THE MORXI5G OHEGOXIAX, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1010. Z)t (Drcijmtmn rOWTLAXD. OR1CGOX. Elr.J at r-vrv.ssd. Oroa. FostoflVea as orta-l.c'lasa ststt.r. iicx:!lo Clmm invariably la Ads-anea. (BT MA II.) r!Tr. mT er, ysar. M J h'lBdif ttr-lu.il. si -nor. ths. Is;'r. s-m-fsy s-it..i-rt. iftrw mntb. ' I si? jr. Sunday !n'lu.lsi. month.... I .:t. without Sands, ens y-ar ' I-elly. wTthtut f-in-lair. e.s month-...- r, I si:. wi'n-xjt SunlsT. t:rs ir.ootaa... I- In.?. lilit Suedaj. OM nBl.-.. -J Ws-s.-y. ens yr . . . . f on r . . tuur asd fclir. sas ysar (Bt CARRIER) r"r. STOiiar Inelu.Isd. one year 2? Xl v. Bund In-ludi. ons mrth.... Hots ts Ksjnil eeJ fstoinca mwi f3r. tiprwt ord-r or psrs-oal ehee oa yoar locsl hank, stamps, co n or tttKF ers at lb sendsr-s risa. lits pnetofaca SJ1-..S la fjii. Inrludin roomy and stats. rMMo iuim ; o ta i p. i c.ni. s to Is pssss. X cwtl; 30 to tJ J.SSSS. J csots; to nagsa. caala. 'ra poslase tiemrjls rat. Eastern Rmllna erfflces Vsrree .onk ITn York. Prucswlck building. lal cf). :egr bulMing. J-ORTLAND. MnWAT. P.C. l. '' WHERE HI HAM. American have been in the habit of felicitating; themselves upon certain undeniable superiorities which they enjoy over the rest of the world, r'or one thin we have more millionaires In proportion to our population than any other nation. Our natural re sources exceed those of most other countries and very llke!y the growth of our cities outranks that of the cltiea of Germany. France or England, i It U conceded also that ire have at least the second fleet In the world for number and power of battleships. Along these linea few would think of deputing that the United States has hold Us own with other nations very creditably Indeed." It may cause some little abatement of our pride when we reflect that the natural resources we p-srss are not exactly of our own cre ation and it Issuggcsted now and then that the growth of cities at the ex pense if the rural districts Is not a subject for unrestrained hilarity; but these are mere spots on the sun. As long as we confine the comparison to population, wealth and other material things there can be no real question of our position among the foremost. Put the New York Independent varies the comparison a little In Its rurrent number. It arks how we stand In respect to thoso subjects which Intelligent and cultivated peo ple care for more than for petroleum, millionaires and big cities. Is our science as highly esteemed by good judges as our steers? How about our literature ? The Independent takes the awar.ls of the Nobel priics for the last ten years as a standard to go by. It says the men who distribute these prizes are probably as fair and com petent as any we can expect to find, and. therefore, their decisions as to the respective merits of scientific and literary men In the various countries for the last ten years have no doubt been reasonably fair. The subjects for the Nobel prizes are physics, rhemtstry. literature, peace and medi cine. The sum which each award rarrie not far rrom HO.Oon. The prlies have gone to fifty-six Individ uals In the last decade, of whom fif teen were Germans. Germany as a recipient ef Nobel prises) far outranks any other country. France comes next with ten ef them and Kngland follows with seven. Holland. Italy. Itusslaand Switzerland rank next with four each. SweJ-n has three, and then comes the I'nlteJ states, altogether too near Ihe tall end to be pleasant, with two Nobel prize. Spain and Denmark !" have two apiece. It U something not to st.md below Hpaln. but It would be better to rank a little above hrr. tpain Is not usually esteemed the best rompany In the world. We escape the disgrace of running with her In postal affairs beeause her system Is far ahead of ours. At the very bottom of the clasa In Nobel prises stand Aus tria. Belgium and Norway with one ra.-h. Holland's four prlxes were mainly f-r work In physics and chemistry. The Dutchmen with their Van fHoff and his colleagues come pretty near leading the world In those Important sciences. Their botanists ara also among the foremost. Germany's fif teen prlxes were for all sorts of emi nence from literature to medicine. Germans have not only been training the best armies In recent years, but they have been writing the best books too. and doing the most distinguished work In science, though France, ev ervthlrg considered, has not been far behind. The ten prises which she has taken compare favorably with our two at any rate, seeing thnt she has rot so many people as we by many millions nhile her birth rate Is an International scandal. Of the two prizes which came to th I'nlted States Theodore Itoosevelt received one for promoting peace. Professor Mlchelson of Chi cago took the other for his profound work In physics. We have won none In literature or medicine or chemistry. The excuse that the Nobel Judges are prejudiced against America will hardly hold. No charge of bias has been bruagt lit them, and If it were brought tt could not be main tained. The disagreeable truth must be admitted that In respect to those things which the world of cultivated men has endurtngly valued we have our prizes yet to earn- We hive not recslved them because w have not 3c served them. It Is not e!!. however, to grieve too much over the sparslty of our first rlass literary and scientific men. It Seems that they are becoming rare In all parts of the world. tr. J. Mc Keen fatten, the editor of Science, has arltten an article which conveys dls. courastrg Information ea this subject. According to him not only Is the fnlted ftates likely to produce still fewer great physicists and writers than heretofore, but the same Is true of ether countries. The world' seems to have reached one of those lamentable periods of l:s career when the Intel lect groa sterile. There was such an age Just before the birth of Pe trarch at the end of the middle ages. In England the eighteenth century was comparatively barren of remark able movements. Germany had a time of aridity In the days of Napoleon ar.l later. It Is only since the middle i-f the nineteenth century that she has shown pre-eminent qualities of world leadership. It Is te be noted on the other hand that periods of sterility hare usually been succeeded bv brilliant outbursts of art. letters and science. After the middle ages came the renaissance. After the artJ elghteerth century in England came the glorious galaxy of Victorian scien tists, novelists and poets. We need rt fear that the genius of the hot-tan race U In decadence. It Is merely resting a little. In the next generation the United States may be Its chosen home. Perhaps some boy now on his way toschool with tardy steps and shining morning face may havo the brain of a Shakespeare In his skulL Let us hope he will apply It to poetry and not to making money. THE HUMS; or THE MlCWlJtr. The Indianapolis News preaches a little sermon on Independence In poli tics, using as a text a recent remark by The Oregonlan that Indiana Is a "state where Independence In politics Is an Iridescent dream or a mugwump assumption. Just as you look at It." The NVs advertises Indiana as the home of the original mugwump which Is a distinction or a reproach, also Just as you look at It and af firms warmly that the Independent Is the most poteni political factor alive and out of captivity in Indiana, and that -no forecaster worthy of the name would hesitate to predict victory for that party in Indiana which had the Independent vote with It." The forecaster who predicts any thing about Indiana usually awakens the morning after election to learn that the returns tell a wholly different story, for there Is nothing certain about Tndlana politics except Its pic tureseiue and baffling uncertainty. The News' remarks excite the mild derision of Its contemporary, the Star, which shows that the recent election Is a sufficient Illustration of the fal lacy of the News' theory that the in dependent votes there always turns the scale. Every Independent and mugwump supported Beverldge for re-election and everybody knows what happened to Beverldge. He was turned down, as the Star savs. for the "most Inveterate and persistent party man that ever lived." Indiana was always a doubtful state, where party lines were drawn closer than In other states. Party spirit was higher, party discipline stronger, party corruption greater and party rewards more certain. It was hardly the "independent" the virtuous and spotless mugwump Ideal ised by the New.s who swung the bal ances between the parties from elec tion to election. It was the floater, drifter, repeater and stuffer, organized In "blocks of five." rtI0 Ml LTNOM.11. The Harney County News has the latest scheme of Congressional reap portionment. Here It Is: This paper would eusreat that for ono district tho eountteo of Clateot. Columbia. Oarkamas and Multnomah, with 2SO.S7S population, ba named. For another dis trict. Ponton. Cooa. Curry. Pouslaa. Jark na. Jooaphlno. Lans. Uneoln. Una. Mar lon. Polk. Tillamook. Washington and Tam h 111 14 with IM7.nl 7. For the third. Ilakrr. Crook. Ollllam. Omni. Jtarney. Hood River. Klamath. Lak. Malheur. Mor row. Sharman. t'matllla. Union. . Wallowa. Wasco and Wheoler IS with 13J.S70. Iheao being all east of tho CaaraUoa. It Is difficult for the slate-fixers to devise a scheme of reapportionment that can Ignore the dominating fact of Multnomah's large population; and It Is Just as difficult to find a way to deny Multnomah alone the Congressional representative that is easily and fairly Multnomah's. But the News does pretty well at It. It requirea the Mult nomah district to have only a little mora than twice the population of the Eastern Oregon district. The reapportionment problem Is not easy: but The Oregonlan haa seen no better suggestion than Its own that the most nearly equitable solution is. (1) Multnomah; tJ) Willamette Valley and coast counties; (3) Eastern and Southern Oreaon. itxnrjt HTrtt and naiANO. Portland's lumber exports for 1910 will break all previous records, and there has been a large business han dled from other Coast ports. With the lumber output of the state and of the Pacific Northwest exceeding that of any prior year. It Is somewhat sur prising to find the market so demor alized that lumber is selling at the lowest figure quoted since 1)0. The effect of these low prices on the general economic situation will be differently Interpreted by the pro ducers and consumers of lumber. In a Tacoma dispatch In The Oregonlan of Tuesday it was stated thnt a bill of lumber for a house that four years ti,i would have cost $&on can now be purchased for IST5. This saving, of course. Is sufficiently large to Inter est the bome-buitder and naturally he sees In the present stagnation In the lumber business an advantage which for obvious reasons Is not appreciated by the manufacturer. 1'nfortunately for Oregon, even the record building boom that la under full headway takes up such a small proportion of the total output of our mills that the saving effected by the Itxral consumer does not even approx imately offset the loss to the state as a whole through dumping our lumber on foreign and Eastern markets at cut-rate prices. The situation is not a new one. Periodically since the beginning of the Industry, manufacturers and log gers have experienced similar trouble. There docs not seem to be any known method by which the law of supply and demand can be administered so that these periodical "gluts" on the market can be avoided. The alluring profits which were returned In the lumber Industry for the greater part of the past six years have drawn into the business scores, perhaps hun dreds, of new manufacturers, with the result that the capacity of the mills far exceeds the demand for lumber. Some of these mills, well managed and with ample capital behind them, will weather the storm. Others, after a brief period of trounle. will drift Into bankruptcy, to emerge later from the receivership In readiness for the next era of prosperity in the lumber business. And this era of prosperity, like the ones which havs preceded It, will not be long delayed. The de mand for lumber In all of the world's marketa which can be reached from the Pacific Northwest Is Increasing rapidly and the supply from which this demand must be met Is rapidly decreasing. These are the conditions that will result In the grad ual elimination of price-cutting and ruinous competition. In every line of business occasional emergencies arise which necessitate the sacrifice of collateral at a heavy discount from Its face value. Such emergencies may account for the man ufacture of l sawlogs Into fl lum ber. With the timber supplies and the lumber manufacturing Industry rap Idly passing Into strong bands, these emergencies will be fewer In number and Umber will cot be cut nor manu factured Into lumber until there Is a demand for it. Oregon was the last of the great lumber states of the Union to begin manufacturing on an extensive scale and, as a result, we have thus far re ceived higher average prices for the timber than those realized In other states. With proper care of the forests and exercise of good business methods In manufacturing and marketing the product, the lumber Industry will for an Indefinite period prove one of the greatest factors In the prosperity of the state. WILL MKl. EDDY RETVRNT The expectation that Mrs. Eddy will return to life sooner or later is In complete accordance with the histories of other religious founders. After their leath there has usually been a more or leas persistent belief that they would rise from the grave, and often this belief has been so strong that It produced its own fulfillment. That Is It led to the creutlon of a resur rection myth. The transition from lively expectation to faith that the expected event has actually occurred does not appear to be very difficult. It has been made many times and no doubt will be made hereafter, even when there is nothing to base belief upon except desire. A' strong wish that a thing might be so has occasion ally caused people to think that it was so. Therefore if a story should emerge by and by that Mrs. Eddy had rl.en from the dead and had been seen in New York, Boston and Chi cago, It need not surprise us. Per haps It would be more surprising If no such story were told. The appearance of a resurrection myth about Mrs. Eddy would not Im ply a purpose to deceive. Mrs. Stet son, of New York, who vigorously predicts that the dead leader will re turn to life, cannot be suspected of a wish to misdirect the faith of her followers. No doubt she is convinced that the power of her religion Is suffi cient to break the fetters of the grave and bring back the fugitive soul from the world of shades. Mrs. Stetson cannot be the only dis ciple of Mrs. Eddy who believes In her future resurrection. There must be -many others of the same mind. Their cult would lack historic com pleteness without such a miracle. A final victory over death Is required, perhaps, as the clinching evidence that the creed Is true. It seems to be pe culiarly needed by Christian Science since that faith distinctly denies the reality of death as well as disease. Of course Mrs. Eddy, with all her power to heal, could not have been lastingly overcome by a mere delusion. Ultimately she will burst the tomb and emerge to comfort the faithful, either In reality or In imagination. After a tew centuries It will not make much difference which. fAtnOS IS EKDED. The work which. milst be handled by the Port of Portland Commission is of such great Importance to the com mercial life of this city that any pro posed changes In the present law should be most carefuly considered. The original commission came into ex istence In response to an urgent de mand for Improvement In the channel between Portland and the sea. This Improvement, in Its entirety, the Gov ernment could not or would not under take, and as the future prosperity of Portland was Involved In the matter, the citizens of Portland were forced to act. The members of the original commission and. with a few excep tions, their successors, have been men of a type that could not be at tracted to such a position by any salary that might be attached. Quite naturally and appropriately the orig inal commission and. except in a few cases. Its successors were chosen from the ranks of business men who had ex pert knowledge of and a direct In terest In the Improvement of the chan nel to the sea. It Is not an easy matter to Induce men of this calibre to accept public trusts of this nature, and from the early efforts of the commission Port land received the maximum of results at a minimum of expense. It was a case where the public received in the administration of its affairs expert knowledge and high class public spirit of value that could not be computed on a salary basis. The present com mission, or certain members of the commission, have committed blunders that have made the body as a whole subject to criticism, some of which was perhaps Justified, and some of which was not. JThe changes proposed In the amendment which has been drafted by the committee that has In vestigated the recent work of the Port of Portland are so drastic that the ef fect, if they are adopted, will be some what uncertain. Whatever criticism may be directed against the acts of certain members of the present commission and what ever objection may be raised to the sweeping powers granted under tho existing law there can be no denying the fact that the Port of Portland Commission has thus far accomplished results eminently satisfactory to the taxpayers. If some plan could be de vised by which we could retain the services of men who would not be attracted by a salary or make the scramble which will be necessary so soon as the office becomes elective with salary attached, and who at the same time would guard against the blunders and mistakes of the few commissioners who havo caused the trouble, the port might be better off than it will be under the proposed amendment If all of Its provisions are carried. The matter is one that con cerns every taxpayer In Portland and should be carefully studied before final action Is urged before the legislature. PAXAM. CAXAL PI ill". Senator Flint, of California, seems to have taken the view that the Pan ama Canal has been constructed for the purpose of .increasing the profits of the shipowners without regard to the Interests of the vastly greater number of people who will be called on to supply cargoes for the ships passing through the canal. That, at least, is the only explanation that can be offered for his insistence that American vessels be exempt from Panama Canal dues. This matter of exemption from dues Is the only point on which the Senate and House Pan ama Canal bills differ. That no one but the shipowner would profit by this exemption from dues Is quite apparent to anyone familiar with the shipping business. Let us view the matter from our own local standpoint which does not differ from that of every other sea port on the Pacific Coast. Lumber and rrain will form the greater part of the cargoes which this port will send through the canal to Europe. The ships that carry this lumber and grain will bring return cargoes of cement, fire brick, iron, steel, coke, etc.. from Europe. The freight rates on these products will be fixed then, as now, by the old law of supply and demand. The cost to the shippers and importers will be exactly the same whether the freight is shipped in a foreign or an American bottom, and the shipper will pay the canal dues as a portion of that freight charge. The American shipowner, not being in the business for philanthropic pur poses, would not refund the canal dues which would be rebated to him by the Flint bill. There seems to be some doubt about the Panama Canal proving a financial success. For obvious reas ons the American people who are pay ing the bills will not make much fuss over a deficit, as the big ditch will have a strategic value not easily com putable in figures. But If there is to be a deficit let us still operate the highway on business principles. If there is to be any distribution of favors In the way of tonnage exemp tions, why not divide the rebates with the men who supply the cargoes, as well as with those who own the ships? Aside from this discrimination in favor of a few shipowners, there Is a far more serious obstacle in the trea ties which this country has with other powers that will make use of the canal. These treaties provide for equal treatment for the vessels of all powers making use of the canal, and any at tempt to impart undue elasticity to these treaties might be followed by reprisals most costly. The steamship Serak, one of the regular Kosmos liners plying between Puget Sound and European ports, is due at Portland today from Tacoma to load a full cargo of wheat for Eu rope. Several large tramp steamers have come to Portland in ballast from Puget Sound this season to secure car goes which were not available at the northern ports, but this Is the first ap pearance of a regular European liner that was unable to find business on Puget Sound. The grain exports from this city for tho present season will show this port with a larger propor tion of the total from the Pacific Northwest than In any previous season In many years. This shifting of the business from Puget Sound to the Co lumbia River is due to the coming of the North Bank road, which has opened up much now territory not pre viously tributary to this city. With the completion of the feeders of the North Bank and tho new lines Into Central Oregon, a still greater gain will be shown. The expected does not always hap pen; In fact, some philosophers go so far as to state that it seldom or never happens. For that reason we find the old year drifting out with the Eastern money markets In excellent shape. The New York stock market yester day, with a three-day holiday ahead of it. displayed considerable strength, with advances scored In a number of securities. Money was plentiful at much lower rates than were quoted a month ago. There Is so much senti ment Involved In financial depressions that it is not always easy for the in vesting public to determine whether they should keep their money In cir culation or lock It up until the dis quieting rumors cease. The murmur In gs which began some time before the November election do not appear to havo been warranted by the facts, and there has been a gradual recovery for several weeks, and the prospects for a brilliantly prosperous opening of 1911 are excellent. The application of civil service rules to teachers positions In the public schools Is open to the same general objection that applies to other em ployes In public service. As stated by Mr. X. N. Fleischner, of the Board of Education. It would, under such rules, be difficult to get rid of incompetent teachers. When we take Into account the fact that under civil service rules the departments of the Federal Gov ernment at Washington are loaded down with chair-warmers, incompe tent through age or other disability to do the work for which they are paid,' we must acknowledge the plausibility of this objection. Here It Is the last day of the week and that cold wave for the Pacific Coast predicted rrom Washington on Monday last has failed to materialize. No expert can tell in advance what kind of weather the South Seas are going to send us. The assertion of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association that football un der the new rules "haa been compara tively safe" Is not confirmed by this season's fatalities and permanent In juries. Perhaps If all employers like the Western Union would advance money to employes who really deserve con sideration, the whole horde of loan sharks would be driven out of busi ness. Fixing tolls for the Panama Canal presents to Congress a most Interest ing subject for original legislation. There are no precedents to guide or confuse our lawmaking. This haa been a banner year for high altitudes, speed, sustained flights, glory and big purses, but on the other side of the record look at the awful death roll of aviators. ' To be sure, an army can be moved over mountains in aeroplanes. Let's order two or three thousand at once. They are cheaper than battleships and no cost for upkeep. In saving the family cat from the fire that destroyed hie home yester day, a Portland man warded off some 111 luck. Republicans who attend the Jackson day banquet would better beware. Those Democratic brethren are mighty sly. There Is a dog In Germany that can talk, but as he is not a dachshund, his vocabulary is limited to short words. It Is Oregon ag'ln Illinois today, and everybody here and hereabout wants Washington High to win. As a timely pre-New Year's resolu tion, resolve never to get drunk New Year's eve. Oregon is becoming quite crowded, with seven people to the square mile. KEJW CHIEF JISTICH A "HAIER." p of Trtmruinjr" Youthful Barris ters Who "Kaon It All.' From tho New York World. Among the favorite pastimes of the new Chief Justice Is the hazing of the fledgling members of the bar at the Supreme Court. It is no gentle Jolly ing In which the distinguished Jurist Indulges, but straight from the shoul der, pointed questions aimed at the head of the new members, in which the Justice delights. In the sport of hazing the legal freshman. Justice White has two able coadjutors in Justices Harlan and Holmes. The method of proceeding is like this: Justice White will wait until the young barrister has stated in unquali fied terms some more or less complex proposition of law. In all likelihood, the embyro Blackstone has relied up on this exhibition of his profound knowledge of the point to impress the court. According to Justice White, the Supreme Court is not an impres sionable body. In the midst of the youngster's statement of the great principle. Justice White will say: "Ahem! Now In the event of this be ing so and taking the proposition which you have Just outlined with such care, when we come to consider this In Its relation with the earlier principle that such a writ may only have been permitted to issue when a fall bench was sitting! suppose that, es you say, the presiding Judge be ing indisposed, had left the bench, what then would be the exact situa tion of the plaintiff which " Up in the air goes the youthful bar rister. If he gets back to earth be fore his time expires, he is lucky. BAN PIT ON COUGHING IX CHURCH Philadelphia Rector Launches Crusade Against Unnecessary Noises. " Philadelphia Ledger. A crusade against coughing, nose blowing and other noises made by con gregations, which often prove to be ex tremely annoying to the preacher . and choir In the church, has been inaugur ated by the Rev. Dr. David M. Steele, rector of the Episcopal Church of St. Luke and the Epiphany. Doctor Steele says he is not a crank. St. Luke's Church was recentlv recon structed. Improvements were made in the vestibule and chancel nnd a tiled f.'oor was laid, the whole purpose boing to make the auditorium more resonant. This ourpose has been accomplished and the dropping of a pin can almost be heard. A raucous cough vibrates harsh ly through the church and the wail of ar. Infant sets the nerves of the choir cn edge. , "I wish ve could get on without eo much coughing In church. TliU is bnd enough In any church; it seems some times to me to be unusually bad in this one. It Is a problem every person has to deal with who leads any form of service, conducts any form of worship, presides anywhere in any assembly or addresses any company. "What people In pews can never real ize, what perhaps they should not be ex pected to appreciate not having lis tened or heard at a distance, and not having tried to speak or read or preach or pray the meanwhile is that cough ing, sneezing and other things called only by good, homely, old-fashioned names, may make Just as much noise, may be Just as loud. Just as disconcert ing and Just as distracting, both to priest and people otherwise engaged at that special moment, as though the per sons doing this rose from their place in pews and spoke out loud not to say called, applauded, clapped or shouted." Red Cross Predicts Six Dlamatera. Chicago Evening Post. During the year 1911 this country will have six great disasters. This prophecy is not based on psychological or other mystic grounds but on the records of the past, and is made by the Red Cross So ciety, which hae found that each year brings an average of five or six events In the nature of fire, flood, earthquake or explosion large enough to call for the aid of the organization. During the last year the Red Cross So ciety engaged in relief work In the United States in connection with two mine ex plosions, one hurricane, one mine fire and widespread forest flree In the Northwest. And the work of the society was not confined to this country. Relief was afforded captured soldiers In Nicaragua, to sections rendered destitute by floods) in Mexico, France, Japan and Servia, and In connection with the Ar menian massacres and the earthquake In Costa Rica. The total expenditure for this work was IlW.OuO in the United States and $66,500 In foreign countries, ac cording to the report of National Director p. Bicknell. now In course of preparation. Brtda-e Roles Set to Music. New York Sun. A woman who makes It a point to ask the name of every new tune she heaiS spent half an hour in a room where a dozen other women were playing cards. When the other women hart gone she asked the hostess: "What was that pretty little air your guests kept humming every little while? Is It from some new opera?" "No opera on earth was ever so popu lar as that song is Just now." laughed the hostess, "it was composed by a teacher of bridge. She put the most im portant rules of the game nto rhyme and set them to music- It's a pretty, lilting tune that appeals to the ear. Women that had never been ablo to remember the rules from one day to another could easily remember that sone and become pretty good bridge players. Even now In their excitement they forget a poinL once In a while, but they have that song at their tongue's end and a few measures sets them right," Knssrets From Geeraia. Atlanta Constitution. Time flies, but the holidays are long enough to the man that has reached the limit of his purse strings. There's a wild music In the blowing of the blizzard trumpets, but we never feel like dancing by it If the coal bin s low. If Trouble demands that you run a race with him in the merry season, lead him to the woods and lose him Sometimes the thought of future fire works saddens the pleasure of the present- But so live that you will not need them in your business hereafter. World's Stock Exchanges. PORTLAND, Dec. 28. (To the Edi tor ) Will you please let me know through the columns of The Oregonlan which Is the chief place in the world for controlling stocks and shares finan clallr. SUBSCRIBER. This question is rather Indefinite. London Is known as the world's finan cial center. Prices of American stocks are controlled In Wall street, however, and similarly fluctuations In securities of other nations are largely controlled In their own financial centers. Ynletlde Theory. Kansas City Journal. "I wonder how the Venus of Milo lost her arms?" "Wore 'em off during the shopping sea, son. perhaps, in lugging borne Christ mas presents." Sentence Sermoaette. Baltimore Evening Sun. It's one of the easiest jobs on earth to tell some other fellow how to dig a hole In the ground, but digging's different. COBSTT ROAD WORK EDUCATION. State Aid Should Be Confined to the Oae Pnrnoee, Saya Correspondent. ESTACADA, Or.. Dec. S. (To the Editor.) In your editorial comment on my communication In opposition to the proposed new road laws, you say I "ap parently assume that county bonding for road purposes will be obligatory on each county if the bonding law as pro posed by the Good Roads Association Is adopted by the Legislature." I did not nor do I assume anything of the kind. I know perfectly well that it will be optional with the voters of each county. Under such conditions can we secure a uniform system of good road building? Why not give each county its own "course of study" for the public schools? It is a mighty poor question that hasn't two sides to it. We need and must have better roads. The question Is, how to get them. Are the laws as proposed by the Good Roads Association the best that can be devised to meet the needs of the coun try? I say no. My principal objection to state aid is, that the amount called for Is en tirely too small. Not enough can be done in the two years to get the people Interested In state aid roads. I do not approve of "cheap, makeshift" roads, but under present conditions all public roads cannot be built in a. "thorough, scientific and permanent manner," therefore It is often absolutely neces sary that much temporary road build ing be done. The answer to your question, "Where would permanent roads be of more general utility than leading to the market places?" depends on how lib eral a construction Is placed on the phrase "principal market places." The proposed law says, "On the main roads at the principal market places." You say, "Leading to the market places." Good chance for a big difference of opinion here. When I selected Hood River County as being the sole county that would be benefited by state aid, the question of money-saving did not occur to me. Practically all of the business of Hood River County is' done at Hood River and Mosier, and as both are on the extreme northern side of the county, the main roads from each town lead Into the Interior of the county. They could put their $60,000 on two or three roads and thus get the best possible results. If thera are any "Christmas gifts" attached to the proposition, it is certain the farmer won't get any of them. And what is more, he doesn't want them; but does want good roads and is willing to pay a fair, living price for them. Taking The Oregonlan's figures for it, it seems to me state aid wouldn't help Curry County. If she pays only $3000 of the $20,000. It would certain ly take a pretty stiff levy for her to raise the required $40,000. In this case I fail to see wherein the strong Is aid ing the weak. On the basis of the 1909 apportionment. Multnomah County will pay about $206,000 into the state aid fund for which she can receive no di rect benefit. Now I maintain that with the ex penditure of one-tenth of this amount, in the next two years, as an education al fund, if properly and wisely used, will give far better results -to the state as a whole than the $680,000 used as proposed. It is too much like try ing to do a million-dollar a year busi ness on a $10,000 capital. In this question of good roads let us not forget to consider our R. F. D. mail routes. In many localities in Ore gon this is of far more importance to the country people than a mile or so of good roads near some town. I am for good roads, first, last and all the time, but am opposed to the "State High way Commission" and state aid laws as proposed by the Oregon Good Roads Association, and will stay In the fight to the finish. G. T. HUNT. Mr. Hunt and The Oregonlan are not far apart In their final views on the State Aid Road bill. The Oregonlan has heretofore expressed the opinion that an appropriation of funds suffi cient to pay the cost of maintaining the office of state engineer as an ad visory bureau for the several counties is all that should be expected of a state where large taxation centers are con fined to so small a proportion of the state's area. In commenting on Mr. Hunt's, earlier letter. The Oregonlan sought to bring out what It believed to be a stronger objection to the bill than any mentioned by Mr. Hunt As to the County Bonding bill, however. The Oregonlan sees no objection to the state providing a method by which counties may at their option vote bonds for a permanent road work, inasmuch as such a law would not prevent any county from proceeding under present available methods. KlKht Before New Year's. Bryan Hooker in January Bookman. But the characteristic college parofly Is exactly the converse; Its subject matter is all-important, and It is cast in some famous mould only for inci dental Incongruity. Thus the following dithyramb of the New Year is only as It were accidentally modelled upon "The Night Before Christmas"; It might have been Just as funny in some other guise: 'Twas the eve before New Year's, and all through the house not a creature was stirring save Pa with a souse, who stood on the . door-step and clawed through the air In search of a keyhole that used to be there. He found It; we heard him step into the hall, fall Into the parlor and snore that was all. We smiled with indulgence and Bleep ward would go, but Just for a short 15 minutes or so; for out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, we sprang from our beds to see what was the matter. "Twas only dear brother was making the noise, informing the neigh bors: "I'm one of the boysh!" We play fully poked him. then bedward were gone, a-leaving dear brother asclep on tne lawn. A few minutes later (some 20. I'd say) we heard heavy footsteps approaching our way, and grandfather, after an Informal talk, hung his clothes on the gate-post and slept on the walk. Then silence ... As over the hills came the sun, our handsome star boarder arrived with a bun. That was all; but at noon we arose with a grin, made the rounds of the boozers and gathered them in. "Twas pa, as we carried him up througn the hall, con tinued to mutter: "Hap New Year for all!" The Beat. Puck. Willis What Is the happiest moment of married life? G! His When a man throws the pictures of his wife's relatives out of the family album and fills it up with photographs of his baby instead. The Ilrst-Born. Chambers Journal. Lily fingers, rose-leaf toes. Crumpled blossom of a nose. Jfever was there quainter toy Than this weeny wonder boy! Babe o" mine, on mother's knee, AU my world I and In thee. Poll the tuft of thistledown That hf-s drifted on thy crown; Laugh and gurgle goo-goo-goo, Dimple here enough for two! Rosy rougue, thy mother's knea la tha wide, wlda world to thee. How thy fragile angers twins 'Round this giant thumb o' mine! go my Fathers hand I hold I. His babe whom love makes bold. God, let every mother's knea El an altar raised to Thee! Life's Sunny Side While a student at West Polr.t U. S. Grant excelled In mathematics and horse manship. He Jumped his horse ov.er a bar five feet five inches high, which made a record for the academy, and a close second to the highest Jump ever recorded in America, He received little honor for some of his efforts, however, notably In-the case recalled by Nicholas Smith in "Grant, the Man of Mystery." But perhaps the humor of it reconciled him. The riding master was one Hershber ger, "an amusing sort of a tyrant," and on one occasion, whether seriously or as a Joke, he determined to "take down" the young cadet. At the exercise Grant was mounted on a powerful but vicious, brute, that the cadets fought shy of, and was put at leaping the bar. The bar was placed higher and higher as he came round the ring till it passed the record. The stubborn rider would not say "enough," but the horse disposed to shy and refuse to make the leap. Grant gritted his teeth Rnd spurred at it, but just as the horse gathered for the spring his swelling body burst the girth, and the rider and saddle tumbled into the ring. Half-stunned, Grant gathered himself up from the dust, only to hear the "stri dent, cynical voice" of Hershbcrger call ing out: ,fCadet Grant six demerits for dis mounting without leave!" Youth's Com panion. - s s Augustus Thomas, the playwright, tells of a hunting trip he once took In the South. They were after 'coons and 'pos sums, but the only trail the dogs struok was one which made them put tuelr tails between their legs and turn for home. "Just what does a polecat look like?" Mr. Thomas asked one of the negro guides. "A polecat boss? Why, a pole cat's somefin' like a kitten, only prettier. Yes, a polecat's a heap prettlern's a kit ten, ain't it Sam?" he said, turning to another negro for corroboration. Sam did not seem so sure. He hesitated a moment. "Well," he replied, scratching his wool, "it's always been mah conten tion dat handsome is as handsome does." Kansas City Star. s s My friend, Hi Broonwood, a merry wight, is in the habit of carrying with him a private brand of cigarettes marked with his name. On one cctasion he en tered an office to pay a call. Upon look-, ing In his pocket he found that he had left his cardcase at home. Accordingly, struck by a happy idea, he took out one of his cigarettes and said to the office boy, "Take this to your boss." In s few moments the boy returned with the cigarette on a tray. "He says he don't want to see you," he announced curtly. The cigarette had been partially smoked. New York Morning Telegraph. see (A Woman's Bank is open in New Bridge street. A report of an alleged financial transaction is sent us by an un kind., but oDservant. correspunuoui. ; Good morning; wretched weather, isn't it? I wanted to put something into the bank, If I could. (Fumbles in reticule.) Can't find It now I must really give ur wearing these hobble skirts. (Cashler'e VOlCe: U, X llliun. mw - " Where did you have it made?" The othet cashiers crowd round to have a look.) It was a cheque or something no, s draft. What is the difference, do you know? (Cashier's Voice, in consultation with a colleague: "And so she broke 11 off. Her mother said his conduct wai absolutely disgraceful") Oh, here 11 is, U 3s Sd; thank you. What? 3 5s 8di. Oh so it is! I knew it was something and eiglltpence. Where? Here? Oh, I've signed my name in the place for the datel Thank you! Yes, put it in and keep 11 safe. You're insured against fire. I hope) Goodby, I'm so glad it's over! (Cashier I Voice: "Oh, my, I've given you the wrong pass book!") London Black and Wliite. THROUGH COLLEGE BY "A SHAVE Student In Texas University Paid Hll . Way Wltb a Barber Shop. San Antonio Light and Gazette. The University of Texas Bulletin, Is sued by the extension department oi the State University at Austin, containi some unusually interesting stories ol college life in its December number Besides the usual statistics regardini the Summer school and traveling li braries, now furnished on request tt smaller schools, the Bulletin tells of in novations at the state scnooi ana re counts the story of the "Barber of Breck enridge Hall" as follows: Several years ago a former president of the University of Texas went into I barber shop in North Texas to be shaved Falling Into conversation with the barber the university president discovered thai the young man expected to go to colleg and at that time had bis plans made t enter an Institution In Virginia the fol lowing Autumn, where an opportunitj had been given him to earn his way whereupon he was invited to come to the University of Texas in tlie Fall and tl bring with him his razors and barber i '"room in Breckenrldge Hall was tt be assigned for his ehop. The young mat accepted the offer, came to the university set up his shop in the men's dormitory and. while doing a thriving business it the afternoons and at night, also car ried on his university studies. ,.t hv nnrt the young mat took his degree with credit; at the saml time he paid his own way uiruusu lege and contributed besides to the edu cation of a fatherless sister. He afterwards attended a medical col lege graduated with distinction, and ii now' a successful practitioner. More thai 100 young men have paid their waj through the university by acting as wait ers in the same hall In which this young man ran a barber shop. Let no boy or girl, however, poor, 'despair of securing a university educa tion. If no way seems open, let him write to the president of the university and some way will no doubt be found. A Map of Missouri Made By Bees. St. Louis Times. The 2009 bees which have been makini a map of Missouri, under the directloi of State Bee Commissioner D. F. Darby, . i that, work. The maD wal nave niwou - - . made for the National Land and Indus trial Exposition, 'rne Dees nave working on the map for more than three months. The map will be a pari of the state bee department exhibit The map Is on a mesh wire back ground, and is 8x10 feet. All the hills valleys, rivers and large towns are shown, and nothing but wax, honey and a littU coloring was used In the work. Darby first had the bees fill the entire framework with comb honey. He the. outlined the rivers, mountains and cities uncapped the honey cells and extracted the fluid. ine . ---- fed colored syrup. They went toworj filling up the empty cells, with the colored fluid. The rivers are shown t red the mountains In green, the towns it brown. The rest of the map is in tin natural color of the wax and the honej In the cells. Boss f'Hrn. 1 Falls City News. The idea that the citizens of Oregon are to be "educated" In the exercise ol the franchise by the use of money con tributed for that purpose by a Phila delphia soap maker and turned ovel to an Oregon City lawyer for expendi ture, seems to be the most rldiculoul political proposition ever presented . I li,;inl hnta VlSB "lASi ine om-iiiic3 - out" apparently, but the new boss ap pears to be no better than the old one, except that he claims the more re spectable title of "teacher," and frank ly admits that he "gets the money."