1U KIITUD, OKEfiO. Cntrv4 at ranlaad Orasan. PoataBToa atacrv:a Kt- laTarsaair la (Bf MAIL.) Vni'.r. Sur taeiul. ana r' l'tiy. Fund latin : i. BODIhr ... :liy. ?un1 laca-lx. thra montoa.. tl y 8urdr lain.!. ( moata.... ' t'i r. without sir, om y-r t . -. - , . , . ... . - month. ..- - l without throa moataa.. I at . without Saaaay. aaa month.. w-kir. on ytr l.M t.W a.M r-uauay. oni 7ar fcuoCay ao4 Waaaty. mm iraar....- (BT CARJtlER.) riry. I ix mcla-l-"!. oea jaar. . t . . .... -- imIimImL M mantB 1 OO .1 Ual bask. Ktuip ". ' ""c1'. " -r. araa ard-r or Iwtl bask. htampa. ca. : at th. .ad.i- ru. Glra poatoffloa aooraaa u fu:L including couaiy aaa ataia. Paataca Hal 10 t 1 ?oti; 2 p.. a cant.: W to . 4i to fe paaa, caata. poa-a aouble rata. . Eaar. Baalaa. MT1w rra ConK ! Tork. Hmaawle amUdta. caco. ataaar aulldla. . rawuiaa OaHoa No. soeat. a. W., Landoa. FORTLAXD. FB1DAT. AfTUI. . " too MrcH or a good thisg. Enlightened opinion In the United Stales baa begun to turn decidedly against the unrestricted admission of foreign Immigrant. Almoat every person worth Hate nine to who apeak or wrttea upon the aubject favora the exclusion of the lesa desirable daase. At one time It was agreeable, and mar not have been dangerous, to look upon this country a an asylum for the op pressed of all lands. Our doors atood open to everybody who chose to enter and we felicitated oorselve upon a benevolence which enlarged our aelf t.taem while It provided hand to Im prove an undeveloped continent. But now the continent has been pretty well developed In most parts and very likely ail the hands who will be need ed for that purpose are available. As to our self-esteem. It has received some rude shocks from recent occur rence. We are learning that the hordes of foreign Immigrants who come to us of lute years are mor dis posed to look upon the United States as a Golconda to be stripped of Its treasure and abandoned than as an aaylum from oppression. A consider able proportion of them come here with the deliberate Intention of mak ing their fortune and then going back home. While they are occupied In making what seems to them to be a compe tence they are willing to subsist In the most degraded manner. Their stand ard of living is but little above that of dumb beast. What we call de cency, comfort, the amenities of life, have no existence for them. Aa long as they can work and save money they are satisfied. They strike only when they are starving. The hope of re turning to Portugal. Sicily, Hungary or Syria, and posing as men of mean compensates them for all they suffer In America. It takes them only a lit tle while to discover that they have not escaped from oppression by mi grating to the United States. The tyr anny of the cotton mill owners, the steel trust, the coal trust, is as bad aa anything they have experienced In the old despotism of Kurope. and it pierces deeper because of the hypoc risy which cloaks It. Many of these undesirable Immigrant tome here with full knowledge of the degraded conditions In which they must live and work. They know what to expect and undergo It cheerfully because the pay i..ko tar tn them. It Is far below what an American workman ought to receive in order to bring up a family decently and educate hi children, but still It Is so much above what they can ever look for at home that it at tracts them. ' Other Immigrants come -here In complete ignorance of the debased surroundings In which they are obliged to live. They are entrapped by the alluringly deceptive advertise ments of steamship companies. Some are enticed by the various concerns which maintain Immigration agents In foreign lands "in defiance of the law and deliberately undertake to destroy the American standard of living by Importing the lowest of the low from European slums. These same con cerns while they are filling their mills with degraded foreign labor con stantly clamor for a high tAriff to protect American labor. While they take the bread out of the American workman's mouth and drive hla chil dren from the school to the sweatshop then- hypocritical howls for a tariff to protect their victims assault the walls of heaven. Is It not a lovely spectacle? Our most tlghly protected trust are the "worst sinners of this sort. The steel trust, which Is sheltered by an utrageous tariff, systematically ex cludes Americans from many of its mills and employs only slum-bred for eigners who will work for half the pay a native workman would demand. The same ts true of the cotton trust and the woolen trust. The woolen mills at Lawrence are manned almost wholly by uneducated foreigners with whose degraded standards of living Americans cannot compete. The cot ton mill In which Senator Bourne Is interested have virtually censed to hire native hands.- Slum-bred foreigners have taken their places because the wages paid are such that an Ameri can cannot live npon them and keep his self-respect. And yet the cotton mill owners enjoy Just about the high est protection we give any manufac nMM Tn aave the country frorh nausea over their hypocrisy It were to be wlnhed that they would either cease to shriek for protection to the American workman or else stop har rying him to starvation by Importing nanas rrom roreign siuma. n,it wa know of ronrse that not?l- i V, ( - rr la tn ria e-roertad-w A i .... mm hvnninHv fa profitable to the trusts they will continue to practice it and tne counyy win tit raurt awm more congested with Immigrants who hlna- of American standards and who want to know nothing of them. Our acceptea way - to njm wronrs Is by the ballot. Thee men &. , hatter nt than violence rkM kKH not tha rirht to vote and tney will never acquire it sine -they do not wish to be naturalised. Their nhitinn la to so back " home and smoke cigarettes In the sunshine while their envious neignoors aamire tneir frowsy opulence. Brought here at the solicitation of various wealthy poten tates without the slightest regard to u-.ifra nt the rountrv ther have begun to imperil our institutions by their blind revolt tinunn gro's mjun ih Tti man who ImDorted them for conscienceless profit now wish to get rid or them rrom cowaraiy irar Tit i w.-a far easier for the fisher man to let the Genl out of theJug than to put him back Inside. These foreigners who refuse to be assimilat ed and who de not understand Amer ican methods of adjusting difficulties present a problem which It will tax our best Ingenuity to solve. Mere rail ing wlU not help. Mob law Is at best a risky expedent. It teaches lessons which both sides can' practice. The tow-class foreigners from Eastern and Southern Europe are here and we must find out what to do with them or suffer the consequences. How can they be Americanised ? How shall we teach them to depend upon the safe and aure results of the ballot? How break up the Ingrained habits of serv ile souls and Instil the manly self-discipline of freemen? No nation ever had a more lormiaa- ki. ta.ir Tt la hlch time that we applied our minds to It. It is high time, too, that we Began to "' some plan for restricting the future supply of Immigrants of this type. KXAjiONS. Th Orearonlan assumes that Mr. Hall, who writes a letter today from Weatnort. Is for representative govern ment. It I Inconceivable that he, or any Intelligent and patriotic Ameri can, should advocate direct action In . What Mr. Hall wants. and what everyone should want, is a representative government tnai repre sents the will and welfare of the peo ple as a whole. it.. la the last to deny the great service Theodore Roosevelt as President and as tne voice crjim In the wilderness hs done for sounder in hnilnam. cleaner living in society, greater fidelity In the family. higher Ideals In tne nation, nut we under any obligation to substitute Mlnrl neraonal fidelity to Roosevelt for acceptance of the correct princl- nlaa he has taught or tne incorrect principles he now teaches? The countrty must consult its own mh irate Interest without reference to the past service or present ambition of Colonel Roosevelt. What debt does it owe to him that it must pay at any sacrifice? rninn.l Roosevelt broucht to tne Vatlnn'a attention the eminent abili ties and the exalted character of Mr. T.ft Th. Nation took Mr. Taft at Colonel Roosevelt's valuation. What Imi Ttnnaavelt now owe the people who accepted Mr. Taft aa President largely because Mr. Kooseveu recom mended him and who are sincerely convinced that he has been a good President? Ha owes them a candid and honest statement of his reasons for repudiation of Mr. Taft. and he has never given it. He owes Taft a square deal, and we thinK ne nas not given It. He owes the third-term precedent due respect and he has not paid It. He owes a real duty to ob serve the traditional position of an ex-President to remain in the back ground, and he has not observed it. He has gone where many people can not follow him. though they might want to follow him, and they are grieved and troubled that they can-nt- knt thav feci that thev have some thing of a duty to themselves and the square deal for Taft; and they stay with Taft because they cannot give to their consciences a good reason for leaving him. Wa assure Mr. Hall that he Is quite mistaken In his assertion that "com munications favorable to Roosevelt" have been Ignored by The Oregonlan. Doe he know of any? TEAM-NO DOWN T1IK IIOCSK. We suppose that Astoria is under no Illusions as to the basis or the recent newspaper outbreak in Portland for common terminal rates at Astoria. Portland has no notion, through any motivls of broad-gauge benevolence or generosity, of moving1 Its mills, warehouses, wharves, exporting es tablishments and deep-sea business to Astoria. Not at all. We hardly think Astoria expects it. Here la a great port, with a great harbor, and an open channel to the sea. It Is the seat of a mighty commerce, built up with un ceasing industry, xeal and enterprise. Are we to suspend our efforts to make Portland the leading commercial and maritime port of the Pacific? Cer tainly not. The Port of Portland Is not maintained for any sentimental purpose, nor are the millions It has expended to keep open the channel to the sea to be now charged up to profit and loss. ' The argument behind the little local effort to surrender Portland's advan tages and give them to Astoria runs something like the following: If As toria shall be given terminal rates It must Inevitably follow that Portland will be in position to demand less than the Astoria rate; and therefore Port land's railroad rates from the East and the Columbia Basin will be lower than Astoria' and consequently lower than Puget Sound's. That is all there is to It. But the assumption that Portland will ever win In a contest for lower railroad rates than Seattle's 6r Ta coma's Is based on complete contempt and disregard of Actual conditions. If Astoria shall have terminal rates, why not Hoqulam, Aberdeen, South Bend and ultimately Port Townsend and Port Crescent? Seattle and Tacoma would be In position to demand lower rates as against these Pacific terminals Just as Portland might be as against Astoria. Portland's plight would then be Irretrievable. It could never re cover the ground It had itself volun tarily surrendered. The common point agitation is fan tastic, and ill-considered. It Is a pro posal to tear down the house In the vague hope that a better one may be built in Its place. hy first tear the house down before you have the foun dation or materials or real plan for a new structure? CANADA'S 8KTTU3W. Thoughtful Americans will contrast with msigivings the character of the Immigrants who are coming to this country and those who are going to Canada. We have almost ceased to receive Immigrants from Germany, Ireland and England. The Scandina vians are still coming, but In dimin ished numbera. In the place of these sturdy men and excellent citizens we now Import a flood of Sicilians. Hun garians, Syrians and other people from Southern and Eastern Europe. They come here literally by the million and we find it harder and harder every day to harmonise all of them with our Institutions. Worse still.'they are driv ing Americans out of many industries and degrading the conditions of life. Canada has a different story to tell. The reader does not need to be re minded of the thousands of American farmers who have gone and are going, there, leaving their fields to be tilled by foreigners who cannot speak Eng lish and will not learn It. Moreover, the tide of desirable Immigration TTTT! MOTIXTXO -OTtEGONIAX, FRIDAY, XmTL 5, 1912. which formerly flowed to the United States has been turned toward our northern neighbor. Only the other day Canada received 21.000 settlers in one company, of the type who used to seek the United States, but who come here no more. Ninety per cent of these settlers came from England, and they were the same kind of people who settled New England and Virginia in our co lonial days. There were Welsh and Cornish miners among them, an ex cellent Methodist breed of men who make some of the best clUxens in the world. Most of the settlers have money and their purpose la to dwell on farms. They present a marked contrast with the hordes who flock to the United States and huddle in filthy slums or lead slaves' lives in tha cotton and steel mills. How does It happen "that Canada gets the desirable Immigrants while we get the dregs? Why are American farmers forsaking their own country to live under the British flag? A few years ago we thought it sufficient to smirk and . utter some complacent Idiocy when a question like this was asked. But smirks and Idiocies are getting a little out of fashion. Is our standard of citizenship to go steadily downward while Canada's rises? How long can we stand the process without disruption of the country? AFTER MXTY YEARS. As against the changeling matri monial plan as Introduced and active ly worked by the modern divorce sys tem, the record now and then of a couple, who have passed fifty or sixty years together, pulling evenly In the matrimonial harness, or bending their shoulder patiently to the matrimonial yoke. Is gratifying to all who consider marriage a sacred Institution and the founding of home and bringing chil dren up therein as man's and woman's highest duty to society. The story of such a couple, briefly told in outline, which is the only way that It can be told. Illustrated by the faces of a man and woman who have grown old to gether Inlaid by duty and softly chis eled by time Is Interesting, partly be cause of Its lnfrequency. but mainly because of the life work that they undertook together in their far-away youth, pursued with unfaltering faith In each other as tHey slowly climbed the ladder of the years. Ronald ' C. Crawford and his wife TTitiahath. of Seattle, celebrated. April 1, the anniversary of a wedding that occurred In Oregon City sixty years ago. At ,the time they fared forth . . v. n v. n . a 97 aha 17 vpara old. h'tiii,i no " - ' -" - Three 'score years found them glad. with the added giaaness. or long nsu clation, to be together, and looking about them, he at 80, she at 70. they counted their descendants to the third generation. Their life together nas han a lone one. whether gaujred by years or by the measure set by Dr. Edward Toung. the meditative poet of "Night Thoughts." tn these words: Tbat Ufa l Ion tbat snawra Ufa's great end. It Is not recorded that wealth came to them, though plenty as compassed Xy .Industry was their portion. Care and' responsibility, attributes that are necessary to the human development, had attended them and no doubt they had broken together the bitter ashen crust of sorrow. But the essence of bitterness separation from each other by death or dissension had been spared to them. Fortunate indeed are they of whatever name and sta tion in life who, -es sung by Bobble Burns, have "clamb the hill thegither" and passed hand in hand serenely down the slope to "sleep thegither at the foot." M1TP SIBSIDY IX NEW Cl"IJK. The minority of the House commit tee on Interstate and foreign com merce has made a report In favor of exempting American vessels In coast wise trade from Panama Canal tolls, which makes a good case for the valid ity of such action, but a poor case for Its wisdom. It revives the argument that, because no tolls are charged on improved rivers and harbors, none should be charged on the Panama Ca nal, Ignoring the fact that the canal la in a class by Itself. It also contends that the tolls will ultimately be paid by the consumer and will benefit the railroads by enabling them to charge proportionately higher rates. It la in accordance with strict equity that the consumers should pay the Interest on the cost of construction of the ca nal and Its operating expenses, each In proportion to the benefit he derives from it. By paying a freight rate high enough to cover the tolls the consum ers will certainly enable the railroads to charge rates proportionately higher, but If we are going to club down rail road rates, why stop here? The rail roads which compete with coastwise vessels now enjoy protection equal to the Income -on the difference in cost of construction between American and foreig-n-bullt ships, which is 0 per cent. Why not force down railroad rates In competition with water lines 40 per cent instead of by the paltry Jl to $1.25 a ton which will be the amount of the canal tolls? That would be something worth while. We can do this by admitting to the coast wise trade foreign-built ships owned and operated by Americans. It would be In accordance with the principle which is now fast gaining favor, of let ting every tub stand on Its own bot tom. The committee shows that Professor Emory R. Johnson estimates the ton nage of ships using the canal In Us opening year at 10.600,000, or wnicn only 1,160,000 will be In coast-to-coast traffic. It quotes Colonel Goethals as estimating the annual cost of opera tion and maintenance, less profit on supplies sold by the Government, at $3,500,000. which, on the basis or l a ton toll, would leave a margin of $7,000,000. Estimating the cost or the canal at $400,000,000 and Interest on the bonds at 3 per cent, this would leave the canal $5,000,000 short or paying Its way as a business Invest ment. But the minority assumes that no effort will be made to recoup inter est out or tolls and professes to see a margin which will allow free passage to coastwise ships. With traffic In creasing at the rate of 69 per cent per decade, according to Professor John son, and with a canal capable of pass ing 8.000,000 tons a year without en largement, according to Colonel Goe thals. but few years would pass before the canal would be earning a profit af. ter paving interest on Its cost. We could then reduce the tolls enough to absorb this profit until they became a mere bagatelle, having practically no Influence on railroad rates. The free tolls advocates are simply the ship subsidy men In a new guise. They have developed a sudden Interest In the welfare of the consumer. If they love the consumer so dearly, let them fii In line for free fehips in both for eign and coastwise trade and give him the benefit of a 40 per cent reduction in coastwise freight. We may well rejoice with our two sturdy pioneer citizens, F. X. Mathleu , and Thomas Mountain, tne urai i whom celebrated his 84th. the latter his 90th. birthday, one at the home of his son. the other at the home or his daughter In this city, on April 2. The story of F. X. Mathieu In con nection with the settlement of the Pa cific Northwest, has often been told. A late ract. brought out by the inde fatigable leaders of the woman suf frage campaign now In progress In this state. Is that the venerable pio neer Is not only a champion of the political equality of woman, but that he has believed in this principle from his youthfup. As pictured on his 94th birthday he stands erect holding a large bouquet of daffodils, tneir goiaen glow being the suffragist cdlor. and f nil fftr anotfter decade of looking good for anotner decade or i life, at least, captain mouhuuuj na tivities In this city, where he has re sided rifty-two years, belong chiefly tn tranannrtation interests. Not a river man of the old water lines era , but knew "Tom Mountain.' The few I or these (comparatively speaking) who remain regard him kindly and even tenderly and will be pleased to know that he has begun the ninety-first year of his life with a fair chance of en joying a number of added years. The annual increase in amount of railroad securities held by railroad companies, either directly or through holding companies, diminished more than 50 per cent during- the latter half of the decade ending in 1910. Thia Is attributed partly to natural exhaust ion of the movement towards control of the smaller by the larger lines: nartlv to the decline of the holding company as a device for control, and partly to the opposition or federal ana state governments to conrol of one road by another. The Railway Age Gasette suggests that a new drift towards leaseholds may set in, and that a tendency against inter-corporate holdings may diminish the argu ment for Federal charters. T vara of the rood old' Constitution will read wit a shudder that the bill for a child labor bureau only needs the President's signature to become law. Not since the days of secession has the Constitution tottered as It did when CongTes voted to inquire how Florida's 6-year-olds were faring, at the oyster wharves and Georgia's In the cotton mills. Senator Bailey went out of one conniption into another in the debate on the bill, but it passed and the country wa lost. If . little boys and girls cannot be worked to death by the cotton mill owners we might as well give up the ghost and be done with It. . Roseburg no doubt shed some nat ural tears over the wreck of her brazen Hebe, but there is consolation in the thought that the supply of god desses is large and that they all look a good deal alike when embodied. in Imperishable metal. There ts .also consolation In the thought that, dis ciplinary as the contemplation of her brazen beauty must have been to the young, a cigar store Indian will serve the same purpose until Hebe can be recast. An all wise Providence has mercifully arranged it so that no ca lamity is utterly Irreparable. "False In theory. Intolerable In prac tice." This is what the Granger of Douglas County think of the single tax proposition. Holding this belier, they are opposed to the Single tax In every form, and they urge, not only farmers, but all patriotic citizens, to work against and vote against a sys tem of class legislation which they regard as detrimental o free Institu tions. Sapient Grangers! They know a thing or two where land values and taxes are concerned. No exemption of big city blocks and merchandise for them. The twenty drinking fountains which S. Benson has given Portland A-Ill promote temperance more effec tually than a thousand prohibition orators. Many men bny beer to drink because water is not to bo had. ' Make virtue aa easy as vice and all the world will be virtuous. Perhaps Mr. Ben son's noble gift will Inspire some man of wealth to replenish our city with other conveniences of civilization whose lack is a direct source of cus tom and profit to the saloon's. .If all the Income on the Gould for tune were as well spent a Helen Gould's share, the public would be well content to see the principal re main intact instead of being dissi pated In foolish railroad ventures and marriage portions for French Counts. The ease with which the Grays Har bor cities disposed or the I. W. W. agitators when they once became aroused to action shows how much of the agitation is mere "hot air." Our timorous Maybr might take the hint and pluck up courage. By passing their wool bill without regard to the Tarltt Board's report the Democrats have made one or the issues or the campaign TaTt's scien tific versus their own unscientific methods of tariff reduction. The only excuse for the nomination of a dark horse is a deadlock tn the National convention. Taft ts already so obviously the popular choice among Republicans that no such excuse exlsts' Alexander Graham Bell must re member that the absurdities and Idio syncrasies of English spelling and pronunciation make It a valuable as set, not to be tampered with in the in-J terest of folk too lazy to learn. The opinion of Attorney-General Crawford that a voter cannot register a second time, changing party afrilia tion, is sound. A man who desires to do so is frivolous or evil-disposed. The locomotive engineers will con elder a long time before ordering a strike, simply because they form a powerful organization and never mis use their strength. There is aome consolation In know ing no other country In the world can send a transcontinental train of sev enteen cars of mail. In Nome, where only strenuous peo ple can exist, the socialist Is defeated. Tha Reavers are conspicuous any- t way, atthe bottom of the table. MYTHOLOGY IN SCHOOL READERS Writer Condemns Tae of Impoaalbllltlew tn Teaching the Toms. WAMIC, Or.. April J. (To the Edl-A- t f ttiA-A la nn m thine above an other ,'of which the people of Oregon nouI(J bo justiy proud, it is our school system, containing as It does all the true e4ements of the commonwealth, and yet, with all these attainments, after a careful survey of the educa tional field of opportunity, we must class it aa in its infancy, the embryo stage, watting the time of persistent effort that shall unlock the. door of privilege to our Oregon school system, making it one of the grandest sye t.m in tha land. The oDDOrtunlty pre sents itself to every loyal voter of the I . .1 ! (. tnimnot ant In state m ucukiv h luvumt.. its dealings, along the line of character building, for It is right here that the earlier home training, however well and impartially administered. Is parti ally or wholly eclipsed by our school system's literature now in vogue for better or for worse. No system, however worthy, nas Deen ' lnc th ot "eation u mlght n so been and probably was made better with the one exception "The Word of God," and no man nor set of men have ever been able successfully . to prevail against it. The truth as Implied and aisseminateo inrougii uui .B" rhool avstem will live, th evii, u any. ought to perish and be eradicated from ofr its" record, lor It win certain ly bear fruit, either for the mainten ance of Justice and righteousness or vice versa, to the contrary. "Truth though crushed to earth shall rise again." as a true saying, affords it self as a convenient fulcrum upon which to weigh the present status of the system's teaching, for it la not the system, but Its text books and Its literature at which this article aims. Neither would I especially designate our Text Book Commissioners as wholly at fault, for they have but filled a demand as manifested by the patrons of the public schools of the state. I would not for one moment Impugn the honorable motives of any officer of the state in this connec tion, but I would assign this disastrous calamity as found In our educational literature as directly traceable. to the Individual homes of the Oregon system's patrons, where it verily be longs, for is it not a system within a system, a wheel within a wheel and Is not custom greatly responsible for the law? As an Illustration. I was on Wash ington soil sometime back and saw their school law set at naught, through the introduction of divine worship In their schools by the consent of the dis trict patrons, virtually a law unto themselves. The elimination of God's Word, from our text books has not oc curred all in a moment that the vast army of believers in the state knew nothing about it. Hence we are all guilty in the eyes of the law "an ac cessory after the fact." We have helped to support a class of literature, as I shall shortly prove, entirely in adequate to meet the demands made upon it. How? Simply by our silence. If. on the other hand, by the taking away of all direct or Indirect allu sions to God's Word, or otherwise the truth, there has been added something of a more exalted nature upon which to build a useful life, a destiny re splendent through the imperishable nature of good, revealed, kept, bearing in mind this means eternity, then the nature and source from whence it came and where it led those who adopted it must necessarily be estab lished before it may be safely adopted. Take It for granted, a child reared under present conditions up to the age of 10 years -and they bear the in delible impressions whioh invariably follow them through life. On the first page of Wheeler's First Reader I find the account of a little boy trying to drive a bunch of goats out of a. turnip patch. This little man finds he cannot do it, but Just then a rabbit happens along and says he can do' it but falls after which a wolf and a fox come along and likewise fall, but not so the busy bee, (being all miraculously gifted with speech). He prevails over the goats and buzzes them out of the patch. Article 8. Only a morninglorjt seed, but it Is enabled to address itself to the sun, the ground and the rain. Article 3. Ceres, the good Earth Mother (from Greek mythology). Article 4. Conversation among a nest of little foxes. Article 5. Two little kittens talking. Article 6. Three little bugs talking and quarreling. Article 7. Three fairies under an oak. Article 8. Iris (more of Greek myth ology). Article 9. Little Red Riding Hood. Article 10. Two cats talking. Article 11. Five peas in a pod talk ing. But why enumerate? Suffice it to say, there are 20 articles covering from two to ten pages each, along this same line, in the First Reader alone and the Second Reader contains 19 articles of the same character, 36 in these two readers. Cyr's Fourth Reader contains four objectionable articles, entirely beyond the pale of reason- and entirely lacking in reality. Imagine If you please a child having passed the gamut of public benefac tions as found In the text, books enum erated above, trying to demonstrate before an Intelligent audience the great source of knowledge derived there from. Compare if you will the old time readers with those of the present It is not Grecian mythology which is going to settle our sociological ques tion. An education along fictitious lines, is worthless. Our home land with all its beautiful offerings Is enough, upon which to enlarge, with Its great fields of wheat, its boundless forests, its great and unexplored wealth in orchard and mine. Grand old Oregon, the star of greatest magni tude in the Union and its matchless Governor! Last but not least, its school system: May the God of the universe sustain It. W. D. MOREHOUSE. All Cranberry Land Not Beiurht. SEAV1EW, Wash., April 4. (To the Editor.) I noticed in The Oregonlan Sunday. March 24, an article purport ing to be an interview, in which there was an error I wish to have corrected. The article stated that I bought 600 acres of good cranberry land In this vicinity, which is a fact: but I did not buy all the good cranberry land, as re ported There are several hundred acres of such lands . on the peninsula apart from my holdings. If you will kindly publish this correction, you will oblige all Interested in the development of this vicinity. H. M. WILLIAMS. Polychrome and Manlton Blblea. EUGENE, Or., April 3. (To the Ed itor.) In The Portland Oregonlan, March 31, is printed an editorial tell ing about the famous Polychrome ver slon of the Bible, which shows the reader how various manuscript sources were united to produce the text we now have. You also tell about Professor Moulton's Bible Edition. Where can I get these Bibles? ,F' J' The Polychrome Bible 'is published by Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. It Is expensive. Moulton's Bible may be had of J. K. GUI & Co., Portland. Chtldreii Born Abroad. PORTLAND, Or., April 4. (To the Editor.) Will you please inform me if a person (male) born in a foreign coun try can become President or the United States, this question to Include children of Ambassadors or traveling Ameri cans? N. A. D. Read section 5. article 11, Constitu tion of the United States. Children of citizens are Americans, If born abroad, the same as ir born In this country. ITS, I.VDEED, WE ARE ON TRIAL Writer Pleads for Squarer Polities and Leas Bnncombe. PORTLAND, April 3. (To the Edi torsThe Joke of the age! "Tou are on trial, not I." Yes, the perpetuity of the great commonwealth of Oregon de pends upon the outcome of this in dictment. Senator Bourne sitting in his high place, . with his penetrating vision, with his unspeakable personal sacrifice of energy, time, and money a martyr to the Interests of a more or less heretic constituency has at last delivered this remarkable declaration. What forebodings possess us, while we contemplate the great catastrophe that must befall if Jonathan be dis carded at the approaching election! Not only this, but our "Intelligence." or rather the lack of Intelligence, will be published broadcast, to our shame, throughout the whole Nation and the uttermost parts of the earth. Banish the possibility! Forbid such a con summation! "You are on trial, not I!" Verily we are on trial of our pa tience. We have tested forbearance to the limit. We were on trial for tolera tion when Jonathan Bourne commanded the forces which held up the Oregon Legislature for 40 days in 1907. We are now on trial for toleration of the flagrant violation of the spirit of the corrupt practices act under the guise of the franking privilege, where by the Senator has distributed over 1,000,000 copies of speeches on the Ore gon system ostensibly in the Interest of popular government, but really in the interest of Jonathan Bourne's can didacy to succeed himseir. We are now on trial to discover how long it . will take us to pay for these tons ' of campaign matter (speeches) at 5 cents per copy, includ ing legitimate postage, probable cost of $50,000. Should we pay $2.44 per annum (Jonathan Bourne's annual con tribution to our tax fund)? The figures are approximate!' 25,000 years. We were on trial last year when the Republican party nominated by a large majority at the popular primary a candidate for Governor other than Jonathan's. The distinguished Repub lican Senator taxed his vigor to bring about the defeat of this candidate, Mr. Bowerman, and was instrumental in electing a Democratic Governor. (Note the dispensation of the rule of state ment No. 1.) We are tired in Oregon of being on trial. We have been "monkled" with. We have been fooled enough by this political legerdemain. In behalf of clean, fair and sauare politics I beg to enter my protest against any more of these "trials. We have been "buncoed" heretofore, and are now in the position of the pig, who said, when the boy cut its tail off, "You can't do It again." J. E. EASTHAM. WATER POWER IS OFFERED FREE. r-hnrl. Sa-ra Ha Will Giva It If lOat io uoilinfn ma ,-imiiru. PORTLAND. Or., April 3. (To the Editor.) Being one of the "beggarly elements", referred to by Mr Gaston and St. Paul, I am forced into the llme lleht as an unwilling plutocrat by the vehement Insistence of Mr. James Cochrane. Mr. Cochrane's agitation seems to arise over the suspicion that I have something to sell. I know this will be considered a crime, providing It would at all interfere with the cinch of the P. R., L. ft P. Company, even though if it were true, and my pro posal would reduce that prospective lighting 'bill he refers to from $2.24 to less than 50 cents, still leaving the citv a large profit, but his love of mo nopolistic conditions would prevent him from embracing soch an opportunity. Cochrane's letter is in line with that of Clark, one of che owners of the elec trie plant, who at the Commercial Club the other night devoted himself, not to answering pertinent complaint, as Mr, Gaston very forcibly showed in his communication of yesterday, but to call on those who attended to frown on the imnertlnence of crltlolsm. In order that the unpardonable offense he at tributes to me may be condoned, I will now say that I will give outr'ght to tne City of Portland 6000 horsepower of water, conditioned that it at once move to bring it to our city, putting its value Into power at not in excess of a rental of $30 per horsepower for constant use, and for heat and lighting at not in excess of $40 per horsepower, thus re ducing the rates soon to be Imposed from the equivalent of $160 to $30 and $300 to $40. These rates will make a splendid profit to the city, because It can be brought and distributed at not In excess of $10 per horsepower, as is done in Ottawa, Canada. And further' to calm Cochrane's per turbed mind, after the city has in stalled the 6000 horsepower as. named, I will assign It another 6000 horsepower of water as a free gift on 1- .e condi tions. In order that the average citi zen may be enlightened, will say that the present lighting contracted by the city does not amount to 1200 horse power. I am so anxious to see the city be come what it ought to be, one of the most attractive manufacturing cities on the face of the earth, instead of a dwarfed, atrophied and palsied ap pendage of the money power, nested in Big Business, under thrall of absentee landlordism, of which the P. R., L. & P Company from the accusation of the Government, not two weeks old, IS Its representative, here, that I' would do anything to break that absolutism pos sible under my limitations. CHARLES P. CHURCH. Campaign for Good ETeslsrat. Boston Globe. The American Association for the Conservation of Vision is starting a widespread campaign of public educa tion to call the attention of people to the care and preservation of their eye New Special Features for The Sunday Oregonian A Royal Victim of Beauty Cures No less a person than the Ger man Empress set out to combat age with beauty cures and now her health is gone. The inside story is given by a writer who is in close touch with the German court. . In Darkest America A half-page about the strange 'people or Southern mountains, where civilization is at a low ebb. Famous Lovers Another of Laura Jean Libbey's interesting arti cles, in which she takes up the world's most famous romances in TheGame That Cost a Pennant Eleventh in the notable baseball series prepared for The Oregonian by Christy Mathewson, the Giants' star pitcher. . ... Easter and the Butterfly An attractive article is presented by Rene Bache on the story of the beautiful butterfly symbol. Tables in Slang George Ade's fable for the coming Sunday deals with "a family that jumped out of Class B into the King Row," and it leads to the moral: "Some achieve greatness and others have it rubbed in." , Two Complete Short Stories "Just Like That," a tale of two partners, a love affair' and a tragedy, and "The Magic Billiard Ball," a story of love and magic. .' The Jumpups Mr. Jumpup reverts to type. More adventures by Sambo, Hairbreadth Harry, Slim Jim, Mrs. Time Killer, and Mr. Boss. Easter1 "cnt-out" clothes for little Anna Belle. . MANY OTHER Order Today From Our Day in Court By Dean Collins. "People of Oregon, hear m'cry! You are the ones on trial; not I. I bring you to court to the ejufense Of all your claims to intelligence: t en. ii,1o.a nnH the 1iirv. Lno- And the prosecutor who's after yon: You, oh people of Oregon, are . ... Merely the prisoners at the Var"; said ne Jontuaii o. -Beware, oh. Oregon people all. . Of the heavy sentence that may befall; For It should be plain to an. or some. What a Daniel is to the Judgement come: I am the Judge and the Jury stern And the constable, too, as you will learn. Who brought you. a prisoner, to the bar Where on trial tor your wits you are BeTore me Jonathan B. Speak with care, for you know I may Use against you whate'er you say; Answer correctly and don't make sport. Or you'll be fined for contempt of court; And I am the court, my wortny gents. That Judges your claims to intelligence; The august Judge and the Jury wise. And e'en the lawyer who your case tries Is me Jonathan B." L'ENVOI. Oh. wise young Judge; oh. excellent man. Touching on precedents, we can Refer you only to 'Aesop, in re The Bull and the Frog, wherein we see. May it please the court, though the frog essayed To swell to superior bulk, he paid The ultimate price ror his rund of crust By disintegration in short, he bust. (Not grammatic. perhaps, but clear.) So we politely refer you here To Aesop's fable, which same may be Suggestive to thee Jonathan B. Portland. April 4. Half a Cehtury Ago From the Oregonlan of April 6, 1862. A treasonable secret society has been exposed in Indiana. The society was organized to oppose the war and resist the collection of taxes. The flight of that meanest of Indiana traitors, John G. Davis, to Secession, is supposed to have been occasioned by his knowledge that his treachery would soon be made manifest, and that he had to take his chance between Richmond and Fort Warren. Dallas Citv election This resulted as follows: J. S. Reynolds, Recorder; H. W. Hedrlck, Marshal; P. Craig, Treas urer; R. E. Miller. E. P. Fitzgerald, B. J. Drew, F. Bolten and A. Clark, trustees. Shakespeare's great tragedy, "Mac beth." will be presented with a strong caste tonight. Mrs. Pope as Lady Mac beth, Mr. Pope as Macbeth and Mr. Beatty as Macduff. A new ferryboat will shortly take the place of the old tub. which for a long while has been an eyesore to the peo ple of Portland. The Julia This steamer took up on yesterday morning a large crowd of passengers. Our city has already begun to look dull, at least our streets have not that crowded appearance which they have borne for the last month. T h f. delegates to the state conven tion from the lower counties leave this morning on the steamer Express for Oregon City, whence they will go up on the Relief from Canemah direct to Eugene. Congress has appropriated $100,000 for the construction of a fort at the mouth of the Columbia River. John R. Foster & Co. have opened at their store on Front street a large stock of hardware, comprising various articles demanded by miners, farm ers, builders, housekeepers and others. The Benton County Union convention met at the Courthouse In Corvallis on Saturday, March 29. The following named persons were elected delegates to attend the union state convention at Eugene: A. G. Hovey, W. H. Spencer, Martin Woodcock, A. J. Thayer and J. R. Bayley. The follow ing nominations were made for county officers: Senator. A. G. Hovey; Rep resentatives. C. P. Blair, A. M. Wltham; County Judge, James R. Bagley; Com missioners, James Gingles and James Edwards; Assessor, Jesse Wood; Clerk, Horace G. Burnett; Sheriff, J. C. Alex ander; Treasurer, George Mercer; Su perintendent of Common Schools. F. H. Stilson; Coroner, J. C. Krieschbaum. Reason for Criticising Roosevelt. WESTPORT, Or., April 1. (To the Editor.) In criticising Roosevelt's speech at St. Louis, in which he ques tions whether the people of the United States rule, you use these words: "Rep resentative government is government for the people through their representa tives." Yes, but does this please the people the majority? Do the repre sentatives represent the people? Sup pose the people had the direct say as to Lorimer and Stephenson would they retain their seats still? It looks as though The Oregonlan were criticising Roosevelt simply because it's Its pol icy to do so, regardless of sound prin ciple. Why don't you give credit where credit is due? Why doii't you publish more communications favorable to Roosevelt instead of ignoring them? F. C. HALL. ' Average Telephone Call. Indianapolis News. The New York telephone call aver ages a rn'nute and a half In length. FEATURES Tour Newsdealer.