THE MOnXTXG OREGOXIAX. FlilDAY, DECEMBER 22. 1911. 12 rOKTLAKD. ORKOOJt. talirrf t Partlaad. Orafoa. loetoMe aa euaacrlsuas iL" Inrarlaa.r to IBT XAU.) frua:r. aea iwar &ua4a ud Wa:r. oat J' .e IBT CARRIER.) , Paf'v. tf ln'1ud'l. eoa yaar I? !! r. iuaar me!aid. one month...- Hw Itoaall bl4 Poatqftica mo"T ar r. tlP' ordar or paraoaal k V local taoL aunp coin ar eurTme.Jll! at IB e:ara riaa- Oiva aoatoSlc ndaraaa Is f-j I. itc j-ii roomy an 1 atata. rUca lUtM 19 to 1 pasaa. 1 t""1.1" ta i aaa-a. 2 casta. SO ta o pxaa. 1 "'" a-t to a pajaa, a aaata. rara.ea soeiasa. SaoVa rata to fcaatarn BnlaM OtVw Varro 4 Coa Bn .Now Tor.. Uriualcl bliU. Chltav o. r-r au: dine. . Eurasian uflka No. a Kitnt street, B. W. Lalfon, poktland. mm at. dec. it. THE WOOI. TARIFF. For the flrt time In many year. prhps In the whole history of tariff-making. Congress la In possession of ail the facts on which the wool tar iff should be bas-d. Those fact have been ascertained after a moet thor ough and painstaking Inquiry In all nvool-pradurlns; countrlea of any con sequence. They are declared to be the fact by the unanimous vote of a barl of three R. -publicans and two Democrats. The aarreement of such a board deprive the standpatters and the tarlff-for-revenue men alike of any excuse for aywrtln: that the board sought and found facts which would fit any particular theory of tariff re vision. Any wool tariff which may be - made In the Immediate future by either party must be made to square with these facts. The Tariff Board's report Is a com plete vindication of President Tsffa artlon In vetoing; the hybrid La Fol-Ittte-Underwood bill of last session. It shows that 'the framers of that bill erred ms far In one direction as the fiamcrs of the Payne-AMrlch bill erred In the other. It shows that the present law unduly taxes the wearer of clothes of cheap and medium qual ity and bears lightly on the rich, who wear the costliest woolen fabrics. It shows, however, that those tariff re formers who would have slashed the wkI schedule with a meat-ax would have done a grave Injustice to an Im portant Industry. The present sched ule Is exposed as a piece of black ainlth work and the vetoed I'nder-wood-La. Follette bill is exposed as the work of an even clumsier, more awk ward team of blacksmiths. A crushlnc; blow Is dealt by this re port at the pet Democratic scheme of ad valorem duties. Not only does an ad valorem duty on raw wool foster fraud by undervaluation, but It oauses Pr'y. mrtar i'!oid. ita yanr ?! r. r. Iii'.ir lu tidxl. ! montha.... Pi;r. lacio.l4. thraa montha.. a- t'al'r. liBStf lac;udd. ana momtt t t: Jf. amnout Sunday, ana yaar Ija::. WMrp,ut Sun-lay. a monthi .... a -a Eai.r. without aumtr. thraa '" i -F. Without k jaU. ana w!r. aea aaar - i... the tariff to bear harder on the con sumer the higher rises the price of wool and to decrease unduly when the price falls below a certain average. Such a duty. If Imposed uniformly on alt grades of wool, high and low. would exclude many low-grade wools needed by the poor and admit hlgh grade woola needed by the rich. Thus the Democrats, who profess to be the champions of the poor against the ex-aw-tlona of tariff-fed monopolies, would by their Ignorant Jumping at conclu sions have Injured those thoy professed to serve and Increased the favors shown those shorn they alleged to be already excessively favored. No more unscientific tariff-making could have been perpetrated than the levying of the. present specific duty on unscoured wool, regardless of the per centage of pure wool. This la pro nounced to be prohibitory on the Im portation of low-priced wool. It is, therefore, a powerful factor in caus ing the rapid substitution of cotton for woolen clothing In this country. The Tariff Board suggests a simple but valuable Improvement by proposing a specific duty on the scoured contents of wool In the grease, which will meet criticism from all sides. a usual when an Impartial body in vestigates a subject of beated contro versy, the Tariff Board finds that neither extreme Is right. One rate of duty after another Is declared prohib itory, yet the board finds the cost of wool manufacture much higher In the T'nlted States than In foreign countries. These prohibitory duties, however, do not enhance prices in this country to the full amount of the duty, as has been contended by extreme tariff re formers. Thus, on certain samples of English cloth the duty Is equivalent to 1S4 per cent, but the American prod tact costs only 7 per cent more than the foreign article In Kngland. Had the t"nderwood-La Follette bltl become law. It would have dealt a se vere blow to the whole woo Industry, fn the light of the board's findings. That bill proposed to cut the duty on raw wool of the first clasa from 47.54 per cent to 2 per cent. This doea not appear to be Justified by the language of the President's message accompany ing the report, for he says: - The areraa-a coat of productloe for tha v hole American cltp la highar than the coat tn tha chief competing country br an amount somewhat leea than tha praaant duty. It will hardly be contended that a duty of tt per cent Is "somewhat less" than one of 4 7.! 4 per cent. The same bill cut the duty on wool ens to an average of 4 per cent, though the board finds that It costs 100 per cent more to make cloth from yarns In the United States than In England or France, and though the 50 per cent duty Imposed by the Wilson bill proved disastrous to the industry. With this report before them, the Democrats cannot reduce the tariff to a revenue basis without frankly aim tr.f a destructive blow at a great Amer ican Industry. The Insurgents cannot Join hands with the Ieraocrat In such an undertaking without abandoning ths policy of protection, to which they are pledged. The standpatters can no longer defend duties which, after Im partial inquiry, are pronounced prohib itory and trust-breeding. There is no exiruse for the two Republican factions rot to combine on a bill which will put in practice the protective principle as defined by Mr. Taft -that duties should equal the difference In cost of production at home and abroad, with a fair profit added. If this bs done, such a bill can surely pass the Sen ate and secure the President's ap proval. Should the Democ ratio lead ers In the House refuse to pass such a bill and Insist on a purely revenue tariff, they would stand convicted of denying the people a measure of relief from tariff exaction which could be obtained and wonld be) placed on ths defensive. Br vetoing the hybrid blU of last a- ; slon and awaiting the report of the Tariff Board, the President has no only shown wis statesmanship, but played good politics. He has placed the Democrats on the horns of a ci lemma from which there Is no escape except to carry aut his policy. If they refuse, they will be on the defen sive In the next campaign. - THE OALlOWtl DECISION. Tk. itx-lainn of Judn QallOWSV in the State University appropriation case la substantially inai me enure ic n H m nrmiailiirii la so tainted sith fVatirf anlu and dishonest DurDoae to Invalidate the petitions. The court insists that the prtncipaia oenina n avferonrltim nrolect are not in cou with riean hands, and he thinks they should do equity if tney bsk equity. Trie court s ruunr is a mow m i the reprehensible business of petltlo -Irlfi ani4 a! an a tu r-chasln ST. and n- a .V- rr hn tn the nersona or class ies who appeal to the referendum through mnt vm or rtlnue or rFttlu alee or jeaj ousy. The occupation ef getting U Initiative or referendum petitions a so much per name ought to be made unlawful. The present memoo is premium on perjury and blackmail t i miarliUvniii anH indefensible. II make the referendum a commercial enmmnditv. a thing of barter and sa Anyone can propose any law II ne nas the price to hire name-procurers i fix up the papers, or he can hang u m- hilt if he is willinr to round u the saloons, cigar stores and other lounging places for cheap names .nmnlv m-ltn leeal forms. Will our disturbed and excited friends at Eugene permit The Orego nlan to say to them that It congratu lates them on their escape if they ho, oaranerl from consequences a referendum not Invoked la good faith. thouKh provoked Dy ine arm trary and foolish, methods of rne unl niona In the Leglsla ture? The referendum has failed through the folly of the Interests that proposed It. REIORE rONTlCTIOS. The law of Oregon provides for cap ital nnniihnuni. Death is the only penalty prescribed by law for murder In the first degree. Governor West says that there shall be no more hang ings In Oregon. He repeals Dy nis verbal flat the law that has been In force in Oregon for more than hair i ninrv For his arbitrary and ex traordinary act he cites Article V. Sec tion 14. of the constitution or uregon fntlnaa! 'Ha (the Governor) ahsll tasve newer to grant reprleea. commutations and parrtnns after roayletloa for all offanaes. an apt traa- .. -.. . i i m .it h r.cu.miiun aa mar be provided br law. The Governor, has the power to par. don or reprieve murderers after con l..tlnn Wa hiu nnw rerjrleved all mur jrM hafnee conviction. It Is the de- .iart nniirv rf the Governor, before the crime has been committed, oeioro the charge is laid, before the trial Is hti hAfnee conviction is secured, be fore sentence Is passed, to alter the ver dict of the Jury and aeteat ine solemn l.iit.m-ni . ih, pniirt thouarh Strictly in accordance with law, unless Judge and Jury shall reach the mild conclu sion the Governor In advance declares tk.. micrh, tn reach The Governor has made the law of Oregon as to punishment Tor muraer. He has defined the policy of the state towards murder and murderers. That la the function and the duty of the TtfiaiatiiPA Xhe rjower of reDrleve or commutation was not lodged by the constitution with the Executive tor the purpose of abolishing the death penalty. It was vested with the. Gov ernor because the people In their wis dom felt that It should be placed somewhere for exercise In emer gencies as an act of sovereign clem enry. or to prevent any possible miscarriage of Justice, or for modification of the rigoroua and automatic operation of law where exceptional conditions might arise after conviction. But we have a Governor who so misinterprets the law and misunder stands his duty that he Is greater than constitution or statute Ttnt PARTY RBTORMS, rtOKM HOT DUE. That President Taft's confidence In the ability of the Republican party to satisfy lta progressive elements and thus to deprive them of any excuse for breaking away or organizing a new party Is well founded will be agreed by all Republicans who pane In mental re view the recent history of their coun try. A party deserves to live so long as It Is responsive to the popular will In meeting the Issues of the times as they arrive. It only deserves to die when it ceases to represent any vital principle or represents only an obdur ate opposition to change of any kind. The Republican party has proved Its fidelity to its principles and Its readi ness te cwrry out the popular will by its whole course since It regained power In 1S7. It has settled the money question by the final establish ment of the gold standard, at which even Bryan has ceased to carp. It met the emergencies arising from ths Spanish War in a manner approved by the sober sense of the people. It has extended National control over the railroads and removed many abuses of their management. It has put Ufa into the anti-trust law and stands for a constructive policy In dealing with monopoly. It has forced .ths meat packers to put no more diseased meat on the market, and has put In opera tion measures which Insure the purity of the people's food. It has realized the dream of centuries by building tha Panama Canal. It has adopted a pro. gresslve policy for the use of ths pub lic domain consistent with the conser vation of our resources. It has entered uron the execution of a policy of sci entific revision o the tariff which will go far to end controversy. It is pre paring to place our monetary system on a sound footing. The man who would pronounce moribund a party which has done in recent years and Is now doing so many works of a constructive character must be blind to the teachings of history. Parties which ars doing what ths peo ple want done do not die. Recent Internal disturbances In ths Repub lican party are signs, not that morti fication has set in. but that new life has given the party an. Impetus to go forward more rapidly with the great work It has been doing for fifty years for ths American people. Unfortunately the dispatches do not tell us how little Gorge Lindsay throve on the diet of grapes and beer which the Sun Worshipers gave him in Chicago. Beer Is fattening and grapes contain a good deal of nutri ment of one sort and another. We should not be surprised to learn that the lad got along fairly well. At any t rats bis millionaire mother was satis- 1 fled. Perhaps there Is a particle, a very small one, of prejudice against ths Sun Worshipers in Chicago. - A PBACnCAI, QtTSTION. 'The- Ainsworth School building, which serves the pupils of the public schools of Portland Heights, Is from all accounts a structure long outdated by progress and scarcely fit for a sheepfold. Simply stated, the build ing is outdated in construction. In methods of ingress and egress and ventilation. Built of wood, dry as tin der, with a wooden fire escape (of re cent construction) that mocks at safe ty in case of a possible need, it is im possible to remedy its defects by patching or rebuilding.. It Is manifest therefore that this building should be supplanted at as early a date as Is practicable by a properly-constructed building of steel and concrete. The School Board, In a case of this kind, la literally in a strait betwixt the two. Patrons of ths public schools, or at least those who take a proper In terest In the welfare of their children In connection with the schools, insist that suitable and sanitary buildings shall be provided for the housing of pupils during school hours: tnat piay. grounds be provided for their exercise during . Intermissions between study periods, and that such safeguards acotinst fire as meet the demands of prudence be provided. Taxpayers, on the other hand. Insist upon -keeping the lev for school purposes down to the lowest limit consistent with keep Ing the schools open. Between these contending elements the School Board stands, vainly striving to satisfy the one without antagonizing the other. It is a fact that cannot be questioned and should not be Ignored that, if this community undertakes to support the public school system on its present basis it should vote a suitable equip ment for that purpose. Certainly no Intelligent community can acquit itself of responsibility for conditions wmen have been disclosed by the recent in vestleation of at least two public school buildings in widely-separated high-class residence districts of the city Portland Heights on the West and Irvington on the East Side. In ability or refusal to remedy the con dttlons thus disclosed will be a tacit acknowledgment of weakness that would justify the assumption by pa trons of private and parochial schools that our public school system Is lack. Ing in the vital essentials that lead to health and usefulness. Of course, as an Intelligent, progressive community, we are not ready to make this admis sion. It behooves us, then, to refute" this assumption by meeting intelll gently avoiding parsimony on the one hand and profligacy upon the other the obligations assumed under the title and guarantee of our public school system. THE HHTRWOOD PENSION MIX. The Sherwood pension bill, which has passed the National House of Representatives, contains provisions which every person who cares for the welfare of the country ought to study. It is analyzed rather minutely ' by General Charles Francis Adams In the December number of the World's Work, and since he was a Brevet Brigadier-General In the Union Army and saw more than three and a half years of active service in the field dur ing the Civil War he cannot be sus- peetfcd of unfriendliness to veterans. Hence his disapproval of the Sher wood bill comes with .greater weight than w.ould any strictures from a hos tile source. General Adams condemns the Sherwood bill, on the grounds of extravagance, evil moral Influence and political debauchery. He shows, moreover, that it Is loosely drawn and will cost the country a great deal more than It openly threatens. On its face the Sherwood bill will add some 150.000.000 annually to our pen sion expenditures. How much It will actually cost year after year when Its full power to dispose of the public funds has been developed it woui be rash to try to estimate. One fact alone we have to guide us, namely, that every pension bill heretofore has cost a great deal more than was promised on Its passage. The Sherwood bill does not repeal nv former pension legislation. All the expenditures previously authorized whether by general or special acts of Congress will go on Just as before. The sums which It grants from the Treasury, and takes from the taxpay ers, are In addition to the already gen erous bounty of the Government, The bill provides that "every soldier who served In the Civil War, no matter when, -here or how, for the period of ninety days shall receive J 15 a month for the remainder of his life." Simi lar service for six months brings $20; nine months, S26; and one year or more brings ISO. Thus all distinctions of merit are abolished. The brave man Is confounded with the coward. Ths deserter takes hie place side by side with the faithful soldier In Con gressman Sherwood's hall of fame. The bill had one apparent merit. In spite of Its glaring faults, when General Adams took It up for discussion. It decliaed to bestow additional pension bounty upon any person who already has a net Income of 11000 a year. This might possibly have proved a check upon the extravagance of the new legislation, but the Democratic House, posing all the while aa the champion of economy, has amended it out. . In Its eagerness to empty the Treas ury tha Sherwood bill removes two important restrictions upon pension frauds. It abolishes those boards of medical examiners which have to some extent checked the schemes of. Impostors and it dispenses .with spe cial pension agents. Of course these officials are no longer necessary, since tha new pensions are to be granted without distinction ot merit and re gardless of the -recipient's character or deserts. Our annual pension ex penditure now, fifty years after the close of the Civil War, runs up to bout 1160.000.000 a year. On the rolls are the names of 880,000 recip ients.. The Sherwood bill will increase the annual expenditure to $200,000,000 and add unknown thousands of names to the roll. Still more- ominous are the bills which are to follow the Sher wood measure. There Is to be one providing for the widows and orphans of veterans, one for tha soldiers or tne Mexican War, and divers others. One cannot help asking what will become of the poor taxpayer when they are all In full operation. If only we could all be pensioned the prospect might present a little consolation, nut, un happily, somebody hss to work and pay the pensions. The outlook seems to be that somebody will have to work pretty hard and allow himself - but short hours of rest. For it is rainy certain that all of the proposed, pen- ( sion legislation will be passed sooner or later. The reasons for this opinion .are manifold. For one thing, there Is the pension trust to be reckoned with. This organization includes about 15,000 shrewd and active lawyers who un derstand precisely how, when and where to bring pressure to bear on timid Congressmen. Then in each Congressional district in the country there is an average of 2000 pensioners, some of whom are Teady at all times to act in concert with the lawyers to bring members of Congress to terms. From all new pension legislation the pickings which go to the 25,000 pen aion lawyers at Washington and else where are extraordinarily rich. It is from bills like the Sherwood measure that they .reap their harvests. Again General Adams points out that the habit of receiving pensions is one which grows with what It feeds upon. It leads, he declares, to moral laxity and produces economic dependence. It destroys the good old American spirit of self-help and tends to reduce us to a sort of Roman mob always crying to the government for bread and games. If it could be proved that the stream of pensions is in truth a flood of economic poison which is gradually corrupting the blood of the American people, would our Congress men pause In their wild career of extravagance? . We doubt it. Broad statesmanship is rare among them. Courage Is rarer still. The pressure upon them is something terrible and both' parties have yielded to it. T,he committee which reported the Sherwood bill has a Democratic chairman and a major ity of its members are Democrats. The present House of Representatives is heavily Democratic. We thus psr celve that the pension trust and Us work are as bi-partisan as any of the other trusts. It has both parties un der its thumb. The only possible ob stacle to Its alms' Is an aroused public opinion. The groans of the taxpayer will not be effective until he learns what he is groaning over. Then the reaction will come and In the overturn we fear that the good pensions may be swept away with the bad. Marriages between colored people and white, the bridegrooms being Jap anese. Chinese or negroes, are fre quently performed in Vancouver, Wash., usually by a Justice of the peace, but now and then by a minis ter. These marriages are nine times out of ten as unhappy as Incongru ous. They are, moreover, a disgrace to the community and an outrage upon the offspring tha comes of them. They are utterly incomprehensible either from the standpoint or personal decency or public policy. The white woman who becomes the bride of. a man of alien race and color removes herself thereby from the pale of com mon sympathy when, as surely hap pens, the mesalliance becomes abhor rent to her. John T. Belt, late of Oakland, Cal., has purchased the Newberg Enter prise. His . predecessor, Mr. Shaver, made the Enterprise one of the best local papers in Oregon, and Mr. Bell, with" forty years' experience In Jour nalism In the western half of the con tinent, will keep It at the high standard. In the death of Rose Eytlnge stage folk In Portland lose a friend to whom they looked up affectionately as a mother during her residence In Port land. Her lovable character shone through' her stage make-up and en deared her also to those who knew her only across the footlights. The Christmas edition of the Salem Statesman, issued December 17, was typical of the annual effort of the pioneer paper. Printed in the colors of the holly and mistletoe and filled with well-chosen and appropriate reading matter and illustrations, it was an excellent number. Rose Eytlnge's death at 72 illus trates the longevity of actresses. They outlive the men of their profession by many years on the average. Booth, Barrett, Irving, Mansfield died com paratively young. The women who were their contemporaries are for the most part still alive. There need be no surprise at the dilatory motion made by the meat packers to'escape trial. Men who have, by every technical device the Jaw al lows, avoided facing a Jury for eight years may be expected to pursue the same policy to the end of the chapter. Mr. Beals' understudy, Mr. Drake, who is well fitted to fill a star part, makes the "likely" forecast of rain on Christmas day. That will be typical Oregon weather for a day when every body should be at home. The Russians of Los Angeles need to learn that the Oriental custom of sell ing girls Into marriage cannot be trans planted to this country certainly not to a woman suffrage state like Cali fornia. The Western Governors' tour was so successful that it may be made an an nual event. Eastern people were eager to see the exhibit of Western products, including the Governors. The boy who can introduce a con tagious disease and start a holiday closing of his school a few days ear lier Is a hero In the eyes of the rest. Discovery of adulterated paper in use for Government documents sug gests that Dr. Wiley take a look round the house occasionally. economy and efficiency in cities. Cn- der II DUIiri Will V. u l 1. . . .c.j . . v.u . e i t,- 14.7 By reprieving four murderers due to be hanged at Chicago today. Gov ernor Deneen seems to exploit the Western idea. A man whose zeal for his church will lead him to steal that he may give to Its good work Is a study in psychol ogy. Burglars made a profitable clean-up in Station A. but the trail of the stamps will be their undoing.' The turkey Is not cutting much of a figure, for Sir Loin Is his time-honored rival at this season. The best holiday gift in some sec tions is resumption of work in the big sawmills. Where would there be leakages, if not in a water department F WHAT WAS SAID I TAX DEBATE EL W. Stoat Declares lie Hlsrepreseata ttons Made In IHnstTatJoBS. PORTLAND, Dec 21. ITo the Edi tor.) I notice In The Oregonlan today quite a lengthy statement from Mayor Grant B. Dlmlck. of Oregon City. In this article Mr. Dlmlck Insists that In ray debate- with A. L. Veazie at the Congregational Church I gave a certain Illustration of taxes on a particular piece of land as being In Clackamas County. This Is not the face as Mr. Dlmlck can find out by consulting A. L. Veazie. my opponent. I did give quite a number of Illustra tions and figures In regard to Clacka mas County, and In this way I suppose the misunderstanding occurred. I feel that the position of- the so called single tax la so strong ,that there Is absolutely no need for any mis statements or overstatements. In the same article I see that Mr. Dlmlck makes the following state ment: "I notice also on' page SI "of said pamphlet Mr. LTRen received out of that millionaire manufacturers' fund, known aa the 'Fels fund,' the magnifi cent sum of $16,775. In addition there to he Is now receiving out of that fund a salary equal to that paid to the average Circuit Judge In the State of Oregon." Mr. Dlmlck is mistaken in this. He did not see on page 81. or any other page, in the report of the conference, that Mr. TTRen received $16,775. I was the Oregon treasurer of the so-called Fels fund, and an Itemised statement of the expendlturea was filed In ac cordance with the law here In Oregon and ahowed-Just what the expenditures were for, and Mr. ITRen personally did not receive one cent of that money. It was largely spent for printing pam phlets, postage, stenographic work and regular campaign expenses. I am still the treasurer" of that fund, and none of the money that passes through my hand Is paid to Mr. ITRen, personally, and as far as I know he is not receiv ing any money from the Fels fund. H. W. STONE. Judging from Mr. Stone's statement there is more than one Fels fund de voted to the single tax cause In Ore gon. It has been stated on the au thority of Mr. Fels that Mr. ITRen receives or did receive a salary from the Fels fund. The amount has even been given at $2500 a year. -Mr. U'Ren has never denied that he has been de voting all or large part of his time to "paving the way" for single tax at a yearly stipend from men interested in the movement. We doubt If any body construed Judge Dimlck's state ments to mean that the $16,776 ex pended from the Fels fund In Oregon went to Mr. ITRen personally. The fact that this sum has been expended in the single tax campaign in Oregon has been so prominently published that Judge Dlmlck would hardly expect to misrepresent the case and get away with it. CITY WITH THE DOWJf-HIXl PCUi Montana CHIsens Make Discovery as to Advantages 'of Portland's Location. MILES CITT. Mont.. Dec 16. (To the Editor'. Yesterday, engaged in an ar gument as to the respective merits of the North Pacific cities, and supporting the claims made by Portland, a new (at least to me) slogan for your city occurred to me. Those of us in the argument finally had recourse to examining the map, and I showed the others that from Summit on the Great Northern in Mon tana; Garrison, on the Northern Pa-, clflc, in Montana; Stltes and Grange ville. In Idaho, and Saltese, in Montana, n tha r-McBiro. Milwaukee & Puget Sound, not taking into consideration the same conditions to me sou m ui uu. In your own vast empire, you have a down-hill pull to Portland, the slogan that occurred to me was "The city with a down-hill pull." ' I do not know whether this slogan v... hen used In connection with your city, because, as I state. It Is en tirely new to me. ana n it is worm while, use it. vii fwiuno, Secretary Chamber of Commerce. lM-w tin Teachers' Institutes. Den tt.i n To 2D. (To the Edi tor.) Will you kindly give the school law concerning the attendance required at an institute in order to keep a . i...-. c-tlflcwfa vaJIri? Are the high school teachers of this city ex empt? Are they or the district sub jected to a fine for non-attendance? The Orecron Legislature of 1911 passed a law requiring all County Su perintendents of the state to hold an nual teachers institutes lor noi less hra dava. for the instruction of teachers and those desiring to teach. "All teachers In the public schools or his county," reads the law, "shall be .n,,ir n attand The SuDerlntendent of Public Instruction may, at his dis cretion, upon the written complaint of tha f'nnntv SuDerlntendent. revoke the certificate, or refuse to grant a certi ficate, to any teacher who refuses to attend a county institute without cause." County Superintendents are required to give certificates to teach ers attending the institute, showing the times wnen tney were present. xne law anva tiacheri ahaj not forfeit their wages for closing school for three days to attend the Institute. We have been unable to find any exemption for high school teachers. No fins Is pro vided for non-attendance. ' Information on Alaska. PORTLAND, Dec 20. (To the Edi tor.) i-Will you kindly Inform me where I can get general Information on Alaska, regarding work, wages, etc. at the present time? A READER. Alapka is about six times as large as Oregon. One would probably have to seek several sources of information to gain an idea of opportunities for employment. R. L. Polk's Alaska Yukon Gazeteer and Business Direc tory gives late and accurate informa tion concerning the Industries in each town, and from, it could be obtained the namea of persons who would prob ably reply to inquiries. The publishers have offices in the Beck building. Flood Outlet Greater. PORTLAND, Dec 21To the Edi tor.) In regard to a possible repeti tion of the 1894 flood and discussions of high water annually, one very impor tant consideration appears to be over looked, .namely, that there is now a channel of some 300 feet in width and from six to eight feet In depth through each bar between Portland and the sea, making an additional conduit of great capacity which runs full con tinuously. A. B. -No. CATHLAMET, Wash- Dec 20. (To the Editor.) Does a child born in this country of foreign parents, who were unnaturalized at the time of his birth and never did secure citizenship papers, require naturalisation before becom ing a cltisen? K. 8. A. TAFT RISES TO TUB " OCCASION Frank Statement by a Critic of the Administration, Rural New Yorker. ' -The Rural New-Yorker cannot be ac cused of being a personal organ for President Taft, or of advocating his renoml nation. It seems to "as that whenever he has taken occasion to dis cuss public questions in their relation to farming he has shown a strange, almost childish, misconception of the needs and the thought of real farmers. In other smaller matters of administra tion he has made what seem to be remarkable blunders. It must be said, however, that now and then when the conditions arise to call out his real talents the President rises to the oc casion and shows himself a great and strong man. Such an occasion was found at the recent great dinner given at Pittsburgh. This place Is the nursery and hotbed of monopoly and . political graft. Arrangements were evidently made to "put President Taft in a hole." An eloquent speaker was engaged to precede him and make an argument for the repeal of the Sherman anti-trust law which. If enforced, will send some of the very gentlemen who organized this nice little dinner trap to jail. They evidently expected that the President would flinch before those rich and in fluential members of his party. It was a hard situation but President Taft met it like a great man. Tha two decisions laat Spring. In my Jnds ment. give tha law definite meaning that any combination in restraint of trade with the purpoaa of controlling prices and stifling competition 18 a vio,aiion 01 dl.-. Men know whether they Intend to atlfle com petition and control prices, and all that la necessary In a court of law Is to prove tha combination and tha Intent. Only one course la open. Either wa will have Individualism or we will have com binations In restraint of trade going to that point where the people will demand that the power of men engaged In auch corporations be transferred to tha Government. Ana then wa will have atata Socialism. This incident reveals the President at his best calm, cleaj strong and convincing. When you come to realize the character of that audience and the whole situation you can readily see that no ordinary man could have met it in this way. Another strong factor of the Taft Administration, not general ly recognized, is the powerful crusade against the fraudulent use of the mails. Nothing like it was ever done before. As stated above, it, seems to us that President Taft has failed to comprehend the spirit and desires of our farmers, yet we are frank to say that he is a clean man and a great man when con ditions demand it. SETTLERS MAY SHtTN STATE. Barclary by Forest Ranger Alarms Tfewcomer from East. ooott.4 vn rn 17 fTo the Edi tor.) I have seen your editorial about the forest ranger that used a skeleton key to help him break Into settlers' cabins on the reserves. Now, if it is a pertinent question. I would like to ask: What have the forestry officials done about it? Do they countenance such conduct or have they bounced the offending ranger? If it is the methods they follow, I warrant me they have not. Now this Is a serious matter to me, and there are others like me. I am a newcomer and think I can make just as good a living here as I did in the East. I believe I can do better be cause the climate is suitable. But from what I have seen of the available land a person cannot go on to the land and immediately make a living. I can't be cause I "haven't money. I will have to go out and work at times of the year and I will want to know that my home will not be broken into by Government men when I am away. I have been anxious to settle near Eugene, but I am told that you can't file on the Government land down there, because it has been decided that It is no good for raising of crops. Why should the Government decide the land Is not fit for farms when there are scores of good farms all around raising finest kind of crops? There are no trees on the forest reserve, so why Is it not allowed to be taken as homesteads? I have seen the crops raised there and know as well as I am writing this that, if I could make a good Jiving in New England. I can make it here, where l - n, frost to Sneak of lucto i" nv i . -. in Winter. There is a fine country here and we wno are cumins i .u. . - i . n nAmtnn. Via a n xvnnt to DUl II wo io i-"6 - know if we are going to get the land. very respectiuiiy your, ALEX WARWICK. Civilisation, and Savagery. Chicago Journal. vxr- - V, V ...1 nroru now And then at some fearful outburst, of savagery. ..t th,t htit vflaterdav our luigciuue , , - ancestors were cannibals, taking each others' lives. The origin ot me iwu buttons on the backs of our coats re- ii- Aw nf c.hivalrv when every gentleman wore his sword. But how about the buttons on m cwm wcci at the wrist? They were first worn nf tha sleeves, and were placed on uniforms to prevent soldiers from wiping their noses on their wrists. Civilization has scarcely taken two steps from .savagery. Limitations of a Statesman. London Standard. a .A-.l vAFir ,1m racteri Stic of the statesman and diplomat who made it is given in the "Autobiography of Alfred . . . ,. T 1 T.aHv fialishlirv WATA Ausua. uui w &iu j - among the guests at Hewell Grange. J-iOra ailSDury iiau uviiiw .v " i'" 11 - wit. -...Hnir rin tha morninr of the jjuuai. umsMHB' v f ; l y when the speech was to be de livered, seeing Lord Salisbury passing into the study, I said to him: "I sup pose you are going to think over what you will say tonight?" "No," he said, in his Ironical way, "rather to think over what I must not say." Poetry In Skyscrapers. Springfield (Mass.) Union. It is a mistake to think we must go back 1000 years or more for genuine poetlo- inspiration, or that the poet of today must necessarily confine himself to the veins that the Greeks worked to create their lasting vogue. There la poetry In the big- modern institu tions where 20th century life pulsates. If only there be the imagination that can treat it in a masterly way. Before. Christmas. Detroit Free Press. Last night when we were at tea the little fellow said: "Paw, what are all those packages hid beneath your bed?" I almost choked upon my food, and mother simply smiled. As though to say we're bringing up a very knowing child. He's waiting for me at the door when I get home at night, I try to sneak into the house and not turn on the light And get upstairs before I doff my over coat and hat. But he is Johnny on the spot, with "Paw, oh, what is-that?" He's eyeing me suspiciously, I really think he tries With all his youthful artfulness to take me by surprise; He hasn't intimated yet that he has found us out. But eyes and ears are open wide when ever we're about. I spelled a phrase to mother once, and then he promptly said: "I guess it's time now. Maw, for me to a-o ucstairs to bed. An- I suppose that you an" Paw will talk out when I'm gone!" I'd make an affidavit that the little rascal's on Country Town Sayings by Ed Howe i - A 'man will usually do more for his stubborness than for his religion or his country. Nature is the supreme court that re verses any law opposed to human ex perience. There are so many patent medicines now that unless a man breaks a leg he . doctors himself. i I In the old days of barbarism, the ' people fougrht with hatchets. Civiliza tion burled the hatchet, and now men fight with gossip. "I'll tell you the worst thing I ever did," I heard a man say, in company. And I'll bet the thins he told wasn't the worst thing he ever did. At first, a woman only wants a hus band: but after she gets him, she wants everything else in the world. Ask any book agent who sent him to you. and you will find it was one of your friends. Every man is a coward if confronted by the proper terror. A man never knows the price of a Christmas present given him; a woman can tell within a few cents, no mat ter what the present is, or where it came from, - There is a popular saying to the effect that Opportunity knocks once at a man's door, and, receiving no re sponse, departs and returns no more. As a matter of fact. Opportunity ham mers at a man's door as persistently as a woodpecker hammers a telegraph pole Law-Abiding Will Rule. BEAVERTON. Or.. Dec 20, (To the Editor.) 1 would beg the prlvlloge ol saying a few words in reply to the let ter of "A Union Man," printed in The Oregonian of December 12. He says, among other things, that "organized labor realized that behind the prosecu tion In the Los Angeles case was a money power almost unlimited." I fully agree with him there. Every respect able, patriotic and law-abiding citizen in the whole country would have wil lingly contributed (if need be) to bring such dastardly murderers to Justice. The sooner all Individuals who uphold such savagery can get this idea into their craniums the better it will be for them, for the true American citizens who love Justice and fair play, legal equality and industrial freedom, who have made this country what It Is to day, and who intend to make it a great ' deal better in the future, are not in a temper to tolerate such barbarities much Ionper. And before these investi gations are through with I venture to predict that the above statement will be amply verified. Just because the Petti bone-Hay wood crowd got off free (although convicted in the minds of most thoughtful men), the fellows that shouted the loudest for them seemed to think that they could carry on the mur derous work with Impunity. But, thanks to an aroused public opinion and the grim determination of the home-loving, fair-dealing and law-abiding citizens of the country, such bandits will be hound ed down hereafter and brought. to sum mary Justice without ruth or pity. "Coming eventspast their shadoOws before," and it doesn't require any great stretch of the imagination to see that the decent, law-abiding element of this country will dom'nate its destinies for a good' many years to come. To all of which statements I am sure that "A Union Man" will respond with a hearty "Amen." A LOVER OF FAIR PLAY. The Abode of Parsons.. London Tit-Bits. A Scotch minister took one of his parishoners to task for his nonattend-' ance at kirk. The man said: "I dinna like lang sermons." The parson with some wrath replied: "John, ye'll dee, and go to a place where ye'll not have the privilege of hearing lang or short sermons." "That may be," said John, "but it winna be for lack of parsons." Welshing; Husband's Salaries. Chicago Tribune. Women of Chicago are to be taught bow to spend their husbands' salaries. An organization whose principal object Is the study of the spending of Incomes was formed several days ago in the clubrooms of the Woman's City Club. It is the Chicago branch of the Ameri can Home Economics Association. The Orea-onlan'a Stand Rlarbt. PORTLAND, Dec. 20. (To the Edi tor.) May I commend most heartily the editorial, "Fruits of a Prison Pol icy?" The whole course of The Ore gonlan on capital punishment is sane and the only way. C. E. CLINE. Christmas Features of The Sunday Oregonian Santa's First Stop Full page, in color, of the new Santa Claus and his first stop jn Portland. The Shrub of Thorns An ac count of the wonderful Glaston bury thorn, which made the agon izing crown that Jesus wore. It blooms unseasonably in America this year. Christmas Under Fire C. B. Lewis tells of a trying day in the great Civil War on Christmas day. A Beggar Maid A gripping Christmas story by Lily A. Long. Quaint Christmas Customs A glimpse into the cheery practices of Yuletide in olden times and today. Nineteen-Eleven A page on the year just closing: a year to be wondered at. "They're Sure to Get Me" So says Burns, fatalist and de tective in McNamara ease, in a remarkable interview, which is .given a full half page. - An Argentine Cinch Another crisp short story of the business world. Fables in Slang George Ade writes two fables for Christmas, both of them in his richest vein. The Jockey Who Slept A cork ing short tale about a newspaper reporter and his "feature story." Dorothy Deere, Slim Jim, Hair breadth Harry, Mrs. Time-Killer and Mr. Boss get into fresh dif ficulty. . Anna Belle's cut-out clothes and a puzzle will give the little ones a joyous hour. Many Other Features