lO TIIEMORXIXG OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1910. PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofllce aa Seoond-Class Matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Runday included, one year $8.00 lly. Sunday Included, mix monthB.... 4.25 ally. Sunday included, three month. . 2.25 Daily, Sunday Included, one month 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, .without Sunday, six months 3.23 Daily, without Sunday, three month. ,. 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year . 1.50 Eunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and -weekly, one year... 8.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year...,,.. 0.O0 Dally, Sunday included, one month..... .75 How to Remit Send Postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local banJc. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoftice ad dress In full, including county and state. Postage Rates 10 to 14 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 28 pases. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages 3 cents; 40 to 60 pages, 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business' Office The S. C. Beck with Special Agency New York, rooms 48 M Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-512 Trubune building. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, JA. 14, IB 10. CONSERVATION WITHOUT rTNCHOTISM. The State of New York does not al low Its resources to bo "Pinchotized," but It conserves them Itself. ' It is carrying out an elaborate plan of for est reserves and of development and protection of water powers. The re serves of New .York State contain 1,641,523 acres of land In the Catskill and the Adirondack Mountains, and it Is proposed to raise the total to nearly 4,000,000 acres. This policy of con servation is strongly recommended by Governor Hughes in his last week's message to the State Legislature. The Governor quotes from his preceding message as follows: The time must shortly come when, no longer having reason to fear the grasp of the selfish hand and having settled the in violability of the public Interest in our priceless forest possessions, we shall make possible their scientific protection and their proper utilization for the public benefit. We may thus not only secure needed advantages In safeguarding our streams and industrial power, but we may also properly promote the health and enjoyment of the people. We hall not realize the full benefit of these great resources until we not only preserve our forests by intelligent treatment, but also by means of suitable roads and well-kept trails we make our mountain pleasure grounds, under wise regulations protecting woodland and nature's beauty, more accessi ble to our people and render available to the many the lnvlgoratlon and the inspiration which few may now enjoy. Governor Hughes also makes strong recommendations for developing addi tional water powers on the Hudson River. The State Water Power Com mission, in its report soon to be made, will propose plans for making avail able 246,000 new horsepower from the flow of that river. All this conservation will be car ried on for the lasting benefit of the State of New York. Local desires and needs will be conserved along with the resources. The people of New York, of course, would not hand over this business to the Pinchot bureau in Washington; they have their own ideas of how they wish their resources con served and what other things are to be safeguarded along with them. Re sources of Oregon, Washington and other Western States, however, are managed to suit the non-resident no tions of Pinchot's bureau. State conservation ' is the proper method of guarding the public wealth In forests, streams and minerals. The people of Oregon and those of Wash ington can look after their resources without dictation from Washington, end do it altogether more satisfactor ily than swing-chair officials in the National capital, who know this coun try chiefly for its Summer trout fish ing. ENLARGING TUB TREASURY DKFICI. If all departments of the Govern ment service are handled with the same utter disregard for business principles that is so prominent a feat Tire of the Quartermaster's Depart ment, there is no occasion for surprise Rt the steadily increasing Treasury deficit. As an example of the waste ful, ridiculous system by which the Government fs mulcted through the t-olossal stupidity of its employes, the Philippine lumber contract awarded in this city Wednesday is most interest ing. The Government is in need of 2.140,000 feet of lumber at Manila. Three bids were submitted by Pacific Coast dealers. The Tacoma Mill Com pany offered the lumber at a figure which, freight added, would cost the Government a total of $4 6,040. J, Er nest Laldlaw, of this cityv submitted a bid which, freight added. Would make the total cost of the lumber delivered at Manila 4 6,6 4 7. Balfour, Guthrie & Co., of this city, offered to deliver the lumber at Manila, with all charges paid, for $41,800. The ordinary business man, depend ent on common sense and a slight knowledge of mathematics for his success in life, would not hesitate very long in determining which of these three bids should be accepted. There would have been a clear saving for the Government of over $4000 by accept ing the lowest bid submitted. Every thing was straight and regular, and the lumber was to be delivered just where the Government wanted it; but, unfor tunately for the lowest bidder, as well as for the taxpayers who pay for the losses due to departmental ignorance, it was decided that the bid was not legal. There was not enough red tape around the offer of the lowest bidder, and, ignoring the fact that it was more than $4000 lower than the fig ure submitted by the next highest bidder, the Judge Advocate-General decided that it was "not competitive," and therefore not legal. Naturally, there must have been some infraction of the red-tape rules that would cause such a decision against the lowest bidder. There was. A Seattle firm has a contract with the Government by which it is paid $1 per thousand more for transporting lumber from Portland than it secures for lumber carried from Puget Sound ports to Manila. Notwithstanding the fact that there was nothing in the contract which required the Govern ment to ship its lumber from Portland tinder the disadvantageous differential, an attempt was made to place the Portland bidders at this disadvantage by calling for bids for delivery at Portland or Puget Sound, instead of Manila, where the lumber was needed. The Portland firm which submitted a bid by which the Government could get the lumber to Manila more than $4000 cheaper than . by the terms of any of the other bids charters ships and sells lumber cargoes all over the world. Be ing unhampered by red tape, it pays exactly the same freight rate on lum ber from Portland that It pays from Puget Sound. Lumber importers in Europe. China, Japan, Australia, Af rica and other countries have never rejected the bids of this firm as being "not competitive" when they were several thousand dollars lower than those of the next highest.bldder. This system, if followed in private business, would bankrupt every man who at tempted it. KQl'AL AND UNIFORM TAXATION. The Oregon Federation of Labor represents a considerable body of good citizens; but its resolutions on the va rious subjects offered for considera tion do not always represent the views of a majority, if the subject under consideration' proposes radical change In the policy of the state, one may be sure that only a small minority has approved the. resolutions that favor radical change though the resolu tions have been adopted without pro nounced dissent. This is the law of all these and similar organizations. The aggressive radical minority pushes the proceedings, and the quiet ma jority is silent on the ground that the revolutionary doctrine can't pass, any way. The resolution proposed by the Ore gon Federation, on the subject of tax ation, falls under thi description. Taxation is to be taken out of the hands of the Legislature, and it is to be determined on initiative petition, by popular vote, what classes of prop erty shall be taxed, what shall be ex empted, and what the rate of taxation shall be. If adopted, the proposal will open the way to unequal taxation. This doubtless is the intent 'or pur pose Of the change thus proposed. But It is believed that no better system can be devised than that which requires all taxation to be equal and uniform. This principle is written in the old constitution of the state the existing constitution and it is not apparent that it could be improved by any change. Ill i:s. It Is only the ignorant and heedless who- will scorn the plans of the New York Academy of Medicine to exter minate house flies. Were it only for the sake of good 'morals, their work would be commendable, for it is cer tain that flies are the cause of more profanity than all other objects in the world combined, but the physicians of New York have a less exalted aim than the salvation of souls. It is the protection of the health of our bodies. Little by little in recent years the fact has been disclosed that "the harmless, Inoffensive housefly" must be counted among the most deadly enemies of the human race:- It is not only a- filthier insect than lice or bedbugs, but It propagates half a dozen loathsome and murderous diseases. The fly is covered with a coat of short hairs which be come daubed with whatever it crawls through. Since the insect frequents by instinct the foulest accumulations it can reach, one may easily imagine the substances it spreads over the bread, the meat and particularly the butter, which It finds on the dinner table or uncovered in storesi Protection against flies requires every article of food or drink to be screened against them. : A single in sect trailing across the butter may in fect it with typhoid germs collected from a cesspool. It may poison food with the germs of tuberculosis or rep rosy, to say nothing of a dozen other diseases: Everything must be con stantly screened where flies exist, or they will defile if they do not infect it; but so long as they are "buzzing around nothing can be screened con tinuously enough to make it safe. The sugar, the milk, the bread, must be un covered now and then, and the instant it is exposed a swarm of flies are ready to pounce upon it and leave their loathsome traces. The only certain protection against flies is to exterminate them. This is a much less difficult task than it ap pears at first sight. All that is neces sary." is cleanliness.. Flies breed in filth. Where there is no filth there can be ho "flies, but wherever there is a neglected accumulation they breed In myriads. The refuse from horse barns is their chosen material to de posit eggs in, but anything that is foul will do. The lesson is plain. If we do not want our food and dwellings defiled by flies, we must keep our surroundings clean. The art of clean liness is stiil only rudimentary in the United States. It is practice'd neither in city nor country, except spasmodic ally and partially. Once in a while there is a grand "cleaning up" in Port land and other cities, just as the old farmer regularly took, a bath on the Fourth of July, but the tireless, sys tematic, thorough removal of .filth is a habit we have yet to form. Until we have formed it, however, we must ex pect to-be plagued with files and to perish before our time of the diseases they spread in their loathsome wan derings. ' THE MANCHURIAN MUDDLE. It is not surprising that the Japan ese should object to the plan of Secre tary Knox for neutralizing the Man churlan railways. Neither will it be surprising to learn a little later that Russia is not in accord with the plan. The reason for this Russia-Japan ob jection to the plan is not. far to seek. Russia, while still smarting from the wounds inflicted by Japan in the late war, began making the best of a bad Job by negotiating with Japan for division of the Manchurian trade ter ritory. Most of this territory belonged exclusively to China, but the timidity of that bulldozed ' and bullyragged country prevented her asserting her rights. As both Japan and Russia were pledged to the "open door" pol icy, the rest of the world was mildly indifferent to the situation. Russia's first claim on this territory was by virtue of the railway agreement be tween the Russo-Chinese bank which financed construction of the Chinese Eastern Railway. These rights were undisputed until quite recently, when China began com plaining that entirely too liberal an interpretation had been placed on the agreement, and that Russia was exer cising power which it was never in tended she should have. In settling up the score after the Russo-Japan war, Russia handed over the southern portion of this territory to Japan. When China began crying ' fraud. Japan was quick to recognize that her Interests in Manchuria were identical with those of Russia. About two years ago the Japanese Minister at Pekin addressed'a note to the Russian Minister at Pekin in which Japan ac knowledged Russia's claims to ex clusive and absolute right of adminis tration in the territories of the Chinese Eastern Railway. Russia, in the cir cumstances, could do no less than to return the compliment by acknowledg ing Japan's claims to the spoils of war in the southern territory. If the rest, of the world could be satisfied that Russia and Japan in tended to maintain a fair, neutral ad ministration of this territory which decrepit China seems unable properly to look after, there would be no ob jection to the attitude of Japan and Russia. But, not without cause, sus picion has arisen regarding the inten tions of Japan and Russia. The Knox plan for neutralization of the Man churian railways would give all of the powers equal trade rights In the country, and there will be uneasiness and dissatisfaction until this plan," or one of similar merit, shall be adopted. With Great Britain and the United States standing with China for "a fair field and no favors," Japan and Russia may later be forced to ac cept a modification of the present sys tem of exploitation of the rich Man churian trade fields. . POOR DEMOCRATS. The attitude of some Democrats toward "white slave" legislation in Congress shows how disastrous to a man's usefulness insensate devotion to a fetichistic formula may become. These Democrats believe, or fancy they believe, in an ancient and foolish form of words called "state's rights." Once, long ago. It stood for something real. Now it stands for a chimera, a vision, a vain and empty dream, and nothing more. Yet the devotion of these men to their silly fetich paralyzes their ac tivity in important crises. It reduces them to mere wooden images which stand and automatically squeak, "state's rights" when they ought to be using their brains for the public good. The white slave traffic is by its na ture an interstate affair. Perhaps more accurately, it is international. Forbidden to cross state lines, it must pine and die. It is a thing which no state can possibly suppress. Were Democrats in the habit nf thinking in stead of inanely parroting vapid form ulas, they would see this clearly enough. But they have lost the capa bility of thinking, if they ever had it. All they can do is to open their mouths and repeat the ritual of adoration to their grotesque and withered fetich, "state's rights, state's rights." The spectacle is pitiable. PREVENTABLE TRAGEDY. Except in the name of the ship and the personnel of the victims, the Czarina tragedy presents no features that have not been in evidence in many similar disasters along the Pa cific Coast. Criticism that might be directed against Captain Duggan will be softened because he has paid the extreme penalty, but, unless the news reports of the tragedy are at fault, it would seem that this terrible affair might appropriately be classed with "preventable disasters," and Captain Duggan more than anyone else might have prevented it. A vessel at sea, hurrying for a harbor before a raging gale, might naturally be expected to take some chances in getting into port to escape possible danger out side. A vessel lying snug inside the harbor, while a gale was raging out side, would not naturally be expected to take such chances. The Czarina, coal-laden, started sea ward when the bar was very rough. Captain Duggan, whose faulty judg ment cost him his life, undoubtedly believed that he could push his way through the breakers that were comb ing over the bar, jeopardizing the life and property In his charge. A more cautious man would never have , at tempted the feat, but it is one that Captain Duggan had perhaps success fully accomplished many times in his long career in and out of the bar har bors of the Pacific Coast. It is the old trouble of familiarity that breeds contempt for the dangers of the sea. Nearly every, man in com mand of a steamship on the Pacific has faced death at such close range that It has lost many of its terrors. Some of them profit by their narrow escapes and exercise' a caution that prevents disasters, while others con tinue to flirt with death until' the crisis is reached, and another is added to the long list of preventable tragedies. An exceptionally sad feature of the Czarina wreck was the loss of Harold Millis, a well-known young Portland man, who perished before the ej'es of his father, who was powerless to help him. There are hearts that are breaking and a life-long sorro,w. left in the homes of the officers and crew who went diown- with their ship, but the families of these brave men, wit"h the possibility of such a fate for theiff loved ones ever before' them, are to a far greater extent prepared for the blow than the friends .of the ordinary passenger, unfamiliar with the dan gers, and totally unprepared for such a tragedy. PURE FOOD LAWS. Following the excellent example of Mr. Roosevelt, President Taft has called a. meeting of the Governors of the states to consider a number of subjects which concern the Nation. All these subjects are important, but none more so than that of uniformity in pure food laws. At present Oregon and some other states have pure food laws which vary but little from the Federal statute. In many states, on the other hand, regulations have been passed which seem to ignore the act of Congress entirely. The result Is a confusion of laws which embarrasses interstate trade and needlessly bur dens the business of honest manufac turers. The distracting multiplicity of conflicting pure food laws injures honest manufacturers a great deal more than it does those who produce fraudulent and adulterated articles. Since the latter are in the business of breaking the law, it matters little to them if every state has a different statute. It is about as easy to break one law as another. ' But for a manu facturer who is resolved to obey the law, and who desires to produce a uniformly honest article, each new and conflicting statute brings with it a new array of difficulties and losses. The pure food act of Congress ap plies only to goods manufactured for interstate trade. The laws of the va rious states are valid within their own territory, and no farther. In so far as they vary among themselves and differ from the Federal law, they im pose unjustifiable burdens upon trade. A firm which sells its goods nowhere but in the state where they are made cares very little, of course, what the local pure food law may be. It can arrange to obey the requirements, and there the matter ends. But if the firm wishes to ship its goods into other states, the dilemma is not so simple. It must then obey dozens of conflicting sets of regulations, which naturally require special arrange ments of plant, special grades of raw material and multiplied processes of manufacture. As a matter of fact, very few firms cater to local trade only. Most of those of any conse quence seek an interstate market, and suffer, therefore, from all the incon veniences of our hodge-podge pure food laws. The Congressional pure food law Is either a sufficient -safeguard for the public against fraudulent and adul terated articles, or it is not. If It is not sufficient, then it ought to be amended and reamended until it is. So long as objectionable goods are not barred from interstate commerce, state fulminatlons against them must remain . ineffective, to a large extent. When they are barred, then state reg ulations" become" unnecessary, except for purely local products; and If the Federal regulations are adequate to safeguard products in interstate tr,ade, the same regulations must be ade quate to safeguard local products. It follows that as soon as we have a proper Federal law, the only rational thing for the states to do is to re enact it. We may expect the meeting of Gov ernors to take this view of the mat ter. They will undoubtedly recom mend amendments to the National pure food law, if it needs any, and afterward urge their respective Legis latures to adopt the perfected Federal law without making any alterations in Its provisions. The City Council of Eugene recently granted the petition of the ministers of that city to build a large frame structure on a prominent street to be used for revival meetings. The per mit was contrary to the ordinance concerning fire restrictions, hence the construction of the tabernacle is vig orously opposed as dangerous to the public safety. , The point is well taken. If a large, fllmsily constructed wooden building used for assembly purposes is a menace to the city a fact that will be conceded by all it is not the less so if used for religious gatherings. The ministers of Eugene expect "to crowd this inflammable building night after - night, possibly with an Imported evangelist as a draw ing card. In the always possible acci dent of Are, the loss' of life would be as great, were Billy Sunday the attrac tion that filled the building, as it would if a prizefight had drawn the crowd; greater, indeed, since in the former case the audience would be largely made up of women and chil dren. It is an impertinence to ask a privilege of this character, and folly or weakness to grant it. San Francisco is in a fair way to get back to that proud eminence which a number of years ago made her the Mecca of pugilists and plug uglies from all over the world. That the "fighting game" Is to be restored to its former glory is evident when it is stated that the present chairman of the police committee of the Board of Supervisors of the City of San Fran cisco is none other than John L. Her get, known in prize-ring circles all over the United States as "Young Mitchell." This city official and ex bruiser offers a very philosophical ar gument for permitting prizefighting in San Francisco when he states that "the only argument against them is a moral one, and if the fights are not held here they will be held some place else." The only argument against a great many other things which used to be done in "good old Frisco" was a "moral" one, and yet there were people who preferred that some of these "immoral" spectacles should take place "some place else." The fine four-masted bark Poltal loch, 100 Al classification, with a car rying capacity of about 4000 tons, was sold in an American port by an officer of the United States Government, to an American citizen for about one fifth the cost of building a similar vessel in this country. The vessel would be a credit to the American flag, and under that flag, could immediate ly find remunerative employment. Here is presented an opportunity for our friends who are so solicitous for the welfare of the American merchant marine to make an Immediate addi tion to its tonnage figures. If Con gressman Humphrey, Pacific Coast representative of the subsidy, inter ests, will introduce and pass a bill giv ing this ship American registry, with out any foolish and impossible restric tions, 'he will have accomplished more direct tangible good in upbuilding the merchant marine than has yet been accomplished by the combined influ ence and efforts of all the subsidy seekers in the United States. ; The secret of the mysterious North Coast road is again out. This time the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Is cred ited with being the Invisible power that pulls the strings winch Mr. Stra horn has attached to so much railroad property In the West. According to this latest theory, the North Coast and the Milwaukee roads are working on a project for a union depot at Spo kane. From the fact that he is spend ing real money in immense amounts, and is actually building railroads, Mr. Strahorn enjoys a distinction that has seldom been given "mysterious" railroad-builders of the past. With a large number of them, developments subsequent to their departure' for new fields have left the element of "mys tery" confined exclusively to the man ner in which they managed to secure money sufficient for meal tickets and room rent. Those two mugs together Bourne and Chamberlain presented In The Oregonlan yesterday from the Detroit Times, made a wonderful hit. The whole business at once, open to the glance of the eye. Not necessary to weary the attention with? a written ar gument. - Sun spots or' comets are said to cause bad weather. But that's a mis taken dea. Kickers make all the bad weather. To the good in heart all weather is good. A girl in Iowa went crazy after a young man hugged her. A girl is usually crazy, however, at the time she allows herself to be hugged, rather than afterward. City folk whc deprecate the car service should consider Albany, where the local paper says "the" street car was delayed one hour by a fuse burning out. We see again in the reviewed land fraud testimony that it was a strong, bold political "gang" that Heney dis rupted in Oregon four and five years ago- VIEWS OF PINCHOT'S DISMISSAL.- Removal Frftni Office Could Not Be Avoided. - Chicago Record --Herald. Ind. Rep. While the loss of so sincere and vig orous an official, so unselfish a cham pion of public interests, is to be deeply regretted, the dismissal could not have been avoided, and that only the bigoted and willfully blind will see in it either a blow at the conservation movement or failure in Mr. Taft to recognize the courage, the devotion, the vigilance with which Mr. Pinchot served the Government and the Nation in the For estry Bureau. Pinchot Prejudices the Case. Boston" Advertiser, Rep. Under the order for an investigation all the facts are certain to come forth and find judicial consideration, as they deserve. Mr. Pinchot. in his letter, thus seeks, or else is led by his emo tions, to prejudice a case now pending fair adjustment, and his action thereby becomes unworthy an honest cause. President Taft Act Wisely. Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Rep. In removing from office Gifford Pin chot and his associates in the plot to discredit the Administration. President Taft has strengthened himself with the Deople. it is the people, after all, rather than factional leaders, who have the last say Mr. Taft has been in office but ten months, and is making head way right along. Pinenot May Retire Taft. Baltimore Sun, Ind. Dcm. . The dismissal of Mr. Pinchot from the public service because of his letter to Senator Dolliver Is very likely the open ing of a serious Internecine strife in the Republican party. Its results will be far reaohing and may possibly include the return of Mr. Roosevelt to the White House in 1913, or perhaps the retirement of Mr. Taft at the end of his present term. Pinchot Gets His Desert. Hartford (Conn.) Courant, Rep. The letter of the President Incident ally points to one fact that has not been commonly noted in the loose dis cussion of the Pinchot-Ballinger con troversy that the trouble is over not a great domain but a matter of thirty acres. Those aware of what was doing have known for some time that Pin chot wanted to be dismissed and now he has got what he wanted. We are sorry. Few Can See Through the Muddle. Chicago Tribune, Ind. Rep. There are few who can see through the muddle which exists in Washington for the moment at least. If ever there were a call for suspension of judgment it comes now. Men are puzzled and grieved by reports that the President purposes to take sides in a party con troversy over a law now on the statue books and over the rules of the House, and hope that they may have some light on. the subject. Pinchot as the Brave Knight. Houston (Tex.) Post, Dem. It may be that Mr. Pinchot has acted too rashly, being inspired thereto by mis taken zeal, but whatever the immediate outcome to him personally, or of the in vestigation growing out of the contro versy between the two officials, it will be difficult to destroy the confidence of the public in the patriotic intent of the chief forester's action. Let the light in this is the people's Government. Balllnger's Case Yet to Be Tried. Indianapolis News, ind. Whatever the final outcome may be, the country is not likely to forget its obligation of Gifford Pinchot, for he has rendered It a great service The only possible conclusion was that he wished to be removed, on the theory that there were great ' wrongs to be righted ... .This action is in no sense a vindication of Secretary Ballinger. The dismissal of Pinchot is neither a con demnation of his administration of the forest service, nOr an indorsement of Ballinger. His case is yet to be tried. Pinchot Sacrifices Himself. Kansas City Star, Ind. It is deplorable that political exigencies should have led to the sacrifice of perhaps the most efficient man in the service of the United States. Technically, GifTord Pinchot may have been guilty of insub ordination. But It is evident that he so offended because of his belief in the ne cessity of calling the attention of the American people in a sensational way to the danger of the looting of the National domain by the privilege grabbers. It must be believed that Pinchot deliberate ly sacrificed himself in order to make the issue plain. Pinchot and Roosevelt vs. Tnft. Chicago Inter-Ocean, Ind. Rep. It is unfortunate that the Nation should lose such a splendid public serv ant. It is unfortunate that such a splendid public servant should act so defiantly as to necessitate his dismissal. These misfortunes mean a sudden, demoralization and irreconcilable con flict in the Republican party Pinchot as the "representative of the Roosevelt Idea against Taft as the representative of the Taft Idea. And there's the rub! We all know what the Roosevelt idea is, but what's the Taft idea! Nobody knows. Western Settlers Are Pleased. Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune, Rep. It was impossible for President Taft to retain Mr. Pinchot" after his acts of official insolence and insubordination. The settlers generally throughout the West will also view Mr. Pinchot's downfall with equanimity, and will welcome the opportunity to obtain bet ter use of the public utilities than heretofore. There has never been such denial at any time in this country, from "Colonial times ' to the present, when settlers were harassed with such restrictions as they have-suffered un der the Pinchot policies. Pass No Judgment Now; Wait. Springfield (Mass.) Republican, Ind. Mr. Pinchot had become impossible as an official of the Taft administra tion, and that his immediate separation from the public service was required by the exigencies of the situation. The issue Mr. Pinchot has raised is that the present Administration has been unfaithful to the cause of conserva tion, and in the promotion of its inter ests is no longer worthy of public con fidence. The" public mind sooner or later will be made up and the public judg ment rendered, but for Uie present it would be well for all to suspend final Judgment until the whole case can be placed before the people. No Other Course Open to Taft. New York World, Dem. The removal of Mr. Pinchot from office was the only . course open to President Taft. The letter which the Chief Forester sent to Senator Dolliver to be read in the Senate was an act of flagrant Insubordination. After his re flections upon Mr. Taft he must have known that his connection with the Administration could no longer be tol erated. No government could be run under methods so demoralizing to dis cipline. If Mr. Pinchot felt that he was superior to the general Instruc tions issued to all department officials against making unauthorized state ments he should have been governed by the personal advice of Secretary Wilson against writing the Dolliver letter. But he set himself above all authority. As the, deliberate victim of his own un ruliness he has deprived himself of the privilege of posing as a martyr to the cause of the conservation of natural resources. . - SISKIYOU'S StTDDEV SECESSION." How the Mlshty Movement Is Rearard ed In New York. New York Times. ' We have heard of late with distress and anguish the word "secession." Our distress is made not less acute, nor is our anguish less excruciating, because the word is used of a state that me diates seceding into, not out of, the Union. For It is no miracle of peace able secession. Already we hear war cries and breathings of slaughter Fathered by California, mothered by Oregon, unfilial Siskiyou emerges with threatenlngs and violence from Its pa rental confines. A "vast empire" en dbwed with ocean harbors, with min eral wealth, with scenic attractions and tall timber is In rebellion. So much was rumored, and we call for in formation. The Portland Oregonlan vouchsafes some: The clamor for a new star In the frnriteous constellation of the Union gathers its thun derous boom znainly from one throat to wit. that of the literary prodigy whose in spired pen writes the editorials in a Med ford paper. This srreat man wants to se cede from Oregon and California Because he is mad. His madness is geographical: The portentous circumstance Is that he has made up his alleged mind to withdraw and take portions of the Kogue Fiver Val ley and Northern California alone wltn him. He has an arsenal: He Is backed up by the Jackson County fress Association, a powerful body, com posed of the Medford editor, a printer's devil In Jacksonville and an outdated rail road pass the latter framed and. hung on the wall as a perpetual reminder of other and more glorious times. it Is said a sup ply of arms and ammunition has been laid in to be used if the base legislative caitiffs at balem and Sacramento resist the Beces alon movement. Can nothing be done to avert the impending conflict at two capitals? What makes the Medford editor mad, anxious to break off his piece of Ore gon and California, too? Is it The Oregonlan? THE LATE MRS. WEEKS." Question About the Days of Sherwood, Oregon. M'MINNVILLE, Or., Jan. 11. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonlan January 10, under caption of "The Myth-making Mind," is an article wherein it is shown that the story about Mrs. S. A. Weeks, who recently died at Sherwood, Or., having been a daughter of John Day, the explorer, for whom Jehn Day River is named, Is a myth. The Ore gonlan thus "comes very near the myth making line itself. You say that "Mrs. Weeks, doubtless, was a daughter of George Day, an old settler of Sherwood. Washington Coun ty"; and that "everybody in Washing ton County fifty years ago knew George Day." I knew him well for many years, as well as his estimable wife, both be fore and after her marriage with Mr. Day, at which time Mrs. Weeks, aged 64 years, must have been about 10 years old. Mrs. Day, nee Jennie Pain ter, a short time ago was living on the old Day homestead near Sherwood, where. I think, she still lives with some members of her large family. Their eldest daughter, now Mrs. Mag gie Barstow.'of Twin Falls. Idaho, is many years younger than Mrs. Weeks was at the time of her death. So, to me, it Is just as certain that Mrs. Weeks was not the daughter of the late George Day, of Washington Coun ty, as it is that she was not the daugh ter of John Day, the explorer, whose heroic life and melancholy death are perpetuated In the river that bears his name. ED C. ROSS. SCHOOLBOYS' PHIZES MISTAKES. Collection of Beautiful Specimens of Modern Education. Detroit News. The following is a selection from a large number of "howlers" submitted in connection with a prize competition, ar ranged by the University Correspondent for the best collection of twelve mistakes made by schoolboys. I-ord Raleigh was the first man to see the Invisible Armada. In India a man out of cask may not marry a woman out of another cask. Tennyson write "In Memorandum." George Eliot left a wife and children to mourn his genii. Thomas Becket used to wash the feet of leopards. Henry I died of eating Palfreys. Louis XVI was gelatlned during the French revolution. Romulus obtained the first citizens for Rome by opening a lunatic asylum. The Rhine is bordered by wooden moun tains. Algebraical symbols are used when you don't know what you are talking about. Geometry teaches us how to bisex an gels. , Gravitation is that which if there were none we should all fly away. A renegade is a man who, kills a king. The press today is the mouth organ of the people. A lie is an aversion to the truth. A deacon is the lowest kind of Chris tian. Pythagoras built a bridge for asses. Etymology Is a man who catches but terflies and stuffs them. Women's suffrage is the state of suf fering to which they were born. MusIuks of the Gentle Cynic. New York Times. When It's an uphill fight a man can only do his level best. Unless you look out for yourself you won't see much. Don't borrow trouble. Enough will come to roost. He who kills time is the assassin of his own opportunities. The widow who looks well in black wears it as much for her next husband as for her last. Don't pose. The poet doesn't wear his hair long simply because there is no short cut to fame. The girl to marry is the one who be lieves In love in a cottage. If she be lieves that, you can stuff her with any OKI thing. The tips and downs of life keep a man from getting rusty. It isn,'t the henpecked husband who lays for his wife. Sure to Have Assemblies. Condon Times. It'is an absolute certainty that the Re publicans of Oregon will hold an assem bly some time during the year, for the purpose of recommending candidates for the primary nominations. Chairman Cake of the state central committee will call a meeting of the state central committee some time in February for the purpose of adopting some method of selecting dele gates to the state assembly. The primary nominating election will be held about September 10. and the assembly will prob ably be held six weeks or two months prior to the primary. The Democrats always select their candidates before the primary and we see no objection to the Republicans doing the same. All political parties have a right to assemble and recommend candidates for the considera tion of the people of the primary nom ination election. Within the Party. J Chicago Tribune "You people have a primary law out here. How do you like it?" "Suits me first rate. Gives me a chance to take a whack at a bum Congressman without going outside of my party to do it." A Report on Frits. Boston Globe. "How lss your boy Fritz getting along in der college?" "Ach! He Is halfback in der football team and all der way back in his .studies," GREAT COST OP XT. S. DETECTIVES Figures as to a Mysterious Branch of ederal Service. From a Speech In Congress by Represent- ame Aaair. No business institution .... would last 30 days If it were run on the same basis and with the same methods used In the conduct of Governmental af fairs. Under the proper system our de partments could be run for one-half what they are costing today. The salary force should be reduced to the needs of the de partments, incompetents should be weeded . ,., e,ou.a not oe given places because they were ward politicians and had rendered some uvrin. .u- kj tuts uariy P.7er' Vfualy th dumping ground no nave rendered political service has been fh the detective service Just a few years ago a few hundred men wre employed in 'he Governmnt Detec tive Service, but now the number ou the payroll runs into the thniTU()nH.. t, - - - iw.t.t: 1 1 v- ly our appropriation bills, as shown by u.ti.,SuiSUCU neaa or tno appropria tion committee (Mr. Tawney). has carried allowances for detective service as fol lows: ApproprialionB for Government Defectives Postoftice detectives ji .-,!,, Internal revenue detectives . i-'-'moo Customs frauds detectives ' "nn'oort Counterfeiter detectives I mr.'orio Bureau of Corporations detectives... JT500O i!?t,enBtat commerce detective M'(Vl 1-ublio lend detectives nij.'ort.! Antl-trv.t law detectives ::.-..' A t Pension Bureau detectives Sc9 Meat inspection detectives 3 .'.!,, Pure food detectives S:.touO Total appropriation for detectlvee.7.1iti,oot Think of it, Mr. Speaker,' tT.UO.ooo of the people's money spent in the detec tive service, and outside of the benefits derived from the meat and pure-food in spectors, the balance of the service amounts to but very little. Over a mil lion dollars paid to the postoffice detec tives each year, and we have no record of their having discovered or detected anything that resulted in any great ben efit to the Government. Under civil service rules a Postmaster Is not per mitted to take active part In politics, yet everybody knows his appointment was ' probably due to his activity in politics and he was recommended for the place because the Congressman naming him be lieved he could render valuable political service when the time came for his re election. But notwithstanding this com mon knowledge, no postoffice detective has yet ever been able to detect a single Postmaster who takes any part in poli tics. So far as I am concerned I do not care' how much part a Postmaster takes in politics, but I do not want to see a million dollars of the people's money ab solutely wasted. We have been paying KOO.OOO a year to custom-fraud detectives, but they failed to detect the sugar trust robbing the Government of nearly J3.0UO. 000, and had it not been for some of the employes of the sugar trust we would know nothing about it now. We are pay ing $500,000 a year to Government land detectives, and all they have ever saved the Government would not buy enough land at $2 per acre to bury a mule. It seems to me the biggest joke of aUl is the fact that we pay J2SO.O0O a year to the anti-trust detectives, and up to this time they have not been able to discover a sin gle trust. Then we pay $380,000 a year to pension detectives, who .seldom ever de tect anything of importance to the Pen sion Bureau. How much better it would be to pay this vast sum, of money to the ex-soldiers in the way of increased pen sions. Ah, Mr. Speaker, the enormous expense of the detective force is an outrage and a burden on the people, and should be re formed. There are single bureaus voted more money each year than it used to take to run the Government. The For estry Bureau alone is spending $4,0011,000 a year, and insists on larger appropria tions. If the appropriation of $4,000,000 a year for this bureau should be continued .and it makes the same progress in the future it has made in the past, it will not grow enough, timber in the next 100 years to make a wooden log for .a lame duck. One Objection to the Lords. Sydney Brooks in January Atlantic. The great objection to the Lords Is not that they occasionally reject Liberal measures, but that they never reject Con servative measures; not that they do one half of their work too thoroughly, but that they do not do the other half at all. To this it may, of course, be answered that the bills brought forward by a Con servative government are in general so reasonable, so little revolutionary and so much in harmony with popular wishes, as to make rejection or amendment unnec essary. But the plea will hardly bear the test of fact. The Education Bill of 1902, the Licensing Bill of 1904. were both of them measures that were vehemently re sented by a majority of the British peo ple. They were precisely the kind of measures that a strong and impartial sec ond chamber, free from party subserv iency and taking the broad, national point of view, would have rejectted. The Lords, however, not only passed them, but strengthened some of their most obnox ious features. Prohibition In Louisiana. Natchitchotcs Times. For a few days here the red-hot pro hibits were standing around while the thirsties were getting their goods, and saying: "Yes, you got it, but it cost you thirty cents extra for express." "A Wild, Savanre Book." J. F. Rhodes In "Historical Essays." When the book ("The French Revolu tion") was done Carlyle wrote to his brother, "It is a" wild, savage book, itself a kind of French revolution." IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE . SUNDAY OREGONIAN THE MASCOT OF SWEET BRIAR GULCH A powerful, fascinating bit of Western fiction by Henry Wal lace Phillips, in- which red-blooded men and a brave boy figure. The story will be concluded in three issues. THE BIG SIX OF The world's most powerfu.' group, who now constitute pra tiealiy a central bank for AmericJ CELEBRATED CASES OF DISAPPEARANCE Many' who vanished, like Di e uik .rd oA in un-J Cook, and were never heard again; mysteries that remain solved to this dav. JAPANESE SCHOOLBOY IN CONGRESS Hashimura Togo takes for hi text in his coming letter, "Is if cruel to poke Jo-Uncle?" j ORDER EARLY FROM YOTJjf NEWSDEALER I