VB3B -UOEKTSQ -OSEGOSIA2T,; SATTJEBi;? $3STTf2&S&-&fiaf&:, ht rXjmtm Entered at the Postof3ce .t Portland. Orzoa, u second-class mattes. P.EVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mail (postage prepaid) la Advance. Daiiy, with Sunday, per menth $ 1 Xtelly, Sunday excepted, per year.... 10 Daily, with Sunday, per year - Sunday, per jear.. ....... - The Wekty. per year 1 j The Weekly, three raontM TO CITY SUBSCRIBERS. Dally, per week. deMvered. Sunday excepted.-25c 2aily, per -week, delivered. Sunday Included..:: 11VILY METEOROLOGICAL KEI'OHT PORTLAND. Jan. 4. S I'. M. Maximum temperature. -15: minimum temperature. a: height of river at 11 A. M.. 7.4: change in the part 24 hour?. 3.5: total predpHation today, . total precHrftatlon from September 1, I'l wet seaxmi. to date, 16.C4: average, 'HJSZ; de Jicieno, ri.Cb. WEATHER SVXOPSIS. Heavy rain fell mi California during the part 12 liours. and Hunter ram m Western Oregon. There has been a decided change in the tem perature In Northern Oregw. beeeming much warmer. No reprw have been received from "Washington and EaMern Oregon. Prom the fat that the barometer is reading lower at Portland than at places to the uthward. It is inferred that the storm's center is In British Iumbia. and that raiH must necessarily con tinue from such a. condition. WEATHER FORECASTS. VorecatU made at Portland for the 24 hours Uridine at midnight January : IV,r Western WatMngtoa and Western Oregon -- ontinued rain and nearly stationary u-tnixr-aturc, with freeh southerly winds; sales on the coast. Fur Portland Rain and sIlRlit temperature changes, w ith f re-h southerly winds. B. S. PAGCE. Local Forecast OBk-.al. before the president can set rid of this congress and call the 54th in extra session. That is, the public debt prob ably must be increased 550,tw0,000 more before government comes into hands of legislators with sense enough to stop the drain. I'OHTLAM), SVTl'RDYY, JAMAHY 3. SPECIAL FEATURES TOMORROW. Continuation at Bret Harte's new story of the cnil war. Cterenee." Illustrated. "Not PrnclleaU." A new short story bj' An thony Hope. HlHetralrrf. "Bau" jitiilosoplilzes thh. week upon "The Woes of Womankind." "Great Da." an illustrated atride on famous brnch-ahow prizewinners and iiolnts in breed ing. vz "Woman's Departnient" contains the UMtal .Trench falion letter, an article descriptive i skating costumes, and another on toboK Kannlng, all Illustrated with drawings of new designs in wraps. The "Youth's Deparment" oontains a continua tion of the "Little Mr. TblmblefinKer" sterie. fcj Joel Chandler Harris, an interestinK his torical s&etch of "Xapoleon's Only Son," an article on "Trained Bee?." and a descrip tion of "Twelfth Night Games." All illus trated. ? "Sodal Happenlnge" contains a record of Hie doings of hociety people for the past wek in Portland and vicinity. THE INTENT OP THE PEOPLE. Oregon's definite purpose last June was to suppress Pennoyerism. This was alike the purpose of republicans and democrats. The central principle of Pennoyerism was base money. Part of the scheme of base money was free coinage of silver. It was set out through the public journals and pro claimed by public speakers in every part of the state that Oregon could not afford to express approval of Pennoyer ism, with its free silver and base money schemes, and its general assortment of socialistic and populistic follies. The emphatic result of the election was due to the desire of the people to crush once for all the effort to commit Oregon to irrational finance schemes and ruinous currency schemes, with the whole train of attendant follies, perilous to sound and safe financial administration, that are bound up In the term "Pennoyer-' ism." Lately it has been assumed In some (quarters that Pennoyerism was not beaten after all; that Oregon did not declare against free silver and base money; that the populist platform, not; the republican, was endorsed by the people of Oregon; and hence a senator must now be elected who will stand for that victorious populism, which the people of Oregon voted for last June. Jf that is so, then no man like Fulton or Tongue, no man who supported the republican ticket on the republican plat form last June, ought to be elected to the senate. The election is due to Pennoyer himself. Men who did not act with the repub lican party last spring, but who fought it expressly because the party, its plat form and its candidates were alike op posed to adoption of silver as the stand ard of money; men who did their utmost lo defeat the republican party because, sis they knew and said, "nothing could he expected for silver from it," have been endeavoring during many weeks Xo take the leadership of the repub lican party for election of a free-silver senator. The noise they make attracts some attention; but after all, a senator "ft 111 be elected who will not favor free coinage of silver and consequent de basement of the money of the country; a. senator, in short, who is a republican, and not a Pennoyerist. Oregon was very solicitous for her name last June. She made a great ef fort to set her seal of condemnation Sn the most emphatic manner on all .razy notions of finance, on all pro jects of base money, on all schemes vf lax and inefficient administration, on ull theories of fiat value on all things, in short, that are summed up in the term Pennoyerism. The people votd th republican ticket tremendously. 5reat numbers of democrats, men of business and men of affairs, voted u. The voted it for a definite purpose. They saw that was the way to vote t-ffectlvely against the loose and dan gerous schemes of populism, chief of vhich is free coinage of silver and degredation of money to the level of the silver market: to be followed by withdrawal of gold from circulation, general impairment and curtailment of t redlt. and a terrible crisis to industrv and business. This was the meaning of the overwhelming republican vic tory in Oregon last June. The silver ttes, headed by Pennoyer, universally complained that "the democratic gold bugs and plutocrats had joined the re publicans, and voted the republican ticket." The afterthought of reviving Pen noyerism and populism, of etting the result of the June election aside by elec tion of a senator on Pennoyer's prin t jples, will not be thought to have much merit when the legislature shall assem ble and settle down to business. Xo republican Jumping on Pennoyer's plat form, disguised In the robes, or rags, of populirm, will be able to deceive or mislead the people of Oregon. GOYER.YMEXT AND BANK PAPER. A correspondent criticizing Senator Fnrweli's suggestion that the govern ment retire the treasury notes by fund ing them in fifty-year bonds, and relax some of the restrictions of the national banking law, so that an adequate vol ume of credit currency can be provided under it, addresses the following to The Oregonian: "Will jou please tell me how the government is to get out of the currency business If its bonds are to be the basis for the issue of currency, even by the national banks? And will you please also tell me why, if its bonds, bearing 2 per cent interest, are good enough to form a basis for the issue of currency, the go ernment should not Issue the currency direct, and save the interest?" It may not be easy to make the per fectly simple and obvious answer to this question entirely clear to a mind which sees no difference between the sale of an interest-bearing bond to a voluntary bidder, who buys it as an investment, and the forced issue of treasury notes, in payments by the government to Its citizens, which are nominally due on demand, but which, in reality, the government has no money to pay, if even one-fourth of them were presented for redemption at once. But it ought to be clear that the gov ernment will be cut of the banking business when it is no longer responsi ble for redemption of the credit money of the country; when it is not obliged to keep a coin reserve like a bank of issue; when the value of the circulating medium does not depend upon the vis ible resources of the treasury, shifting with the size of the gold reserve, or the fluctuations of revenue; wnen the sta bility of that which passes for money and the uniformity of that which meas ures values does rot depend upon the shifting breezes of popular opinion, and the constant changes of party admin istrations. The grand object of the change pro posed by Senator Farwell'is to take the burden of redemption of credit money from the national treasury and place it upon the capital and the business of the country, represented by the banks. Under the national banking system the government has no responsibility for redeeming the notes. The capital of the banks is pledged for their re demption, not formally, but actually, since an amount equal to the notes, under the proposed plan most liberal to the banks, must be deposited in the tieasury in form of bonds. When the government redeems the notes of a failed bunk, it sells these pledged bonds for money to do it with. The notes are really redeemed out of the capital of the bank. The government has In curred no risk and suffers no loss by its service as redemption agent for the banks for protection of noteholders. Therefore it is out of the 'banking bus iness, under the national banking sys tem, even if its own bonds do form a basis for circulation. The second question of our corre spondent really Is answered in the above, but it may be profitable to try to make more clear the distinction he fails to grasp. Bonds are a sound basis for banking, because their pur chase is a voluntary act, and the cap ital of the country will not buy more of them at par than it believes gov ernment can pay interest upon and re deem when due. Treasury notes are not a safe currency, because they are forced upon the country by payment to creditors of the government, and their volume has relation neither to the real ability of the treasury to redeem them, nor to public confidence in that ability. Thus resort to a credit money of government paper inevitably and al ways leads to a crisis, like the present, in which presentation of the notes for redemption exceeds the ability of the treasury to take them up. Were bank notes redundant and pressing for re demption, the banks would have to take them up or suspend, in which case the treasury would take up the notes, not with its own money, but with money realized by sale of bonds of the banks in pledge with it, these bonds having been bought with the money of the bank, and representing part of their capital. That is the dif ference between treasury notes anu national bank notes. buildings. Security, economy and con venience have aided and waited npon the practice of carrying structures in central thoroughfares to great heights. In ordinary mining, the great reduction in the cost of steel beams has been an Important factor in extending their use for propping'and roofing. Wood is still cheaper in some localities, but the fu ture of the steel beam and post in min ing operations is practically assured. It is of interest to note also that in the proposed construction of a dam to be built across the Santa Ana river, in Southern California, steel is to be large ly used. The face of the dam is to be of riveted steel-plate, and the supports of tubular steel. The cost will be less than one-half the ccst of masonry, the material used will be capable of more rapid construction, and the work when finished will be less liable to rupture from seismic disturbances. It is need less to say these advantages point to a new era in dam-building. throughout the stcrm belt generally are still to be heard from. Most of the damaged trees are of the class that makes rapid, growth, so that by proper pruning they will recover what is lost in a year or two at the farthest. The loss to next year's crop will probably be considerable, but a partial recom pense for lack in quantity is more than likely to be made "up in the quality of the fruit produced, and in any event there is very little Sanger of a serious shortage. The discomfort of such a storm Js not great, but it caused much inconvenience, and the true Oregonian welcomed, as an old and tried friend. the coming of the rain, which promised a speedy relief from its annoyances. A.V EXCELLENT EXAMPLE. The fire department of Portland has been brought to an economical basis without impairment of its efficiency. The commissioners now in office are ful filling the just expectations of the tax paj ers of the city. The cost of the de partment for the year 1S93 was $150, 55S 09, and the estimate of the former commissioners for the year 1S94 was 5153.000. During the first half of the year 1S94 the expenditure was $74,- 769 SI; during the last half, (under the new commisisoneis), the expenditure was $58,031 63. This makes a' reduction in six months of $16,737 65. The estimate of the commisisoners for 1S95 is $109,800, and it is their pur pose to support the service for this sum. It is $40,748 09 less than the expense of 1893, and nearly $24,000 less than that of 1S94. It is a considerable reduction, moi'eover, from the late of expense on the reduced scale for the last half of the year '94. The force has been reduced by about 35 men. yet it is believed now to be adequate for all demands In all ways the closest economies consistent with general efficiency are enforced. Close watch is kept by the commisisoners of all the details of expenditure, and all the property of the department is util ized to the utmost through vigilant in spection and careful repairs. The police department has not yet been brought under equally rigid rules of economic administration, but it should be. If the expense of the fire department can be reduced nearly 30 per cent, it should be still easier to make an equal reduction, or even a greater, in the cost of the police de partment. Some reduction In this de partment has, we think, been made, but it is not considerable enough. The cost of the police force of this city should be brought within $75,000 a year. There should be reduction also of the expenditure for public lighting. On the 1st of April, at -the expiration of the present contract, the number of lights in the city may be reduced 25 per cent. This must be enforced. We are not complaining of the price of the lights) but the city Is buying more light than it can afford. There is no private citizen who does not study economy in the use of light as in all oiher things, and the city at the earliest practicable time must adopt the same rule. The strict est possible economy must be enforced In all public expenditures. The fire de partment has set an excellent example. Portland has been pretty nearly iso lated from the world for the last two days, as the meager telegraphic columns of The Oregonian prove. But it Is a fact of some interest that this paper has had about as much telegraphic news in this stress, when two-thirds of its dispatches were cut off, as any other paper west of the Rocky moun tains, outside of San Francisco, prints in the best times. Water filters and Ice, excess of light and luxuries of various kinds, which taxpayers can't afford in their own. homes, are supplied by the public funds in state, county and city offices. Hen in office, who do not buy these luxui'ies at their own homes, have no hesitation In ordering them when they are to be paid for out of the public funds. chased these lands from the Northern Pacific had a right to expect of the gov ernment. Nor can any one complain "who may have initiated an adverse claim as a settler. They had notice of the rights and equities- of these people, their pos session and improvements warned them of these facts. There are two sides to this "honest set tler" cry so often raised to shield real "invaders" (as the secretary In one case designates them) of the private property of others. Also in the case of the lands in dispute and patented to the Oregon & California Railroad Company, and every siroilar case. We may say that were the grantors any less a personage than the general governmert, they would be con cluded by issuing this patent -where the title had passed to an innoeent pur chaser, and it is to give this transaction the same effect that the act of March 3, 1SS7, provides in the fourth section as stated. The department and the courts should give the most liberal construction of laws passed by congress to accomplish this end. It has been with an aim to accomplish the beneficent end, and at the earnest so licitation of many vitally interested, that Mr. Dolph has acted, and expects, we hope, to continue; and while I am not engaged for his defense, and especially not so for his re-election, yet I do think, after he has manifested the interest he has in this important matter, justice de mands the facts should be known, and proper motives credited to him for his acts. W. T. BCRNEY. Governor Pennoyer still has it in his power to render the state and the cause of public honesty one last service be fore the close of his term, by seeing to it that the ballots for selection of school books are not tampered with. How much soever the governor's opinions are questioned, his honesty is relied on. The only bimetalist is the man who opposes free coinage of silver: Free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 simply silver monometalism. We have both gold and silver now, but with free coinage of silver we should have silver only. Mr. Reed la correct, and: I cannot see how The Oregonian can safely assume from the history of the past that taxation would exterminate them. There are many people, whb, like Mr. Reed, think the progress of civilisation has not been advanced by the churches, but rather that it has been retarded by them. This view -would seem to be sup ported by the fact that in those countries where the Protestant religion prevails progress has been most marked. In other words, the further a country gets from dogmatic beliefs, and the less it is en thralled by superstition, the greater strides It makes in civilization; and may not the remnant of those crude supersti tions, which the protestant churches still contain, be a retarding power even In those more progressive countries. It seems to me, that the fact that this ex emption of church edifices is abused by including other church property to large amounts, and, as The Oregonian recently admitted, there seems no way to prevent this abuse, that this alone should settle the question. That the "hard shell" Bap tist church should be the one pf all others to advance the liberal and just idea of church taxation Is to its credit but just how far it is actuated by the hope of crippling the Catholic church, I do not pretend to say. ONE OF THE CLODS. ABOUT SALMON" PROTECTION. It would be interesting to know what and whose meddling attempt provoksd the recent declaration of the Japan3se foreign minister that Japan "will know how to deal with China without the td vlce of any foreign country." It is said that the new secretary of state is opposed to an inaugural ball. That is very wise. We see no reason why we should have an inaugural ball. There is nothing to bawl about. The debate on the taxation of church property has developed an extraordi nary amount of Philistinism in Port-laud. Copies of the New Tear's Oregonian may still be had at the office of publication. LET JUSTICE PREVAIL. Congress continues to gabble, while the gold runs cut of the treasury- The leserve probably will fall below $S0,O09, UM) before the end of this week. It has fallen nearly $30,000,000 since the last bond sale, near the end of Xovembtr. This is at the rate of about $5,000,000 per week. At this rate, the reserve w ill be below $60,000,000 bafore March 4, nud another bond sale .will'benecesar' AMERICAN" ART EXCELLING. It is nothing to the discredit of the United States that its civilization, in some phases commendable, has very little in literature and less in art to commend it to future ages. Its litera ture and its art are both in great meas ure imitations and blendings of the thoughts and creations of other lands. But its limitations are those neccssarlly concomltant of youth and inexperi ence. In common with the peoples of other times, we follow in our history the logical and natural order of devel opment. A nation learns to build Its house before it begins to beautify the Interior. Accordingly, we are now, as a people, at work upon architecture. Architecture and engineeerlng, once Identified, became somewhat disasso ciated through several centuries cf bastard art. The achievements cf mod ern engineering are now followed by this result: That the true connection between architecture and engineering Is now to be restored; and this, in the esthetic aspect of the matter, by adupting to the problems of architec ture the new resources ot engineering. The chief factor in the situation is the application of metal to building pur poses. This work is peculiarly Amer ican in its best and highest develop ment, it includes the introduction of the cast-iron column: the displace ment of cast by wrought-iron, built into suitable shapes, and the gradual introduction and use of steel. In gen eral, the architectural gains made have been greater rigidity with less mateiial: economy of space in outer and partition walls; the approximate completion of buildings at the factory, rather than in the street, increasing the earning oapacity of the ground by making lofty structures possible, and safety from tire and other disturbances. Obviously, little has yet been made from our wonderful structural f teel but objectsof theseverest practicability; but the possibilities are as great for effects both beautiful and imposing. The achievement along practical lines is very great, and of Increasing promise. The United States has led the way in this extension of the use of steel and iron for railroad ties, mining beams and posts, 'in marine, construction, for brldges1 and fr public and private The statement which is said to ac company the Bluefields correspondence transmitted by the president to the sei ate, that the administration has suc ceeded in removing obstruction to American construction of the Nicar agua canal, by inducing Great Britain to withdraw her pretensions to a pro tectorate over the Mosquito coast, is very optimistic. The serious obstruc tion to building of this canal by the United States is the British pretension to common use of it as neutral waters. This is based, not on her vanished protectorate over part of Nicaragua, but on the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, py which we deliberately agreed that we would claim no exclusive right to con trol, fortify or protect such a canal, if it ever should be built. We have been trying to get this treaty annulled for ten or fifteen years, but the English hold tenaciously to their rights under it. Mr. Blaine contended that the treaty had been violated by Great Britain, in that she had asserted ter ritorial rights in Honduras, as well as in Nicaragua, contrary to its provisions, and that the treaty was therefore no longer binding upon us. It may well have been remembrance of this con tention that induced Great Britain to withdraw her pretensions to a pro tectorate over the Mosquito coast, be lieving that she would thus strengthen her own contentions that the Clayton Bulwer treaty must be regarded as still in force. Her apparent surrender at Bluefields. then, really discovers pur pose to hold out firmly on the main question. It is improbable that the Clay ton-Bui wer treaty ever will be ab rogated by diplomacy. Wc shall have to repeal It, so far as it binds us, by an act of congress, and let Great Britain make the best of it. Nathan Straus is one of the practical philanthropists of New York. The Straus coal yards, from which coal was distributed to the poor at the rate of twenty-five pounds for 5 cents last winter, were again opened for business early in December, making it possible for hundreds of the more thrifty poor families to have comfortable warmth in their homes without asking fuel as a charity. His plan is to buy coal in 5000-ton lots, and sell it in small quan tities at the price stated. This does not quite pay expenses, but is yet not a gratuity, the tendency of which is to undermine self-respect and sap the foundations of personal effort. The en lightened philanthiopy of the age is that which administers its own bounty and makes each dollar thereof do full duty without increasing pauperism. The features of the snow and sleet storm that is now abating were tame and commonplace. The temperature was so mild throughout its continu ance that no one suffered the sharp pinch of cold. The most serious incon venience was caused by the stoppage of the street-cars, and the greatest ac cruing damage was the destruction of many shade and fruit trees and much shrubbery by the heavy weight of the sleet that accumulated on their branches. The poplars and locust trees that abound in some sections of the city are almost entirely crushed, and many of them are uprooted, while pear and apple trees in door yards and on lawns suffered a like fate. Cherry trees being of tougher fiber, stood the pressure well, while the prune and peach orchards ' in the suburbs and Senator DolpU's Action. Ileffnrilintr Forfeited Rnilrond Lauds. PORTLAND, Jan. 5. (To the Editor.) T, with many others, have been greatly exercised over the dispatch appearing in your issue of about the 11th ult., purport ing to give the substance of a bill Intro duced by Senalor Dolph, and a day or so after by Mr. Ellis In the house, relative to the vexed question of the forfeited railroad lands. The report seemed to war rant it, and many persons and papers be gan at once to denounce Mr. Dolph. I have today been furnished with a synop sis of the bill, or the proposed amend ments to two bills,.and, while I do not desire, as so many seem inclined, to rush in and proclaim the law and its interpre tation where angels dare not whisper their opinion, so great is the uncertainty prevailing as to what the department and the courts will do in the premises, never theless, the great interests involved and the number of persons affected requires some immediate reiredlal legislation to settle these titles, and all expected our delegation in congress, responding to nu merous requests, to propose some remedy possible of enactment in this congress. Hence the anxiety experienced upon see ing the Item referred to, and the explana tion required must excuse this letter. Briefly stated, the case is this: Under the provisions of the fourth section of the act of March 3, 18S7, relating to the final adjustment of railroad grants, purchasers In good faith and their transferees of lands patented to any company errone ously, which patent is subsequently can celed, by voluntary relinquishment or pro ceeding in court, may take title from the government, the latter collecting from the company, of the purchase money paid, the price of like government lands, leaving the owner to call on the company for any remaining over the required sum. As the main trouble is likely to occur over the interpretation of this section, Mr. Dolph began by suggesting to thenebftf mlssloner of the general land office that it seemed that persons who had not paid a sum equal to the full government price would not be protected and could not pur chase; and this official, a3 also the secre tary, agreeing to the suggestion, as the interpretation entertained by them, Mr. Dolph introduced an amendment provid ing that such sum as was paid the com pany should be applied in favor of the purchaser, and he permitted to pay what ever balance was necessaty to make up the price of the land; and this class should likewise on these terms be permitted to take title as aforeiaid. This is the only amendment so far pro posed to the act of March 3, 1SS7, and why it can be supposed to be in the interest of the railroad company I cannot see, but can see many reasons why they would oppose it, and I am credibly informed they are not trying to get it passed. The amendment Is certainly one justice re quires, and nothing short of a far-reaching anticipation of the strict construction put upon all laws for the disposition of public lands by the department can meet these cases as they arifce. The other amendments relate to the forfeiture act of September 29, 1S90, and affect Oregon lands south of the Colum bia river and east of the 30-mlle limit of the Oregon & California company. All the lands involved in the suit by the government against the said company will be disposed of under the fourth and fifth sections of the first named act, or the settlement laws. The amendments reiterate the limita tion of all purchases under the forfeiture act to 320 acres, and provide that per Eohs who have improved lands adjoining their farm may purchase a prescribed amount on certain conditions without residence, as was formerly ruled in the interpretation ot the original act. Also that purchases may be made of noncon tiguous tracts which may have been im proved. All these propositions are just and right, and nothing 'more nor less than I what the people who improved or pur- Flsliwnja Should lie Unlit After nn Approved Model. PORTLAND. Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) Having had seven years' experience in the artificial propagation of fish In the state hatcheries of Wisconsin, naturally, I have been somewhat interested in the preservation of salmon, since making Oreeon mv home. A sreat deal has been I entil ViT.fttio.Vi fik rtlnirlYKl rtf 'PVlA Orp- means I - , """" - -". . of the present situation, and many the ories are advanced as to the proper legis lation necessary to restore the Industry. Some have been very good and practical suggestions, while others could not be executed. The law relative to the fishways seems to have given our present fish and game warden the most difficulty to enforce, and the point seems to be, "What constitutes a fishway?" This same question was a very perplexing one to some of our East ern states, until they adopted a regular system ot fishways. What we should have Is a-system of fishways adopted by the state, and compel owners of dams to construct the same, subject to the ap proval of. the board of fish commissioners. I was especially interested in your edi torial, of Saturday's issue, touching on the subject of protecting the young sal mon, etc. This is one very important question, and there is no reason why a law to that effect cannot be properly en forced. Wisconsin has a law specifying a minimum weight at which white fish and wall-eyed pike can be offered for sale, bought or had in possession, which has been enforced with good results, and, al ' though receiving considerable opposition at first, it is now acknowledged by both fishermen and dealers as essential to the preservation of these fish. With our fishing industry In such a con dition as it is, we hope before the com ing session of legislature closes, we will have some stringent laws enacted, for protection of what salmon we have left, and a liberal appropriation secured for operating our hatcheries, as it would only require an amount, small, comparatively, with what is required in the Eastern states. It is a settled question that ar tificial propagation is the only mean3 by which we can restore our fishing Indus try, so why not have the state assume control of our hatcheries and operate them as other states do, and not wait for the United States fish commission to shoulder in all? BADGER. ANOTHER MAX'S VIEW. PORTLAND. Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) The subject of taxation of church prop erty Is receiving considerable notice just at-the present time. I have read with in terest the views of different people on the subject, and will say that I am thor oughly in accord with the views expressed by Messrs. McCamant and Reed. I beg to differ in seme respects from the comments made on the articles of the above-named gentlen.en by The Orego nian, in this respect: It says: "The pub lic is not taxed to support the churches." Literally, this is true, but in a general sense it is not. The church receives all of the protection of the law without shar ing any of the expense thereof. If my house is burned, I have to help share the expense of trying tho criminal for arson; also, if a church is burned, I have to do the same, while the church does so In nei ther case. "Church buildings would not exist if taxed as private property." Something is wrong, sure. Either the people do not want them bad enough, or there are too many for legitimate purposes; and as to their "beauty and adornment," that is good in some cases, but may be carried too far. Religion is not necessarily found in stately structures, and I think that the country would be better off if the money expended in church property were prop erly divided among the hospitals and sani tariums of the land. Christ never held religious services in a temple costing millions of dollars. No; he used no edifice at all, but you must remember he did not live in a city of wealth in the age of "19th century re finement." There is a difference between "Where through the long-drawn aisle and fretted vault the pealing anthem swells the notes of praise" and "The groves where God's first temples" I agree that religion is a prominent fac tor of the human mind, but I also state that it is not necessary that the best cor ner lots in the city should be used for re ligious purposes. As to the churches not being property, I will answer by asking a question: Is a drone the less a bee because he does not make honey? A. H. BUCKMAN. THE SXOW ORDIXAXCE. Perhaps n Fevr Arrests of Prominent Offender Would Do Good. PORTLAND. Jan. 4. tTo the Editor.) If there is an ordinance upon our statute book requiring property-owners to clean all the snow off their sidewalks before 10 o'clock in the morning, the city offi cials should see that it is rigidly put In force, and not wait to be reminded of the existence of such an ordinance by The Oregonian, before acting. It Is their duty to see that the city is kept in order and the laws enforced, without waiting to be reminded of this by any one. For the past 43 hours this city has been in the worst plight I have ever seen in any clty, excepting the meanest hamlet, in the United States. By Mr. Pague's re port in yesterday's Oregonian, I, see that we are liable to have 50 inches of snow, or over, during the winter, and if this be the case and no more attention Is paid to keeping the sidewalks clear in the fu ture than has been paid to this work since Wednesday last, we had better stop crowing over the beauties of Portland as a city of residence. If, with a population of from S0.000 to 100,000 people, we can't clean our walks, right down in the very heart of the city around the city hall, even, where, of all places the sidewalks should be cleared of snow Immediately after every fall (as an objects lesson or example, as The Ore gonian very truly remarks, if for no other reason) then we had better throw up our charter constituting us a city and revert back to the autonomy of a country village. CITIZEN. THE XEW YEAR'S OREGOXIAX. Live People In n. Live City. Skamokawa Eagle. The New Year's Oregonian was a 40- page paper, and is as handsome a sheet as ever saw daylight in that city. It il lustrated what can be done when live people get together to advertise a city. It will win, too, for people will lay it away and read it more than once. Creditable All Around. Winlock Pilot. The New Year's number of The Ore gonian, which appeared on Tuesday, con tained some 40-odd pages of choice read ing matter, was gotten up in the highest style of the art, and was a credit not only to the management of that excellent paper, but to the city of Portland and the state of Oregon. All states are not blessed with such a newspaper as The Oregonian. One which is should be proud of the fact. Putting: It Mildly. Castle Rock Advocate. The New Year's edition of the Portland Oregonian is at hand, apd to say that it is a splendid paper, one that all Ore gonians should prize highly, is putting it mildly. All the more prominent Industries of that state are described in a pleasing manner and are finely illustrated in The Oregonian's 40-page edition. The Oregon ian is by far the most newsy and pro gressive journal in Oregon, and by its splendid New Year's edition it only ex emplified the energy and pluck of the proprietors that ably conduct the journal, nal. o Cot'krnn and Crolier, New York World. Bourke Cockran has an opportunity such as comes to few men. He knows all about Tammany methods as they existed under Croker, and he has never profited by them. Now that Croker Is making war upon him why should he not fight back? Who 13 so well equipped as he for such a conflict? Who has so much of in side information without being himself responsible for the evil to be exposed? Croker invites retaliation at his hands. He madly challenges the ugly revelations that Bourke Cockran can make if his courage is equal to his ability. He even broadens his defiance of the lightning by coupling with Cockran all other decent men who have had Tammany affiliations and bidding them all "come on." Perhaps some of them will accept the invitation. Having seized a tomahawk to run amuck, Croker may find himself the person brained when the melee is over. XEWS OF THE XORTirWEST. ' '-OreRon George and James Curry, of Euchrd creek, Curry county, have killed seven bears and have saved 20 gallons of finei oil, -which thejr are selling at a bit a pound. The deeds for the new railroad subsidy! have been filed in the county recorder'3 office at Astoria. There are 2CS of them, and the .estimated value of the property transferred reaches up into the millions. The souvenir holiday of the Klamath Falls Express, just issued, is a most cred itable production. It is printed on fine paper and contains upward of 60 half-tone engravings, all Illustrative of the re sources and residents ot the Klamath country. From different parts of the Nehalenl country sales of timber lands are re port edK which is proof of returning Ufa to the lumbering industry. The Lower Nehalem has bright prospects for three sawmills this year, and if the demand for lumber increases there will be more. F. A. Stewart's black sand mine, at Gold Beach, has panned down until it is in fine shape, and they are shoveling sand In a hurry. The gold Is very coarse, and accumulates rapidly upon the plates. Mr. Stewart will start for Salem on January 7, where he goes to represent Curry county. In the lower house. William Rumbaugh, a pioneer citizen of Linn county, died at his home in Albantf on January 2, from the effects of a stroke of paralysis several days ago. The de ceased was born in Wayne county, Ohio, on February 15, 1S29, and came to Oregon at an early day. He lived at Sweet Homo for many years, but has lately resided irt Albany. He served the county as com missioner and has always been a useful, respected citizen. He leaves a wife and several grown children to mourn his loss. Smith Brothers livery barn, burned at Newberg last week, will be rebuilt att once. The loss, $2000, falls heavily on thej owners, who are unable to stand it. Helif will be extended by the citizens. Within 14 hours from the time the fire was dls? covered, a load of lumber was on tha ground for the new barn, which will bo 4OxS0 feet, the same size as the main part; of the old one. Nearly $250 in cash otf lumber has been subscribed, besides lib eral donations in feed, and supplies, and work enough to build the barn. The need for quick and cheap commu-f nication up and down the Oregon coasfi was never better demonstrated than aft present. With a large output of wool in Curry county, and the shipping the past season of from 40 to 50 tons of wool, thero is a scarcity of wool at the Bandort woolen mills, and Bandon Is now im porting wool from San Francisco bj schooner, to enable the mill to run. Ow ing to lack of communication along thd. coast. Southwestern Oregon cannot sup ply the wool market of Bandon, as it ia easier and cheaper to ship to San Fran cisco, 300 miles away, than to Bandon, which is but a few miles distant. Thua Curry county ships its wool product to San Francisco and Bandon then Imports It from San Francisco, instead of from Oregon ports direct. Conceded. Too 31nch. Syracuse Standard. If Secretary Gresham informed the American minister in Constantinople that the absence of a treaty rendered It im possible for the American government to demand that Turkey respect the citizen ship of Armenians who have been na turalized in the United States, he con ceded altogether too much. If anything in the diplomatic principles of this coun try is settled. It is that foreign born and naturalized citizens are on the same foot ing before the government of the United States, which guarantees to them when abroad the protection of the American name, no matter what treaties may neg lect to say on the subject. AND STILL ANOTHER. PORTLAND, Jan. 4. (To the Editors Mr. J. R. Reed, in this morning's Ore gonian, bases his objection to the exemp tion of churches from taxation on the ground that many people, who, like him self, think that churches do more harm than good, are indirectly taxed to support them by this exemption. The Ore gonian responds that "No one's taxes are increased by exemption of church build ings, for church buildings would not ex ist if taxed as private property." Then, contrary to the usual logical course of The Oregonian, a very irrelative attempt to convert Mr. Reed to the prevailing religious views of the day is made, and the usual terms "clod or an animal" are brought in as extremely conclusive. Now, I would like to ask by what au thority The Oregonian asserts that if churches were taxed they would cease to exist. It seems to me that the Protest ant churches were born and continued to exist for many years before any favors like exemption from taxation were shown. More than this, the members of these churches paid taxes to -the government in England and also paid taxes to sup port the established church besides. It seems to me that our good Baptist breth ren, who are in favor of taxing churches, do not think that the tax would tend to exterminate the church edifice. If they i would continue to exist when taxed then He Pops With the Pops. Newberg Graphic. For several days after Hofer, ot the Capital Journal, arrived home from his trip East, he was on the wing with refer ence to the senatorial election, evidently endeavoring to take a 'alf 'alf stand, but something has evidently dropped, as he has gone over kerflop on the everythin-to-beat-Dolph side. Nothing is strange in this proceeding however, as the Journal would, about half the time, pass for a pop sheet any way. o Au American Mascot. Buffalo Express. An agent of the Chinese government is said to be negotiating with Brazil for the purchase of the NIctheroy, the dynamite cruiser which was sent down to Rio Ja neiro to destroy the rebels. Apparently Zalinskl's Invention is destined to make several fortunes for those who buy and sell It, without being required to fire a shot. Enterprise. Chicago Dispatch. The Siloam Springs (Ark.) Herald offers a year's subscription free to the man who brings in the body of outlaw Bill Cook, dead or alive. A Valuable DIscuhnIoh. Indianapolis News. The democratic party should digest thoroughly the present scientific discus sion as to how a cat manages to light on Its feet. Something on the Traelc. Detroit Tribune. The condition of the track just ahead impels Chairman Springer to whistle for brakes and put it off till after Christmas. AVaishInj;toii. Grand Recorder Pickens monthly re port cf the A. O. U. W. for December shows two deaths, requiring two assess ments for January. Eighty-two new members were initiated into the order in the state during the month, making tho total membership 4905. J. B. Ternes has applied to a Tacoma court for letters of administration on the estate of Edward W. Grant, who was killed on the Northern Pacific railroad in November, 1893. The suit against the road has been settled by the payment of $1000 and costs by the company. John Robin, of Castle Rock, cut 20.19S, 000 shingles with his one single-hand machine during the year 1894. Any single hand shingle-mill in the state that can beat that cut will please let Mr. Robin know, and he will go them 5,000,000 better this year. He can cut 25,000,000 shingles during the year 1S93. H. V. Gates, after getting the elected light plant In Castle Rock Tunning in prime shape, departed last week for Hepp- ner to look after his light and water sys tem at that place. From there he will go to Idaho on other business matters, and on his return will begin his legislative labors in the Oregon legislature as repre sentative for Washington county. Last Monday, Emerson' Heath, of II waco, treed a bear in a hollow cedar, and, being unable to get him out any other way, undertook to smoke him out. As the smoke became thick, Mr. Bruin scrambled to the top, but on sticking hia nose out he saw Emerson awaiting hint with a club, so slid back again in the tree, where he was smothered to death before Emerson could put the fire out. It is probable that Tacoma will ask the legislature this winter for consider-, able special legislation. The bulk of iti may be in reference to charter revision, but one important bill will ask for aui thorlty to expend the $300,000 voted bjj the people for water extension to Thoma) and Patterson springs to get water at some other place, or to use the money for some other purpose. The News says therg Is not, as has become well known slnco the light and water purchase, enough water at the Thomas and Patterson springs to warrant the spending of the, money in that direction. PERSONS WORTH. KNOWING ABOUT, Thackeray's dinner service is offered for sale in London; but It wasn't the service that made the dinners gay. Mrs. Emily Robbins Talcott, of Wesfi Hartford, Conn., celebrated the 105th an niversary of her birth recently, in good health. Senator Wolcott, of Colorado, and Rep resentative Clark, of Missouri, are men of one kidney, each having had one of those organs removed. Professor Neumann, of the university, of Koenigsberg, is 96 years of age, and for 66 years has been lecturing continuously on physics and mineralogy, lie is tne oldest professor in active work in Ger many. General Duchesne, commander of the French expedition to Madagascar, first did service in the Franco-Prussian war, receiving the rank of captain. He fought against the Chinese in 1884. and in 1893 was made a general of division. Eugenie, ex-empress of the French, is nearly 70 years ot age. She is now living in exile In the beautiful retreat in Farn borough, England. She was 27 when she married and ! when her only child, the prince imperial, was killed by the Zulus. Franz Kossuth, who had raised quite a furore in Hungary by trading the memory of his father's name, has had the chagrin of seeing his factitious boom collapse. Among other things the liberal party all over the country decided not to take part in any public reception that might be given to him. Sir Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, M. P., who was born In Brooklyn, has received a let ter from one of the Swazi envoys to the queen, informing him that the Swazl dep utation, as some return for the zeal with which he has championed their cause. have conferred upon him the name Of "Sllonlo." which means "The popular one, the fearless one, the courageous." "Captain Robley D. Evans, of the cruiser New York," says the New York Sun. 'complains that the cold penetrated her side at the navy-yard, and nearly froze him to death. Fighting Bob can't expect that warmth and fervency of underlying principle that made his distinguished trav eling companion so happy In South Caro lina. Brooklyn is good, but cold, and her hospitality has not the tropical glow of the land of the palmetto and the Tillman. The New York is to start shortly for lands of warmer welcome. Including Ja maica and Curacoa. Fighting Bob may yet be happy; but who shall console his faithful mate left behind in Washington?"