THE MORM.NO OREfiOXLU THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1911. 10 rOBTLAND. OREGOX. itr.J at Portland. Onioa. PoatofTlc aa cd-C'.as MAtt.r. xripuoa luiw Invariably la "Q- (BT HAIL.) Enn4ar inrlorled. eo Tsar ..-- y. Sunday Include, six month... y. Sunday lae.ufi.4l. thrt months. 7. feanamy lnclad.d. od. mootb... y. w:tout Sunday, en rr y. Wltnout Sunday, six moatha ... V .Ithnul fiimaw IhMA m T. E h 1 . 4 : .75 00 t :s 7. wimout buaasr. on moaia , " kljr. on mr ." ISO .... .&0 - r. on rear nay end w.ekly. on ysar (BT CARRIER.) r. Sunday Included, on yar. ... r. Sund.y tnelud.d. on mootb.. .o .TS w Co Kemll Send Pctorric. mon.y r iiprfii order or BtnoDAi check oa your 1.1 bank. 9uapi cola or currency. :ns sender's risk. Civ postofflc addraa "j;!. tnc'udlng county and stal. 'oolas K.t Ii to 1 p... 1 cent: 1 29 4.a. 2 tun, ' to 4U p.c. I cata: to to paces. 4 coat. Forslga Boalac. : t . r.t. --"tern, B'talawaa Odna Ttrra Conk. N.w lork. bruu.lca building- Chlca- S!.a.r Bu.:dlnr. Eorw.a oau N. a Bagant street, a. . LtndaB. IRIXAND. TKVK8DAT. DEC 11. MIL aiocKAcrs oe ix the pork BARREL. The Democratic majority in the iuse has already given evidence that appetite has more Influence than pledges, and the committees are reparing to pile up more evidence. the greed for appropriations and t the votes which they are expected swing the Democrats have already rgotten the pledges of economy llch they made only a year ago. stir raids on the Treasury, If liccessful. will swell the Government Itpenses In the next fiscal year to a im larger than they ever reached In me of peace. If all the schemes al- lcJy propounded go through and the Democrats develop a "growing appe- as the session passes, they will use a deficit of over 1100.000,000 in be fiscal year 1913. Already Democratic rapacity for otes has caused the passage in the I louse of the Sherwood pension bill. Ithtrh would expend $75,000,000 In the ffort to win the votes of the average 1 2000 old soldiers and their depend- r ts In each Congressional district 'he committee on public buildings has list voted to report an omnibus bulld og bill, which its chairman hopes to mid down to $20,000,000, but which Is I nnre likely to be expanded to $40.- 00.000 when it reaches the House. The Secretary of the Treasury recom- nenrls an appropriation of 123.000.- '0 tor rivers and harbors, which sum he hungry Democrats will perhaps louble with demands from every dls- 'rkt which has a creek capable of rjj.iting a flatboat. Democracy already has Its nose In the pork barrel and is deaf to the ap peals of Underwood not to disgust the rtuntry by Its greed. That leader, moved by fear that his party will waste the first opportunity In sixteen years to win the Presidency, voted asuinst the Sherwood pension bill and appealed to the buildings committee sgainst the building grab. But the pension hill went through with a rush and the committee voted to report an omnibus building bill. Underwood's only hope now is to Induce a Demo cratic caucus to forbid the Introduc tion of the latter bill, but he admits that he will have the fight of his life. I Political motives largely animate the Democrats In their present course an in the passage of the tariff bills at the extra session. They fully expect President Taft to veto the Sherwood pension bill and the building bill. He warned the Republican leaders In the last Congress that he would veto any Mil h measure which came to him In future. The Democrats calculate that. If the President should sign the pork burrel bills, they will get the pork ana tt will share the odium. If he should vt to the bills, they expect to save their record for economy on the face of the returns and to save the votes of their rreedy constituents also, while the President will alienate the soldier vote and the vote of the small towns which are must eager for public buildings. That the President will not hesitate if veto the bills, regardless of the con srquencesj to his own political for tunes there can be small doubt. He has already Intimated, though not In specific words, that he would rather b- right than win a second term. He has shown by previous vetoes that he places the performance of his duty above the gratification of his ambition and that he has the courage to act upcn his convictions. The probabili ties are that, by vetoing the pork-barrel bills, he will win the approval of fsr more than enough people to offset thewe whose greed for pensions and buildings he will have disappointed. - The .oernor and his rRiTira. i The Oregonian is said to be "hound, log West." The accusation comes from a bushwhacking partisan of the Governor, a newspaper that has made a practice of pursuing relentlessly and with vindictive hatred public men like Svnator Fulton and Acting-Governor Uowerman and other Republicans for the heinous offense of belonging to the "old guard." Governor West is a soft-hearted, well-intentioned young man who has happened through exceptional condi tions to be elevated to the Governor's chair. He has got Into trouble through !'. egregious meddling with stable methods of government and boyish experimentation with the powers and privileges of his high office. He takes a snapshot Judgment of every question or problem that comes before him and formulates over night grave state poli cies. He has an entirely original gen. lus for getting In hot water by saying foolish things and doing other things equally absurd. He vetoes legislative bills w holesale.-most of them worth)-, because It suits his whim or because their authors are his enemies, takes a great group of grinning convicts under lus wing, stages a murderer's reprieve at the state prison In the most theatri cal fashion, aboltsfrea the death sen tence, and otherwise disports himself la a manner to surprise and startle the public. The Governor Is subjected to a constant fire of criticism because he provokes criticism by his spectacu lar progress from one freakish and Juvenile executive performance to an other. That Is ail. Let Governor West, who aspires to mul.tte" the example of Abraham Lincoln, as he says, be reminded that the Great Emancipator freed slaves, not convicts. He never acted In haste, spoke unjustly or in anger, bore mal ice, punished personal enemies, broke faith with friend or foe. spurned coun. sef. despised precept, contemned ex perlecce, set aside the law, usurped ' the function of the Legislature, or evaded responsibility for his own deliberate arts. rOHMIfSIONER WALDO'S M1STAKE- In maintaining: that no greater pre caution should be taken for the safety of the President of the United States than for that of the Mayor of New York City. Police Commissioner Waldo shows lack of the sense of proportion. He may have Intended only to flatter the Mayor by placing: him on an equal Ity with the President. That he Is mistaken is evident from a consldera - tlon of the consequences of the death or injury of the one official as com- pared with the other Much as all well-disposed citizens would regret the death of Mayor Gay- nor, such an event would anect tne Interests only of New Tork City, which I la after all but a part of the United I States, though it may Imagine that it Is "the whole thing" surrounded by a ! prove of the Government's suit to dis large area of "hinterland." The death I solve the plumbing supply trust There of President Taft would have vital 1 is no more Indefensible combination consequences for the whole nation, ' than that ring of allied monopolies one of the most regrettable of which would be that James Schoolcraft Sher- man would become President. It would vitally affect the question who should be the next President. It might be compared to a wave In the ocean, which never ceases until it beats on shores thousands of miles apart. The death of Gaynor would resemble noth. lng greater than the swell of a steamer on a good-sized lake. Mr. Waldo should make a tour of the United States, get acquainted with his own country and revise his opinion of the Importance of New York City In relation to the whole republic. DEGENERATES NOT ACCOOTABLEf "To hold that a man who would entice a child Into some secluded spot for the purpose of lust and murder Is In possession of normal and respon sible mental equipment Is untenable, says a correspondent in The Oregonian today. "Yes, It Is untenable to hold that he Is a normal being. Yet degenerates, as a. rule, are responsible. That is. they are responsible to the extent of realizing the enormity of their mis deeds, the necessity for concealing them and the consequences that will fall on them If they are caught. If the degenerate did not possess this much of moral consciousness he would not "entice a child Into some secluded spot.!' He would attack In the open, wherever he found his victim, as do the bolder of wild beasts. The details of the crime almost In variably measure the accountability of the criminal. It ts not only right, it Is wise to hang such a degenerate as the Holzman murderer. ' IF WE AIX DEMANDED COIN. What would be the consequences If every person receiving payment for property sold were to insist on pay ment In gold and were to count It, giv ing no heed to the certificate of the Treasury Department as to the con tents of a bag of money? So much time would be consumed In counting money by bank tellers. In counting it again by the recipient. In counting It again every time the recipient pafrl out a part of It. that banks would be compelled to double or treble their forces, the amount of business trans acted by each firm and Individual would be reduced and business would be revolutionized. People would be continually going to and fro with bags containing large sums In gold and silver. They would find It neces sary to carry arms and hire guards to protect their treasure from robbers. This question, suggested by the ac tion of Mrs. Dubordleu In Los Angeles, illustrates the extent to which paper representing money credits has revo lutionized business and Increased the volume of trade. Compare the few scratches of a pen by which a bank teller transfers $100,000 from the ac count of a customer to that of a cus tomer of another bank with the labor of counting and recounting that sum In gold and transferring It- from one bank to another. Consider the treas ure trains which would be constantly earning gold from one city to another to settle balances between banks. Con sider the Immense Increase in the cost of doing business, due to employment of additional men in counting and transporting gold. Even then the volume of business would shrink enor mously, for the supply of gold coin is not sufficient to carry through every transaction. For every $20 gold coin in existence hundreds of dollars change hands every day in the form of paper credits; checks, bank notes. drafts, etc. The relation between de mand and supply of coin would be en. tlrely changed, gold would become rela tively scarce and prices would soar skyward. The friction due to contin ual counting of money would cause waste of gold and further diminish the supply. It would harm the whole country if there were many Mrs. Dubordleu. or the Monetary Commission would be called upon to recommend far more radical changes In our financial sys tem than It has contemplated. 1 WOMEN IN JEWISH MTEKATTRK. A writer in the annual number of the Jewish Tribune, published Decern, ber 15. gives anaccount of the esti mate of woman in Hebrew literature w hich may surprise some readers. He I remarks that non-Jewish writers now and then believe that "the Jewish law dealt harshly with women. She was the chattel of her father and later of her husband. She had neither rights upon her own person nor upon prop erty." But this, says the writer in the Tribune. Is a mistake. Hebrew literature, both In the Bible and the Talmud, "has always considered woman the better half of humanity." The 'ery creation of woman, he ar gues Ingenuously, places her higher than man, for Adam was made out of gross raw material, while Eve Includ ed nothing that had not been first re fined by previous use in Adam him self. This ought to be convincing of itself, but many more facts are ad duced to prove that Hebrew literature, as well as the Jewish people, thought highly of women and 'accorded them a great deal of liberty. For example, in religious work women had the same rights as men. From such Instances at that of Deb orah we know that she could be a prophetess. She could lead religious choirs and even compose her own songs for them. She might also com pose prayers and recite them in public services, as we learn from the Book of Samuel. See I. Sam. 1:11. This Was far In advance of Paul's advice. Paul not only discouraged matrimony, but he forbade wopien to speak in church and ordered them to be sub ject to their husbands In all things. The Jewish opinion was that "he who Is not married is unworthy of being called a man and is always barred of Joy. blessings and good." This doc trine may not be so pleasing to ascet icism as Paul's, but it is vastly more sensible. One regulation which our author cites strikes us as particularly wise. It Is enjoined upon a man seeking a wife to study carefully the brothers of his sweetheart. Evidently It Is sup- . posed that the rough young men may let re any a cat slip from the bag which their more watchful' sister would keep out of sight. Moreover, J ..chlldren moit,v inherit the qualities , of mother., brothers." Is this , Tne artlcIa one of numerous . interesting ones In a notable edition I j .. v., ,..., THE PLIMBIXO TRrST. Every man in Portland who has had I occasion to erect a building will ap which controls everything connected , with plumbing, from the manufacture of washers to the wiping of Joints. Manufacturer, Jobber, master plumber and Journeyman are all In a conspiracy to rob the home-builder and divide the plunder. If the prosecuting officers o Oregon had any conception of their duty they would follow up the Govern ment's suit against the supply trust by bringing suits against the other mem bers of the ring. It may be pleaded in extenuation that Oregon has no anti-monopoly law. That may be, but President Taft's re cent message made clear the fact that, even had the Sherman law never been passed, th,e oil and tobacco trusts could have been dissolved under the common law and that the Sherman law Is prac tically only the common 4aw reduced to the form of a statute. In fact, elm liar combinations and monopolies had been enjoined under the common law long before the Sherman law was thought of. It was well enough to re duce this law to statutory form and make It more positive. But in the ah sence of an anti-trust law In Oregon, the prosecuting offlcers already have all the law they need. Let them add to it a fair supply of honesty, ability and energy and they can break up the little trusts, which, as has been truly said, are more oppressive than the big ones. DETECTIVES THEORETICAL AND PRAC TICAL. Detective William J. Burns' brilliant work in uncovering the mystery of the McNamara dynamite conspiracy has won him a good deal of praise and a good deal of detraction. One cannot expect persons who sympathize with criminals to think highly of a man who seems born to bring them to punishment. On the other hand. It stands to reason that everybody who detests crime and its promoters will Join in glorifying Mr. Burns. His de tective work In the McNamara case brought him more conspicuously be- fore the public than anything else he ever did, but it is not perhaps his most difficult achievement. Those who have followed the narratives of some of his cases in' McClure's magazine, or who otherwise knew his record, will re member others fully as intricate and some which were even more wonder ful. Burns Is not In any sense a literary detective. His method Is to go to the scene of a crime, listen to the' talk of the people roundabout, observe the circumstances and thus obtain some sort of a clew. When he has once found a clew, though it may be a faint one, he follows It up resolutely to the end. His superiority seems to con slst mainly in the ability to Judge ac curately of the worth of a given piece of circumstantial evidence, or of some careless bit of conversation. What a man of Inferior gifts would pass by as of no moment often leads Burns to the goal he desires. Burns is an opportunist pure and simple. Unlike the detective of liter ature, he does not preconceive a the ory and then proceed to verify It. No doubt he always has theories. No great man ever does much without them. But he keeps his theories well under subjection and never permits them to override the facts. The work of the literary detective is deductive, and for that reason it appears all the more marvelous to the reader. He seems to create a world In his own mind and by the marvelous power of his reason make it exactly reproduce the unknown elements in the real world. He charms the reader by prov ing that the outer universe is really logical through and through and that anybody can manufacture it 'for him self if his capacity to reason is strong enough. Burns looks upon the world as a tangle with threads running through it. If he can get hold of one of the ends he can feel his way along, but he never tries to predict where the thread will lead him. Or if he does predict, it Is with many reserva tions and Infinite caution. Burns is scientific in his methods. The detec tive of literature Is theoretical. There Is no doubt that Burns is a man of genius. When we compare what he does habitually with the fail ures of the ordinary detective we ob tain a measure of his ability. Out of every hundred crimes committed In the. United States It Is said by good Judges that some ninety-five or ninety six are never brought home to any body. In other words, our detectives fail to ferret out the wrongdoer, though In every Instance there is a clew If anybody bright enough to see It were on the spot. Frequently when the obvious clew Is observed the abil ity to pursue It is lacking. Burns Is never blind to whatever clew there may be In sight, and he rarely misses the goal It leads to. In detective stories the Sherlock Holmes. Lecocq. or whoever.the work er of miracles may be, to usually con trasted with the ordinary police much to his glory and the latter's shame. The official crime Irunter does not shine in literature. ' Is his ray any brighter in real life? How many of ficials have we in this country who begin to compare with Burns? Why is it that we cannot catch our crimi nals, and If we do catch them, can so seldom obtain evidence enough to con vict them? Why are we reverting to the medieval method of torture to ob tain evidence of crime if not because our detectives have proved incompe tent exactly as Conan Doyle represents them In the Sherlock Holmes stories 7 Still, granting that In .this respect the detective stories are true to life, we cannot say that w are entirely without objections to them. They are Interesting nough. We do not com plain of their dullness, though we must confess, to our sorrow, that the last Sherlock Holmes tale does drag a little. The catastrophe is so obvious that It is not very creditable to the miracle-worker. But that is of no moment Just now. Our objection is of the same sort as Mark Twain's to the usual Sunday school book of his youth. He complained that these books gave boys false expectations about what was likely to happen to them In life. There was always some benevolent old gen tleman Intervening to help them out of difficulties. Some lucky chance would happen to save them from the hard necessity of thinking and working. So it Is In detective tales, though In a different line, of course. The liter ary detectivedoes not need to meet the real world face to face and solve investigation. He can do it all In his mind, sitting cosily by his fireside. All the help he needs Is an occasional dose of morphine. These stories, teaching as they do an entirely false view of detective work, have been so popular in recent years that they may have operated disastrously on the character of our police officers. They may have been indoctrinated with the notion that they ought to ferret out crime as Sherlock Holmes does, and If it cannot be done in that way it cannot be done at all. How much of the undeniable inefficiency of our police work Is at tributable to some such subtly poison ous influence? The success of Mr. Burns is not only a fine thing in Itself, but it may pos sibly act as a corrective to the preva lent adoration of literary defectives who are so fascinating In books and so helpless in the face of an actual crime. There is something wrong with our inheritance laws when a man can by will leave $2,000,000 to a strange woman and not a penny to his vife. Whatever a man's prejudices or pref erences may be, he ought to be com pelled to provide for his family before he heaps favors on others. Consid ered, from the point of view of the general welfare, a man's property is only partially his own. There are many proper limitations upon its use. The right to dispose of it by will was created by law and the law should see that It is not used for wrongful purposes. The President of Northwestern Uni versity, Illinois, hopes to extirpate col lege sno"bbery by altering the architec ture of his buildings. We are doubt ful of his success. Snobbery is a dis ease of the soul Which has persisted through all the ages. It was about as virulent in Athens with all the Doric columns of the Parthenon for an anti dote as it is at Harvard. The one rem edy which has ever proved efficacious against snobbery is work, and of course that is out of the question at a modern university. China having been favored with a note from the Western powers to the effect that "war In the Orient must cease," cannot In politeness do less than reply In the same vein. She will order Russia to stop fighting in Per sia. Italy to withdraw her arms from Africa and France to make peace in Morocco. When the notes both ways have been obeyed all the world will be at peace. We anxiously await the blessed consummation. There may be some connection be tween the Wabash Railroad receiver ship and the purchase of a $500,000 necklace by one Gould and a scotcn estate by another. More attention to railroading and less to Jewelry and less Imitation of British aristocracy by the Goulds might have kept the Wabash on Its feet. Bv delivering a letter addressed to Santa Claus to State Senator Kellaher Postmaster Merrick has made a start in conferring a degree of honor that should be continued the rest of the week. There are other 250-pounders who oueht to be benevolent besides the Le'licose Senator from Multnomah. Slight difference in circumstances saves many a young woman from the fate of the little waitress who ended a short life of turmoil and trouble by drinking laudanum at Medford, and if there be any lesson In her career ana end It should Impress Itself on the men who make such affairs possible. In her contract with Frohman, Edna Goodrich may safely be assumed to have capitalized the notoriety growing out of her divorce from Nat Goodwin. It would be business, too, for being Goodwin's wife for ever so short a term should bring monetary compen sation. If the stork refuses to surprise a man with a baby In the good, old- fashioned way, his wife has no alter native but to adopt one and put it in his Christmas stocking. If Congress will vote the $100,000 necessary to mane roaus in Ltaicr Lake Park, that wonder of Oregon will rival Yellowstone and Yosemite as an attraction to tourists. The people of Indianapolis and M uncle must have had an ex post facto thrill when they learned that they had lived in close proximity to so much dynamite. Twentv-one million pounds of meat were condemned in this country this year, destroying by that much the dog's chances or escaping the sausage mill. Lowell observatory makes the state. ment that there Is no frost at the Mar tian Pole. There lies Dr. Cook's op portunity to come back. The cut In water rates comes at the right time to encourage the bibulous to climb on the water wagon at the opening of the year Mrs. William Golden must have a nervous headache whenever she tries to determine her relationship to her own relatives. The alleged white woman recently wedded to a negro at v ancouver denies the lack of color In the report. The surest indicator of Portland's growth and prosperity Is the proposed .reduction of the water rate. Senator Borah thinks three years' residence on a homestead Is enough. It is, in the sagebrush. This Is the shortest day of the year. especially to the man who arises early and does much work. Return of a few unfaithful paroled men may improve the others who are out. Stars and Star-Makers By Lena Cass Baer. A Pittsburg crematory concern Is worrying itself unduly, perhaps, but Just the same worrying about whether the ashes of all that Is mortal of E. H. Sothern. when he has passed away, are to be placed In an urn in Its crema tory and then scattered over the sea with those of Julia Marlowe, his wife. The actress many years ago purchased an urn in Pittsburg when on a visit . -u.u v, k ashes after death. She purchased an other also with the understanding that the ashes of her then husband, Robert Tabor, be placed therein after death, and that when both had departed the ashes should be mixed and carried In one urn and scattered over the sea. Since her second marriage the crema tory people are wondering whether Sothern will assume that part of the plot agreed upon by his wife's first husband. The concern says that the wishes of the actress regarding her urn will be respected, but so far neither Mr. nor Mrs. Sothern has intimated what is to be done with the other urn. . . Ann Murdock, who created the role of Margery In Henry W. Savage's pro duction of Rupert Hughes' -farce, "Ex cuse Me," and whose pronounced clev erness has established her among the favorite players of the younger gen eration, suffered a rather peculiar ac cldent during the performance of the play recently In Chicago. In the sec ond act an actor playing opposite Miss Murdock, in making a gesture, unin tentionally struck her a blow on .the temple. The shock was so forceful Miss Murdock sunk unconscious to the floor. The curtain was rung down and the orchestra played two selec tions while an understudy was dress- lng for the part. Miss Murdock re vived in sufficient time, however, and when the curtain went up again was received with tremendous applause, and at the end of the act an Individual curtain call. Stellar lights to visit Portland this Winter include Blanche Bates, Elsie Janis, Anna Held and Maude Adams. "The Girl In the Train," considered by many to be the best American ver sion of any foreign musical comedy taken over In half a dozen years. Is to Include Portland in its itinerary next Spring. "Madame Sherry" again in January. is to be with us Oliver Morosco; Pacific Coast thea trical producer and manager, is in vadlng the East. Under his manage ment, Dick Tully's "The Bird of Para dise" will be given its first Eastern presentation in Albany, N. Y Christ mas day, remaining in that city a week; then will follow one week each in Rochester and Baltimore, after which the play will open for a run at the Maxlne Elliott Theater In New York City, the opening date being Jan uary 15. On the same night "The Fox,' also under Morosco management, will be produced at another New York house. Both openings will come some what earlier than originally planned, and consequently Oliver Morosco will be compelled to hasten his departure Eastward. He had expected to remain in Los Angeles until after the first of the year, but now plans to be in Al bany Christmas day. . A complete new stock company, "The Myrtle Vane" players, has taken pos session of the Lois Theater in Seat tle. Their opening night was last Sat urday, when they presented Sardou's "La Tosca." The roster Includes sev eral people known in Portland. Eva Earl French Is character woman; Eddie Lawrence, a former Bakeronlan, is character comedian, and Walter Mc Cullough Is leading man. . Gaby Deslys has gone Into the beauty business as a rival to Lillian RusselL She Is contributing literary splashes to a syndicate, which Informs the feminine community at large how to keep young and attractive (at so much per week). Fritzt Scheff, the opera star, has an nounced that she never will again ap pear on the stage, owing to an af fection of her throat. It Is rumored that a disagreement between Madame Scheff and the management of "The Duchess," in which she starred, is the real cause of the trouble. Apropos of the affair Is the following: Rennold Wolf, who writes the dramatic goaslp for the New Tork Telegraph, la ca- gabl of aaylnc Bome things of a peculiarly timorous kind, despite the wholly par tisan and aometlmes foolishly bitter thins he writes of those against whom he directs the flow of 'his ink. His well-known hos tility to the tihuberts h znakea the basis for paragraphs of much spleen. The other day h struck a real funny note in a par ody on an old and childish memory. Speak ing of Prltzl Scheft's habit of leaving her company and refusing to appear, Mr. Wolf aald: "Members of the Frltsl Scheff Company, who are still wondering when their star will return, and when the tour of 'The Duchess' will ba resumed, have learned a new prayer which they say nightly befor retiring. It la as follows: " 'Now I lay ma off again, I pray the Lord my soul sustain; If we should close before I wake. Give my regards to Lee and Jake.' " Lee and Jake Shubert are Miss Scheffs managers. Eugene Walter and David Belasco are reported to have made up their differences and" the playwright has completed "The Assassin," a play sug gested when he met the funeral pro cession following the body of Petros lno, the Italian detective. Almost over night he completed a scenarl, which he showed to Frederic Thomp son. For various reasons the produc tion was delayed until finally Charles Dillingham acquired the rights, and now the arrangement with Belasco has been completed through Dillingham. Marc Klaw filed on Monday In the United States Circuit Court his answer to the suit brought against him by Fanny Ward Lewis for breach of con tract. He admits . that on April 27. 1909,: he signed a contract, but this was by mutual consent afterward de stroyed, thus relieving him of all ob ligr Hons. In asking for the dismissal of the writ. Klaw maintains that at an'y time since the plaintiff could have secured a contract as good as that wihlch was canceled. ) Liquors by Hall. - '-MIST. Or., Dec. 19. (To the Editor.) --WU1 you kindly Inform me whether 01- not a carrier of the United States mails has a right to carry Intoxicating liquors and deliver the same to -customers or individuals? I CONSTANT READER. Vinous, spirituous or malt liquors are nrit admissible to the United States mails. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian. Dcembr 2L 1SG1 Colonel Forney writes from Wash ington to the Philadelphia Press: "In my comments upon the lamented Col onel Baker I stated that. In addition to his many other intellectual gifts, he was a fine poet a mark that was received by many with surprise. I am permitted to publish one of his fu gitive pieces, written by him 12 years ago and now In possession of an in timate friend in this city. Observe how the last verse applies to his fate:" Dost thou seek a star with thy swelling crest, O wave that leavest thy mother's breast? Dost thou leap from the prisoned depths below In scorn of their calm and constant . flow f Or art thoa aeeking some distant land To die in murmurs upon the strand? Hast thou tales to tell of pearl-lit deep Where the wave-whelmed mariner rocks in sleep? Canst thou speak of navies that sunk in pride Ere the roll of their thunder in echo died What trophies, what banners, are floating free On the shadowy deptha of that silent sea? It were vain to ask. as thoa rollest afar, Of banner or mariner, ship or star; It were vain to seek in thy stormy face Some tale of the sorrowful past to trace. Thou ' art swelling high, thou art flashing xree. How vain era the questions we ask of thee I too am a wave of a stormy sea; I too am a wanderer, driven like thee; I too am seekina- a distant land To be lost and cone ere I reach the strand. For the land I seek is a waveless shore And they who one reach It shall wander no mora. r On the second of March. 1839. Elwln O. Hall, then printer of the Honolulu Mission, under the auspices of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and since editor of the Polynesian, accompanied by his wife, sailed from the Sandwich Islands for the Presbyterian mission, on the Clearwater River, in what was then Oregon, but now Washington Terri tory, In charge of Rev. H. H. Spauldlng, bringing a printing press, font of types, paper, ink, materials, binding apparatus, etc, to the value of $500 or thereabouts. Mr. Hall arrived In -the Columbia River on April 23 of that year and pro ceeded with all dispatch to the said station, which he reached, together with the press, early In May, 1839, and soon thereafter commenced the print ing of elementary spelling books In the Nez Perce and Flathead languages. which were adopted and used by the various mission schools. The mission In charge of Mr. Spauld lng and at which said press was es tablished was located on the River Clearwater, about 125 miles northeast of old Fort Walla Walla, among the Nez Perces Indiana This river was called by the Rev. Mr. Parker Koot: Koosle, or Little Water. In the Spring of 1840 Mr. Hall and his lady, after having established the first press and printed the first book In the Pacific American possessions, re turned to the Sandwich Islands. The public school examination yes terday was well attended by ladies and gentlemen. . In the after noon Miss Sarah White read the pro ductions In the Young Ladies' Journal, edited by the young female students. and Master Ankeny read the paper en titled the Radicator and edited by the male students belonging to the higher department. . . . The singing and reciting in concert by the Intermediate departments could not be beat any where. Masters Burton. Gleason, Rob ertson, Sampson, Barren and Hendee, each of which must not have been over 6 years old, made quite handsome speeches. At the conclusion of the ex ercises the scholars presented - the school directors with a Christmas cake, for which Mr. Holman and Mr. Failing thanked them with very stir ring remarks and divided the cakes among the children. From Mr. L. Day, Tracy A Co.'s ex press messenger, who arrived last night on the Julia, we learn that he brought $30,000 in gold dust; also that news had been received from Powder River that diggings had been struck at that locality paying from 10 to 20 ounces per day to the hand, and that the gold Is very coarse, much re sembling the California gold. The Mountaineer tells the story that a miner, while on his way to Salmon River, struck rich diggings, and that having no bag for his gathered gold. he filled one of his India rubber boots with it and at the last date was filling the other. The Statesman mentions a rumor that there had been trouble with the Indians at the Siletz reservation. Ru mor has gone so far as to say that the Indians have compelled the whites to take refuge in the block houses. ACCOUNTABILITY OF MURDERERS Writer Ararneai That Acta of Desrener- ates Disclose Their Irresponsibility. CENTRALIA. Wash.. Dec 18. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian Decem ber 16, there appears an editorial en titled "Pertinent Questions" which deals, with the death penalty and kindred ideas. Permit me to ask a few questions which seem "pertinent" at this time. Should society seek to punish the Individual who commits a crime be cause of "debased and perverted human passion?" , Is the mentally denclent or perverted individual responsible for his deficiency or perversion? Would it be just to sang an insane criminal? Where are you going to draw the line between murders committed by persons accounted normal mentally and those who are the victims of hereditary defects? To hold that a man who would entice a child Into some secluded spot for the purpose of lust and murder is n possession of a normal and responsi ble mental equipment is untenable. The act itself is proof of degeneracy. Would it be right to hang a degen erate? No two human minds are governed by the same Impulses. There is no absolute standard of mental responsi bility. "Back of every human thought and action there is sufficient cause" and to demand of the disnatured, de generate, and inherently vicious, the same accountability that we exact from those who have no weaknesses that are apparent is manifestly unjust. It is undeniably true that perverts are menaces to society and that pro tection is essential, but when that pro tection takes the form of blood-crav ing savagery and revenge, we are going'back to the days when civiliza tion had little of which to boast. It is cheaper to hang a man than it is to keep him properly safeguarded for life, but the revulsion of feeling occasioned by the cold, premeditated, unmerciful and diabolical legal hang- ng. Is more damaging to the peace and happiness of a community than the deprivation of the slight sum per capita required to maintain the crim inal for life. I am not surprised at the attitude of those who think they are good Christians in their Insistence upon the enforcement of the death penalty. Their reasoning processes, like their religion may be compared in some re spects to those of the "disnatured" and perverted criminal who murders a 6-year-old girl. They are more to be pitied than censured. DO. tilia UlA&bh. i On Mental Shopping By Dean Collins. Nesclus Nltts, he whose wise remarks, dropping On Punkindorfs ears, kept their eyes fairly popping. Saw a frivolous flea on the floor fleetly hopping, And soon in a nicotine lake It was flop ping; Then Nescius spake on improved Christ mas shopping. "I've Jest talked with Philomel Love, who had went To the city three days and his wages was spent And he tells about this here late Christ mas rush A-swarmtn' all round, and the scurry and crush or peopiis a-crowdin' the streets, every one A-Jumpin' to git all their late shoppin' done. "I tells you I figgers that us folks who waits To shop till we come to the very last dates. Ain't nigh half so wise as them other folks that are Malntainin' the power of mind over matter; Fer If that idee is correct, then they've not No 'casion to rush like us others have got. "They claims things mater'al, what- ever you find. Is merely a product rolled out of the mind. That pain and disease and all sech aggravation Is purely sprung forth from mankind's 'magination. And brickbats and antos, seegars, and sech Junk Are likewise results of the thoughts we have thunk. "Consider then, how that idee would help out In dodgin' the crush of the late shop pin' rout; Sence why go and buy, when all things in creation Are sprang from mankind's over wrought 'magination? Far better jest set, and send out to your friend Imagin'ry gifts as you choose, with, out end. "Thus one could imagine fine big tourin cars. And send his friends bushels of psychic seegars; And I need not buy, but could Jest set and chaw And "magine silk shawls fer my daughters-in-law. And all Christmas shopping with ease I could shirk If I could Jest make this here mind science work." Portland, December 20. WEBSTER SECOND IN HIS CLASS Valedictorian Once Denied That States man Was Churlish About It. SALEM, Dec. 19. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian, December 10, is an article concerning Daniel Webster and his college diploma, in which It is said that, because the faculty had conferred the valedictory upon other than him self, he tore up his diploma In the pres ence of some of his classmates in the campus, through chagrin, saying: "My Industry may make me a great man, but this miserable parchment cannot." This whole proceeding may surprise most readers, but anyone who has studied the life and the speeches, as well as the letters and other private utterances of Webster, In whloh he al wavs sDoke in the most endearing terms of his "alma mater," will hesi tate to believe that Daniel Webster ever descended to the Ill-natured and churlish action thus recorded of him, probably by some writer who may have Imagined he had found something new that would astonish the world and give point to a newspaper article. The fact is, a story similar in details was re lated of Webster many times, after he had become celebrated, and the writer of this heard It more than 60 years ago. The story, as I then heard it, was to th effect that, after the graduating exercises were over, Webster took hla successful competitor back or tne col lege building and told him that, not withstanding hla success over him now, In after years he (Webster) "would be as far above him as the heavens are above the earth." In the Spring of 1850 I was residing temoorarllv in Jacksonville, 111., the seat of Illinois College, and I made the acquaintance of many connected with the college, professors and students. Among them was a Mr. Coffin, an old gentleman of about 70 years, who was connected with the Institution in some subordinate capacity, probably as Jani tor: at any rate, he was not a teacner. I learned that he had been a classmate of Daniel Webster at Dartmouth Col lege, and had carried off the honor as valedictorian at the graduating exer cises. At the time of whlcn I am speaKing Webster had Just made his famous neventh of March sneech, and the whole ronntrv was rinr!nir with praise on the one hand and denunciation on the other. of the great statesman lor nis views as propounded in that speech. One day, in familiar conversation, I made bold to ask Mr. Coffin about the college oc currence, and whether he had ever heard of the story. He turned to me without the least surprise and said he had often heard of the ridiculous story, but that It was a "He made up out of whole cloth." He seemed not to know how it had originated, nor where, nor to care anything about it at that late day, as he and Mr. Webster had always been friendly, and were yet so, as let ters In his possession would show. Afterward, while living in wasmng- ton, I often saw Webster in the Capitol and on the Btreet, and, on the supposi tion that the story was true, when con trasting, the appearance and the repu tation of the two individuals, one of them old, snaggle-toothed, of the lean and slippered pantaloon order, acting as Janitor In a college, and the other, striding the world like a Colossus, with the look and bearing of Jupiter, I thought many times how truly the lat ter had forecasted the future of each, from the college yard. D. W. CRAIG. "Tama Jim's" Modest Keeds. Washington Cor. New York World. t . nraiiar Tnire bhfi director of public roads of the Agricultural De- . .a.ivoH o pond business offer the other day, and went to see Tama Jim wusun aouui ii advise anybody about offers to leave .1.- i-1nna-nmanf Oorvill" Raid SeCre IUB u'' ' tary Wilson, "and I'm not going to advise you wnat to u. oni-e x ..o.. been at the head of the Agricultural Department a good many alluring propositions irom tuc uunn."" 4...,. view have come my way, too, some of Rnt whilA T am not a L J 1 1-Jli . - - rich man by any means, I have always figured tnat 1 couia amy iio ouse at a time, sieep m uo " (m ana eat one meal at a time, and that's all any man really needs." State Abbreviations. PORTLAND. Dec. 20. (To the Edi- tor. ) rieHse suiic " ...... abbreviation of Oregon is and also wno decides the official abbreviation of a state. Respectfully, A CT-ra-"T7TT3C,T7 r,itnn decides the abbreviation of state name. "Or." or "Ore." Is a proper abbreviation for Oregon.