THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 1. 1922 ESTABLISH EI H HENRY I.. PITTOCK. publlia-"1 by The uregonian Publishing Co., 13o Sixth hHrel. Portland. OreKon. C. A. SIUBDKX, B. B. PIPER. Maiuccr. Editor. The Oregonlan is a member of the Asso ciated p ess. The Associated Press Is n ousively entltleJ to the use for publicatlol rf all n-ws llapiv..e credited to it or not otherwise crediL-d In this paper and also 'he loca, news puu.ished herein. Ail riaht i.f publijiitton o-: peclal dispatches herela are also reserves. holmeriptinn Kutei Invariably In Advance. .By Mail.) .T ;:S23.; SXS::r,"h. i Hiiy. a i iciay in j 'ffti, tnree inonin. . 't Tyd-oryen.rn,.h:: :o Jmlly, without Sunday, si months .... 3.'.'1 laily, wtlnout Sunday, one month .... 0 Weekly, one year InC Sunday, one year 2.u4 W Carrier.) I .ally, Sunday Included, one year ID.Ofl IHlly. Sunday incuded, three months.. 2.1:3 J'aily. suiday Included, one montn 1 'ally. W'Miout Su.iday, one year 7. 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The precise issue has perhaps never been earnestly raised in Oregon be fore, though we doubt not that many bill's received a majority of 1 living members in the past but without comment were held to have failed because they did not have approval of a majority of the full membership To recite again the situation: The membership of the Oregon senate is fixed by law at 30. It is provided in the constitution that bills shall have passed when approved by a ma jority of the elected members of each house. ' When the senate convened there was a vacancy due to the death of one member. The exposition measures after having been passed by the house were passed by the senate by a vote of 15 to 14. The question is whether 29 or 30 consti tute the elected membership of the senate In such circumstances. If 29, the measures passed; if 30, they did not. If it be true that 15 out of 29 liv ing members cannot enact legislation then we have a condition rarely, if ever, possible under parliamentary procedure wherein a majority can block any act. And if the rule which thus applies to' majorities applies also to quorums, then 11 members of the senate by resigning can wholly block the functioning of the legisla ture. In other words, 'a quorum would then be 20, and if only 19 members were left there would be nothing doing. A bloc of 11 senators could hold the threat of resignation over the majority and virtually have the majority at the mercy of the bloc. On th other hand, if a constitu tional majority is a majority of the members who have not died or re signed, and if 27 resigned, the three left could logically transact business, for two would be a quorum and two a majority. Or the membership might even be reduced to one man and this one man would have a voice In legislation equal to that of the 60 members of the lower house. Whatever theory be adopted there is opportunity for extravagant specu lation, but as a matter of fact the illustrations given are not so extrava gant as they may seem, in view of what Oregon legislative history ac tually reveals. It has been indicated herein that the rule generally observed has prob- . ably been that a constitutional ma jority is a majority of the full mem bership. Specifically the legislature in the past . has assumed that a quorum is two-thirds of the full membership of house or senate, as distinguished from two-thirds of the members living and In good standing. The legislative session of 1868 was a bitter partisan affair in Oregon. It Is not necessary now to relate the details of differences that arose, ex cept to say that after the session had been prolonged to 43 days- the gen eral appropriation bill had not been passed, but it appears was withheld by the democratic majority to force acceptance of a plan to re-canvass the vote by which Governor Woods had been elected In 1868. On the forty-third day 12 republicans re signed from the house. Three others submitted their resignations but they were not. accepted by the governor and were- withdrawn. The house, however, expunged the names of the last three from the rolls and bodily ejected one of the three when he sought to answer the roll. As the full membership of the house in those days was 44, the resignation of 12 and the virtual expulsion of three more left less than two-thirds of the members on the roll. It -was assumed that there was no quorum, the members -went home and there was no money for conducting state business for two years. It Is ait Interesting phase that the Oregon senate, which then conceded that it was helpless to transact busi ness, reached this conclusion only a few years after a similar issue had arisen in congress where It was de cided in a wholly different way. In cident' to the civil war congress lost numerous members by withdrawal and by secession of the southern states. The national constitution re lating to the quorum of house and senate is similar in wording to the provision in the Oregon constitution, except only that the national consti tution fixes a quorum at a majority of each house whereas in Oregon it is two-thirds of each house. While a majority of both house and senate apportionments were elected and sworn, the reduced mem bership soon made it necessary to de termine what number constituted a quorum. In both houses it was ruled that a quorum was not a majority of the apportionment but a majority of the members elected and sworn. Congress apparently transacted busi ness on that theory but the rule was not so definitely promulgated as to 'cover all circumstances until 1890. Since then the rule in the house has been that a quorum after the house is once organized "consists of those members chosen, sworn and living whose membership has not been ter minated by resignation or by action of the house." The senate rule Is virtually the same. Had the Oregon house in 1868 fol lowed the precedent set by const ess under a similarly worded constitu tion, the 29 members left after the resignations and expulsions could have continued in session and even by the stricter interpretation of a constitutional majority they could have passed the appropriation bill by the affirmative votes of 23 of them. It may be suspected that the legisla ture in that year, however, 'was not looking for precedents or loopholes. The big- idea of each party, after 43 days of conflict, seem to have been to invoke a calamity on the state and blame the other party for it. Unlike the s'a'e constitution the aUonaI constitution does not define i me majority necessary to pass laws Only from the provision which em- powers the vice-president to cast the deciding vote in case of a senate tie, and those provisions requiring a two thirds vote in special instances, si:h as on impeachment,' may it be In ferred that only a simple majority is required to pass bills. And in a de cision of the supreme court, sus taining a ruling by Speaker Reed, the court uses this language: "And here the general rule of all parlia mentary bodies is that when a quor um is present, the act of a majority of the quorum is the act of the body itself." Were it not for a provision found In the Oregon constitution, which is absent from the federal constitution, there could hardly be doubt as to the validity of the exposition bills, in view of the rule recognized by both. congress and the United States su preme court. The Oregon section in question is: "A majority of all the members elected to each house shall be necessary to pass every bill or joint resolution ..." If that provision means that a majority of the senate necessary to pass a bill or Joint resolution is 16, no matter how many members have died or resigned, and if the congressional rule as to what constitutes a quorum Is safe guidance, then in this state senate membership might be reduced to 15 by death or resignation, and 15 or even two-thirds of them could meet but could not transact any impor tant business for lack of the 3 6 votes necessary to pass bills. But the con stitution is to be literally construed. If it presents incongruities, it is sub ject to easy amendment if we do not like them. This discussion, in any event, is not intended to support or combat the validity of the exposition measures, but to submit a few mat ters of historical interest to these who like to mull over unsettled Issues. A NEW ORDER OF MERIT. In bestowing upon Georges Carpen- tier the Order of Physical Kducation, the French government on January 1 will do more than recognire a boxer who has proved his merit in the pugilistic ring. The honor goes to him also because he has created a new interest in the subject of ath letics in general. It is said that this has already made a noticeable im pression upon the health of the French. It Is a mistake to suppose that the body can be neglected with impunity. even on the theory that more time ought to be devoted to the develop ment of the soul. The inclusion of physical training in the curricula of elementary and secondary schools of Oregon, which has been prescribed by law since 1919, marked a step in advance for education as a whole, and no state in which the method has been tried would surrender the advantages thus gained. They are stated with great fullness in the Oregon law. "This course of in struction," says the statute, "shall consist of such activities as will pro mote correct physical posture and bearing, mental and physical alert ness, self-control, disciplined initia tive, sense of patriotic duty and spirit of co-operation under leader ship." The fact of importance as to physical training is that it not only benefits those who participate in it. but also the whole people. Our instinctive admiration for physical prowess, which we manifest in a thousand ways, is based on a sound principle. We know that th - adage, "mena sana in corpore sano," con tains an eternal truth, France will yet have occasion to rejoice that the new order has been established. If it stimulated interest only in professional athletics, not so much could be said for it, but the announcement of the forthcoming decoration of France's physical idol says that it is expected also to result in a revival of outdoor sports of every kind. The nation which pos sesses a robust and healthy citizenry is equipped to solve the problems of peace as well as those of war. MODERN ALCHEMY. Professor Irving Fisher of Yale, whom the news dispatches' report to be on his way from London to Berlin to investigate a rumor that a Ger man chemist has discovered a method of making gold synthetically, is undoubtedly aware of the exist ence of a vast volume of literature dealing with the general subject of the philosopher's stone. Of all the pursuits of scientists, empirical and philosophic, none has more deeply engaged them than the romantic ad venture which seemed to promise something for nothing which only goes to show that scientists are but human beings, after all. "Modern chemistry," says an en cyclopedia writer, "places metals in the list of elements, and denies the possibility of changing an Inferior metal into gold." But even as the words are written, new authorities assert that the possibilities in this direction have not been exhausted, and that perhaps synthetic gold is only a matter of time although they are careful not to say how much time. The great physicists are doing a good deal to resolve what were formerly regarded as the orig inal elements into still new elements, and under their researches and ex periments science becomes, if not more satisfying, at least less dog matic than it used to be. We are co longer content with the old for mula for air and we discover strange and previously unthought-of ingredi ents in gases and in the spectrum of the sun. There is no finality about science nowadays, so that Professor Fisher does well, if he has time to spare, to look into that exceedingly interesting tale from Berlin. Quite beside the alchemy of the problem, and beyond it, is the hu man equation involved. The motiva ting idea of the seeker of a synthetic process for making gold out of dross of course, Is that he will thereby vastly add, first to his own wealth, perhaps afterward to that of the world. But the curious anomaly is created that if he does succeed, he will defeat his own purpose, unless he is able to guard his secret from the rest of the world and unless he exercises a self-repression wholly ab normal and not at all to be expected from men of his type. For a flood of cheap, easily made gold would be .the reverse of a boon to the world just now, and it might be the one thing needed to force us to take refuge in the new economic doctrines of Henry Ford. It is hiore credible, however, that even if the chemist has explored a new field in synthetic chemistry he has discovered nothing of practical value, because all profit is likely to be absorbed in the cost of extraction. This was so with the extraction of gold -from sea water, which was, demonstrated to be theoretically practical a quarter of a century ago. and more recently in diamond syn thesis and that of "pearls. There are gold mines today in which the metal exists in its native state but which o not pay for the working. It is a violent assumption that gold will be nianufdeured more cheaply than it is mined an assumption that in view of the catastrophe which the discov ery would invite we shall hesitate to make. 1 There is nevertheless a good rea son for continuing the work that the ancient alchemists began. It is not to be forgotten that practically all that we know about chemistry, with its many ramifications in every hu man field, is the result of the labor of these old-time empiricists. It is not possible to overestimate the good that may be done as the by-product of continued search. It is to these side issues, indeed, that we shall look for whatever good that comes out of I the effort as a whole. WHAT PEOPLE READ. There is a good deal of significance In the result of a recent "referen dum" conducted by the Outlook to ascertain the taste of the average American in reading. Rudyard Kip ling stands well at the head, with Booth Tarkington second, and H. G. Wells (doubtless in part because of the vogue of his "Outline of His tory") third. Among the first twenty five there are few that would be classed by an impartial jury as not worth while, Harold Bell Wright, be ing among the few, and there is a dis tinct refutation of the widely ac cepted idea that readers of the pres ent day strongly incline toward the morbid and curious or eternal tri angle and the psychology of sex. Henry Van Dyke, for example, Is close behind Wells, and Joseph C. Lincoln, Mary .Roberts Rinehart and W. J. Locke are well up on the list. We can hardly find fault with a ballot that ranks Joseph Conrad a high as eleventh, and surely not with one that accords Abe Martin only a single vote. John' Galsworthy, George Bernard Shaw, Winston Churchill and Edith Wharton, to mention others among the first fif teen, are sane and wholesome and corrupting neither of morals not good taste. There is nevertheless a good deal more to be said concerning taste in reading than is revealed by a mere list of dominating preferences, as R. D. Townsend, author of the article in the Outlook, points out. "The scattering vote was amazing," he says, and givesaparticulars. In addition to sixty-four authors who scored more than twenty points each. no fewer than 228 received some votes, making 292 "favorite authors" in all. The force of the figures will be more apparent from the fact that the voters numbered but a thousand. Among the millions of buyers of books and patrons of libraries in the whole country, the total of favorites must be truly amazing. It is not probable that a list of a thousand is even fairly representative, nor is It claimed that It is, although it prob ably .is reasonably indicative of cer tain things, as for example, that the minority, too, have good taste and that an excellent list might be made up of those who failed to attain high points in the competitive score. Among these are Leonard Merrick, William McFee, St. John Ervine, John Drinkwater, Alice Brown, G. A. Birmingham, Arthur Benson, George K. Woodberry, Kate Douglas Wiggin, W. K. Thayer, Romain Rolland and Eden Phillpotts. It-is curiously illustrative, too, of the fact that readers really care less for the personality of the author than they do for his work as they know it that in a referendum which was supposed to have been confined to "living authors" a considerable number who are no longer living re ceived votes. Tolstoy was among them, and so were Henry James, Mrs. Humphry Ward, John Fdx, Edward DeMorgan and E. P. Roe. To their readers these authors evi dently still live, which is perhaps as sincere a compliment as could be paid them, while there is-something to be said as to Conan Doyle's ca? pacity for vivifying his characters when "Sherlock Holmes" appears as the favorite "living author" of one of the Outlook's electors. With 292 favorites among only a thousand readers, as indicated by the test in question, one is able to glimpse the difficulties that librarians face In meeting the demands of a public even less aristocratic in its predilections. The problem of giving intelligent service without resorting to offensive censorship is enormously increased by the multiplicity of books, only a portion of which can be procured within the average library's means, and even the list in the Outlook, encouraging as it is on the whole, leaves something to be desired. What shall be said, for illustration, of the vogue of Harold Bell Wright, with total sales of 7,250,000 volumes to his credit, when there are so many others to choose from? It is a situation that obviously caanot be ignored by librarians, how ever they might wish that it were otherwise, and so many "campaigns of education" in matters of reading have failed that the bravest may well despair. It is interesting to note that the Oregon state library, though earn estly seeking to supply the wants of a wide variety of lovers of reading, has taken a stand upon this very issue, and that it usessthe works of Wright, which are only typical of a considerable class, as the test for a recent explanation of its policy of restriction in certain insrances. Some time ago Owen Wister wrote in the Atlantic an article on "Kuack Novels and Democracy," an extract from which the library now finds pecu liarly applicable to present-day con ditions: i Speaking of the author's poor Kngllsh, he quotes: "He doesn't like for anyone to see the picture"; "I like for people to hear my music":. "I would be very glad for such an engagement": "Neither Mr. King nor Mr. I.elirange are at home"; " 'Ti not s .r. from ) r w?ihr. "Ihe. tits oC the World." . "The Eytes J of the World" Bathers Into Its 464 pages. I think, ail the elements of the quack novel; one element appearing rather more con spicuously than in any of Mr. Wright's preceding stories. This is the sen&isnus suggestion, the carnal preoccupation, the somewhat frequent (but scrupulously pious) reference to illicit sexual relations, Such is the typical quack novel: staler-distorted a sham, a puddle of words. . . . 1 have taken yu wading through this mess of mildewed pap, because unless you touched It, smelt It, tasted It yourselves, how could you know the flavor . . . ? So it is possible, it eems, since not all the books that are published can be purchased out of a limited fund, to guide the popular taste somewhat, even though such a policy runs counter to the "best-seller" idea. There are other reasons for restrict ing buying, all of "them wise. The book that deals with the sins and vices of the idle rich, for ilKistra tlon, is demoralizing, not alone be cause it panders to a taste for vice, but also because it creates unworthy emulations and fosters a wrong sense of proportion; the stories that make heroes of .criminals are obviously unfit, even as studies of "life as it is." means of Justifying books that pic ture life as it never was and prob ably never will be. The recurrence of Wright's name among lists of "favorite authors" would doubtless an excuse much overworked as the be less observable if a similar rule were followed more generally, and the result would be attained less by suppression than by the offering of worthier author In its place. A SEW MKXXOMTE INVASION. The 'advance guard of a great Mennonite immigration from Can ada to the southern states, which has just'arrived in Alabama, brings with it a new problem for the public schools. The peculiarities of the sect are not objectionable on the whole, although the strong pacifism of its members and their supposed leaning toward Germany made a good deal of trouble for them in Canada during the war, but there is a prospect that sooner or later they will come in conflict with the estab lished customs of their new home. For ' "non-conformity with the world" is one of the cardinal doc trines of the particular branch which is now overflowing the bor der and thee are extremes to which, even in a free country, non conformity cannot profitably go. Menno Simon, who founded the sect, was born in the year that Co lumbus discovered America, and thei vitality of his teachings is shown by the circumstance that the church has so long survived its beginning, more than four centuries ago. But it will be wondered whether not a little of this has not been due to thrift and industry which, along with adult baptism and other the ological matters, are part of the Mennonite creed. The Mennonites, wherever they have settled, have proved hard workers, excellent farmers and honest folk who pay their debts. But on the other hand tHey are clannish in unusual degree they contribute little or nothing to the social development of the com munities in which they reside and they not infrequently incur the hos tility of local authorities because of their opposition to "man - made laws." These newcomers originally planned to settle in Mexico, where a large tract of land was bought for the purpose, but they seem to have changed their minds in favor of the United States. In view of their clash not long ago with the Canadian au thorities because of their insistence on conducting their schools "with out molestation or restriction," it will be wondered whether there was not a careful design in their selec tion of a home in the region which pays least attention to education t any state in the I nited States. But even here the immigrants are likely to encounter the campaign for the Americanization of aliens. They are bound to be included in the sphere of influence of the American school. and it is pretty well established that the plan and scope of our schools will be dictated by the American people themselves. LO AND THE AUTOMOBILE. We get a glimpse of the rapidity with which the Indian is being as similated, after the many years in which we almost despaired of civil izing him, from a paragraph in the report of the United. States board of Indian commissioners for the fiscal year 1921. The point under discus sion is the propriety of freeing Lo from all government restrictions in the management of his property, and the question arises whether he will be prudent, thrifty and sagacious if left to his own devices. As to this. the report says: The automobile has intruded lta compel ling allurements Into the scheme of sen. aratlng the new citizen of Indian blood from his property. It seems to possess the same irresistible fascination for the Indian as It has for his white neighbors. To own oni seems to be the particular desire of a ma jority of the tribesmen who have been placed in possession of the lands . and money which had been held in trust for mem py tne government. i-ormeriy tne craving for alcoholic stimulants and love of gambling were regarded as dominating causes In the impoverishment of Indians. But evidently In these days gasoline to a large degree has usurped bad whisky, pneumatic tlrea have displaced the gal loping hoofs of racing ponies and a book of road maps has been substituted for the poker deck as the active elements In the process of transferring the ownership of the broad acres and bank accounts . of newly citlzenized Indians to their white neighbors. In this respect it will be seen that the Indian does not differ vastly from the white. A good deal of thrift literature has been written and mostly wasted at one time or another in efforts to persuade white men to buy necessities first, then put a nest-egg in the savings bank, and postpone the acquisition of luxuries until after those matters have been attended to. On the whole nothing much has come of it. Consequently, although the Indian bureau has de veloped a wide difference of opinion among its field agents upon the issue whether Lo is ripe for the experi ment in self-determination, we have a strong leaning toward the viws of thi minority, who say that "they are in favor of releasing from govern ment supervision some of the young, capable .Indians, now spending their time in idleness, on the ground that it such Indians lose their land and money they will be compelled to go to work, and will thus be forced to begin a new life which may lead to self-supporting Independence." The fact of Importance is not that the In dian sells his land and buys a high powered automobile with the pro ceeds, but that in no other way can he acquire the independence and ini tiative that are so necessary to his ultimate spiritual and material sal vation. Separated from land and cash, but retaining youth and health. the young buck will be no worse off after his gasoline Mskthan many a wniie wan nas ueen who Has ma- I tured into a thrifty and useful citi zen. There is,' however, a pleasant me dium between the policy Impetuously put in practice about 1917, which i carried to its logical conclusion would have freed all Indians from government supervision, and that which would Veep them perpetually under the governments,! thumb. Three-quarters of a century of of ficial misunderstanHing of Indian character has created an obligation which the white man's government is still bound to respect, and to turn some Indians loose to shift for them selves would be a plain act of in humanity. But with the next gener ation it ought to be different, for. as the board points out, "the solution lies in the education of the Indian children." Here is a tangible policy, and one that ought, in thirty years or less, to effect a final separation of the tribesmen from government control. About twenty-five Indian children of school age are now not attending school, largely for lack of facilities, as the report makes plain. The want of foresight which congress shows in failing to make provision for more Indian schools is indicated by the following: It seems obvious that real economy will be found in the use of larger appropria tions now for Indian .education, because more money means more school facilities for more children and the greater the num ber of children of the present generation we can put in the Indian and other schools the sooner the day will come when there will be no supervised Indians, and. conse quently, no bureau of Indian affairs. If the Indian bureau half a cen tury ago had exhibited a .small part of the wisdom here compressed into a sentence, there would be no Indian problem today. . EARLY GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES. Twenty-five years ago, as was re corded in The Oregonian at the time, an effort was initiated by cer tain residents of Douglas county to change the name of Cow creek, sub stituting therefor the more melli fluous appellation "Azalea," in honor of a beautiful wild flower in digenous to that region. It is sug gestive of the great difficulty with which people are induced to re linquish names that are fraught with early though sometimes for gotten associations that the name Cow creek persists to this day, al though the post-office in that lo cality, which is named Azalea, still stands as a partial triumph for their cause. But we are reminded also that Cow creek this particular one of many Cow creeks in Oregon has meanwhile almost lost its identity through confusion of local geo graphy by people less familiar with the contour of the country than the old-timers were. The so-called Cow creek canyon, as a well-marked de file on the Pacific highway is called is not Cow creek canyon at all, but Canyon creek. The Cow creek valley through which the highway leads has a wide and pleasant vista, which the automobilist leaves when he passes the site df old Galesville. The real Cow creek canyon begins in the vicinity of Riddle and ends near Glendale, and used to be famous as a terror to railroad men. Twenty five years of intermittent effort have failed to change the name of the creek or the canyon and there is no brighter prospect or success today. Only occasionally did the old timers, engrossed in the serious business of making a living under dificultles, give much thought to the cultural or even the historic aspects of a name. There are as a matter of fact at least seven Cow creeks in Oregon, each named, as we may suppose, after some local incident in which livestock was involved. There are at least four Antelope creeks in the state, half a dozen each of Camp, and Mill, and Pine, and Dry and Cottonwood and Elk creeks. Standard atlases list sir or seven Bear and Beaver creeks as well, but counting them all, little and big, there is probably at least one in each of two-thirds of the counties of the state. Not much originality was displayed in the early nonien clature. The names of animals are apt to predominate in the regions where hunting was good in pioneer times. Antelope, Big Sheep, Deer, Rabbit and Wolf creeks, abound. Eagle, Fish, Goose and Grouse creeks testify to" the prevailing want of imagination of the folks who named them. There may be the material for a story in the naming of Mule creek, but if so it has been lost to history. Rattlesnake creeks meandering across the landscape here and there tell of no uncommon phenomena, for there is a Rattle snake craek in almost every county of every western state. The legends out of which these names arose are quite commonly for gotten. There was an interesting dis pute some years ago over the origin of the name of Three Lynx creek. one party to the controversy con tending that it grew out of the loss by a surveyor of three links from a chain. The other held that an early settler had so named it because he had come upon three wild cats while hunting there one day. A board of savants gave the matter weighty consideration and decided the dual issue of orthography and geography in favor of "lynx." The true sig nificance of "Skookum" creek is ap prehended by few. "Skookum," in the Indian tongue, commonly means strong" or "stout," in the sense of the physical attribute which the In dians most admired, but it also was applied to powerful spirits from the other world, and it is to the fancied presence, particularly at night, of these skookums or wraiths, that our Skookum creeks and lakes in all probability owe their designa tions. There are two Lookingglass creeks in Oregon, the names of I r ...... ... which in all likelihood nave widely different origins. The one on the divide between Umatilla and- Union counties undoubtedly was called after the famous Indian chieftain of that name; but we may suppose that the Lookingglass creek in Douglas county originated in some , story about a mirror, for the fame of the celebrated Nez Perces warrior had no association with southern Ore gon. We note an occasional variation in the regions first explored by miners. as, ior example, uoos ana turry counties. Euchre creek, not far from Sisters rocks, has a peculiarly mining flavor, and so docs Pistol river. There probably is a tale be hind the naming of Calamity creek. which historians have failed to set down. An effort was made about half a century ,ago, if memory serves, to change the name of Stink- ngwater creek, on esthetic grounds. but it failed in Oregon, although Montana once succeeded in substl- tutlng ivuoy as me name oi a turn- ilarly sulphufbusly evil - smelling stream. In our researches into the origin of the appellations of our creeks and rivers, we look to the , Indians in vain for aid, for the In- j dian had no names for streams as such. Aboriginal fancy, usually ac- ' t!'n onAiiffii uMAma tn ti-.iva hAPn tin. ! equal to that particular task. A curious mystery attends the early name of the peaceful stream now called Mary's river, which Cor vallls has made famous. Its mod ern name is explicable enough, but this in all probability dates back no farther than the early forties. Trior to that time the fur trappers and. first settlers had given names to many of the Important streams, ai they did to the Pudding river, which dates back more than a century, and to Long Tom, which was the Lum tum of three-quarters of a century or more ago. Somewhere In the broad valley of the Willamette, as Duflot de Mofras, the French ex- piorer, ana Joel Palmer, the pio neer, have recorded, a Mouse river was known to the early residents. If, as some suppose, this was the stream now known as Mary's river, it appears to present one of the fevi instances in which the name of a stream has been successfully changed and the record of that change has been lost. Lord Riddell, the British journal ist who has been attending the dis armament conference, returns home, he says, under the impression that, the Americans are in a fair way to become the politest people on earth, thus affording a pleasing variation fforn the old practice of foreign vis itors of mentioning only the things they find fault with and wholly overlooking the pleasanter phases of American life. Yet a little reflec tion convinces us that Lord Rid dell's praise is probably wholly sin cere and founded on close observa tion. There Is quite as much real politeness, we think, in America as in any other country on the globe, if by politeness we mean willingness to be of service to others and not only the superficial graces in which a pioneering people have been too busy to perfect themselves. But this opens the entire question of what politeness consists of, as to which there are many opinions. Lord Riddell evidently alludes to the spirit rather than to the out ward semblance, and with his con ception we are content.- The demand- for a further three years' restriction of alien immigra tion seems far more than reason able, in the light of the statement of the commissioner of immigration that more than 800,000 aliens en tered the country in the twelve months preceding the enactment of the present law, and in view of the figures showing that immigration reached a total of more than 400, 000 in the calendar year of 1920. The largely mythical character of the "melting pot" was revealed under the scrutiny of war conditions and it is clear that we have many problems to solve before compli cating them further, as unrestricted immigration- would be sure to do. We-ought at least to have time to put the machinery of Americaniza tion in working order, to assimilate all the elements now in the country and to complete the plans now on foot for eliminating illiteracy among the native born. The American Le gion, which champions the three- year movement, would do well to make it thirty years instead. The new revenue law contains 1404 sections, the most impressive of which to the average man will be those extending the exemption to folks with small incomes and re pealing the so-called "nuisance taxes." The purchasing power of the dollar is increasing in one respect at least. According to the news from Moscow it will now buy 145,000 rubles, by comparison with a little over two roubles five years ago. Sooner or later everybody but a train robber is sure to like the ma rines. Senator Pomerene finds that Haiti is well satisfied with their rule and that everything Is serene In Santo Domingo. Before bemoaning the evils of overproduction, as some folks are already beginning to do, wouldn't it be well to find out whether it Isn't really under-production that Is trou bling us? The astrologers are now predict ing that the world will be "shaken to its foundations". In 1926. What do they call the ordeal through which the world has only recently passed? The ruling that an income tax payer may ueauct nis Pad uebts from his return to the government is hardly a satisfactory substitute for a creditor who pays his bills. Lloyd George says that Great Britain has gone absolutely the limit in the Irish peace treaty, which seems to be exactly the objection that Ulster makes to the treaty. Professor Lambert's assurance that the poles have never been more than sixty feet out of position con firms Mr. Browning's statement that all's right with the world. The Eskimos have learned to make whisky from potatoes, and it won't be long before we are hearing of the great potato-growing possi bilities of the Arctic zone. Poland's purchase of several thousand American auto trucks makes it look as if that country ex pected to raise something before long to transport. Of course resolutions are in order on New Year's day. Including a spe cial resolution to keep some of those which usually are broken about the second day. Life is just one paradox after an other in Russia. People are said to be fleeing to Siberia, where they used to be sent for' punishment. The idea seems to be to put the battleships into a sinking fund out of which the obligations of the world may be redeemed. The latest warship to be launched is named the Concord a peculiarly appropriate nan.e for a war vessel in times like these. It isn't as hard to swear off as it used to be, with really good liquor bringing around $10 the quart. The Listening Post. By I-Wltt Harry. ABOUT a week ago C. B William" ' of Seattle started something by writing In and asklnsr for words to the- song starting "Frog went a courtin', he did ride sword and a pistol by his side." Since publica tion of the request a flood of answers have poured in, the words of the old song recalling nursery rhymes of olden days, the fond mother as she sang to her child, an old negro mammy crooning to her pickaninny, homesteads in Ihe sunny south, the chanting of the field workers tho pictures ere legion. That "Frog went a courtin'" should take rank , as a favorite nursery rhyme now nearly forgotten, and that i- originated in the south, seems to be the preponderance of opinion. It is seldom heard these days, but it bears the stamp, in ready response, of having been very popular a gen eration or more back. How many men and women of today have been crooned to sleep by its plaintive mel ody? Mr. Krog went a courtin". He did ride. I'h huh! (ilko a frog croaks). With sword and pistol By his side. L'h huh! Uh huh! This seems to be the accepted ver sion, each couplet of the song having its accompanying croak of Mr. Frog for a refrain. And then the song con tinues, the regular croaking after each two lines, about as follows: Me rode till he came To Mine Mousie's side. Showed his sword and pUtol With artlul pride. He took Miss Mouse I'pon his knee. And said, "Mi's Mouse, Will you marry me?" "Without Uncle Rat's Consent ' I would not marry The president." Away tliey went to Uncle Itat. To see what ho would say To that. Uncle Rat he laughe'd Till he shook his oldes To think that hia niece would Be a bride. "Bless you," he said. "You'va my consent." "Miss Mouse cost me too Many a cent." Oh. Wnere shall the wedding; Supper be? Down in the grove In the hollow tree. What shall the wedding Supper be? A slice of cheese and A cup of tea. This Is the end of The story book. So we will Ieav them In their nook. The book lies on The kitchen nhelf If you want any mora Just help yourself. But this is a happy version, and i doesn t agree by a long ways with several others that refuse to allow Mr. and Mrs. Frog (nee Mouse), to "live happily ever after." They nearly all agree that Miss Mouse was prop erly. wooed, "sat on his knee," bu thence on we find quite a few dif ferences of opinion. One answer says that the lady asked "What are you going to maintain me upon?" and Mr Frog answered Three green pease and a grain of corn." The final verse has the tale end this way: As Frog was awimmjn' across de lake, Tuh-a-huh ! He was swallowed by a. moccasin snake.' Tum-ahuh! Haah! Different kind of frog evidently, for the tone of his song teems more resonant and there is no explanation as to why the coward did not use hia "sword and pistol." s One of the "Constant Readers' writing from Reedville, says that "the kitten and the cat were wedding guests, and -the cat caught the rat and the kitten caught the mouse, while the frog went gallopln' to his own house." Forrest L. Maus, an Ore gonian carrier, seemed to have the best information and sent in two most excellent versions, and Mrs. C. E. Hoak says there may be yet other verses, One "Subscriber" has the cat and all in his recollections and also the man at the end and says that he is certain that it was a kindergarten eons. An answer from Salem has a bumble bee mixed up in the story who "'uned a banjo on hi knee." Mrs, Beldelman of Portland las the frog's end as the act of a milk-white duck that "gobbled him up as he was crossing a brook. Sir. Mc.Minnville in jects a trace of sadness Into his song by telling how an old gray cat ate Miss Mouse soon after her wedding and Mr. Frog was left a widower who mourned but a few minutes untlj he also met an untimely end at the hands of the big black snake. Some of the aftermaths of Christ mas: Detectives searching for bad check operators who took advantagu of the holiday shopping rush to shov fheir paper. Secret service operators picking up a flood of $10 and $20 bills passed by counterfeiters. Re ports of most all agencies and police departments reveal that bad checks nd phony bills are certain at this season. And the change in the makeup of the newspapers. Now for the stiff pull of winter's hardships In a period of depression and unemployment. The help wanted columns have shrunk to few Inches while hundreds are seeking situations through the want ad. The yearly shopping rush is ovei and the display ads start sale cam paigns. The seeKer alter gilts now can buy far below the prices of a few days ago. But the gripping fact about the advertising pages is the number, both men and women, who beg for work, "odd jobs," "anything" they say. Whether it's good spirits or care essness is a difficult matter, but the lost and found columns arc also prospering. Everything seems to have been lost from "a gray hair switch" to a "rosary." - Much cur rency is wanted, even to single bills, many of these ads bearing an under current of hard luck. As usual the proportion of founds to losts is ten or more to one. There is always a pleasant surprise in the arrival of the belated Christ mas present, l'ostof flee reports show that the "mail-early" campaigns seem to bear fruit in Increasing ratio. It's admitted to be an excellent plan to mail presents early for the reason that they may not be expected and their arrival a few days before gives the recipient a chauce to com back. Futility of Words. Ily Crsre K. Ilnll. Dear lnve of long; hko, how oft Indoe.i I've said you were as nothing now to inc. That nevermore could heart of mine frrsli- bleed Because of w hat can never, never be. But Just today I saw a sturdy boy Who has your eyes tho c!f-san-. merry eyes: One glance and they had killed mi" present joy. And now 1 know my words were lies were lies! TIIK I ItVKTAI. KOMKM'r. When the chinnnk blows above tm Some two thousand feet or more. Atifl I lie cooler low winds shove us. And play round us all. iralore; Down Hie little mist of raindrops Kail from tip the warmer air To t'l colder, lower stratum. Here to freeze on branches hare. Then the winds leniti to quieUrn, And the wood. n longer free. As the gleaming llnlncs thicken. Weave a silver fil.Kiee , boon wo have a crystal forest. As tile trees of every strain . Sway utitl i'1-i-iik ah if in protest. Thoush their protest be in vain. Every tree is clothed in crystal. Every plant a gbiss house takes; Chilling winds through branches whistle, . While the lee Is on the bikes. Woods Hro bound In ley fetters. Both tlie green tree and the gray; Now we have our "spell of weather," Though it lasts us but a tiny. 'ouglis are drooping, bending, break ing. Wbilo the sea-wind skyward flies; Rattling branches to the wayside Irop their loads of forest e ; Twigs are tipped with shining silver, Icy sheaths each tree and bough; Tubes and pipes of purest crystal Crush beneath our feet e'en now. Let not winter's visit mar us; We can bear his reign a while; Woods (if ice or crystal forest. When King Sleet sels up in style. Old Jack Frost must have bis inning. Making havoc of our fun. And for once we see him winning Ere we put hiui on the run. JE.SrilE M. M. MARTIN. JUST MILLING ABOUND. We're milling around in this restleas word. But always going to bat; Though we've wasted time in doing this When we should have been doing; that. Wo curse the heat in Biimmcr time And later on the snow. And in between we yearn for botB Or cither and so we go! John and Bill were country boys And knew the farming trick: They both could plow and sow- and re a p. Knew t lie shovel and the pick. John chose to slay upon the farm, Dame Nature'd be his chum. He'd raise his sheep and cows and bogs, lie d never starve, by gum! But William said he'd try the law, It looked a belter way, He'd gather in the tempting fees "Let John go pitch the hay!" But later on lie saw the farm In quite a different light, , And yearned for pigs and cows and hogs As a source of sheer delight. But John saw William there In town. As In his office chair he sat. With polished shoes upon the desk. All dignified and fat. And wished he'd never seen a farm With lis endless life of endless trudge He should have gone into tho law He'd have made a splendid judge. So we're milling around in ceaseless whirl. Each pushing each to get above. Thousands who can't love what they have. And others can't have what they love. T. T. GEEH. MV VESTAL OF THE SNOWS. The frost with her pale fingers drapce A curtain on my window pane; Of flowers in strange and mystlo shapes. I search for on the earth in vain. Along a ghostly border path. Are plumy ferns, all dazzling white; Some Icy harvest harvest's aftermath Are sheaves Of wheat, aglow with light. And near the edges of the brook. She hangs a fringe of purest pearl; In every secret woodlund nook A thousand snowy fronds unfurl. And when the savage north wind blows, And drives his shaft of eleety hail; I see my Vestal of the Snows Walking alone, all wanly pale.. Over the trees she throwa a Khroud, And binds each bud in a crystal cell. And sifts the snow from a passing cloud. And wraps the world in mystlo pell. Nor for crushing grief, nor weary care, Nor Joy of love she knows; With star frost in her floating hair. My Vestal of the Snows! MARY ALETHE.V WOODWARD. SOLITUDE. I am standing on a barren beach. A level, vast expanse. I am alone. In the sky a palo sun pours a light On aands as wan and white A frosty gleam. And a tired tide eddies at my feet. Its fretful ripples bear The myriad sound Of an empty wish, unspoken thought. The sighs and songs of men. And peace and strite. I am standing on a barren beach And looking past the tide. am alone, n the sea a mighty current takes Its way, forever on Relentless stream. With a surging movement gathers in "he petty, whispering tide. Then casts it forth. On the margin of tho sea 1 stand The merest speck and watch. am aione. KATHRYN EASTHAM. A HAUNI'KD not si:. spent one night In a haunted housa With scorn for all ghost stories Alas! for every boasttul man W ho in bis courage glories. Tli" hour of 12 had barely struck When sounds so weird and ghoulish Began to fill those empty rooms: 1 screamed, then thought how foolish. For none could come to comfort me Alone 1 was and frightened. And so remained hour afler hour Till dawn my chamber brightened, Then with the day, steps fled away Those strange shrieks which we scare at. I searched the bouse to find a clew From cellar up to garret. My soap was gone, my bread and meat ,1'was thieves Instead or spirit. For 1 found three dozen rats and more. Tes. rea'.lv, fifty's near It. ALlCii MAba L'ALXIAIORE.