10 TITE MORXTXO OREGOXIAN. FRIDAY. MAT 12, 1911. (Efje (Drfrrmtimt roRTLAXD. oarr.ox. Enirl a: Portland Oraa-on. poatorftco so Vx:or4-'!as Maftar. Ibocripuoa Hotao Invariably la AdiuCA BT MAIL) ?anr. panaay ynciuna!. on y 4 :j L:lv. urd&r tnrliui.! al months aiir. "titular lnc it.. tfcr rrontha... 2-23 ta:ir. Sundaa ln-tutl. otio montn...... -S l.y. otrbout uo'ly. on .... 8 0 I i y. .ibji. i.i month a 2.. r:lT. wfioul 'inar. t.r menlfta.... 1.73 Cat;v. without Sua4l, ntontb. .' WaalT. nnt y r 1.50 SunHaw on trr . ..... ........... . Sun.: c a wnllr. en lr .oO HT CARRIER) t?y. Snn1T ln-!tid1. on r. ...... Loi.r. h 'xt.iLm r lnclil4. on month)..... .7 Mow to Kmjt nif patnrtleo monr rar. iprra urc.r or poraonol cr.ack on y-ur local bank. Ifitmpi, rotn or rurrn-y r t In ndr' r.a. ;iv potorflr tvJ -1 r-aa .n full, tn.-ludins county od atat. foatotro Kata IO to 14 I cr.t: 1 to pax. 1 caata; lo to pa. 3 -nta: o to 6 p4. a casta. Foraija pota tlonbl rat. I.Mrra ftvalo Offliao Vrro A Con a -Il Nao Yora. I nanaotcK. pulldlnc CM tear building. roRTLAXD. IKIDAT. MAT 1. lata. WKXXT IXCI.hLATIOX IX OiiXAHOM.. Are indebted to th New York " Sun for the views of the Enid Events upon the subject of the Initiative and referendum. Enid Is In the State of Oklahoma, the Enid Events Is a news r&per. and Oklahoma has on form of Ae Intuitive and referendum. This Oklahoma Journal Is obviously not an advocate of direct legislation. for w find It commenting- thus: I Duricf our three years and one- nsir or the initiative and referendum and recall the people of Oklahoma have Initiated no legislation, recalled no officials and referred no legislation cither stata or local. "If the reader will think a moment he will conclude that the Initiative, referendum and recall are so unwieldy that their effectiveness is destroyed except as they are used by political or other firmly established organixa lions, backed by plenty of money. "It would be an Impossibility for a few individuals to initiate or refer leg Islatlon or recall an official except they erect a sufficient organization and ex pend considerable money. It would be necessary to open headquarters. employ helpers and petition circular ers, and spend from several months to a year initiating- and bringing- the proposition to a vote. In the mean time and in making the fight it would be necessary to spend many thousands of dollars." As a consequence of the stat menu thus set forUi. the Sun exults, seemingly, that the mountain erected by the upiifters of clvliiration and good government has not brought forth even a mouse. We have a dis tinct recollection, however, that sev era! Eastern Jonrnala have commiser ated with the voters of Oregon over the task Imposed upon them through the lr.ltiatlvo and referendum, of re jecting or approving thirty-two pro posed laws or amendments In the last election. It therefor seems that the opponents look upon too much direct legislation as a bad thing, and too lit tle direct legislation as equally vicious. The inquiry naturally arises as to why Oregon, with the initiative and referendum, should find direct legisla tion burdensome, while Oklahoma ap parently Ignores its opportunities. We take it that the Enid Events does not mean to Imply that the voters of Okla homa have never had a measure pre sented through tho initiative or refer endum. In the last election six cnact . ments were referred to the people of that state. Each of the measures failed at the polls. In other words, no legislation was accomplished, al though the machinery was In motion. On the whole, this circumstance Is not any sounder argument that direct leg islation Is a failure than Is J he experi ence of Oregon, with its horse-blanket ballot. The term "initiative and refer endum" Is applied to a principle which may be worked out in a variety of ways. Oregon has gone to one ex treme and adopted the wide-open, ever-ready and easily-manipulated type. Oklahoma has possibly gon to the other extreme and adopted an over-cumbersome type, although the record so far doea not necessarily make that the inevitable conclusion. In Oregon, voters to the number of S per cent of the total vote cast for Justice of the Supreme Court may present laws or constitutional amend ments by initiative petition, while the number required to refer laws enacted by the Legislature must be at least i per cent. The percentages In Oklahoma are the same for Una but IS per cent of the voters must sign initiative peti tions for constitutional amendments. The basis for applying the percentage differs in Oklahoma from that In Ore gon, for In Oklahoma the percentage is calculated on the highest number of votes cast for any state office. In Ore gon the candidates for Governor re ceive normally from 15.000 to 20.000 more votes than do the candidates for Justice of the Supreme Court. A change In the ratio and percentage in Oregon to those adopted in Oklahoma would undoubtedly make an Impor tant difference In the number of meas ures submitted In this state. In addition to this difference, the Oklahoma Legislature may prescribe other restrictions by law, and it has adopted the plan of making approval of a measure contingent upon its re ceiving a total affirmative vote at least equal to a majority of the total vote cast In the election. In Oregon, if the affirmative vote exceeds the nega tive vote on any measure presented, the measure is approved. Had the Oklahoma plan existed In Oregon at the time of the last election, not on of the thirty-two measures would have fceen approved, whereas, under the Oregon system, nine were adopted. The initiative arid referendum, adopted in Montana In 1905. has not been used extensively, if at ail. There the percentages are the same as in Oregon, but the base is the. vote for Governor and petitions must be signed by the required percentage of the vot ers In two-fifths of the counties of the state. The people have not the power to Initiate constitutional amendments, nor to Initiate or refer laws carrying appropriations. Contrasted last year with Montana and Oklahoma was South Dakota, where the voters, as In Oregon, were overburdened with legislation. Five per cent of the voters may initiate a measure In South Dakota, but the constitutional provision provides that such measure shall first go to the Leg islature and by it be submitted to the people. Other states that have adopted or propose to adopt the initiative and referendum have almost, if not quite. Invariably chosen no other state .cystem. .Washington proposes centages and ratios different from those in Oregon, and will exclude con stitutional amendments from the pro-vb-lons of the act. Arizona's much dlcuacd constitution uses the vote for Governor as the basis for calculat ing the percentage' required to Initiate or refer measures. Illinois' proposed act could more properly be termed a form of imperative mandate than a form of the Initiative and referendum. Under the proposed Illinois plan a law Initiated must first go to the Legisla ture, If the Legislature falls to adopt It. It is then submitted to vote of the people, but only In the event that 25 per cent of the members of the Legis lature vote affirmatively for the meas ure. One well may speculate as to which Is the best plan. If one believes that the Initiative and referendum U a proper substitute for the Legislative Assembly, he may logically" approve the Ore.-n plan. If he believes thnt the Initiative and referendum should be- held ss a reserve power to attain for the people only that which they need and desire, but which the Legis lature refuses to give them, or to pre vent the Legislature from Imposing upon the people something that the people do not desire, then he may log ically approve the Oklahoma or the IUinos or some other plan. According to The .Oregonian'a way of thinking, the Initiative and referen dum should not be an instrument freely offered to the faddist, the ex perimenter, the demssogue. the spe cial interest or the political clique. Its use should be so restrained and safe guarded that it would be Impossible to submit any measure to vote of the people unless it were honestly drafted, clearly worded and so earnestly de sired that it would be unnecessary for paid emissaries to solicit signatures in Its behalf. In the light of the experi ences of Oklahoma and Oregon with different forms of direct legislation machinery, the people of the South western state should be content" that their system Is too cumbersome for use except when the public welfare u In actual stress. ANTI-RECIPROCITY TWADDLE. The quantity of twaddle which ts uttered In the name of the farmers upon the subject of reciprocity Is as founding. Thus John M. Stahl. legis lative agent of th Farmers National Congress, says, among other un Inspired remarks, that "the farmer 1 not the one to strike at because of the high price of foodstuffs to city consumers." Who wishes "to strike at the farmer?" Certainly the advo' cates of reciprocity do not. Mr. Stahl himself admits that the prices of farm products at the farm gate are about as low as they can possibly get with all the boasted benefit of the tariff on wheat and corn. This ought to prove to an Intelli gent person that the tariff has noth ing whatever to do with the amount the farmers receive for their grain and stock. They get what the mld dlemen choose to pay them and no more. Since their receipts at present Just skim the margin of the cost of production, they could not receive less under any conditions. If the price falls below the cost of production, the farmers must go Into some other bus! ness. Mr. Stahl cite another fact which he supposes to prove that reciprocity would Injur the farmers. It really proves that the market price of their products is fixed by agencies entirely uncontrolled by the tariff. He say that "the price of hogs on the Illinois and Iowa farm has been for the last thirty days only 0 per cent of what It was for the same period In 191. And this is under the beneficent pro tective tariff. If prices can fall 60 per cent In one year how In the name of common sense does the tariff neip the farmer? W admit that It helps the middleman who exploits the far mer. After he has swinaiea me pro ducer out of his crop the tariff help him swindle th consumer out of his wares, but doea this benefit th worker In the fields? The most sublime passage in Para dise Lost Is Milton's apostrophe to light. The most essential and the saf est thing in all the world Is light. Men feel the need of it so much that sometimes they imagine darkness to be light. Mr. Stahl seems to suffer badly from this Illusion. Would that the scales might fall from his eye be fore he plays th part of th blind leading the blind a great deal more. PKOVOflOX WORK SYSTEMATIZED. It is asserted, and undoubtedly with truth, that no commercial body ever engaged in so comprehensive a cam paign of advertising as that recently undertaken by the Portland Chamber of Commerce. As one of the crown ing efforts of this campaign is the appearance of a 32-page album, with Illustrations in color, entitled "Ore gon, the Land of Opportunity." This album Is Intended for free distribu tion, largely among possible Investors, and Is the acme of that type of color promotion literature which has found such great favor among Oregon communities. The energy of the Chamber of Commerce, however, is by no means confined to the publication of artistic albums. The system adopted by the organization embraces a series of pamphlets, each dealing with special industries. A small booklet sent broadcast presents in colors views taken In many localities off Oregon. An attached postcard gives a list of the special pamphlets and invites request for the publication 'dealing with the Industry or occupation In which the recipient is particularly Interested. These pamphlets include Instructive and descriptive treatises of the cli matic conditions of Oregon, the apple industry.' other fruits and nuts. Inten sive farming, dairying and stockrals lng. poultry. One pamphlet tells what can be done with $1000 to $5000 In Oregon, another tells only of pub lic lands, another of education, still another answers questions concerning general conditions. Fourteen different publications are either ready for dis tribution or in process of printing. Unusual merit is found In these publications by reason of their com prehensive yet conservative treatment of special subjects. The inaugura tion of th plan has undoubtedly been expensive, but the systematized effort to reach the Individual should prove economical in the long run by reason of Its - saving of ammunition. The homeseeker or investor is not bur dened with the task of searching through a large publication for the matter that particularly interests him. He can obtain the information de sired, told tersely and by writer of authority, and the fund is not de- per- , pie ted by sending him a mass of material In order that he may find something about his one specialty. . It is a work that merits continuance and is one that should have the finan cial support of all who are now es tablished in Portland and expect to derive benefit from the further growth and prosperity of the state. HOLOING IT THKEJB INSTITUTIONS. It is curious and may be significant that the three centers of the move ment against the Monmouth Normal, the University of Oregon and the Ore gon Agricultural College appropria tions are Yamhill County, which has no state institutions. Marlon County, which ha nearly all the state insti tutions, and Cottage Grove, which lias a deadly hostility toward Eugene and all its works and ambitions. But the State University and the Agricultural College and the normal school are open alike and on equal conditions to students from Yamhill and Marion counties and from Cottage Grove, and. they ought to have support there as in every other part of Oregon. It should be assumed that the peo ple of Oregon definitely and finally settled the vexed normal school prob lem when through ' the Initiative a year ago they declared for Monmouth and against the other normal pro posals. Do not the people know what they want and what they do not want? not entitled to have It? A few years ago. too, there was another referen dum on the University of Oregon and the institution was sustained. The verdict of the people was therefore for the university. Why another ref erendum now except for spite or re venge or perverser.ess or Jealousy? It is not creditable to Oregon that its State University should be hampered and attacked by recurrent movements of this kind. Let as have an end of this referen dum business on these three institu tions, that they may move forward to desirable positions f service and use fulness to the people of Oregon. and educate, but Grover Cleveland, besides having been a safe and saga cious President, was also a provident and worthy fatherland provided from his own error's, as worthy fathers do, for the maintenance and education of his offspring. Why, then, should the country be called to assume or sup plement this service? It is the abuse of the pension idea as exemplified in coses where the pen sion is neither Just nor necessary that makes it impossible to check its excesses or vigorously to protest them under the ordinary conditions of life. It is thus that the pension idea, noble In its conception, and Just in its in tent, has been debased by the free handed and unjust bestowal of it privilege. LOCKWOOD. Mr. Logan calls Charlie Lock wood "a menace, a drag and a detriment to the Republican party." This Is of ficial, for Mr. Logan is chairman of the Multnomah County Central Com mlttee. IVhe immediate occasion for the pointed remarks of the chairman was an effort by Lock wood to get his thlrfty grip on the organization of the city committee. . Lockwood Is small fry; but he is a type. There are many Lockwoods, far too many. They do infinite harm to any cause or any party upon which And if they want it. are they J they chance to force themselves. The matter with the Republican party In Portland Is Lockwoodism. The peo ple are tired of feeding the party leeches. They are weary of seeing th Lockwoods around. The low estate of the Republican organization in the general mind is the Identification of party and party organization and party effort and perty purpose with the Lockwoods. The party exists. apparently, to feed the Lockwoods at its crib. Tha only way to get rid of the Lockwoods Is to destroy the party. aV) they destroy the party. But the Lockwoods go on forever. So lung as the Republican party In Portland tolerates Lockwood and his odious kind it will not have the public confidence. And it should not have. THE SAME OLD PARTIES? Party lines have been weakened by the progress of events during the past several years; but they have by no means disappeared. There are yet two great parties and nothing in the signs of the time indicates the im mediate dissolution or submersion of one or the other. Everyone knows that there will be a mighty contest next year between the historic Na tional parties, and no one believes that defeat of one or the other will Involve It in Irretrievable disaster. Yet w see strange portents In the political firmament. President Taft works willingly and deliberately with the Democratic majority in the House and the Democratic minority in the Senate to put through Canadian reci procity. He Is opposed by the ma jority of his own party, though an assertive minority stand by the Ad ministration and makes possible, and even probable, Its success. The question is going to be asked next year whether a Republican Pres ident or a half-Democratic Congress is responsible for Canadian reciproc ity. The Democratic platform will point with pride to the disinterested and patriotic action of the Democratic Congressmen in carrying out the great Democratic principle of Canadian free trade, and the Republican platform is going to do the best It can with a vexatious and awkward issue. It will doubtless praise the President mildly and direct toward the Democrats a broadside of artistic and withering de nunclatlon for what? Clearly th Republican party will be face to face with a grave dilemma, and the Demo crats axe sure to garner the fruits of their consummate strategy and polit ical wisdom In Congress. Yet we see President Taft pushing straight ahead, and hi party sinking straight down in the mire of its own perplexity and fatuity. Party lines do not concern the President; evi dently they do not trouble the coun try. His own political future gives his enemies more anxiety than it gives Tart; the country approves heart ily and pointedly his lofty self-renun- clatlon and appears to be preparing to reward so noble a sacrifice by vot lng for another as his successor. Withal we find no public man leav ing the Republican party because the ship Is thought to be sinking; nor do we find the warlike and Irreconcilable Insurgents earning out their sup posed purpose of organizing a party of their own. Not at all. Even La Follette stands pat as a Republican, though he attempts to create of the nsurgents a party within a party. What La Follette and his followers will do next year, when Taft shall be renominated, may be questioned; but where will he go If he goes and where. will he end at the end? La Follette. It may be supposed, would doubtless become an apostate if he could carry the Republican party of Wisconsin with him; but he can accomplish nothing more than its ruin and his own political demise by so radical a course, bo he stays. President Taft stands immeasur ably better before the country now than he did a few months since; but does his party? Evidently not; yet there are many opportunities In the next few months for the Democrats to blunder; and when have the Demo crats' failed to walk Into any pit dug for them? Members of the Star Grange, now in session at Corvallla, to.-the number of 250, visited the State Agricultural College Wednesday, were escorted through the grounds by the gallant cadet of. the military department, through the buildings by the officers. ana were banqueted by the young women of the School of Domestlo Science and Art. . Needless to say, they were highly pleased and enter tained by what they saw, heard and ate. Depend upon It, the Oregon Ag ricultural College will get what it asks of the State Legislature if the Grange members of that body have the de ciding vote. Old-fashioned farming and the old way of teaching farming were all right In their day, but new methods are for new times. In the forefront of the progress for which the State Agricultural College stands Is the "Order of the Patrons of Hus bandry" and Its expression, through the Grange. FEXSIOXS IVB FRKSIDENTS WIDOWS. The abuse of the pension system is the same whether it applies to rela tively young widows of veterans who served as soldiers in the ranks or to the same class of applicants who were married to veterans higher up In the line of military position. Thus there is no more reason in Justice as ap plied to the basic, pension idea in giv- ng the relatively young widow of General Benjamin Harrison a pension than there Is in giving a pension to youthful Mary Smith, widow of pri vate John Smith, who served In the Civil War long before she was born. The principle Is the same in both cases. Neither the one widow nor the other deserves anything of the Gov ernment for having married the man she chose, though if the pension idea Is to be worked out on a charity basis Mary Smith is the fitter subject of the two for governmental bounty. With the widow of President Gar field, the case 1 different, since she shared with thet soldier the anxieties and dangers of war, doing nobly the woman's part In war by keeping the home and caring for the children and the aged mother of the soldier while he was afield performing the man's duty in stress of war. As for Mrs. Cleveland well she Is one of three widows of ex-Presidents. That Is all that can be aald in favor of giving her 15000 a year. She has several growing children to bring up J The new $2 cash register Is all very well, but what is really wanted is an automatic salesman which will sell goods and swallow the pay. At the end of the day the stomach can be. opened and the cash put In the safe hdward Everett Hale describes an automatic escort in one of his stories which served the purpose as well as if it had been a living man. This showr how little real difficulty there woula be In the way of an automatic clerk, or salesman. If some Inventor would apply his mind to the problem. MR. LAFFE11TY EXTENDS THANKS. Pleased That Campaign Which Wot IL(m Votes la Renewed. WASHINGTON. D. C. May 4. (To the Editor.) In the late campaign cer tain Portland papers made fun of mr name. JThey accused roe of changing it often. They -advertised me and made me many votes. It pleases me im mensely to see that they are now start ing a, campaign for my re-election, should I again seek public office. Again, my naays is made the Bubject of their much appreciated sarcasm. These same fellows also charged me during the campaign with being insin cere in my professions of friendship for the public, as against the special in terests, with being a disreputable law yer, who "had been up for disbarment before the Land Department," and with having been arrested for "insulting de cent women on the streets of Portland." In the face of these charges, made by these "Influential" papers, the people went right ahead and elected me by a large majority. It seems that the peo ple ought to have a guardian. Well. the people of Oregon have managed to stumble along and do pretty well elect ing officers for several years, and they are getting on to publications that pro fess great friendship for the people, and then always support the candidate with the longest pocketbook. I admitted everything they charged against me last campaign except the allegation that I had been arrested fflr Insulting decent women on the streets. If they had said I should have been ar rested for any reason, instead of say ing that I actually had been arrested, perhaps I would not have denied that. But as it was I made the statement In my speech at Sixth and Washington streets Just before the election that if they would produce the record showing where I had ever been arrested In my life on any charge, or the statement of any officer who made the arrest, that I would withdraw from the race, and that if such proof could be produced after my election that I would resign. I am still waiting for the proof and my challenge then made still holds good. They failed to produce the proof. but now say I spoke to "indignant women on the streets. I should like to see the women. In the language of Captain Peary, "Let them produce the Esquimaux." The women are not com plaining, but these gentlemen are. If they are commissioned by any particu lar member of the fair sex to make this charge, let them give the name of the one in whose defense they are wielding their chivalrous pens. Other wise we must conclude that their fair damsels exist only in their Imaginations. My name is Walter Lafferty, and I want all my friends to call me by that name henceforth. My parents gave me the name Abraham Walter Lafferty. No one ever called me "Abraham,"- except Judge McGinn, who has a fad for call ing every one by his first name. At home and In school I always went by the name of Walter Lafferty. It is the only name that sounds good to me, when applied to myself, and la the only one that makes me feel at home. 1 have always signed my name "A. W. i-arrerty." ana In order that new ac quaintances may know the first name that I go by I now carry it on my let ter-heads as "A. W. (Walter Lafferty. I may later drop the "A. W." alto gether and simply sign It "Walter." I reserve the right to keep on working on my name till I get it down to suit my own taste. A W. (WALTER) LAFFERTY. TRIBUTE TO GOVERNOR WlLSOJr. The sailor dead will be honored at Vancouver on Decoration day by the beautiful custom that has prevailed in the garrison city for some years that of casting roses upon the current of th broad Columbia River at that place. A more fitting tribute to the heroes of the sea-arm of tha Govern ment service could scarcely be de vised. Whether current-borne or tide-tossed, these flowers will exale Incense to the memory of many gal lant men whose duty took them down to the sea In ships. Just over the hills back of Portland, a stone's throw (If you throw it far enough), in the town of Beaverton, where the onion thrives on the beaver dam land, lives the latest Oregon newspaper baby, the Reporter, which for style, spirit, make-up and setting of "display" la entitled to the blue ribbon. When will railroads give over the pleasant fiction of spreading rails as cause of accident? Why should rails rpread if the track is given the atten tion it needs for constant traffic? A rail may break, but not spread if properly spiked. The Custom-House people might make a dicker with Pendleton and get rid of the fireworks on hand. Pen d'.eton does not want a celebration that savors of sanity, so-called. Pen dleton purposes making a noise. The State Grange would use the hair to cure the bite by putting liquor license money into the peniten tiary fund. Some states find the plan advantageous of putting that money into the school fund. , . Justto give an idea of progress in one small town, it may be stated that Nehalem is building a three-story hotel on a foundation 50 by 80. That would be "some tent" In many a pre tentious city. Somebody besides rebel soldiers and adventurous Americans is likely to be hurt If the game of war is kept up much longer in Mexico. It looks now as If it might be Diaz. Chicago boasts a May temperature of 87 degrees. If memory serves cor rectly the record not being instant ly available Portland did that well one day last April. . Qne proposed law by the State Orange has merit to prevent swear ing in vote. At present the law helps the lazy man. People with the strawberry appe tite must have them, even from so far distant as Tennessee. A possible ride on a dead horse seems to knock the nerve of the best man for Mayor. When cash registers get down to 2 apiece, every housewife can ring up the "old man." Your Uncle Blnger, old warhorse that he Is, scent th fray a long way off. Eaatera Oregon Writer Looks L'oon Him As Presidential Timber. PENDLETON. Or.. May J. (To tha Editor.) As a citizen of the state. I desire to congratulate the people upon their determination to make the ap proaching reception of Woodrow Wil son non-partisan in character, and I crave the courtesy of The Oregonian's columns to pay a personal tribute to this scholar, publicist and statesman. I am a Republican. He is a Democrat. Tet I am Impressed that he is the most Imposing figure In American official life today, and more nearly reflective of the sentiment and purposes of the great middle class of the Nation than any man who has appeared upon the political stage in the last quarter cen tury. He is not a doctrinaire like Bryan, nor an opportunist like Roose velt, but. combining a marvellous arrasr of the science of government with prac tical knowledge of human nature, he Is able to achieve, to reduce to concrete legislation, the abstract theories of the average man and to accomplish such results without attendant commercial panic or popular alarm. .- He is a progressive. If In Congress he would probably be denominated an Insurgent. Yet he is not an extremist, and never a radical. He has reached the firesides of the Republic, where Im portant questions are finally Betted, as has no other public man since Lincoln. If the Presidential election were to be held today, and Governor Wilson were a candidate, he would probably defeat any man who might oppose him. The party harness hangs loosely in these days. There is no striking issue which divides men into parties. The people are concerned over moral, civic and economic questions, and above all else are desirous of finding some prac tical method of divorcing business from politics without destroying the indus trial fabrlo of the Nation. Most think ing men are progressive, but they know that permanent progress is of slow de velopment, hence they are conservative progressives. Of this class Woodrow Wilson la becoming the recognized leader. Only a few months ago' this man stepped from the presidency of clois tered Prinocton to the Governorship of the State of New Jersey, the mother of corporations, the nurse of trusts, the pocket borough of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the home of the High Priests of Political Big Business. When nominated the Nation viewed him as the choice and representative of wealth, as the scholar In politics, who was to be groomed as the Presidential candidate of the Interests. Yet his first announcement as a candidate was to align himself with the independent ele ment of his party, and his first act as Governor was to crush the bipartisan political machine of his state In the successful espousal of the cause of popular nomination of Senators. He has not yet been in office a half year, yet he has routed the bosses of his state and. even with a divided legis lature, one branch thereof Democratic and the other Republican, he has se cured the enactment of such advanced legislation as other states have re quired years to attain, and has placed reactionary New Jersey In the very van of the popular conflict. ' Among the new statutes of that state which bear the Wilson Impress may be noted a comprehensive measure regu lating public service corporations, a thorough-going corrupt practices act, a primary election law, wise enact ments covering employers' liability and worklngmen's compensation, together with administrative reform of both the school and penal systems of the state. From the man who could accomplish all this as governor of New Jersey In four months, the public would have reason to expect much in four years as chief executive of the nation." Governor Wilson may never be Presi dent. The people do not yet nominate Presidential candidates. But he pro claims a message broader than the ten ets of any party, and it is meet that he shoulld be greeted, not as a parti san, but as a citizen. STEPHE.V A LOWELL. 1 1 ; MORAL SHEPHERD VIEW OF WAR. Dr. Wise Writes About It and the Peace Propaganda. PORTLAND, May 10. (To the Edi tor.) You call me a "Moral Shepherd." You know that Miss Watson's Jim told Huck if any of his own race called him "Polly voo francay" he would "bust him over the head." As a Caucasian and a citizen of America I resent your in sipid insult, and deny the Implied soft ness. If you think you can annoy me with soft bleats of that nature you will find an intensification of the 15 pounds to the square inch that habitually presses the top of your head. On sober second thought I do not know what a moral shepherd is, but it sounds like something related to a Jellyfish. The time is passing, my dear sheep, when the men who "seek peace and pursue It" can be accused of Ingrained timidity. If you editors had the nerve to talk out there would be less shouting for war and more real courage. During the late war with Spain, and during the rambles I have made through his tory with favorite authors, I find that the leaders of men, who have embroiled them in wars, have encouraged most cowardly methods. They would not fight an enemy, as a rule, unless they outnumbered him, nor would they attack a position until they had beaten it to pieces first with long-distance ar tillery. You know that the science of war Is to get behind the other fellow, and after ho Is disorganized by your ambuscades, to murder him at your convenience and with perfect safety. I do not speak of rare instance but of the rule. When I spoke in favor of President Taft's arrangement with Great Britain, I did not suppose for a moment that an enlightened newspaper would suppose it was the result of fear, no matter how much Mauser bullets annoy me. I know that most editors are not afraid of bul lets and prefer them to reason, but was deluded into believing that they, as a class, favored enlightenment and were not opposed to the plain progress of civilization. The only part of war I have ever come into personal contact with was the death from Typhoid Fever of scores of young men at Chicamauga. You doubtless recall the sappy bravado of the press at that time, which turned Into a putrid whining after scandal when the thing went wrong. There must have been something wrong with the waste of energy that compelled such extravagance of treasure and life in that Instance. , The Peace Propaganda Is seeklne the error In the minds of na tions that expose citizens to such ca lamities and our honored Frealaent thinks he has found a preventive for many ills of like nature In a working agreement with a powerful kindred nation. Your philosophy of the boys In the apple tree Is striking, and, I must admit, convincing of the perverseness which leads men to suppose that nations should treat each other as fussy child ren. You know, of course, that our present relation with Great Britain la of such a nature that we are practically committed to peace, since we have agreed that our enormous common boundary of the Great Lakes and the Canadian line shall be utterly destitute of warlike preparations. You are prob ably aware that treaties do not pre vent war but avoid them as long as both parties abide by their contract. Your quotation "Trust in God and keep your powder dry" is as much out of date as your philosophy, because modern arms have waterproof cart ridges, and according to the more ad vanced theologies the deity does not take the Interest in military afTalrs he used to. Napoleon knew that latter fact and you can find it by turning to your well-used book of handy platitudes. War Is not Irreligious, not un-Chrlstlan or un-Jewlsh. but it is uncivilized, and should be the resort of the oppressed and the defense of civilization against barbarity, not the argument of cultured nations. My dear sheep, you are trailing be hind and I must send my dog to nip your hocks and get you up with the bellwether, so that you can be within reach of the "Moral Shepherd." While I resent your pallid Insinuation, I re main convinced of the fact that you are still to be had for progress and peace. JONAH B. WISE. The Oregonlan is quite unable to understand the point of this commun ication. If there Is a point. All we can make out is that the excellent rabbi objects to be called a "moral shepherd." We didn't; we didn't. We merely said that he "took the moral shepherd's viewa" There is a difference, though there would be nothing to get excited about even if we had called him out right and without making any bonos about it a "moral shept-crd." Dr. Eliot and Dr. J. R. Wilson were placed In the same offensive list, but they have meekly submitted. But not Dr. Wise. No, sir. He lets us know what he thinks about it with all the Justifiable indignation displayed by the good woman who had been called a paral lelogram. Advertising Talks By WIMIam C. Freeman. Mutual Inventory of PockeJ. New York Evening Telegram. A gentleman never snatches his trousers away from his wife when he discovers her going through his pockets. He only hopes she will leave him enougrb. with which to go down town in the morning. He is perfectly welcome to go through her purse any time and help himself to anything he can find. That is' what married life means. A man should not allow his feelings to be hurt wfieu his wife runs across loose change or a roll in tils pockets; he ouKht to play the game and take such little conjugal pastimes for granted. Laws la Canada. SUBLIMITY, Or., May 8. (To the Editor.) If a man dies in Saskatche wan, Canada, leaving brothers of half blood and of the whole-blood are they all heirs by law or only those of the whole blood? S. O. The Oregonlan will not undertake to answer legal questions arising in for eign countries. Te. PORTLAND, May 9. (To the Editor.) Had Mr. Montag received the ma jority of Republican votes at the pri mary, would he have been the Republi can nominee for Councilman of the Sixth Ward at the June election? A SUBSCRIBER. Yes, unless he declined to accept the nomination. sa PORTLAND. May 10. (To the Edi tor.) If I have money left me by an uncle which I am to receive at the death of my aunt, and I never receive the money, would It be legal for me to make a will for my wife to reecive It at my death? A SUBSCRIBER. One cannot will expectancies. Child Labor Law. RICKREALL, Or., May 7. (To the Editor.) Is there a child labor law In Oregon, and does it prohibit children under 14 years from working In hop yards in the country? -A SUBSCRIBER. There is a child labor law in Ore gon but it does not apply to farm work. Highest Office Bulldlnsr. DALLAS, May 8. (To the Editor.) What is the highest building In the United States? J. D. S. Metropolitan Life building. New York City. Tradition has tilled more ndvertialasr (TM-trarda than anything else. Look around you and you will seo this for yourself. Take the firms in your community that have followed cgatom for years that haven't changed their methods are they progressing? Inquire as to th'e amount of business they do and you will find they are do ing less. If anything, than they did 10 years ago. Compare these firms with firms who have changed their methods to conform with the times have you noticed their progress? Time was when advertising ran only occasionally and consisted merely of the name and address of the firm, with possibly a mention of the merchandise for sale and the prices at which It was to be sold. But the merchant who follows this style of advertising In these days will not meet with much success. The advertlxing copy of today must be something more than a mere price list to bring results. I It must have human Interest. It must tell a running story every day about the merchandise that is offered why it is good merchandise why it is worth the prices asked for it and it must be truthful. Advertising: copy of this nature will brius bunlncss to nny firru if it is done persistently and conHlstently. This is true of every community it applies to Houston. Tex., as well as New York. Get out of the rut, Mr. Merchant . you who have followed custom Just because it was custom. Shake off tha shackles of "tradition" and you will progress In tho right direction. (To be continued.) Country Tcwa Sayings by Ed Howe (Copyright, 1011. by George Matthew Adams.) The "good story teller" seems to be passing away; people seem better sat isfied with the almanacs here lately. The old-fashioned way of doinsj things must be improved upon slowly; it takes thousands of years to mako much of a change. When anything In the way of gossip Is said to be "all over town," It usually means that four or five people know it. Hidden away in every breast is the instinct of a slave; the instinct to cringe bet'ore power, and bend the knee to it. A man gives up something every year because It doesn't "agree with him." After awhile, he finds that living doesn't agree with him. and gives that up, too. There Is nothing more" pitiful than an old man making a new start in life. Every time a man picks up a baby, some woman present screams: "Look out for its back." Usually It Is necessary to ask a man twice In order to get his real opinion. Some people always look the same. whether going to a funeral or to a wedding. College boys do not act much worse than town people attending a picnic in the country. The Scotch Idea In Bargaining. London Tit Bits. The canny Scot wandered into the pharmacy. "I'm wanting three penn'orth o' laudanum," he announced. "What for?" askod the chemist, sus piciously. "For two pence," responded the Scot. Sherlock Holmes! Will Reappear in Next SUNDAY'S OREGONIAN That great exponent of deduc tion and adventure has Jbeen re vived by Sir .A. Conan Doyle. The Adventure of the Devil's Foot is the first case the keen and crafty Sherlock undertakes. It is a weirdly fascinating tale in which Doyle is at his best. Re new your acquaintance with the greatest of detective characters, on page 7 of next Sunday's mag azine section. AND ANOTHER BIG FEATURE We have secured the most vital of that great collection of Civil War photographs recently un earthed after having lain in musty vaults for half a century. Real action pictures of the con tending armies in that great struggle ! You will get a closer and more intimate understanding of the war from these remarkable photos. Text provided by the em inent historian, Dr. Francis Tre velan Miller. Fiction is amply provided. Be sides the Sherlock Holmes offer ing there are two complete short stories both of them up to the measure of good short fiction. Some New Self-Mades of Con gress deals with men 'who have forged their success out of bitter struggles with early adversity. There is a distinct loeal end to a recent stirring battle in Mex ico. This is dealt with in an in tensely interesting half page, fully illustrated. "Tampering With Nature" re counts the achievements of Gov ernment scientists in creating hybrid plants and animals. Ever hear of the cattabu or the zebu? Col. Crowe. Wallace Irwin's new hero, hands out some delight ful satire, softened by humor, re garding our liberty-loving neigh bors across the Rio Grande. Widow Wise nearly loses her heart and her life in the Al pines. Sambo acquires a kingdom and Mr. Twee Deedle has a fresh adventure. Those are just a few of the things. 1.