10 THE MOnXTN'O OKEGOXIAX. FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1913. 5 .60 PORTLAND. OREOOIC. Entered at Portland. Oman, Postofflos i eond-elass matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance (BY MAIL.) Dally. Sunday lnclndd. one year.. Dally. Sunday Included, an montM.... f Dally, gunUy Included, tnree montna.. Daily. Sunday Included, one montn. ... .' Daily, without Sunday, one '- .,, Dai y, witnoui cun.j. . Dally.' without Sunday, on montn.... w-k1v. nni year. ........ - Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, ona year (BT CARRIER.) Dally. Sunday Included, on year...... t . . i .. c innludML one monui. ' ' - a TJ..-. rifflr-m MAnaf or. Ow TO itcmu jcuu , . . . . . - der. express order or personal check on your local bank. iajup. id ' j"" -i the sender's risk. Glva poatoffice address lull, lnc uuinir county . , -, Poataae Batea Ten to 14 pages, 1 cent cent.; to 0 pases. 4 eenta. Forelgl poetaire. double raie. w Kaetern Bn.lneaa Ofnee.-V.jrre. Conk- i,.T- Krunielck bulldlnC CW- caro. Ftejer building. Ma IraaHeoo Office R. J. Bldwell Co., til Market street. Earopraa Office No. X Recent atreet B. W.. London In POBTXAD. FRIDAY. iASTABI SI. 1913. UNDERWOOD'S TARIFF POIJCY. The Democratic tariff-framers have chosen to observe one plank of the Baltimore platform and practically to cast the other Into the discard. That fiUtform declares that revenue should be the sole purpose of tariff duties, but It also says: We favor the ultimate attainment of the principle we advocate by legislation that will not Injur or deatroy legitimate lnduatry. The ways and means committee has discovered that it cannot raise reve nue from the tariff on certain com modities without encouraging the im portation of those commodities. The more It encourages imports by tariff reductions within certain limitations the more revenue it will raise, but the more it will Injure American industry. That policy can only be reconciled with the Baltimore platform by main taining that the injured industries are not legitimate. Underwood proposes to scale down the wool, cotton, sugar, shoe and chemical duties until they make foreign competition possible; in some cases down to nothing to the point where they would yield no rev enue. In defense of this policy he shifts his ground from one argument to an other. Where the findings of Taffs Tariff Board fit the case he accepts them; where a chance remark of a manufacturer can be cited in support of his purpose he quotes it. Thus a statement of a textile company, which manufactures a specialty made no where else In the world and therefore without competition, that It needs no protection Is quoted as proof that the whole cotton industry can stand un restricted foreign competition. The Tariff Board's finding that the Ameri can cost of certain processes in cotton manufacture is less than the foreign is quoted as an argument against high duties on the better grades of goods. Free boots and shoes are offered as a boon to the consumer, although free hides have not reduced prices, al though boots and shoes are already on a keenly competitive basis, and al though there is no suspicion of a trust in the industry. The Underwood tariff bills will have plain sailing in the House, but they will strike a snag in the Senate. The Southern cotton manufacturers, who make chiefly cheap goods, have made common cause with their Northern brethren, whose product Is mostly of the higher grades. They may cause the North Carolina and Georgia Sena tors to break away from the Demo cratic party and create a rift in the solid South. The Louisiana Senators will stand out against free sugar and may be joined by the new Democratic Senators from such beetgrowing states as Colorado and Kansas. Already a coalition has been formed between protectionist Republicans and five pro tectionist Democrats to prevent the passage of any free list bill. By threat ening to vote for free sugar unless all free list bills are killed, the Repub licans will coerce the Louisiana Demo, orats into using their powerful influ ence against any free list bills. The Democratic majority in the House Is pledged to a tariff which will admit competition. That tariff cannot puss the Senate -without overcoming the opposition of those Democrats who are determined to prevent its passage. They bid fair to have the whip hand. PALESTINE AND THE JEWS. The curtailment of the Turks' power in consequence of their defeats in the Balkan war brings forward the situa tion of the Jews in Palestine. This province is under Turkish dominion and has been us badly governed as the rest of that unhappy empire. The greater portion of it lies uncultivated not because the land is sterile, but be. cause the peasants are robbed of their crops. In spite of these drawbacks to prosperity about 100.000 Jews have nettled In Palestine under the impetus of the Zionist movement and many more would go there to live If their presence were suffered by the Turks. But the latter Tear that the Jews will fill the province and ultimately fight for their independence if they had free entrance. So none are ad mitted now except for a limited period. All who enter Palestine must go away again within six months. Of course this puts a stop to the Zionist migra tion which, to many Jews, embodies the hope of their race. Others do not care so much about it, but all things considered it is of immense Importance not only to the Jews, but also to the rest of the world. The presence of a civilized and ac tively intelligent population in Pales tine "would make that really favored region highly productive and would materially further the colonization schemes which Germany has been hatching, since It would make food cheap in Asia Minor. It Is believed on grounds like this that when the Balkan difficulty is finally settled the powers will Intervene to secure to the Jews the right to settle freely In Palestine under conditions which will permit them to prosper. This amounts to saying that the province will be freed from Turkish rule. The Turk has always been in compatible with prosperity and there Is no reason to expect that misfortune will alter his nature. Palestine be longs to the Jews historically. They have a still better title to it perhaps In the sentiment of the world. They never have had a country since Titus destroyed their capital and dispersed them over the face of the earth. Man kind owes them a debt which might be gracefully paid by giving them back Palestine with Jerusalem for their seat of government. It Is not easy to understand how an expedition on horseback from New York to San Francisco can promote the cause of woman suffrage, but it might do so In some occult way. At any rate certain enthusiastic sisters are going to try it. The plan is to start as soon as the roads are good and push on to the Coast, scattering, tracts by the way. It will be an ex pensive way to distribute literature. The mails would be cheaper. But the scheme is adventurously romantic and the spectacle of the fair missionaries may win converts whom mere argu ment could not touch. FIXRAIJTY OR MAJORITY? PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To th Editor.) I obeerve tnat The uregoman nas meu caslon to comment on th holdupa over Senatorial elections In the various tat where the old conatltutlonal method is atill In forca and to aay that the new fashion of direct election has proved Its worth in bringing quick results and in removing any Senatorial contest from conalderatlon or con troversy In any Legislature. All well enough; but will The Oregonlan say that the plurality scheme of popular election by he people Is better than the majority method by a Legislature? DOUBTER. The Oregonlan will say that It has long been an advocate of direct elec tion of United States Senators. Aside from the scandal and corruption that have too often attended Senatorial elections. Senatorial contests impede the course of legislation, lead to log rolling and traffic over all sorts of measures, and to harmful feuds and demoralizing factional controversies. We are well along toward direct elec tion of Senators, now, and such de vices as Statement No. 1 will cease to be an Issue. We suppose that our doubtful friend means to say that if a Legislature were to be able to elect by a plur ality and not by a majority, there would be no deadlocks. Probably not. But Is It desirable or undesira ble that a Legislature or a peo ple elect by a plurality? It is true enough that a plurality nom inates under the popular system: and it is true enough that a plurality fre quently elects; it Is true enough that if a majority of a popular vote were required, the legislative hold-ups would be trifling affairs compared wun tne popular deadlocks. But all other pub lic officers are. or may be, elected by pluralities. Why make an exception of United States Senators? It is too late to change the legisla tive method so as to harmonize with the popular method. Undoubtedly if a Legislature could elect by a plural ity, as the people do, there would oe no hold-ups or deadlocks; but the old barter and sale of bills, the demorali zation of legislation, the diversion of legislative interest into improper chan nels and the taint of secret traffic or outright corruption would all be there; and it is well that a Legislature be left strictly to its legislative duties. AT LAST. THE PERFECT JUROR. At first glance it appears that an ideal juror, as measured by the searching American system of criminal procedure, has been found In Los An geles County in the person of Dairyman Dresbach. Mr. Dresbach lives oniy twenty miles from Los Angeles at Ar- tesla, but until summoned in the Dar. row trial had never heard of Darrow or of the McNamaras. Mr. Dresbach reads only a dairy magazine, but his wife, who scans the newspapers, tells him about the murders and automobile accidents. Mr. Darrow, not being charged with murder or involved in an automobile accident and not known as the in ventor of a milking machine, of course escaped the attention of the intelligent and well-informed talesman. How the McNamaras escaped is more diffi cult of conjecture. But no doubt it may be accounted for in the prover bial inconsistency of the sex or his daily informant. At all events, the dis covery of Mr. Dresbach Is gratifying. The law of proportion indicates clearly that there are at least eleven of his kind in Los Angeles County, for it re quired the summoning of only 400 ve niremen to find him. While we have remarked that the venireman appears to be an ideel juror, it will occur at once to all who are well informed that the mere tact that he never had heard of the defend ant does not qualify him for duty in this Important case. Perhaps he belongs to the same secret society as the cousin of the wife of the District Attorney. Or perhaps he has a latent suspicion that all lawyers ought to be in jail. Or it may be that his partial ity for murder and accident news in dicates a destructive temperament which would tend to influence his ver dict. There are a numb -r of elements that our admirable system takes into account in the selecting of twelve peers of the man on trial. But these are mere possibilities. Such a find among only 400 men de monstrates the power of stern elimina tion to uncover in any community the human blanks deemed necessary to the safe conduct of important criminal trials. It ought to be sufficient an swer to those critics who unthinkingly condemn the American criminal code of procedure. For those critics who are solicitous for the unimportant or penniless defendant there remains the reply that one Dresbach and eleven of his cows would no doubt fill the bill just as well. THE UNIVERSITY'S MEDICAL DEPART- .11 r.. t. NT, m nrn wilPtllV rnilSft COUld be for- warded by the Legislature than that r.t h mArllrnl denartment of the Uni versity of Oregon, which makes a modest request for an appropriation r tin nna vpar It is Dronosed to expend this money only In the em ployment or full-time proiessors ana In the installation and equipment of laboratories. This medical school has the merit of being the only one of its kind in the four states of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana, and therefore of supplying medical education to those who cannot afford to attend the dis tant colleges in the East. As the re sult of a rigid Inspection by the Car negie foundation for the advancement of medical eaucation oi ncanj mi 4i i .nit..., in th. TTnited States. the standard of the school at Port land has been raised so nign mat n i- n-a.- ratiH in Has A bv the council of education of the American Medical Association. The state or w asmngion u ...IvajI tnnt its nniversitv shall leave the field of medical education to the State of Oregon so long as this .,.,.,. molntalnt A clasA A institution. The position of this school is therefore secure as the only one In its field. The necessity of a medical school .maintaining so high a standard in this territory is obvious. A steadily re cruited body of -well-trained physi cians is recognized by all intelligent people as essential to the public health and to sanitation in general. The medical department supplies this need admirably and is alone in its field. It therefore should have adequate sup port of the state. There was a time. In the days of beautiful chirography, when it was perfectly good form for a person to write his own calling cards. Now they must be engraved. Printing will not do because it is cheap and everything connected with good society must be as expensive as possible. Cards print ed by an expert are quite as artistic as the engraved ones, but they are banned. Those humble hangers on of good society, milliners, haberdashers and the like, have taken to engraving their advertisements lately. It gives an elite appearance which the printer cannot rival. LOGIC BRINGS STEAMSHIP LUTES. The logic of the situation is bring ing the Royal Mail Steam Packet line to Portland, just as it brought the Hamburg-American line. All we need to do in order to acquire steamship lines is to show the tonnage, developed and Immediately capable of being de veloped, the safe, navigable channel to the sea and the facilities for quick and economical handling of ships in the harbor. These essentials assured, the steamships will come of their own ac cord without subsidies or other artifi cial inducements. A subsidized steamship line is but a poor thing at best like a bottle-fed baby. If we wish to develop a healthy ocean commerce, we must feed the carriers the natural mother's milk of profitable traffic. A subsidy-fed line is too much like a protection-fed in dustry, confessing by its acceptance of the subsidy that it Is unable to stand alone. It is also a direct reflection on the port which pays the subsidy, for it advertises to other steamship lines that the volume of traffic is insuffi cient to support a line without this unnatural stimulus. For this reason it operates to warn away other lines which might come of their own voli tion without such an inducement. The coming of the unsubsidized Royal Mail as well as the Hamburg American line is an advertisement that there is business enough In sight to Justify the profitable operation of both lines. That the confidence of these two great corporations may be justified by their experience it is es sential that our merchants give them all the business possible. The spec tacle of steamers coming in and going out regularly with full cargoes will at. tract other lines until Portland will become what its unrivaled position fits it to be one of the great ports of the world. "BEN HUB." T!ie first thing that strikes and charms the spectator at a performance of "Ben Hur" is the marvelous beauty of the spectacle. Nothing could be more lovely than the gradual appear ance of the Star of Bethlehem in the sky as the sages gaze eastward from the silent desert. Its long rays, lighting up the whole world at the fullness of their splendor, are bright with promise. Their message Is the hope of redemp tion from the overshadowing horror of Roman rule which typifies the deeper horror of sin. Jerusalem, set like a gem in the desolate oriental landscape, with Its tall stone houses and roof gardens, looks on the stage much as Josephus must have known it. One sees the flinty pavements over which the weary feet of the Savior trod the way to Calvary and the harsh outlines of the bare houses are no more pitiless than the hearts of the political clique that condemned him to death. The lake on whose moonlit waters the Egyptian beauty tempted Ben Hur woos with the mysterious shadows of its palm trees, and the long line of light across the surface seems to lead to some magic land where life Is happiness and happiness eternal. The Valo of Hinnom is a vast cleft between towering peaks of bar ren rock. The tombs where the lepers live are as hideous as their disease. Ben Hur wanders among the frightful precipices seeking his lost mother and sister like a soul through the wilder ness of hell. But the art of the scene maker comes to a climax in the chariot race. No reader of "Ben Hur" ever passed the pages which contain the descrip tion of the Jew's triumph and the Ro man villain's downfall without thrills of fascinated horror. It is all shown on the stage as real as life. Messala in the background urges forward his steeds with whip and shouts, standing in his crimson colors as the type of Roman power and Roman arrogance. Ben Hur in the foreground chants the song of the free desert to his coursers and accelerates their speed by mem ories of the palm groves to which they will return when they have won the race. He is the victor and Messala not only loses the fortune he has wagered but barely comes off with his life. Ben Hur's chariot engages his wheel at the critical moment and he is hurled into the dust of the arena. Of course the author meant this to tjpify the downfall of Rome before the Galilean. But all this is external. The spec tator is enchanted to witness It, but his thoughts are elsewhere, dwelling with two great ideas which lie at the heart of the book and the play. One of them Is the all-embracing dominion of Rome with Its cynical contempt for human rights, its grinding weight of military power and its lust for gold. Rome was the universal robber of the human race in the reign of Tiberius when the Star appeared In the East. There was no power on earth that could withstand her armies, no refuge but the depths of the sandy deserts to which a fugitive could escape from her cruel talons and no recess dark enough to hide a private fortune from her greedy clutch. Simonides brings this out time and again as he tells one and another how they must not dream of fighting for safety, but must buy it from the omnipotent pirate. Rome had crushed the intelligence of the world and enslaved its spirit. There was scarcely such a thing as free labor in existence anywhere. The sheiks of the desert still defied the imperial city from their inaccessible fastnesses, but when they approached the walled towns those wild wanderers were compelled to bow before the ea gles and the legions. Roman military power colled like a serpent around the earth and feasted upon its riches as the serpent gnaws the vitals of its prey. In the heart of the imperial city there was no such feeling as pity. Justice was but another name for briber'. Law meant the will of the Caesar and his minions. God had van ished from the heavens and a beastly crew of degraded demons had usurped his throne. Nowhere but in Palestine was there a vestige of orderly liberty and even in that last refuge of human hope a sordid clique of politicians had traded their heritage to Rome for ft share in the plunder of the world. The other great idea is that of tht coming redemption. From the ages Israel had expected a Messiah. He was to come in power and great glory. With healing in his wings for the woes of the human race he was to appear In the east leading the armies of the angels and put Israel's foes under his feet. The Jews never had submitted In their hearts to Rome because, un like every other nation in the world, they knew there was a power superior to the legions and they believed it was on their side. Ultimately the Messiah would come and turn his omnipotence against the scarlet Babylon drunken with the riches of the earth. There was a rumor afloat that the Messiah had appeared. Strange stories had strayed out of Galilee. A carpenter's son had soothed Ben Hur with a touch and a whispered blessing when he was dragged past to the galleys. Blind men had been restored to sight. Nay, men born blind had been made whole. More marvelous still, leprosy, the dread curse of antiquity, had been cured and the voice or the healer had penetrated the caves of death and called back Lazarus to his sisters. The wonder worker must be the Messiah, but such a Messiah! Where were the militant hosts of angels? Where the armies that were to break the power of mighty Rome? The Messiah had come but he was preaching peace, longsuf fering and brotherly love. He spoke as if the oiains Rome had riveted on the limbs of mankind were but a trifle and the only thing of consequence an Invisible kingdom within the soul. And this was the outcome of the millennial hope. All Palestine sighed with disappointment, all but a chosen few who knew that ideas are more potent than gold and legions. The Messiah did conquer Rome, but It was only after centuries of patient attack that the Imperial power disintegrated and humanity again began to live un der the protection of the truth that makes men free. No doubt the most thoroughly con vincing historical pageant ever exhibit ed in the United States is the Pendle ton Round-Up. Perhaps in rivalry with that most delightful of spectacles Denver Is preparing something of the same nature under the inspiring lead ership of Colonel William F. Cody, whose "Wild West" show is perhaps the great original of all such exhibi tiona There is to be a reproduction of the romantic and thrilling features of cowboy and pioneer life and at the same time a reunion of all that time has spared of the old settlers, the In dians and the paraphernalia of the trail. If it is well done It will be the sight of a lifetime. If ever there was need of the min istrations of the Red Cross Society, It is In the Balkan war, which now seems about to be resumed. The Turks are notoriously callous about the care of the wounded and the little nations which are fighting Turkey have so taxed their resources in equipping themselves for the actual fighting that they have probably done little to care for the wounded, the sick or the sani tation of their camps. The Balkan states doubtless will be prompted to fall in line with the most enlightened nations In these respects after the struggle is ended, especially after the lesson the present war will have taught them. A current report from New York seems to show that even society women are not so steeped in trespasses and sins as to be beyond redemption. A number of the foremost among the fashionable dames of the metropolis have signed a pledge never again to wear heron aigrettes or bird of para dise plumes. The aigrettes are ob tained at the cost of starving the young herons, since the mother bird must be shot in the nesting season to obtain them. The use of bird of paradise plumes has caused the species to be come almost extinct. It seems almost time for fashion to relax its demands a little. If France should have occasion to go to war she would find some of her leading politicians as embarrassing as the enemy. They have declared for peace at any cost and advise the most astonishing measures to make war im possible. Their favorite recourse for the moment is the general strike. The plan is to stop all work throughout the country the moment the army be gins to march. This is patriotism with a vengeance. It would not take a great deal of it to blot France off the map with the world in its present state. The typical telephone girl is all busi ness. Note the operator in New York who' saw a man's body alight from a drop of eighteen stories and calmly called up the wagon. A man could hot do that. The Marconi Wireless people dis criminate against women operators as not dependable In time of stress. Yet it Is in such crises that woman has made good since Creation. The short and ugly word may be good English, as Judge Mack says, but its use provokes disturbance of the peace and should be discouraged. It Is a fighting word. Representative Lawrence, of Mult nomah, would raise the scale to 110 a day for a 60-day session. Representa tive Lawrence knows a good thing when he sees it. After plenty of time for rest and recuperation, the Allies will resume carving Turkey next Monday. This time they probably will finish by pick ing the bones. Governor West jiofr says it Is time to quit the legislative fight and get to work. He is a wise man who knows when he has had enough. A religious fanatic dressed in pure white put the hobo convention to flight. Pure white Is not part of the hobo color scheme. The noun" dawg will figure in the inaugural parade, but not so joyously as if Champ were the principal figure. If the Filipinos are allowed to gov ern themselves, no doubt they will set out with Mexico as their Ideal. The life record of Captain Blakely would make a splendid exhibit of the merits of Oregon's climate. Make short work with a long sen tence for the "long and short" highwaymen. There is often more legislative honor gained in killing a bill than in passing one. British suffragettes are not without hope while labor takes up their cause. Glavls now shrinks from that bright light which beats upon a muckraker. The hobo convention struggles vain ly against the stigma "freak." IJIPROVING LAW-MAKING SYSTEM Writer Would Have Initiated Bills Go First to Legislature. PORTLAND, Jan. 29. (To the Edi tor.) The, problem of political phil osophy presents various aspects, the question of devising a Suitable legis lative apparatus being one of them. Notwithstanding the fact that from the earliest times innumerable controver sies have been waged concerning the excellence of this or that legislative apparatus, the question is not quite settled as yet. This, at least, ought to be apparent to many of the voters of this state. The Initiative and referen dum are constantly referred to as a supplement to our representative form of government, to be used whenever the people desire to obtain something the Legislature does not give them or to reject that which the latter intends to impose upon them. In most instances. It is difficult to divine, before the votes are counted, what the people really de sire or oppose. For this reason the use of the Initiative ought not to be re stricted, nor that of the referendum, barring a few exceptions, but the In itiative should be made an integrant part of our representative government. The pure idea of democracy is de fined as the government of the whole people by the whole people, equally represented. In a pure representative democracy, every or any section should be represented. Unless such is the case, tt cannot be said that there exists an equal government, but a government of Inequality, where contrary to the prin ciple of democracy, the fair and equal influence in the representation has been denied to one or more parts of the whole. It is an admitted fact that the American democracies are samples of this faulty pattern. How can we im prove it? Here I would make use of the Initiative. An initiative measure, after having received the required num ber of signatures of registered voters, should be filed with the Secretary of State not less than 60 or 90 days prior to the opening of a legislative session, there and at that session to be acted upon, either rejected or adopted in its original or amended form; allowing, for a limited time, the privilege of the floor to one of the prime movers of each measure when it is up for con sideration. When the Legislature sees fit to re ject such a measure or adopt It In an amended form, then, and not till then, should the proposers have a right to demand that the same be placed. In its original form, upon the ballot at the next state election. It must not be for gotten that this complementary part, the Initiative, la for the benefit of the minority. For in our state as well as elsewhere, laws are toe result of the labors of the few and not of the many. But this giving to minorities of more than an equal influence in our legis lative affairs should not entitle them to the opportunity to have their meas ures enacted without obtaining the ap proval of something like a majority of the people. However, this is allowed them under our state constitution. This glaring defect ought to be remedied. Where measures and candidates are voted upon at the same election, an initiative measure should not become the law unless approved by a two thirds vote of the electors voting on such a measure. . To bring about this change the present Legislature should have the foresight and the courage to take the initiative steps. It would be safe, sane, sound and constructive legislation and not detrimental to a single interest entitled to any con sideration. INXE RUS, 390 Jefferson street. WRITER SNEEZES AT PARCEL POST Costa More to Send Can of Pepper by Mnll Than It Did Before. PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) As I was saying, the parcel post doesn't seem to facilitate matters to any great extent when it comes to pruning the "high cost of living." Just by way of getting on speaking terms with the new system I sent a two-ounce tin of pepper to a man at Pocatello, Idaho, which is just up here a ways, and the little experience cost me S cents coin and some little time. The pepper cost 10 cents. You see the tin and wrapper made the weight a little mite more than two ounces, and so they charged pound rates. I made a mistake in not sending a pound ot pepper, but even at that rate I don't see how parcel post is going to reduce the cost of pepper very much. Prior to the adoption of the parcel system I sent two ounces of pepper to San Francisco for 4 cents, but they tell me it was a losing game, and they now forbid me that rate. Yet there are folks who say, "The consumer should get acquainted with a good, square farmer and employ the parcel post." Well, if it costs 8 cents to send two ounces of pepper, what would it cost to send a leg o' lamb? . And this reminds me that we now have cars that stop at the even-numbered streets coming out and at the odd-numbered streets going in, the same dandy little 12-minute headway, the same old crowd of elongated strap hangers holding on for dear life, and the same good will of the Eastern stockholders. Therefore, It Is now recalled that the railway company "bowed to the will of the people" in this matter of mak ing fewer stops and that the hydra headed monsters, known as express companies, didn't go out of business when we instituted the parcel post. All of which goes to shdw that we love the bunko stuff, and that where there used to be a "sucker born every min ute," the average is now higher on ac count of the frequent advent of twins. ROBERT G. DUNCAN, 649 East Forty-ninth street North. PATROJf CRITICISES WATER OFFICE Flow Frequently Shnt Off Without Notice Is Charge. PORTLAND, Jan. 28. (To the Edi tor.) JuBt a few words regarding the beautiful habit of the water office of turning off water in the residence dis tricts without notice. People are constantly howling about the iniquities of the big corporations, but no corporation would ever have the nerve to keep on putting one over . v. . ..,..(.(, n.ihlif n a thin muni- uu tut: BuiitiuiB i' t cipally-owned "public servant" does. But in my oisinct . . . 1 j . . ... n . .. .... II,) .nfP irequenuy niiu vu .i .u. ....... for periods ranging from one to three ... 1 3 C t hours witnout warning, au urni. v t- jt - TV.!.. ... .. 1.1 h. a fina thlntT WKSn UajB. x uig wwu.u " a in a case where a house would contain some person very mi. was suddenly turned off. At 8:30 I rang UP OUT lOCai WftlCI vn.v5 aim t. n . i V. .. , I . ... Kauri to tne reason wuy notified In advance. I was informed in return tnat wnen tue wmci i l a. elmcr na lul thov Vl S! i' CtUoCU UU in . ,. . . . J no time to send men around to notify . -. , . ... . .. ...........I .Vicar In tt iamiuea, uul hub aoo . .. .. . ,, , -..,..,1.1 Via An T SllOri lime me wnLCi rrvuiu "... am writing this at 3 o'clock and it is off yet. Apparently tne niutiu ui -, . ... il,nv rr. i, v, u i.Ani.o thr? O II I CO IS on J- lh in . .r, nublic." They certainly have got me i -r i , I ...... .nnl.,l..- ertnnlrl going, ana i oenovc ""-- . . .. n-lmn in thir nerve. De aone iu pu. , , ... I WOuld like to hear from others on this subject ana wouia oe veijr KJau i . -. .1 , .-, v. t start th. lO give liiiirj ciu-v. '""I'J ' - - ball rolling against this "public , ., 1DVTV r' WrTTTR. nuisance. , .,!,." ' A WUe Investor. Judge. "This Is an excellent picture of you," Piiman TiimlnlnbT a nhotograph of Howso. "Have you ever been done in oil?" "Not on your life!" replied Howso. "I always steer clear of curb-mark t securities." THE CASE OF GOOSE VS. BEAVER Mr. Sebrins Applies IntelllBence Teat In the "Webtoot" Iaane. WINCHESTER, Or., Jan. 29. tTo the Editor.) One of the objections which George H. Himes offers to the term "Webfoot" when applied to the- state is that it is suggestive of a goose, and that the goose being an emblem of stu pidity, the name is a reflection on the industry and intelligence of the people of Oregon. On the other hand- Mr. Himes would substitute the name "Beaver," because, among other things, that animal ex hibits great industry and Intelligence in constructing dams across streams. Now, right here Mr. Himes has opened up a subject to which there are plainly two sides. Let us consider, first, that firBt law of nature, self preservation. I haver lived in the state when both geese and beaver were quite numerous; have tramped from daylight till dark hunting geese, without get ting nearer to a flock than twice the distance that my gun would carry, simply because the birds were too wary to alight near anything behind which I could hide; and in the light of that experience, whenever I hear the re mark "as stupid as a goose." I at once conclude that the one making it doesn't know half as much about a goose as the goose knows about a good many things, one of which is, that the bird knows as much as any beaver that ever built a dam about taking care of No. 1. The beaver Is sharp of sight, sharp of scent and sharp of hearing, while the goose, although fully as keen in all its senses as the beaver, generally keeps too far from the proximity of an enemy to render the last two effec tive. I have' caught many a beaver in traps, besides having had many fail ures. I found that if I left any scent about the vicinity of the trap, very often the animal would forsake the place entirely; also if there was so much as a link of the trap chain ex posed it was "all off." Comparing the constructive intelli gence, or, as some would term it. the Ingenuity of the two, I will have to admit that the goose cannot build a beaver dam; neither can the beaver build a goose's nest, any more than man, with his boasted knowledge, could build either, which places them on a level on that score. As to the Industry of the beaver, on which Mr. Himes relies so strongly to bolster our reputation, If he will ob serve carefully he will find it no more than commensurate with the animal's physical requirements, very much as a man builds his house. But there is this difference in the man and the animal: for whereas a man builds according as his fancy dictates, the animal builds according to a fixed plan from v,-hlch It cannot vary, a plan with which it had nothing to do in originating, and which Is but a feeble manifestation of that ever-present, all pervading intelligence that rules the universe. All of the so-called intelli gence of the beaver is but a bor rowed Intelligence, useful for the time being, to be cast aside when it has served its immediate ends. After the beaver has completed the act is It conscious of having builded a dam? We are led to suppose that there is no mental faculty without a purpose. If this Is the case, why should the animal remember, for no matter how many dams It may con struct, it cannot profit by past experi ence the least degree? And It would seem, therefore, that the faculty of memory would be entirely useless. F. it. SEBRING. EFFECT OF MINIMUM WAGE LAW Correspondent Fears It Would Deprive Less Competent of Employment. PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) I am surprised that in all that has been said regarding the minimum wage measure, as proposed by the Con sumers League, and in the arguments put forth in Its favor, there has been no mention of many phases of the pro posed legislation as adversely affect ing the poor working girl. Assuming that the report of Misti Gleason, as published in The Oregonlan, is true, that a large proportion of those employed in the factories, department stores and laundries are working for less than a "living watre," what remedy will this proposed bill afford? Will It guarantee any wage for a class of workers who are inefficient, incom petent, and inexperienced? And yet every factory, department store and laundry has many such girls in its employ girls who are helping at least to support themselves, where they would only be a burden to their fami lies, or to society in general, should they be thrown out of employment en tirely, as would be the case should any minumum wage be established by law. What will become of the incompetent girls who are now employed at a wage fully commensurate with their worth? Will they be taken to a certain "in stitution" here in our city to compete with our employes, and be subsidized by the state as is the case at the pres ent time? If, as Miss Gleason states, "conditions are unsanitary" in the factories of Portland,, then our health officers are to blame for such conditions, and should be brought to taBk for such dereliction of duty. Our State Labor Commissioner is a frequent visitor in the factories, laundries and department stores, and it is plainly a part of his duties as a state officer to see that such establish, ments are properly equipped, but it is plainly not a part of t)is duty to sug gest any sum, as a mininum wage, as he assumed to do In a report which he recently made. There are a number of factories in Portland and in other localities in Oregon which will be seriously handicapped, If not put out of business entirely, should this pro posed measure become a law. All factories coming into competition with other states or with foreign competi tion will feel the effects of such unjust legislation. While local institutions, such as laundries and department stores, might add to the cost of their product to cover extra cost of production, there are many factories which are in com petition with the East, or with foreign labor conditions, which would simply face ruin if they were confronted with such conditions as the Consumers' League would impose upon them, while the women -employes would be "out of a job." Should this proposed measure be passed providing for the appointment of a commission to take into considera. tion the wants of the employe, as well as the interests of the employer, and both the employer and the employe be represented on such commission, there will be little opposition, but if any at tempt to establish a definite amount, weekly, hourly or daily, Ib made, it will work a great hardship on those who depend upon their labor as a means of support, for it will simply throw hun dreds of deserving women out of em ployment. R. C. WARINXER. Nationality of Actom. PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) What nationality are Sarah Bernhardt and David War-eld? Has either one any Jewish blood? M. COHN. Sarah Bernhardt was born In Paris of French and Dutch parents. Her mother was of Jewish extraction, but her father was not- David Warfleld was born In San Francisco and is of Jewish descent- A Possible Explanation. Harper's. "I never could undertsand why peo ple dock their horses' tails," said Dub bleigh. "High cost of living," said Jorrocks. "Got to dock something, these times." Half a Century Ago From The Oreffotilatt of January 81, lsfii. The books of the Oregon City Woolen Mills are now open at Oregon City and stock is being rapidly taken. The capital stock is $75,000, which Is enough to start the enterprise with every needed element of success. Captain D. P. Thompson will attend to soliciting stock subscriptions In the counties adjoining Clackamas. - Olympta, Jan. 16. The bill for the removal of the seat of government to Vancouver was killed In the House on Saturday. New York. Jan. 19. News from Havana says the Alabama was off thut port on the 5th. Washington, Jan. 19. The House committee on territories has agreed to the admission of Nevada, Colorado and Nebraska into the Union as states. Washington. Jan. 19. The Senate to day confirmed the nomination of Har rington of Oregon as superintendent of Indian affairs in that state. From this time forward the subscrip tion for The Dally Oreitonian will be 3" Ms cents a week. We are com pelled to advance our rates by the large and increasing price of printing paper. The suit of William Grooms, City Marshal, against the City of Portland for certain fees for services rendered the city, making a total of 57, was decided yesterday in the Recorder's court. The Recorder gave Judgment In favor of Grooms for $36. DIGNIFIED NAME IS DESIRABLE. "Diversity State" Suggested In Lien of "Beaver" r "Webfoot." AMITY, Or., Jan. 29. (To the Edi tor.) If the columns of The Oregonlan are still open to those who wish to dis cuss the question as to the most ap propriate nickname for Oregon and the Harriman electric system, I would like briefly to state what I think upon the subject. If the name to be adopted Is of any great importance I am in favor of adopting a name that actually signifies that which is a reality. As for the name "Webfoot" or "Beaver," I dissent to either. The word "Webfoot" as an appellation for Oregon was only In tended as a burlesque; nevertheless it might have a tendency to be injurious ly misleading. To adopt the name "Beaver" would also be misleading. However, at an earlier date than this, when the beaver was plentiful In our state, the name at that time might have been recognizable. But at this time, when that rodent has become so nearly extinct in this state, in my Judg ment, to adopt Its name wou.d be ex ceedingly unfitting. The word that I will suggest for Oregon's nickname will no doubt find dissenters also. But if the name want ed is important, and the most appro priate one desired, I think the word which I will suggest will be the one sought for. I suggest that the word "Diversity" be adopted. We may very fittingly compare Oregon to a great varietv storehouse, with her shelves filled to their utmost capacity with the essentials for man's use. Oregon af fords the greatest variety of advan tages and benefits to her Inhabitants of any state in the Union. Oregon possesses a diversity oi cli mates, soil and productions. There is Eastern Oregon, the famous Hood River Valley, the great Willamette Valley, the renowned Rogue River and Ump- -vrnii-.,. nr th. nnnntrv lvlns: west of the Coast Range of Mountains. Each of those localities possesses its ow" peculiar climate and soil. irl .. l.lnlr flrnirnn'n VnrlptV Of Soil and climate in the aggregate, she is adapted to general tanning, mw;ii ing, dairying, poultry-raising a stale of flowers, hence bee culture, and is unsurpassed for the production of a great variety of fruits and garden veg- C tfl t)lS. Oregon has quite extensive fisheries, and there are also a great variety of forest trees, of which there is being manufactured daily hundreds of thou sands of feet of lumber. There are valuable coal fields in some parts ot the state, and also deposits of a great varietv of other minerals. I believe that Oregon Is capable of conferring a greater diversity of favors upon her people than any other state. While the Oregon people are contem plating a nickname for their state let it be one that will be dignifying a name that will within itself stand out as an advertisement of the many favors which Oregon will supply to her people. WILLIAM S. SCHWARTZ. Weight of Milk. PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) Please state the standard weight of one gallon of milk. DAIRYMAN. A gallon of milk weighs 8.61 pounds at a temperature of 60 degrees. A New Style In Babies It lias been set by Iowa ami adopted in Orepon. It provides that a child shall be judfred by physical perfection rather than by doll-like beauty. The sub ject is given a delightful page, illustrated by photographs, iu The Sunday Oreg-oninn. The Perfect Woman The press dispatches have had much to say lately of Miss Scheel, Cornell's perfect woman. An illustrated half page goes into the subject in detail. Poor Lo! They are now steering the red man through bankruptcy in order to protect him from a horde of white sharpers. Full page in colors. Aerial Bicycling It is to be the great sport of the future. An exceptional letter from The Oregonian's Paris correspond ent. Isle of Broken Hearts An account of the trouble-burdened people who come and go at Ellis Island. Written by a former immigration inspector. Underworld Tricks Another page by Jack Rose on the tricks and traps which beset the un wary. The Suffragist Invasion The advent of the suffragists in Washington is. to rival the in augural parade itself if present plans do not miscarry. Gibson P i c t u r e s-Another half page in the series of pen-and-ink drawings that made Gibson famous. Two short stories, three pages for women, four pages of color comics and many other features. Order today from your newsdealer. t