I run itroKyixo oKEooyiAX. tiiititsday. February 2. 1911. 10 (Dmrimtmt rirrt at rwiul, Oroo. roetorSee as ia i. :ae ttattar. u(wrti.UoB Ra:a tmrUHj la (PT MAIL) rJT. 0isie fBetailati. ana yaar......f I'. Scalar Ib:1i4m1 em mn(- I r! t laclM'!. irtrva mtha. all n.Uy In.-lwlvd. An moat).... tai.r. n bandar, aaa yar. X . ! a Kontht. . J I r. ftuut j.:tri i&.-aa mamas. I. I'a:.T. VHdtfuf 4ftU. aae BttatS.... -2 w ..:,. on. jMr V3 "). eoe yar . a4 weeaiy. ana pear. IBT CARRIER J"rr. BeT tn !! .J. en TW H iwll Mc4 r"'1'-e pr. rd -r r riui abacs e Tr le-el tanl staJTtpa, ce:n ee jrraa- at iae fij.ri rf.a. oie poalfS' 4 lra a f, torlua.sc nuan ao4 etaia. faafae Halse la la 14 Baa. t eawt; 1 . 1 tuti. id la 4J ii casta: aaa. a aaat. IHUI aa(aa aouh.a rata a.tara) Ha il la frHe Vcrraa CVl Ne Ir. 11'iaaa-tca taUOia. CW- S'aaar aVM . wrm d. mi kl r. rut Hint! AXD Tvr. To disinterested onlooker there appear to be a f)od deal of cogency n one or two of the method which r tMiog employed to liutra the elec tion of Wtlltt.u r. She.han to the FederoJ Scr.are from New York. If lrtb hare actually t-.-n offered to some of the recalcitrant IVmoritu h-i stanl out against htm. as report ' the Krmlng I'ost have broadly hlntei. nobody can help admiring th-lr heroic realtranre. Aa we know from l;;inola. M iQar. anJ other tataa a bribe tj a crtaln kird of Democrat!. Irrigator la l;ka :tn!p la a tun ft. With out a-iperrratural aid he can a-arcely ervected to hU out asalnat It. :JTI t.le. New Tork Democrats have helj out. those of thera at l-at who refuee.1 to fo Into the c.iucua or to bound by Its action. Hlch eocle !;ui:tcl authority la New York haa ora out with a proclamation that h.-a Democrats ouht to be ashamed f themselves for r.fit ylcUlna; to the -aucus and Tammany. Their ot lnacy. this church offl,T dA,:arr. s "biirotry and the old spirit of Know. ithlccl-m. and the quarrel they are tl.-r!nc up Is unseemly and unrea sonable." Thla sterna to show that etwan some men's religion and old 'axhtonad morality the connection Is lisrht- The pVa that lerl-tatom otiht to bound by a caucus derision no natter hvm corrupt and Immoral It nay be. savors of the old doctrine of probAbUNru." According to this 'ctrlne It waa a man's duty t obey Is auperiors even In thlnm which -eemei to him to be wicked. "You nay think It wicked, but If your su r!or says It Is not. then hi con cc and not your own must be oM.iwed." This Is an extremely con venient doctrine for weak-kneed poll li lar.. It relieves them of a jrood leal of lrrltatlr.it responsibility and nakes It unnecemary for them to uo heir brains any more than their con clencea). All the poor creature has o Aii ts to find out what his political urerlors . have ordered and then neekly a-o and do It. This doctrine f "prohablllim" has been widely ac epted In recent politics; but revolts .ave somewhat discredited It of late. But the revolt has not borne such hole fruit In New -Tork as It has a s"m other states. The "fraxilln;" vhl.-h, Mr. Rooaevelt rive his enemies f the ell aruarj does not seem to have as lasrln: aa one mlirht have ex pected. Mr. Barnes, whom he was luppoaed to have deposed for rood ind all. Is now back at the head of 'he Republican Ftate Central Commit tee, while Tammany Is making f.iir headway toward the control of the :emocratic party. The flht for the lection of theehan mut mean a rat deal to Tammany and the more ir less portentous Interests which j tan J behind It. What tho Inter n's are nobody seems exactly able to peclfy. but It ts clear that they have Plenty or money which they are win ce to spend for Mr. heehan's benefit inj that they can direct the counsels f some of the tnfluentlil clergy. If ."am many rucceeds In sndinc Its Sen sorial candidate to Wishinirton It i:i have pretty effectual control cf he Ft to of New Tork. Mr. Dlx. to sure. Is not a Tammany creature. ut he Is fu'y as serviceable as If ha er. A reepectably somnolent non- -ntlty Is often of the greatest ua. He lo.Brtra who only aianus and aaa ;e can't Interfere. The New York situation does not rlehten the prospects of the Demo ra:ic party very much far as the euntrr at large la concerned. There ire nut many voters who want to see "ammany In control of the Nation, nd that ts what micht very reason- ioly follow upon another Democratic Ictory. It certainly would follow houM that orranlzatlrn become su ntme In New York. So that the flptht rhtr-h the anti-caucus Democrats are aklrg at Albany rsaentlulty Involves he National fortunes of their rarty. I nose reaaers wno line 10 extract rood from evil may comfort them- etves with the reflection that the New fork scandal as well as the one In Vest Virginia, the rumpus In New "ersey and the emergence of Addicks r Delaware all pour water on the bheel of the popular election of -enators. rrsioi I tiik ar.rfATK. President Taft has Intimated that he v t'.l veto the Sulloway additional pen Ion bill now under consideration by n Senate; and some of the Senators re a good deal flabbergasted. The louse passed the measure by a large iaj'rlty. Democrats lni? with l:e ubilcans In the Hapdoodle oratory bout the old soldiers and the duty f the Nation to provide fo them In heir old age. Now the Kenate bids ilr to repeat the cowardly perform nce and pass the whole business up o the President. If the President will veto this latest nd most Indefensible pension grab, he make bo mistake, political or oth. rwise. The average voter under 'ans that tho average politician In 'ongresa. In helping to pad and stuff ). already inflated pension roll. Is ln plred first by regard for himself and ajt by consideration for the old sol Uer. The oil soldier vote ts the main rfljence behind the never-ceasing v'.nicgness of CongTess to give more nd more In pensions. Is there to be to limit or end to the evarlastlng ocrdlrg away for mora pensions? The real old soldier Is entitled to evarence. respect and careful arten ton from his neighbors and hts coun rr. lie gets them. too. There Is no omplalnt about him or a generous iau.ua for hlr" IT be earned It. or U ha needs It or eren think he needs It. Ii-jt the professional old soldier, who iiw little or no real service. Is entirely too active In this pension clamor. What duty doa the Nation owe to bo vi xi avt Tite state. Ftate aid to roads Is no doubt an excellent thing when the money ap propriated can be honestly and In telligently spent. The most effective Impulse which the good roads move ment has received has been from model highways constructed by the various states. Sllll the blessing Is not unmlngled. It has happened now and then that funds appropriated by a leg. Islatur for road-building have been used up In preparations to build. The swarm of hungry officials who have to be fad before any work can be done leave nothing for the public. Politicians grow fat. but the roads remain as they were. Cltixens of Washington can cite such Instances to their sorrow. It la noticeable that communities which are the moat slovenly and neglectful of their lx-al road are often the most clamorous for state aid. The Orcgo nlan could name a certain village whose principal street la a long array of mud holes. The middle I lower than the aldea. Repairs are never dreamed of. Wagnns go bumping and tumbling along that street worse than If the hand of man had never touched It. This vlllace Is constantly shouting for a state road. If any cltli-n urges the necessity of repairing the sireet he. Is silenced by the cry that "We shall hiv a stato road pretty soon." Ix-al initiative has been destroyed by the expectation of a public benefac tion. Whatever la done In the way of state il l should be upon the under standing that local communities shall be made to pay for the benefits they receive. The payment may be dis tributed over a series of years. It may te veiled under the guise of bonds, but It should be rigorously Insisted upon. Very likely the best war to meet the expense of good road Is to levy upon the Increased value they give to the adjoining land. This plan bur dens nobody and Is fair to everybody. Moreover. It compels the locality ben efited to pay for what It receives. RrUT-X.Ur. XI-RniAMT MARINE. The United Fruit Company, operat ing a fleet of thirty-five splendid, steel, modern-built freight and passen ger steamers out of New Tork, New Orleans and other Atlantic Coast ports, will ask Congress to grant American registry to Its entire fleet, now sailing under the Rrltish flag. These vessels are nearly all now ahlps and would be a credit to the American flag, as they are now a credit to the British flag which their American owners are obliged to fly. While the L'nlted Fruit Company Is the first American firm owning- a large fleet of foreign ships to ask American reg istry for the vessels, a number of other big firms now forced to operate their vessels under foreign flacs will ask similar permission If Congress takes kindly to the proposition of the fruit company. This opportunity for aecurlne; solid fleets of first-class vessels ought to appeal with great force to the Oal llngers. tho Humphreys and other ship-subaldy leaders who have for years been ranting about the necessity for American ships and our helpless ness In case of war. It Is through the policy of welcoming under the flag any vessel that may be secured that Oreat Britain. Germany, Norway. Japan and all other foreign nations have built up tholr merchant marine. As each of these countries has made a better showing on the high seas than that made by the United States. It would seem perfectly natural and logical that we should adopt the meth ods by which they achieved success. Believing In the sincerity of Senator Oalllngcr and Representative Hum phrey, we may reasonable expect these ardent seekers for a merchant marine to bo the first to embrace the op portunity. The bill bringing under the American flag this splendid fleet will of course be fostered In the House by Mr. Humphrey and In the Senate by Mr. Gaillnger. In the hand of two such disinterested laborers In the cause of the merchant marine there should be no opposition, and a few weeks hence we shall see the star and stripes Tying over the United Fruit flaet perhaps. nr.Miu-o avd soApn. The thousands of Oregon cltixens. who have made themselves homes In the wild by patient toting and In the towns by patient saving, do rot see big 'business" for themselves, as Mr. Fela does. In single tax: they have no soap to advertise, nor are they rich as he 1 tn "personal" property thaf his fad would exempt from taxes. They are very practical folk, these men and women. They have Improved land at high cost. They will rwlst confiscation of their "monopoly." as the jariron of single tax calls It. They look for Increase or Increment of value tn their land: they think such Increment fair reward of their efforts. They believe that they and their children should have the same oppor tunity to possess this Increased value as those who have gone before. Nor do they believe that their property should be selxed and "socialized" by government through single tax and be conferred upon others. The Fels reformers say, however, that they do not plan confiscation and public ownership of land at least not yet. They purpoae only to pile taxes on the "big fellow" the man of large acres or of high-value lots In the cl;v und to make things easy for the 'little fellow." 'But the chief alm of single tax is seizure of land through high taxes and termination of individual land mo nopoly. The great apostles of single tax declare that to be Its purpose. Then why should Fels and his retinue of bounty-praising camp followers In Oregon, try to humbug the people of Oregon with sweet phrases T Do they not know that the big lot-owner In the city will keep his land and add their single tax to rent and charge the new account to the tenant and the "ultimate consumor"? Do they not perceive that the farmer and the homeowner, however, cannot escape the extra land tax: because this class of landowners collects no rent? Small property and large property can stand only upon the same basis. The one can be protected only as the other Is protected. The one cannot be secure while the other is confiscated. This la an axiom of politics and government. If Mr. Fels will resign his soap riches and make himself a home in Oregon among stump and logs; If he will proceed by patient tolling to clear away land, drain or Irrigate It; If he , will plow and fence It and put In crops: or If he will plant himself on a tow n lot, build a house thereon, pay taxes year after year, and give out hard-earned money for sidewalks, sewers and pavements if he will do either of these two things, his view of land "monopoly" and of single tax will change. Ho will confess that no scheme of government can take pos session of 100 valuable lots In the heart of a city and leave 23.000 other lots secure and their owners la hope of increment. But Instead cf that, Mr. Fels pre fers to sell soap and to advertise his wares by traveling the country and haringulr.g about slnglo tax. Great Is humbug and soap man Fels Is Us prophet. rovnvvr.o rRosrauTY asstrto. It has been long since the pessi mist who since 1905 have been wait ing for "the slump after the fair" have fourM much comfort In any news concerning Portlund and Oregon. It is seldom, however, that their pet theories) and dyspeptic forebodings re ceive no many rude shocks aa were afforded by yesterday's news, both local and National. The monthly sta tistics were not out of the ordinary. that Is. they continued to breuk rec- trans-Pacific expansion. As San Fran onts all along the line. Just as they ci,ro Is the principal city of the Pa- Jt I .1- ....v.n... lain 1J r lnnrlnp. m . t . j . i . I . did throughout 1S10. Bank clearings. Postoffl.-e receipts, building permits and similar features all showed heavy Increases over thoso for January. 1910. But along with this hlshly flattering showing, which we now accept as only our Just dues, V-Ss much that comes strictly under the head of new business. The announcement that San Fran cisco had won the fight which prac tically assures the Panama Canal Ex position for that city means much for Portland. Tho F.xpoaltlon will draw to tho Pacific Coast thousands of , people from all parts of the world. It will be the gratc.st affair ever held In the West. Either coming or going. . at least nine-tenths of the visitors wl.l call at Portland, and of these people no small ratio will become permanent residents. Another very Important piece of news from Washington was the announcement that the Senate had pnssed the rivers and harbors bill. In cluding the amendment which pro vides for a thirty-foot channel to the seiu As Chairman Alexander, of tho House rivers and harbors committee, has promised to support the measure, this long-sought improvement now seems assured. Long before tho com pletion of the Panama Canal, the larg est ocean freighters afloat can reach Portland dock without difficulty. For the lmmedlato future the most Important of all of the pleasing an nouncement thai appeared yesterday wo that regarding double-tracking of the Hariimun lines. Of the J75, 000,000 appropriated for carrying on this work a great many million will be spent on the 440-mlle stretch be tween this city and Huntington. Other millions will be expended In Orepon for ties and timbers to be used farther cast. This vast railroad Improvement plan will have an early effect much greater thnn that produced by the mere expondlturo of the money In volved. It Is undertaken because. In the language of Judge Lovctt. "tho en tire country served by the Union Pa cific and Southern Faclfio systems Is developing rapidly indeed It Is only In Its Infancy and we are convtneed thnt Its growth lt population and Its agricultural and commercial develop ment must continue." This enormous expenditure is all to be made In double-tracking the main lines of the Harrlman system. Mean while there are already under actual construction In Portland territory In the Pacific Northwest several good alzed feeders which will be hurried to completion for the purpose of provid ing more traille to be handled by the double-track trunk lines for which money Is now provided. This local activity In railroad building Is, of course, not confined to the Harrlman system. The Hill programme, which la being hurried to completion, also calls for the expenditure of more mil lion than havo ever before been paid out In thl state In a similar period. Portland has grown to a great city of more than 200.000 people without the aid of any of the mighty forces now changing tho commercial map of the West. Wllliin a periou ui years from the date, two I xne lompfimu there will have Deen opeuru uV trsde of this city by new lines, exten sions and feeders an area of rich coun try more than three times as large ss that on which Portland has depended to bring her along to the present satis factory stage of development. If we can accomplish, under such adverse conditions, what has been done, where Is the limit that we can reasonably expect to reach under existing condi tions and under the still more favor able conditions which the future is bringing us. All signs point to the fact that 1911 in Fortland and Oregon will be a sad year for the pessimists. PECRr-ASINO RAII-BOAD EARNINGS. It Is no longer a theory, but a condi tion, confronting the railroads of the country in regard to dividends and rates. The current number of th Financial Chronicle contains th In terstate Commerce Commission's offi cial figures on railroad gross and net earnings for the month of November. These figures show that Instead of tho Improvement predicted when the $9, 000.000.000 crop of agricultural prod ucts was moving to market there la again a heavy decrease In net earn ings. Thla decrease for November was $10,488,886. the largest decrease ever recorded In that month, and It occurred with an increase In gross earnings of nearly $1,000,000. These gross earnings were slightly larger than those of last year, but are the smallest recorded In the present fiscal year. In every month since June this unfavorable condition has been more apparent. As a local example of the change that Is taking place, the figures of the O. R- N- Co- for the Hve non,n ending with November ara Interesting. In that period the gross earnings of the road were $7.094. fi5, compared with $6,787,365 forthe same period in 1909 Net earnings for the same months in 1910 were $2,519,470. com pared with $3,162,216 for the same period In 1909. It will be noticed In these figures that the increased ex pense of operating, maintenance, etc., actually transformed a gain of more than $300,000 In gross earnings Into a decrease of $642,000 In net earnings. Similar conditions exist throughout th United States. While most of the roads hav some surplus on hand with which to meet dividend requirements and keep up necessary repairs, it la quite apparent that they cannot con tinue Indefinitely. Th figures which hav been re- I turn mon ted by the Commission from th to month certainly verify the predictions of tho most pessimistic. There will be no market for railroad securities, nor money for extensions and improvements until the equilib rium of gross and net earnings can be re-established. A PACIFIC PROCRFSS EXPOSITION. The Panama Exposition Is to be held at San Francisco. That seems decided. It Is fitting that this should be; historically, sentimentally and practically fitting. For this exposition is to celebrate the opening of the great canal. It ts to signalize the linking of the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans an event for which the world has waited and of which It has dreamed during four centuries. The exposition will be a crowning mark of Western progress; of a move ment that, besides cutting tho canal, has occupied the Great West of the American Continent and turned It Into garden and lias spread across the Pa cific. This celebration, held anywhere else than on tho Pacific Coast, would be sadly out of place. . Congress evident ly regards the Panama Canal a a feat of transcontinental progress and of clflo Coast. it is mo pruyer vilj iwi this celebration. The Senate has passed the rivers and harbors bill, providing, among other things, for a thirty-foot channel between Portland and the sea. As the chairman of the Houso committee Is favorable to the Columbia River Item, the Senate's action will undoubtedly be ratified by tho House. That the advantages of a deep channel between Portland and the sea are at last fully appreciated throughout the Pacific Northwest Is shown by the unanimous support now given Columbia River appropriations by Washington and Idaho delegations in Congress. Twenty years ngo nearly every attempt made by Fortland to securo Columbia River appropriations was vigorously opposed by some or all of the Washington Sen ators and Representatives. It required years of patient effort to change this sentiment, but since the Woshlngto nlans have learned that more Wash ington wheat goes seaward by the Columbia River than by any other route they are perfectly willing to aid in the necessary Improvements. They are actually becoming proud of their great river. The steel trust showed profits of J26.900.978 for the quarter ending De cember SI. The total net earnings of tho corporation for 1910 were J141, 144.001. the highest figure reached since the record year 1907. While the quarterly report, on Its first appear ance, was regarded as unfavorable be cause It showed a decrease from the previous quarter, the facts that the regular dividends on both common and preferred stock were provided for and an Immense surplus carried over caused a reversal of feeling yester day, and the stock went up with a rush. So long as the steel trust can get 12 8 per ton In this country for steel rails which It sells In Europe for any where from $20 to 23 per ton. and which cost $15 per ton to manufac ture, the stock will prove a very at tractive investment, although these excessive dividends, surpluses and sums provided for new plants, legisla tion and dinners are a heavy burden on the American consumers. Tho enormous natural resources of the South practically untouched be for the Civil War are being devel oped at a rate that Is simply aston ishing. Tho coal mined In nine South ern states last year, for example, ag gregated the great bulk of 108,700, 000 tons about one-fourth of the en tire product of tho United States, while the output of timber and lum ber from Louisiana alone was valued at $40,000,000. Northern capital la exploiting these and other fields of revenue In the South. Says the New Orleans Picayune with a tinge of bit terness: "We go on In our old happy-go-lucky way waiting for strangers to come and make us rich which they have no Intention of doing." It would seem from this that the blight of slav . 1 -,m kw.ra nver th Industrial life 0rthe South, checking Its development or leaving this development to those who, from the habit or generations, are explorers In the fields of Indus trial enterprise. Several magazines have lately pub lished shuddering details of the cruel ty that attends pelt-hunting for the fur trade. The object In this Is not apparent, beyond the desire to furnish sensational flllintf for constantly yawning columns. It ran hardly be considered fair to charge this cruelty of the wilds against women who wear furs, since tho necessities of the trap per and the greed of the fur-trader are at least equally responsible for the slaughter which, my lady's stolo and muff represent. The sensation of bclr.g lost In the sky must be singular. That is what happened to Aviator Garros In Texas tho other day. Perhaps he w-as the first man who ever had the experience. Plenty of people have been lost in the woods and It usually scares them pretty badly, but Garros was lost In the clouds. If he would tell how he felt it would make interesting reading. The Chicago millionaire of mature years who has taken up painting may point a lesson for others of his class. For all its glitter and show, there can hardly be anything more vapid than the ordinary life of so-called pleasure which the rich lead. It is amazing that more of them do not turn to art or science to relieve -themselves of boredom. Until the act is made trespass hy law, people will walk on railway tracks and trestles and be killed or maimed. In the absence of good roads the right of way Is the best highway, but wayfarers must take chances. British Columbia fears the reciproc ity treaty will swamp her with butter, eggs and poultry from the Pacific Northwest States. That Is unlikely. There is not enough for the home de mand and never may be enough. The woman Jury at Wenatchee made short work of finding guilty a man charged with profanity. This shows to what stern uses the talents of the gentl sex may be put. Br"er Groundhog may fool 'em today. ESPERANTO'S AIMS AND GROWTH. Defender DenJes LugniKt Is Ephem eral In Statistics Given. MTJTXNVXLLE, Jan. ST. To the Edi tor Reading The Oregonian's criticism of Kfperanto filled me with concern un til I came to where you referred to Ido. A dozen or more yeans ago. Ido was of fered to the world as an "Improved Es peranto." and tried to win over the Esperanto movement. It was argued out but returned again and again until It was ordered out of tho Esperanto meetings, and finally had to be thrown out. It started a magazine In America a few years ago, which reached the first Issue, together with a leaflet containing en Es peranto translation of Lincoln's Gettys burg speech, . clothed In the harshest words to be found, and most distorted grammar. It waa a savage stinger, de voted mostly to the abuse of Esperanto. Recently No. 1. Volume 1, of the same mixture, by the same author, appeared in England. Next issue may be in Tim buktu. Veteran Bsperantists know Ido and Its habits, and. as a rule, ignore It and Its vaunted claims. In view of these matters, and especially as the Portland Commercial Club has In vited the Esperanto Association of North America to meet In the Rose City next Summer, and that Invitation has been accepted tentatively, at least, I believe the public la entitled to hear a defense of Esperanto. That one man ahould create a perfect International language Is an impossibil ity, but that one man should create a language that would stand the test of 23 years' ut, be adopted by scores of International organizations, and be tried out by six great International congresses without a change, ought to be a matter of deep interest. If not conviction, to thinking men, men who love progress. As to the dead languages, "they can not come back," and to adopt a living lan guage for international une would give the favored nation such commercial and industrial advantages above Its neigh bors tuat It can not be considered. The statement that Esperanto 1a ephemeral and will be forgotten In a few years Is an opinion only, that events dfprove. It is already an International language for millions of people, has been In practical use in the commerce of the world for years and la rapliily Increasing In favor. I could give columns of facts, but you would not and could not print all of them. Seventy-eight magazines aro published In the language, the oldest, Internacla Lingvo, of Poriff. has been published for 16 years. Some of the are on a paying basis, having WOO to 11000 subscribers, such as Ksperanto. of Geneva; British Esperantlst. of London; La Revuo, of Paris, and the German Es perantlst. of Berlin. One traveler that passed throuRh 10 countries of Europe that used different langunes, used Es peranto exclusively, and he give a tri bute of thanks for the many courtesies shown him by Esperantlsts found every where. ... , "Infantile," yes, to the Infant, end a call for the best that Is in the master Herein Is Its value, the simplest as well as the finest shades of meaning can be expreeuied. and without the ambiguity of other languages. Flexible and pleasant to the ear when spoken fluently, an ele gant style is growing among its writers. There la little that Is new In Esperanto aside from lt simplified spelling and grammar, as the following will show: Si per cent of all Esperanto wordn are found In French; 83 per cent are found in Italian- 83 per cent la English; S2 per cent In Spanish; 81 per cent in Portuguese; 6 per cent In German; 64 per cent In Latin, i ,n nt In Russlun. Esperanto 1 now on trial hefore the civilized world, the highest tribunal, not to supplant, but ss an auxiliary to all i,r., aires. Every land has Its Es- ! peranto periodical, some countries a dozen or so. and every huven or hamlet of note It- Esperantlsts. That the smootn-iiow-ing style of the Latin and Engl sh coun tries will prevail, there is little doubt, but to throw the Slav and German over " . , , osiHa from Its I at once, as iqo i.'J "T.' .T ." .; ;; A, other faults, wouia mano u " ' sectional language and not an Interna tional one. An international language to be successful with all nauone can not be constructed on any other lines than that of Esperanto, as laid down by the lttUe Hebrew master ui J- J. C. COOPER. Inspirations from Francis nacon. UNIVERSITY PARK. Or., Jan. 30. (To the Editor.) The observations made by The Oregonlan regarding Francla Bacon, born 1661. suggest to the mind of the writer a few reflec tions The Oregonlan may kindly re- CCTh great work Bacon did was to give suggestions and inspiration to others. Ho aia noi uiipm.i. ductlve method, but he blew from it the dust of time. He appealed to others with a successful urgency to observe with their own eyes, and by their own experiments upon Nature become her high priests. Nature's favorites are they w-ho wrest from her the secrets others have missed. He said good-bye to speculations which end nowhere. However, his own researches by in duction possess but slight worth, and his own excursions are as rash as tho foolery which makes him Shakespeare. But in announcing that it makes no difference whether others agree with or oppose us. and thr.' we are to dis cover our own selves, and look through our own eyes Into thlnps. he becomes a benefactor to mankind. Allow me to emphasize the value of his e-says. Never mind obsolete terms, as you see htm construct a paragraph as orderly as a load of hay that rides to the barn Is pitched onto the wagon. Admire the similitudes, the simplicity, the clearness, and the massive strength of his well chosen words. His literature is of thought stamped with freshness, and at times also of the feelings. All literature takes root In either thought, or feeling, or both, and while Intellect is the main thing with Bacon, he is not a stranger to feeling. Feeling is the oasis of the desert. Sa gacity Is the word to apply to those Immortal .essays. At first little may seem to be there In an essay, but the digger at last finds a Klondike nugget of thought. A fine example of the balanced sen tence we find in the essay on "Of Ne gotiating." May I quote Just a little o the essay? "It 1 generally better to deal by speech than by letters. Letters are good, when a man would draw an answer back again; or when It may serve for a man's justification after wards to produce his own letters, or where It may be danger to be Inter rupted or heard by pieces. To deal in person is good. When a man's face breedeth regard as commonly with In feriors, or In tender cases where a man's eye upon the countenance of him with whom he spcaketh may give him a direction how far to go; and gen erally, when a man will reserve to him. self liberty to disavow or to expound." B. J. HANDLEl". Lonsrest Blver. PORTLAND, Jan. 31. (To the Edit or). Please state in N The Oregonlan which is the longest river in the world. Yours truly, E. W. C. The Amazon and Nile are the longest single rivers, and are approximately the same length. 4000 miles. The Missouri and Mississippi from the mouth of the former comprise the longest continu ous waterway in the world. rtoselalr and Webb. BROWNSVILLE. Or.. Jan. SO. (To the Editor). Please answer through The Oregonlan what became of the wife murderer Roselalr who was at one time under sentence of death: also the Webb case, A SUBSCRIBER. Roselalr has paid the death penalty. YveoD is unaer ecuicuca ui uo.ui, uui his case has been appealed to Uia Su- I A DEFENSES OF DR. R. B. 1- 3 It " '!'" I "-- - - Writer Think Head of Oregon State Insane Asylum Is Blameless. PORTLAND, Jan. 31. (To the Edi tor.) A great deal has been printed of late about the alleged extravagance and mismanagement of Dr. R. E. L. Steiner, superintendent of the Oregon State Insane Asylum, and in a spirit of fairness, I wish to throw a little side light upon the situation. Dr. Steiner needs no defense at my hands, and all who know him per sonally will coincide with me In that he will come out of the Investigation with flying colors, exonerated and ex alted. Dr. Steiner, who has a multi tude of people under his care. Is not above leaving his comfortable quar ters In the Institute and In dead of night descending into a ward personally to look after and attend a patient In distress, and knowing whereof I speak, I cannot but deplore the political trick ery that Is at the bottom of this controversy. It Is a well-known fact that on account of these very political machinations rarely can a business man or a professional man, except a lawyer be induced to permit his name to be used for a political office of any kind. But there is another side to this af fair, which may not be generally con sidered. One cannot harrass a man in any manner without detracting his at tention from and unfitting him for his ordinary vocation, and there Is no doubt In my mind that Dr. Steiner Is spending much valuable time In de fending himself before the Legislature, time which he might profitably em ploy In the Institution referred to and in administering to the wants of those who need his attention, and who are least considered by those who aro so anxious to draw hlrn Into disfavor with the people of this state. It is well that our state Institutions should be carefully guarded against abuses of any kind, and In this con nection I might suggest that the Ore gon Legislature now in session could do a good and noble work by demand ing some sort of state or county su pervision of some or all of the so-called private asylums, the walls of which hide untold misery and tho most out rageous cruelties to helpless unfortu nates. These institutions await but the time of the avenger to acquaint the people with their nefarious inner workings. While I am not unmindful of the fact that we are as yet a mile or so removed from the much-heralded mlllenium. If we are making any progress at all. It Is hard to understand why the Leg islature, one session after another, wastes so much time on petty politics. Instead of giving its undivided atten tion to the needs of the state, which, the Lord knows, are more 'han enough to fill the short sessions to overflowing. , Let our solons not for get that there Is a day of reckoning for us all. and that a continuation of such doings may be the means of some1 day abolishing the Legislature alto gether, as worse than useless. Verbum sap. JULIUS ADLER. Men Known by Their Ilnlr. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Hair has an unquestioned Influence upon our lives. Let your whiskers run wild, and you want a new form of Gov ernment. Lose the hair on the top of your head, and you begin to think. Brig ham .Young clean-shaven would prob ably not have been anything more seri ous than a bachelor or a Shriner. No body ever saw an Indian who did not have a luxuriant head of hair, nor did any one ever see an Indian who looked like the hope of his race. A red-headed man will fight a telephone, a white headed man will run, and a curly-headed man won't keep It out. One can easily mark an anarchist. No two hairs on his face or his head point in the same direction. To be bald in front and sort of mop-headed behind makes you a So cialist; bald on top, with a long hiding lock in front a Democrat; nothing but a little hair hoop Just over the ears, a Republican; frowzy hair all over the head, a singlo-taxer; long hair, plain, a Prohibitionist, and short hair, feminine, a suffragette. "Is tho young man Absalom safe? asked David, his fatVr recalling with grave misgivings his beautiful hair. It does make a difference. Conet of Commerce. GRASS VALLEY. Or.. Jan. 30. (To the Editor.) Dear Sir: Will you please answer this question: What Is a Court of Commerce? How does It differ from the other courts, and how many Judges should there be? SUBSCRIBER. The Court of Commerce was created by Congress In 1910 and Is composed of five Judges. It assumes Jurisdiction previously possessed by Circuit Courts of the United States in all cases for the enforcement (otherwise than by ad judication and collection of a forfeiture or penalty, or by Infliction of criminal punishment) of any order of the Inter state Commerce Commission other than the payment of money; in cases brought to enjoin, set aside, annul or suspend orders of the Interstate Com merce Commission and in numerous other matters or controversies arising out of interstate and foreign commerce. In all cases within Its jurisdiction it may exerciso any or all of the powers of a United States Circuit Court; its Jurisdiction Is exclusive in Its own field but appeals-may be taken to the United States Supreme Court. A BONO FOR SOLON 3. Ho, gnllant 6oIon. neath tha Etatehousa dume, Thera are voices calling, calling, from the oiieahaclt home. And a thousand institutions throughout our mighty state Are urxlng on a thousand claims and nona ot mem can wait And a thousand thlnge divert you from your other legislation. Demanding several thousand each, for their appropriation; Then for these Impecunious institutions, mail and bis. Dig de-ply In our coffers, but remember, as ou dis. CHORUS. To keen your foot on the soft, soft pedal; Go slow, don't dig too far: For cuh hiia len, and It aurelr can ske daddle. If tho hd is left ajar. Munificence is lovely, but don't give It too much slack; 'Tis a, virtue one should measure by the voKme o his Hack. So keep your foot on tue soft, soft pedal. And pleasa don't dig too far. Perhaps the time may come some day, when. In tn poet's words. tVe will be rich enough to heave our lucre at the birds. And the offers of the commonwealth will compass an amount That would put tha fabled Croesus on his back to take the count Perhaps when L' Ken a master-mind the nutty problem cracks. And we eit impaled in paradise upon the tngle tax But urtii that mlllenium, O gallant Bolons all. What time you die. responsive to our many-throated call, CHORUS. Just keep your foot on the soft, soft pedal; Go slow, don't dig too far; For cash has legs, and it surely can ske daddle. If the lid l left ajar. Love the Impecunious wherever yon can spot 'em. But while you love, remember tha csshbox has a bottom. And Veep your foot on the soft, soft pedal. And please don't dig too far. (N. B. The melody should wax the more fortissimo. The deeper in the cashbox the appropria tions go. And should make a brave crescendo on the diapason stop. As the bottom of the cola ease comes the uam a aae (09.) i-DBAK COLLJKS. Sentiment In Support of Fresldent Taft's Policy and Intentions. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Leaving the Panama Canal unfortified would not promote peace, but invite war. Washington Herald. There can be no analogy- between the conditions surrounding the Suez Canal and those connected with the Panama Canal, which will run through territory absolutely under the domination of the United States. And the canal . itself Is being built entirely with American money. Furthermore, the Suez Canal Is owned by a private corporation, where as the Panama Canal is a Government Press. Unless the United States fortifies the canal and holds It, it will be too late when the canal Is seized to argue over Its neutralization. How futile paper pledges become when they are plunged into the hot fire of war! Boston Evening Transcript. The great American public work which we are constructing on the Isthmus will have cost $DOO,000,ijO when completed, and common prduence is sufficient to dictate Its Insurance against the hazard to which its strategic value exposes U, to say nothing of the normal commercial argu ment for safeguarding such an enormous Investment of the Nation's capital. Washington Post If nations, like individuals, aro still to be known by the weapons they carry, then it behooves the United States to be on the defensive. Inasmuch as the canal primarily was entered upon as a means of defending our position on the Pacif.c, the President cannot conceive of any patriotic American being willing to have the canal remain vulnerable to at tack or open to use by an enemy for transit to attack us In both oceans. Rochester Union and Advertiser. There is common sense In the Presi dent's contention that neutrality treaties with the various nations of the earth would not suffice to protect the canal from damage by some irresponsible bel ligerent. Even stronger as an argument is his pointing out of the foolishness of leaving the canal as an avenue of tran sit for on enemy to attack us In both oceans. It would seem that from a practical standpoint there is no answer to his contention. Nashville Tennessean and American. This is the open season for foolish talk about how the Panama Canal should not be fortified. Of course It ought to be fortified, and Secretary Dickinson's re port, and the recommendations of the Army and Sat; Board winch studied ti.e conditions on the Isthmus and prepared a plan for defense, should be adopted The. board would spend J12.o00.000 for the protection of tho entrances of the canal and for guns along its course. Interna tional treaties may he a guarantee of neutrality which satisfies some persons, but treaties are a pretty thin protection when shot and shell are Hying and a world's commerce Is Interrupted by war. Chicago Inter-Ocean. The fortification of the 1'anama Ca nal is the simplest of business precau tions. This Nation owns an immense property, created by the expenditure of nearly half a billion of dollars. The only question Is whether It desires to Insure that property against certain known perils. St. Louis Times. So long- as the idea of universal peace has not been reduced to a com mon understanding among the powers, it would obviously be a foolish piece of idoalism to leave the canal unfortified at present. There miht never be a gun firad from the frts on the Isth mus; but tha guns should be there. Indianapolis Star. The right of the United States to n.tftf fha Pannma Canal will not be seriously contested In any quarter. Opposition to It is admittedly uaseu upon the sensational repugnance of certain of our own people to such ac tion It rests upon a blind hope that If we do not fortify it, then no nation will be so mean and unkind as to go In there and destroy it. It Is a pro posal unworthy of serious men, consci ous of responsibility. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Fer us to decide to have the canal unfortified, with political brigands in the neighborhood of the zone. Is like the attitude of a Jewelry merchant who puts diamond tiaras in his shop win dow and has neither watchman nor lights nor burplar alarm. By the time the canal Is done wo shall have spent about 4u0.000,000. We cannot afford to leave unprotected tne iraproaivo fruition of so magnificent an Investment- Houston Dally Post. When the canal Is completed It will have cost the people of this country something like jr.00,000,000. To suffer this stupendous investment to be ex posed to tho risk of destruction by an external enemy, whose hostile intent might not be disclosed until too lata to check It. through lack of defensive preparedness would not be the part of wise and efficient statesmanship. Our X'cw Mouth-Puckering Fad. New York Herald. Whistling- girls and crowing- hens may come to a bad end in Washington. D. C but they do not care if they do. If you cannot whistle or are not learn ing to whistle, you must hunt some nice man to teach you how. The nicer the man the longer it takes to learn. Mrs. Nicholas Longworth started the fad and is doing great work in keeping It up. She whistles in the streets, in her automobile or on her shopping tours. The honk-honk and the electric bell on Mrs. Longworth's automobile are getting rusty from lack of use. When she reaches a crosswalk she whistles and pedestrians make a dash for safety. "MR. TWEE DEEDLE" New Comic Page in Colors for the Sunday Oregonian. Coinmencingr next Sunday, February f, The Sunday Ore ponian will publish "Mr. Twee Deedle," a comic page in colors by John B. Gruelle. This fea ture is in connection with the New York Herald. Mr. Gruelle is a new artist, 30 years old, who won recently the $2000 prize in the Herald's comic picture competition. He writes : "I wanted to get away from the sloppy dash style of comics. I have always loved fairy tales and have wanted to illustrate them. For ten years I have been desirming and drawing all sorts of things. ... I was watch ing for a chance to do what I want to do,' and I seem to have found it." Watch for "Mr. Twee Dee die" next Sunday. i V V