronted makers of Portland was the establishment of commerce, ty water and land. Coincldentally with organization of the municipal so far as is compatible with their employments. The value of light ar a preventive of disease and stimulant of health is only begin ning to be recognized. A physician addressing a daylight-saving confer ence in New Tork recently said tfiat he believed that by getting up an hour earlier in the morning and go ing to bed an hour earlier at night the average man would add years to his life. - The old adage beginning "early to bed." had a solid foundation on science. The morning, moreover, is the period of choice for the gar dener to swat the weeds, and for a multitude of other swiall duties that men customarily put off until they return from work and then neglect. As a health measure daylight sav ing might well have been enforced, but since it has been repealed a lit t'e more has been left to individual enterprise, that is all. an arrangement with Captain J. it. Couch to dispatch the brig Emma Preston to Canton. This was the first direct communication between Portland and the Orient, although the Asiatic trade had been an Im portant factor in the discovery and early exploration of Oregon. Within a short time thereafter Portland cit izens also bought a large interest in the steamer Gold Hunter, with view of establishing a regular trade with Pan Francisco. The venture waa not a financial success, but it pioneered the way for others which were. One of the earliest enterprises initiated by Portland citizens was a road from the city to the Tua latin valley. There seems to have been a vague means of egress by land, but the annals of the period indicated that it was unsatisfactory. There is. Tor example, ' the record left by a diarist of 1848, In which it is related that travel in the im mediate vicinity of the city was r.eset by many dangers. "The woods." said a writer In that year. "are infested with wolves, panthers, wildcats and bears." The remote fastnesses, four or five miles back from the corner of what are now Front and Washington streets, were unsafe at night, because of these prowling animals. Nine miles was regarded a good day's journey by team, because of the condition of the ground. Walking was popular be cause it was more apt to get the traveler to his destination. The growth of timber over what now constitutes the greater part of the business district, as well as the pres ent residential sections, stirred the amazement of every visitor. Nothing short of the profoundest cptimism could have triumphed over the physical obstacles of the period. Evidence that this was not lacking was found in the early files of the Weekly Oregonian, whose history is practically coequal to that of the municipality. Portland was then described as a town that "has sprung into existence within an incredibly short space of time. The buildings. n.ostly new," said the writer,, "are ot good style and taste, which with their white coats of paint, contrasted with the brown and dingy appear ance of towns generally on the Pa cific coast, give it a most homelike aspect." This was the beginning of community pride, which has been pretty well maintained for almost three-quarters of a century. The editor said of the citizens of Port land: "The property owners, by their industry And liberality, are manifesting an earnest of the fu ture destiny of the place. The in habitants, for intelligence and moral vorth, are not surpassed by any in the eastern states." The population of Portland when the municipality was formally organ ized was in the neighborhood of 500. The settlement had been nearly de populated by the gold rush to Cal ifornia in 1848 and 1849. About this time A. 1 1-ovejoy, one of the original locators on the site where Portland stood, sold half of his in terest in the townsite to Benjamin Stark, who had brought the news of tha settlement of the Oregon boundary question to Portland from the Sandwich islands on the bark Toulon in 1846. William Overton. Lovejoy's partner in the original lo cation, which was selected in 184S and occupied in the following year, had sold his interest to F. W. Pet- lygrove. and Lovejoy and Petty- Srove may be regarded as the pio- ceer town builders, although it was trverton who gave the city its name. The familiar tale of the. tossing of a penny for choice between Portland and Boston is sufficiently authenti cated; but there Is an equally In teresting stcry concerning the con tention that Overton advanced in fa vor of the name Portland. Over ton urged that It was particularly appropriate because the settlement was destined to be the port at which shippers would eventually land all freight coming by sea. Almost im mediately after the first house was completed, building of a dock was IT MIGHT HAVK BEEN 1TORSK. As the American people think of depressed industry, many unem ployed, wage reductions. low prices fcr farm products, prices not yet normal fir other products, railroads without dividends or even interest. ships tied up for lack of cargoes. count. waa more fortunate in his ex periences. He admits that he was greatly amazed by 'observing stu dents who cheerfully entered the service of hotels and restaurants as waiters in order to earn enough dur ing the summer months to keep them during the winter. He noted 'hat these waiters did not seem to te ashamed of the menial duties of their occupation. He adds: ' They, wore 'the waiter'! outfit, served tha guests and removed the dishes from the table, all without the slig-htest em barrassment; but once the meal waa over, they would charge their clothes, some times put on their rraternity insignia, court the (irla who stayed at the hotel, walk with them In the park, play tennis, etc. Then when mealtime came they would agair put on their regulation outfit and be metumorphosed into waiters. This la altogether Impossible in Russia. Our students would live on ten or twenty rubles a mof.th. or even starve, rather than demean themaelves by doing the work of a servant. This probably holds true of other Kuropcvn countries. Here Count Witte discovered a fact about America which he failed do In his quest of eatable food et it does not seem to have oc curred to him that the diet that pro f'uees that kind of democracy must contain about all the elements worth while. in books for juveniles. The tend- ; cities on that day, co-operates with ency has been toward a greater real- ! the communist party and the indus icm, and recognition of the fact that, ' rial workers of the world and wRh much sooner than many of his eld- them will conduct a Campaign for ers suspect, tne youth begins to have the "one big union" from ten prin- ratner definite aspirations. There cipal cities. has been a noteworthy change dur- , During the last three months of n.g the present decade in the char- ' the Wilson administration about 300 scter of the boy's book. The boy , notorious reds from various Euro in business and industry claims more pean countries seized their last attention from his fellows than i chance' to come to this country un would have been thought possible i molested, and 100 of them attended only a litjle while ago. Inclusion in J a meeting in Brooklyn early in a recent publisher s list of an un- March. piecedented number of books that! Amnesty implies that the person convey a good deal of information of j to whom it is granted will cease teal use to the boy in choosing a ) hostile action against the govern- career is significant of several things. 1 ment that grants it; it should work income taxes and a huge national iiy, Portland merchants entered into Klebt, they may think they are hav ing hard times, isut it mignt nave been worse. All the railroads, all the docks and all the coal mines might have been tied up. as was the prospect In Britain, with the number of Idle men more than doubled by the ef fect of the strike on general Indus try, and this might have happened when the country depended on im ports for four-fifths of ita food. The greatest Industrial and min ing section of the . country might have been laid waste by war. as In France, and the nation, already In debt to apparent limit, might have to borrow billions more to pay for reconstruction, and at the same time to keep a great army in the field as a guard against a defeated but uefiant enemy. The people might have been so bitterly divided that every city would have been the scene of fac tion fights marked" by shooting. bombing and Incendiarism, similar to the fights betwe&n the socialists and fascist! In Italy. A large proportion of the popula tion, infected with typhus, without food or with very little, without fuel and with only cotton garments might have been living in caves dug in the hillsides in zero weather, as in Poland. We might have returned to a coun try so ravaged by the enemy that, as in Serbia, whole towns were wrecked and even the graves had been robbed, and that 10 per cent of the popula tion were orphan children. We might have two consecutive crop failures, as in North China, and might have been reduced to eating leaves and bark and to wearing a single cotton garment In midwinter. If we had had a dictatorship of the proletariat, we might have been in the same condition as the people ot Russia. Most certainly It might have been worse, very much worse. I.IBOK AND KUI CATION. Discussion of motives which have aroused labor leaders to the neces sity for spjeflding education among workers Is apt to give less credit than is deserved lo a wlde9pread desire to meet the increasing tech nical requirements of the time. It is a narrow view that assumes that the movement is at bottom a scheme rfor spreading social propaganda of m particular kind. There Is general ealization. which was awakened by the world war, that we are living in an age requiring skilled workmen. and in which, ignorance is at a greater discount than it ever was in history. If there Is an undercur lent of belief, in some quarters that industry eventually is to yield to the nrorker a greater share of its prod ucts, then it is a good sign if workers are seriously trying to prepare them selves to meet the responsibility. The fiiit national conference on workers' education, held recently in New York, showed that no fewer han twenty-four labor educational enterprises' are in operation in twen- y-two cities, and that the number of students enrolled is growing steadily. The co-operation of trades unions and colleges also has a ten dency to prevent the drawing of class distinctions and to establish the prfhciple of democracy in education A judicious distribution of vocational nd humanistic studies is also ob servable in the new curricula, ateo an excellent Indication. The problems of the future will be settled by men and women who have been trained to work and to think. The chances that they will be settled right are largely increased by disposition to regard those who ure educated, not as a kind of aris tocracy whose interests are distinct from those of. the ordinary run of men, but as a group to which all may spire who will make the ef fort. Not only the abolition of Illi teracy, but attainment of the highest possible degree of social and econo mic efficiency, is promised by the movement to close the last gap in tne national educational scheme. One of these is that the tendency to underestimate tha boy's capacity is being overcome. The other Is fnat. being permitted more than :'irmerly to make his choice, with the aid of trained librarians, he Is making a wiser choice than his ti.entors did for him when the Rollo books were on the shelves in every r.ome. The new stories of aviation, written for boys, for example, prom pe to be as accurate in their infor mation as they are thrilling in their adventures. If it cannot be said with truth that the same principle prplles to recent books for girls, the situation is not without hope. The corresponding type of girls' stories has not yet been developed, but we tv.ink it will be. . Femininity is not 1'kely to be neglected in the pres ent age. both ways. Before It is granted to Debs, Berger, Haywood and their l'ke. It would be advisable to as certain their affiliations with the various organizations which fol- ,'owed up their work in behalf of Germany with efforts In support of the third international to cause rev olution. Haywood in particular was sentenced two and a half years ago. but has been at large pursuing his revolutionary activity, and the su preme court confirmed his sentence to prison only a few days ago. To grant him amnesty would make the l;.w a laughing stock to the reds. THE DIET Or A DEMCIKACY. The posthumous memoirs of Count Sergius Witte, minister of finance and premier of Russia under the last of the Czars, illustrate the difficult its that beset a distinguished vis itor in obtaining a true Impression o! any foreign country. Count Witte was one of the commissioners who determined the peace of Portsmouth, which terminated the Russo-Japan ese war, and he writes in the cur rent number of World's Work: During my stay n tha United States I ate only one aecent luncneon and dinner, and that was on fcoard Morgan's yacht, on the day of my visit to West Point. At the hotel we paid fabulous sums for our dinner (30 to 40 rubles per plate), and yet the food waa exceedingly bad. The verdict of a foreign visitor Is a reflection upon not only the hotels of Portsmouth, which may have been overcrowded and too busy to give attention to the minor details of cuisine, but also on those of New York and Washington, whiqh .the count also visited. Yet one cannot forego the wish that before he left the country with so poor an impres slon of American cooking he might have tried elsewhere than at the great hotels. Notwithstanding the prevailing notion that one must always go t-broad for really good cooking, there probably is not a country in the world in which the art has reached a higher state of perfection in the home than in the United States. Wre have no national dish except at Thanksgiving and Christ uias but we make up for that In the variety of local dishes in which our cooks excel. Pie, which Is hard ly known in Europe, is not the only toothsome delicacy to make a trip to America worth while. Within a few miles of Portsmouth Ccunt Witte could have obtained a rial New England dinner that ought to please a. visitor whose national dish is cab bage soup. We suspect that during all his stay he never once partook of southern corn bread, or Philadelphia fcrapple, or chicken a la Maryland. of green corn on the cob, that he missed the joys of currant jelly and cranberry sauce, and that he never tasted mince pie or real homemade planned. This dock, at the foot of : bread. Washington street, completed la 1 la other r&ypects. however, the s IHILDfcKVS BOOKS. The reaction from juvenile books that point a moral Is one of the hopeful signs of the times. Better ways have been found for Inculcat ing the principles of good conduct than were in vogue some time ago. Nothing Is more enlightening as to the development of sound teaching nothing since the first picture books of Comenhis than the im provement in children's literature in the past few decades. But it is also perhaps an indication that children have asserted themselves. Educa tion and the character of juvenile reading have developed contempo raneously; and it is a pleasing fancy that youngsters nowadays are doing their own thinking more than they have ever done before. There appears, "for example. In a recent review of the juveniles of a century or so ago an interestin reference to the type of literature on which boys and girls were regaled in that time. The book always con talned a moral lesson.- "You never told us of your accident before, siid Agnes, addressing George. "Were you much hurt?" "It was very pain ful at the time," replies George, "but it was not worth, while to make mamma uneasy for such a trifle." And Agnes also is made to moralize, Even a visit to the pigsty on the tarm is a temptation to didacticism. Walter wishes that his friend Master Harding might see the pigs "they might cure him of his gluttony.' But, "hush." says Agnes, i"we must rot speak ill of the absent. I.et us rather learn the hatefulness of glut tony, the pleasure of giving to others and living together in love and peace." It will be conceded that a good many morals have been thus com pressed into a single episode, but one cannot help wondering what the boys and girls must have bsen like who were edified by these tales of such unnatural children. And we shall always wonder more at the au thors who wrote those books and at the parents who put them into chil dren's hands. As long as fifty years ago, Thomas Mayne Held began revolutionizing literature for boys, but the way had been prepared for h'm by Captain Mafryatt,. the "Dick ens of the sea," who was among the first to discover that the judgment of a younster was worth taking into account. "I would sooner take the opinion of a child -than that of the critics -on a book of mine," said Marryatt. Reid, who followed him, ha'd a glimpse of the child's true capacity, when he wrote: "That this book may Interest them so as to rival their affections for the top, the ball and the kite, that it may iT.press them so as to create a taste for the most refining study of na ture; that it may benefit them 'by 'legettlng a fondness for books the antidote for idleness and vice Is the sincere wish of their friend, the cuthor." But Reid defeated his own' purpose by interlarding his tales with instructive passages, which were too easily skipped. The art of making the book for boys realistic and educational, without a 'co obvious moralizing, is somewhat later than the time of Reid. Even "Swiss Family Robinson," one of the most popular of children's books of the preceding century, was not s'uiltless of this. The vogue of "Rob inson Crusoe" as a children's book. r-lthough it was written for adults, ought to have opened the eyes of the publishers long before it did. The very good child and the very tad one probably have had their day .11 Ml I. LAN 8 ARCTIC VENT! RE. Donald B. MacMillan's choice of essel in which he will sail in July to explore the Arctic regions Is a vindication of the sound judgment of navigators like William Baffin, who sailed those seas more than three centuries ago. MacMillan's chooner. the Bowdoin. is only eighty feet long not much larger than a good-sized launch and in it the ex plorer expects to visit the western shore of Baffinland, on which no vhite man has ever set foot. Baf fin's vessel, the Discovery, was of ibout thfe same size, and was sim ilarly equipped with apparatus de signed to help in traveling with the ice. The plan of following the line of leat resistance In an ice -pack seems to have been devised long ago. Modern navigators who have dls- arded it have nearly always done so at their own eavy cost. MacMillan will have the benefit, however, of steam engines for emergency work, which neither Baf. f!n nor his contemporaries had, and he will "travel on the country" ii a real sense, for he will depend on his own hunters to supply him with whale and walrus oil for fuel, and also partly for food. The whale- til burning engine Is at least a nov elty. As a last resort. the Bowdoin will have sails to fall back on. In all the ages that men have sailed the seas, no substitute for canvas has been discovered where reliabil ity Is the chief desideratum. There, is small prospect that the voyage will yield any Immediate utilitarian results. It will be un dertaken in the pure joy of achieve ment and in order to add to the sum of the world's knowledge. Some years hence it is possible that, by putting together all that has been learned by adventurers like Peary, MacMillan, Stefansson and the host of others who have opened the way. more practical men will be helped in turning these discoveries to ac count. It Is a present dream of geo graphers, for example, that new and valuable minerals may be found in the vicinity of the pole, and even that fuel reserves may be uncovered against the time when our own sup plies are exhausted. A vast pre liminary labor performed without prospect of reward will be necessary, however, before society can begin to collect its dividends. AMNESTY FOR THE REDS. The plea for amnesty for Debs and j others who are imprisoned for ob rtructing the efforts of the govern ment during the war advances the theory that they are "political pris- cners" a term properly applied to members of one party to civil con Ulct. The war was not a civil con- Met; it was a struggle with foreign rations, in which relatively few American citizens espoused the cause of the foreign enemy under L various false pretenses. They are not political prisoners; iney are traitors, and in other times would have been summarily shot or hanged. Granting for the sake of argument that they are political prisoners and that conclusion of peace with the foreign enemy should carry with it their ralease along with prisoners of war, such amnesty requires that they also end the conflict by be coming loyal citizens of the repub lic. Evidence of that kind is ut terly lacking, and evidence to the tontrarv abounds as to the organ! zations to which Debs, Haywood and others belong and which under var ious names petition for their pardon. Conspiracy and agitation to over throw the constitution of the United States continue under practically the same auspices as during the war by the same elements of the population, though not under- the same name. The reds show the same facility as un ordinary criminal at adopting an alias. The two communist parties having combined as the united com munist party, the latter changed its name to "national defense commit tee," but la said to have received $250,000 from L. C. A. K. Martens. he rejected soviet envoy, to be used in furthering the cause of commu nism. It sent an army of organizers o the large cities, 28 visiting Cleve land. In New York city over 400 meetings were held in one week, 104 on one Sunday. The same group under the name "civil liberties union," - with the familiar name of Roger Baldwin at its head, is agitating for repeal of state anti-revolutionary laws and has employed a large staff of at torneys for the purpose, in order that the reds may pursue their cam paign without fear of prosecution, and proposes laws to put private de ective agencies out of business. It has induced that great American, Senator Borah, to introduce a reso lution for the punishment of police or detectives who interfere with pub lic meetings. A third name under which the same group acts Is the "interna tional council of trades and indus trial unions," which was organized in New York a month ago and is .lopported by all radical militant or ganizations in the world, claiming a u'ROWN RICH ON BANKRLTTCl. One clew to Germany's refusal to pay reparation Is furnished by the description of that country's crazy financial houne of cards that Robert Crozier Long gives in the Saturday Evening Post. Thougji the actual value of Germany is about half of its value In 1)14, its nominal wealth measured in paper marks isin pro portion to the 3300 per cent inflation of the currency that has occurred in the interval. As the currency de preciates with the continued addi tion to its volume, prices continue to rise, and men grow rich by buying in anticipation of further rise in prices and by selling when the riie tomes with the issue of more paper marks. Mortgages arj paid in marks worth one-ten.th of, the money that was borrowed and the valiie of the land is multiplied ten times, while the high price of produce, measured in inflated marks, further justifies the high valuation. Corporations having a pre-war capital of a mil lion marks can pay 100 per cent dividends which are actually only 10 per cent dividends in pre-war money. A pre-war debt of 100. l00 marks Is paid In marks actually worth only a terith as much, and the poorest people in the country ore holders of bonds paying fixed rates of interest, for they receive the number of marks nominated in the bonds," though the value is but a tenth of that intended. Every bull speculator In stocks is a purewln r.er. for continued Inflation will certainly raise prices by depressing the value of the mark. The German government is both willing and the involuntary accom plice of this breeding of paper mil lionaires. It deliberately shows a b:g deficit in its budget in order that it may plead poverty to the al'ies, but it has attempted to bal ance the budget by Imposing new taxes. A long Interval elapses be tween enactment of a tax and its collection. During that interval r:anufacture of more money is nec essary to meet the deficit which con tinues to accrue until the tax is col lected. This new money further de predates the mark, increases gov ernment expenses and makes a new gap between income and outgo which the new tax is unable to close. Thus the hare, Inflation, constantly out runs the tortoise, taxation, and the nore bankrupt the government be comes the richer become the specu lators in its insolvency. The allies call upon Germany to pay reparation claims in gold marks or their equivalent, and to raise sur plus revenue by taxation for that purpose. If Germany were to make such payments, they would represent approximately ten times the amount in paper marks, that Is, for every billion gold marks that Germany paid it would have to collect ten billion paper marks from its peo ple. But the demand that such payments be made every year re quires that the money be paid out cl revenue, which can be raised only by taxation. If revenue should ex ceed expenses, the moneymaking mill would stop, depreciation of the currency would cease and the piling ip of fortunes made out of It would also cease. No long time would pass before marks would begin to rise in value, and then many speculative millions would shrivel up like paper in a furnace. The swarm of new millionaires in Germany and the host of others whose wealth has been artificially enhanced by inflation actually dread the day when their government will drag itself out of the slough of bankruptcy and become solvent. They resemble the mountaineer who 1 as climbed to the top of a precipice which he dare not attempt to climb c'own lest he break his neck. The allies, with their demand for pay ment in real money, call upon Ger mania, shuddering on the brink, to come down, but, her teeth chatter ing with fear, she cries: "Nein! Nein!" is still negative, but it will be well for our future well-being if it is supported by further investigation. . It has recently been discovered that undernourishment Is not con fined to the poor. A survey made in New York revealed the surprising fact that the two classes of chil dren in the public schools most characterized by undernourishment were the two extremes of rich and poor. The former were eating food jn theoretically sufficient quantity but of the wrong kind. Lack of vita mines was quite as destructive of health as mere deficiency In cal ories. The essentials of nutrition, only now beginning to e comprehended, included the mysterious growth substance to which scientists had given a fanciful name. By a long series of experiments it was further disclosed that certain vegetables were rich In these needed elements. Stefansson, the Arctic explorer, went so far as to assert that vitamlnes existed in meats that had not been cooked. In a three years' stay in the polar regions the explorer pre vented occurrence of scurvy among his men by including raw blubber in their ration. The discoveries of Stefansson and the Californian sup plement each other, and greatly ex tend the fteld of possibility in ar tificial vitamine production. In all probability the most signif icant phase of the reported discovery Its application to foods that are now wasted. enormous quantities of vegetables now fail to find a mar ket because of inadequate storage facilities or faulty distribution. This i particularly true of vegetables characterized iiy large bulk in pro portion to 'calorific value. But If it we-e made commercially possible to extract the vitamlnes from food now so wasted, transportation and storage costs on the latter would be infinitesimal and an essential in gredient would be preserved. Th possible economic consequences o 'lie discovery challenge the imagina tion. Its hygienic Import Is even greater. One of the most vexing problems of nutrition may have been solved. Parents who have not found it easy to persuade ttjeir children to eat food now known to be rich in vitamlnes would be able to serve the tatter as a condiment. Conservative scientists will accept this first announcement with due reserve, yet will hope that the ex pectations of the discoverer Hre ful filled. The tabloid meal, once oreamed of by dietitians hut Indef initely postponed because of Its not uble lack of true growth substances, is brought perceptibly nearer. -! people vexed by problems of do mestic help and high prices in restaurants are likely to be receptive io any discovery that gives promise of doing away with formal meals. The Listening Post. Chinese I'lay Haa 40 Acta. ONE of Quon At least one I'nited States minister will live in state befitting his of fice. The government has leased from the Zamoyski family the Blue palace at Warsaw as legation build Ing for Hugh Gibson, minister to Poland. The palace was built early in the eighteenth century by King August for his beautiful daughter, Anna Orzelska, and was afterward converted by Prince Adam Czartory- skl Into a magnificent public library, which contains 57,000 volumes and 7 00 illuminated parchments. It takes its name from a roof of blue metal plating, which was stolen by the Germans. While Poland was .under foreign yoke, men of letters and tcience used to gather there to plan preservation of Polish national life, culture and traditions. The sense of fairness of a people, more than any other one thing, is on trial in Great Britain. The question is whether a single group Is justi fied in disregarding the welfare of all other groups in looking after Its own interests. The chances are that the people will win. Now a professor predicts that In a million years the world will be uled by biped reptiles. Between this forecast and the other one that in a million years the world will have lallen into the sun, people who like lo worry will take their choice. NE of the members of the Suey S club, that unique organ!' ration which lunches' In a Second street Chinese restaurant, described a recent drama he saw In the Chinese theater at Vancouver. B. C, in which appeared the matinee Idols of th American oriental and the most famed beauties of the western Chinese stag The play had 49 acts, began at P M. and ended at 12:30. It dea with the adventures of a prince wh ventured among his subjects, in cognito. as did the Caliph Haroun-al Raschid in the 1001 Night. This brave prince soon lost hi heart to a rich man's daughter an shortly afterwards rescued anothe girl after slaying a rogue and bandit who sought to capture her. 1 the defense of the second girl h carelessly clipped the heads off torn doxen members of the bandit gang and she fell in love with him. II refused to fall for her assorteJ oriental wilts until he heard that hi first love had died. Soon after their marriage th first girl appeared on the scene. Com plications galore ensue, a truly mag nlficent situation for the dramatist. The American solution could be lm aglned. with the first love, divorce and all the rest, but the oriental mind moves direct and the remedy was simple, the prince had another mar riage and the two wives lived happily ever after. it haa been a long time since the Portland Chtnase theater has been In operation, but the scheme of things is the same In all of them. There Is no scenery, the prince's horse Is a long stick with a tassel where the tall should be, the actors live light In the theater In the dressing rooms and slant-eyed stage-door Johnnies Infest the vicinity of the areaway. The Test of Courage. By Grace 1 :. Hall. It was near midnight and Morplieua, goa or dreams, held sonorous sway over the apartment house. Along with the rett the denizens of num ber 17 were "pounding their ears.' when their front door buzzer ripped through their dreams. Hubby, half dazed, answered. Voice from the court Do you want anything? Business of sleepy pondering 1 can t think of a thing. -Now who was It? Wlfie wanted to know, rushed to the window, and heard the mysterious visitor call sov- eral other apartments before leaving. He was short, muffled to the chin in a loose cloak and wore a cap pulled well down over his eyes. A bootlegger soliciting saies? Possibly, for apart ment house gossip says that "moon" can be ordered from the milkman In some places and delivered In a regula tion bottle with the fluid for .the morning mush. This Is the tale of a broken-hearted candymaker, bereft of sweethearts with spring calling. It appears that for two years he courted two fair damsels, strangers to each other, but each knew that there was a rival. He went the old adage of not having two girls in Che same nelghoorhood one better. He had one here, the other In J Seattle. As long as the Puget sound charmer stayed In the north he paid steady attention to the local girl and handled the out-of-town affair through the malls. However, the Portland girl suffered a curtain mount of neglect whenever the Se ttle rival visited here and anguish at other times when the candymaker ook a "business trip" to Washington. Last week came the finale. Evident ly the swain had misjudged his ability, for both girls married, and on the ame day. A fitting punishment most f the women who ,read this will gree. Hopes dashed, the wonderful xperiences of the past two years but memory, a life void of thrills until another conquest is scored. Serves him right, don't dally. The maniacs of the deep and broken jail! Loud crashed the breakers In their crested might; As shrieks of fiends demented seemed the gale, And lightning rent In twain the gown oi nignt; The thunder boomed; a long, deep shuddering breath The buoys sent out to sea their weirdest notes: L'estruetlon rode unbrldlad beasts of death, Men's voices turned to dead things In their throats. The painted, tnn-made palace on the waves Was like a toy that rides upon a p,.l. But underneath gaped atorm-spllt spewing graves. And he who cherished bope was but a fool: Two nifn stood silent on the heaxiiiK deck. And felt the vessel nosing to the be,i ; The breakers raced as runners, neek to neck. And fought to truss the railing, des perately. Then spake the younger uiuii in hoarse tlespnir: "There Is no chance! She settles even now !" And. HHhcn-hui'd. dropped on Ms knees in nraver The sweat of awful hnrm i..- brow : J'pon the other's fare a pallor upresd. He watched the llirhtnu.o i .- ii... blackened sky: 'Since 1 have dared to live." he slowly said. '' cannot see, why I should far tn die." MTU YAPIMMi or 1 Arm. siati ev'ry Organ devoted to new s that bears on th I Hold burglars, divorces and !. i events that sum up the struggle and strife; But I've sat by the hour for Hie past rixmeen weeKs Willi a newspaper creased on mv Ian. Dissecting twelve yards of sterotyped pnni mat reatures (ho Island of Vap. Tis a problem that vexes the statfa- nien at large they cannot mn-t In a way. Just where It belongs as a aoi l.il aa. set, no matter who claims It to-day; Hut 1 glean from such sources 1 ha at command 'tis a question ot "Chinee" or Jan Lnthroned with a pennant of burluit fleslgn for aye on the Island of Yap. I should Judge from thn liamA nf 1 hut Isle of dispute that It's much like a slana: Texas noun. A vulgar expletive applied to the rube wno dwells forty miles from a town. fcut where Is the Texan I'll candidly ask whose Ire would Invite e'en a scrap. For the sake of Infringing unon a darned word such a thing as th Island of Vap. My work Ik noglocted, the farm Iihn run down' for want of attention and cure: But 1 haven't the efforts at leisure at least I haven't the momenta lo spare, or 1 vow by all things I hold sacred In life that 111 henceforth do never a' tau Till reporters with nnnrhim. r. "putting in time" dispose of the Island of Vap. ORR O. SMITH. Adolphe Wolfe, than whom there Is no better citizen, pleaded guilty ct Corvallis Tuesday to his first sight of the college In forty years' resi aenco here. -There are hundreds of others, good Oregonlans, too. total membership of a million. Its aim is to bore into and gain con trol of regular labor unions. It has named a delegate to the, world labor conference to be held at Moscow on May 1, has called meetings In favor of recognition of soviet Kus aJa to be held in New York and other ISOLATING THE VITAMINE. ' If U is true that a California scientist has succeeded In isolating the elusive vitamine, which has long defied identification, an important step has been made toward conser vation of our vital resources. An alysts have heretofore been forced to content themselves with negative evidence. They knew that in, ab sence of certain life-giving prin ciples, food failed, to be completely r,ourishing; the nature of the miss ing substance, however, they con fessed that they did not understand. Now the investigator in question says that he has discovered ft and extracted it from vegetables. The scientist, who Is also a phy sician, used yeast In his experiments in the manner in which tons ,f pitchblende are used "before a grain of radium is found. Yeast was em ployed because it is the rankest growing vegetable known. He was attracted by the theory that .since a seed will germinate when car ried over from one season to anoth er, it was possible that the veg etable produced from the seed pos sessed within itself a living prin ciple. Having isolated the vitamic cell from a quantity of yeast, he continued , his experiments with higher orders ot vegetables. He found by microscopic examination Alpha Orion, just discovered to be fabulously larger than our own sun is respectfully reminded that size Isn't the only thing that counts. The mastodon became extinct long ago. Lut the microbe still survives. Congress may yet discover that the unanimity with which every body agrees that the present tax laws ure bad may not mean a similar one ness of opinion on the kind of tax we ougnt to nave. - Commanoer Evangeline Booth says that prohibition has eliminated the Salvation Army's greatest prob lem, but even at that she does not contend that the millennium has ar rived. Mrs. Einstein says that an under standing of her husband's theory of relativity is not necessary to her happiness. Nor, for that matter, to that of most of the rest of us. We are living in an age so skep tical that a man can't get himself believed even when he confesses that he is the murderer wanted in a great New York mystery. Secretary Weeks' estimate that the government needs $17,000,000 will discourage the notion that there is no need of taxes just because hos tilities have ceased. There is one Bergdoll, now In Leavenworth, who will find It abso lutely useless to try to persuade an army officer to let him out to look fcr a burled treasure. The feat of stumbling over a match la believed by many to be impossible, but It does not take more than a trifle to upset the equilibrium of most humans. The smallest slip may be fraught with the direst consequences. Heretofore ITiuoh discussion of the gum evil has dealt with the accretions under restaurant seats and tables, but how about that sowed on marble floors. One large juicy gob adhering to the slick maxble floor In an office building threw a big iyan In faster time than Ted Thye'a record. The gum ambush was In front of an elevator and one edge of the gum was lightly rolled up possibly half an inch above tho floor. .Mr. .Man hit It and took a header, lout his glasses and loosed a flow of eloquence seldom equaled. Harry S. Sheldon, who will be beat remembered as the author of "The Havoc" of some seasons back, has written another play. "The Girl or the Dollar" Is its title, and H. II. Frazee Is producing It with Taylor Holmes in the featured role. The piece opened In Elmlra a week ago and is scheduled for a week of one-night stands through Pennsyl- I.T.i.t;iBl.K. If they were callod away, those whom 1 love And 'twere my lot to Journey on alone Thn' pitied and deemed lonely, yet unseen With me a multitude of memories wou.d linger ever my companions true: For 1 have lived and loved, plucked ruses red, Shared saered ties of home himI motherhood A voice has sung angelic strains to me And heurts responding have been lonil and true; And e'er assuaging should fond mem ories cling Past hours recalled by a cherished flower. Or voices murmuring In a harp string's note, If fevered were my brow the passing breeze Would waft caresses from dear un seen hands And circling mountains seem cntwin- Ing arms Uplifting from the weariness of earth. K'en.p- the earth Is mindful of the un, , . , Thus ever should I be of my beloved. Alone? Nay. not alone, Intangible Yet ever near, those whom 1 love shalt be. JA.V'ETTU MARTIV. TUB DOI.MtKVINTIC Bi;i:. 1 buzz. I hum and I whir; My wings like an airplane drone. From each fragrant bower I sip the wild flower. And ply the fair mejdows alone. 1 sway, I swing and I swirl Whers tall yellow sunflowers nod; Inhale a deep s-wlg From each perfumed twig, And dance on the lithe goldenrod. I live without duty or toll In vales that are fair beyond dream; I tread my feet Upon clover blooms sweet. And bathe In the sun's golden beam. I feel no pangs of remorse, The haphazard way I exist: vanla on Its way to Chicago, where I'm "bum" as you see, ! that the vitamines of the latter were similar in appearance and action to those of yeast. He admits that he still knows as little about the true nature of the vitamine as other scientists know about radium. He knows only that it reacts io a certain way to physiological tests. The jgroof t Kentucky has more colonels than any ther state, which may be one reason why latest federal reports give her national guard a low rating. Spring acts as If It wasn't sure whether it was ready to, take off its hat and stay a while. There is a blizzard raging'in the middle west. Now isn't it good to be living in Oregon? The day of ultimate ultimatums draws nearer in the British strike s'tuation. When a farmer begins to make money ho culls his farm a ranch. k Is booked for an engagement of ten weeks at the Cort theater. . P:oof that spring Is here can be had by any visitor to Lownsdale .square, across from the courthouse. Hero Is the open-air forum and debating club for the park loafer, and the assembled thinkers do not hesitate to handle the most abstruse subjects. Ordinary topics such as prohibition, socialism, prices, etc., are too trifling, they go la for Einstein, world partition and manifestations of spiritualism. Half a dozen groups will be engaged In as many varied discussions and th pondering Intellects move from crowd to crowd and seem equally skilled at Jawbone exercise on any topic. At The Oaks, Columbia beach and Council Crest they are setting the stage for the summer, putting new paint on the merry-go-round animals, varnishing' the cars on the roller coasters, darning the rips In the bath ing suits and repairing the ravages of the Idle season. In about a month the crowds will begin flocking to the parks for amusement and the golden-! . . , ii, , . i 1 tnroatea Dauynoo men win ue on nana with Innumerable lures to draw the holiday dime from its snug pocket. Right now the park managers 'are busy letting their concessions and tbe followers of this form of amuse ment are preparing to reap their an nual harvest. THE SCOUT. A hum bum (ble) bee. When called on to work, I resist, MILTON C. ARMSTRONG. THOSK STARVING O.M-IN. America, look out beyond Your doors of plenty, paths of rape, Behold the famlne-strleken lands Rndurlng untold agonies. Within those age-old Chinese walls Death stalks with sullen tread the while, And time brings naught but want and woe To little ones who never smile. How can you be unmindful long Of hungry eyes In mute appeal? let brotherhood be understood. Be swift to hearken and to heal. America, It is for you With Christian heart and fruitful sod To save the souls who cry for bread To know and do the will of Hod. FLORA E. BREC1C. MAID O' HI v iri;ai. You grew In your father's cottage. My little Maid o' Dreams. Like a rose on its stem a-bloomlng To brighten the world, It seems. Through childhood's happy springtime You were my playmate sweet; The charm of a thousand fancies; The guide of my restless feet. The world then came between us And thrust us wide apart. But. dear, to the end of the uttermost You are graven on my heart. SELMA RICHARDSON. Rainier, or. ,