10 T1TE MOKXLXG- ORKGOXIAN, THURSDAY, JAXUARY 1913. .... .PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland, Oregon, Fostoffice as Second-class .matter. fiubscrlpUon Baes-Invarlably .In Advance. BT MAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year SS.OO Daily. Sunday Included, six -months.... 4.25 Dally, Sunday Included, three months.. 2.25 Dally. Sunday Included, one month Dally, without Sunday, two year. ....... 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months 3.25 Dally, without Sunday -throe months . 1-75 Dally, without Sunday, one month.. 60 Weekly, one year ..... 1.50 Sunday, one year . . z.:v Sunday and Weekly, one year .......... 8.50 (BT CARRIER.) Dally, Sunday included,.e year .... 9.00 Dally. Eunday Included, one month 75 How to Remit Send Postoffioe money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. .Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender1 -risk. Give postofTice address m full, including county and state. - .rentage Bat 10 to 14 pages, 1 cent; 16 to 28 pages, 2 cents; SO to 40 pages, 8 cents; 40 to 60 paces. A cents. Foreign postage, double rate. Eastern Business Offices Verree 4b Conk- I in New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steger building. ban Francisco Office R. J. Eldwell Co., 742 Market street. European Office No. 3. Regent etret, S. W., London. rOKTlAXD. THURSDAY, JAN. 2, 1913. JfO SECRETARY FROM THE WEST. President-elect Wilson Is reported to have said that he will not appoint a Secretary of the Interior from any of the) "public-land" states, and the re spective candidacies of many eminent gentlemen who live within the shad ows of the Rocky Mountains or the sounds of -the pellucid Pacific would appear to tie futile. The Oregonian is not surprised; for it has had no doubt that the President-elect has had con jured up for his delectation on all oc casions the ghost of the Ballinger epl sode; and It has no doubt also that the theoretical conservationists of the landless East and the treeless Middle West have flooded him T.-ith their per. sistent demands to save the public do main and the free water powers from the despoilers and grabbers of the uncouth West. Any Secretary of the Interior from the West would be sub jected at once to the calumnies and Intrigues of the Plnchots, the Garfields and the Glavises and other champions of unborn generations and foes of the present generation, unless he should at once make it known that he is in harmony with their extreme theories and starvation practices. What true eon of the Westould say or do aught, in the Cabinet, but oppose the schemes that have turned over the forests to their primitive solitudes and stigmatized the honest settler upon the reserves as a vagabond squatter and gun-using rreeDooter? Hoar could he, with his knowledge of practical conditions, accept the prac tices of sloth, neglect and incompe tence that have marred the record of the reclamation service and made paupers of hundreds who have in good faith sought to erect homes upon ir rigated tracts? How could he stand idly by and see the streams and the waterfalls assigned to dreary non-use and scenic stagnation while private capital is discouraged and public en terprise Is smothered? How could he be silent when the upright motives of a great body of worthy homesteaders are attacked, and every frivolous tech nicality and petty objection is inter posed before their honest endeavor to get honest title to public land honestly claimed and honestly cultivated? How could he fall in with the greedy assumption that the states have no greater interest in the public lands and forests within their borders than the other states which have squan dered their patrimony?. Yet the people of the West have a right to suppose that a. President elected on. the Baltimore platform of 1918 will understand that the public domain is for present use and develop, ment, not for sequestration, and that a. practical conservation' not an ex perimental or theoretical conserva tion -is the true policy to be adopted. The Democratic platform has an ex tended discussion of the great subject, of conservation, and it makes declara tions hostile to the ultra-Plnchot view, and friendly to the contentions and deserts of the people on the land. Says the platform: The public domain should be administered and disposed of with due regard to the public welfare. Reservations should be limited to the purposes which they purport to serve, and not extended to include land wholly unsulted therefor. The unnecessary withdrawal frum sale and settlement of enormous tracts of public land upon which tree growth never existed and cannot oe promoted tends only to retard development, create discontent and bring reproach upon the policy of conservation. Clearly the platform intended thus to rebuke the bureaucrats who have tied up the public domain in a maze of red tape and made the deserving settler all but an outcast and a wan derer. The cause of the homesteader Is Indeed expressly favored by another clause in the platform, which declares that the "laws should be adminis tered in a spirit of the broadest liber ality toward the settler exhibiting a bona fide purpose to comply there with." Clearly, too, it was intended that the public domain be "disposed of and not held as a mere demesne tor an unappreeiative posterity. Somewhere President-elect Wilson has expressed his sympathy with the isolated and friendless situation of Alaska, and has declared that the need of legislation designed to encourage the legitimate development of that great territory ought to be immediate ly recognized and fulfilled. But the Democratic platform seems to have spared him the necessity of formulat ing any new or strange doctrine on conservation for the inhabitant of the ; great states of the West. He knows, or he ought to know, what his party desires; and he knows, or he ought to know, that the way to develop the treeless areas of the country is to en courage their settlement and cultiva tion; and the way to conserve the water powers is to dedicate them to industry; and the way to utilize the forests is to fell their mature timber and inaugurate a wise policy of re forestation; and the true way to make the public lands, the forest re serves and the waterfalls all together beneficial to posterity is to make them useful to the present generation. EXPERIMENTS IN REFORMATION. Cincinnati has a judge who will try a new experiment in the reformation of women following the oldest pro fession. Fifty denizens of the half world were brought before him that the majesty of the offended law might ba vindicated. "I do not want your money," said the judge; and he pro posed a scheme by which the unhappy defendants might work out their sal vation. All were to attend church once each Sunday for four weeks be fors February 11, and on that date he would determine what to do with them. "Meantime," said the judge, "make an honest effort to readjust your affairs." Probably the judge believed that the presence of these women in church would do them good and make possi ble associations that would lead them into a different environment and dif ferent lives. Much depends, on the church. Yet, if a woman of that stripe were well known, or if the marks of her occupation were plain from her appearance and demeanor, it may be fancied that some congrega tions would evacuate Just as soon as she entered the door. The reforma tion of such a woman must take place necessarily in the closet, or out of the public view, and not in the temples or on the streets. The Judge, or the benefactor, who finds a quiet home for a scarlet wom an, or a friend who will help her to a clean life and a decent livelihood, and a chance for a respectable marriage after due probation, will do vastly more for her benefit than one who sentences her to serve time in a place of public worship. REWARDING OVR CANAL BUILDERS. Now that the Panama Canal is about completed, Colonel Goethals is receiving widespread commendation for his excellent service. Bills are be fore Congress providing handsomely for the guildlng genius of this greatest of engineering feats. "It is well that he be made a Major-General and given other emoluments, for his compensa tion as a Colonel has been .wholly out of proportion to the magnificence of his service. But in this movement the American people bid fair to overlook a person ality of equal importance in the Pan ama Canal miracle. That personality is the chief sanitary officer, Colonel Gorgas. Without the splendid genius of Colonel Gorgas the Panama Canal could not have been built. Death had entrenched itself in a thousand insid ious and hidden forms throughout the Canal Zone. Before the advent of Colonel Gorgas it was more unsafe to venture into the district than to walk ooldly onto the firing line in a great modern engagement. It became the herculean task of Colonel Gorgas to drive out the most virulent of diseases and do away with their most fertile and prolific breeding places. ' The problems this' man had to face were no less stupendous than those of an engineering and executive order. Further than that, they were new problems such as required the most fertile resources, whereas the engi neering problems lay mostly along trails long beaten by experience. Colonel Gorgas did more than the mere task assigned him. He trans formed the very habitat of death and tropical disease to a district of model sanitation and wholesomeness. He had not one foe, but a thousand foes of mankind to vanquish. No general on the line ever did more brilliant, more heroic or more valuable service. In the light of these things we should not follow an inclination to shower the rewards on one man. Colonel Goethals, as the executive head, doubtless will receive the lion's share of the credit for a task the like of which the world never before has witnessed. But there is glory enough for both and the merits of the case demand that this glory be divided. DR. JORDAN AND THE GENEALOGISTS. Most men make dunces of them selves occasionally, eminent men of science as well as others. Eugenics seems to have presented the learned and able Dr. David Starr Jordan with an opportunity to show that he is not exempt from human frailty. Perhaps it is the mental malady commonly called "the bighead," perhaps it is some other inward affliction, that has caused him to fill his latest book with nonsense. Whatever the reason for it may be, the nonsense seems to be there and its measure is so full that whoever runs may read it. His new book. called "The Ideal Eugenics," sets out to prove that Just about everybody of any consequence in the United States is descended from a certain Isabel de Vermandois, a lady of malodorous memory, who lived a long time ago. Her family includes at this date, if we may believe Dr. Jordan, not only that gentleman himself, as a matter of course, but John D. Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan, Roosevelt, Astor, Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and a host more. Truly a heterogeneous assemblage. The inclusion of so many persons of the most various origins in a single strain of heredity speaks more em phatically for Dr. Jordan's imagina tion than for his common sense. He seems to have reached a pinnacle of self-esteem where he thinks he may say anything and still be taken seri ously. Nothing whatever is known about the genealogy of many of these per sons a few generations back. The gene alogists of this country have built up an imaginary science with persevering in dustry. It is so far reaching that, for a suitable fee,' they can provide any body with a family tree. If he has no ancestors they are perfectly able and willing to manufacture as many as he wants. The business of pro viding ancestors is almost as flourish. ing as that of creating antique works of art. Indeed, a satisfactory ancestor is a work of art in the best sense of the word. The wonder is that such a man as Dr. Jordan should have been fooled by this idiocy and should (ap parently) have lent his authority to fool others. PATIENCE AND PRCDBNCE. That President Taft has been alto gether too patient with Mexico is a criticism heard now- and again among his detractors. The contention is put forth that he should long since have put an end to the Mexican internal idiosyncrasies by means of armed in tervention. To determine whether or not the Taft patience has been too elastic, the meaning and cost of armed intervention might be looked into. Suppose the United States Govern ment should take over the City of Portland and put every person on sal ary of from $18 to J500 per month. In addition to that the Government to assume the care of the 250,000 people in the city, providing them with every necessity from food to med ical attention. Having taken this bur den, let us imagine the Government decided to move the populace in vari ous directions, providing the multitude with means of transportation for many hundreds of miles by rail and then many more hundreds of miles by foot, supplying rations all the while, and teams with which to carry the rations, as well as impedimenta needed to sus tain the great body of people in comfort. For at least one sear and perhaps three or four years the Gov ernment carries this burden. In addi tion to this, let us suppose the Gov ernment bound itself to put on pen sion those who should become sick or halt among this -vast concourse. That Is just the sort of burden the Government would take -over at Mex ican intervention. At least 250,000 troops would be required for subduing and policing Mexico. In adBition to that, a death rate of 5 per cent is not too great an estimate of possible cas ualties in such a war. In the light of which it might seem that President Taft were -acting with wisdom and poise in delaying such a coup from time to time in the hope that it might be rendered unnecessary. PLOWING AS AN EXERCISE. Plowing is suggested as a substitute for football at our colleges. Why -not? Football is upheld as developing the physique, but so does plowing." What more calculated to harden the muscles of back, arms and legs than to follow the plow, pressing down on the han dies, guiding the team and stepping over the heavy clods ? Football is good outdoor exercise, but so is plowing. Football develops certain mental fac ulties, but so does plowing.. Skill is required to run a deep, straight fur row, just as skill is required to make an end-run, to block interference and to kick a goal. - Plowing has the further recom mendation that it is useful, produc tive exercise. One husky member of an athletic club could probably plow. .harrow and plant with potatoes a whole acre with half the expenditure of energy that goes into a practice game. Were each of the hundreds of members of the club to cultivate and harvest an equal area of land, he would be equally rich in health and strength, he would be richer in pocket and the whole community, would be benefited by the increase in farm production. 1 The lesson taught by the great Nasby in "Eastern Fruit on Western Dishes" is worthy of study. One of his characters, Koab, inherits a for tune, and, deaf to advice, squanders it in riotous living. He is found hy one of his relatives rolling barrels in front of a grocery. The relative jeers and says; "I told you :so. Koab replies that, money bein gone and health gone, he might have consulted a physician, who would have recom mended exercise and plain food. Had he taken the exercise at a gymnasium he would have been obliged to pay. He was now being paid for taking equally healthy exercise, and the smallness of Jiis wages forbade indul gence in any but plain food. We do not recommend the entire abandonment of football in favor of plowing, but we do recommend that those who feel the need of physical exercise and cannot afford to pay for it as a sport should adopt it as a means of earning a livelihood. They will then strengthen both body and mind and fatten their pocketbooks at the same time. THE BLUE BIRD. Maeterlinck's "Blue Bird" is sur prisingly interesting on the stage. All our common presuppositions are sgainst it- As a rule we do not like plays or novels based on abstract prin ciples, especially if the abstract prin ciple is the main part of the plot, as It is in "The Blue Bird." The author ets out to instruct us -that the active pursuit of happiness ends in failure and every scene in the play is contrived to illustrate his thesis. Worse still, the doctrine is as trite as the moral law. With an obvious truism for its theme the play has only the most com- monplace machinery to carry on the action, a little witchcraft, two children dreaming, a troop of "elements" and "mental qualities" not too vigorously alive. In some of Maeterlinck's plays the spectator may please his vanity by unraveling a complicated symbolism, but that refuge is not available in "The Blue Bird," for its meaning is everywhere as plain as the nose on your face. Still it -is interesting, far more so on the stage than in the book. It is more than, interesting. It is fas cinating. Part of its charm no doubt comes from our pleased surprise to see little children do so much and do it so well. Tyltyl has a part as long as Hamlet. He goes through it with unimpaired energy, bright and ppontaneous to the end. The other children have less to do, but they are perfectly drilled, and it all goes off as easily as life itself. Grown people are always ready to do more than Justice when children bid for their applause, hut in this case criticism might have 'been defied. What amazing things education can accom plish when it is gone about with a lit tle common sense. Then there is the exquisite scenery. It wins more ap plause than anything else in the play. Father Time sailing in with his engag ingly gilded scythe is a figure to love. He grows more charming up to the in stant of his mystic fading in the shad, ows. Night, the sable Queen, in her enchanted palace, makes another alto gether alluring picture. The beguile ments with which she tries to keep Tyltyl away from the Blue Bird's cave chime well with her black robe and raven hair where the illusory stars hint murkily of ignorance and the de struction it trails in its wake. Poor Night, Queen of the besotted soul, is resolved to keep what miserable bits of her old secrets conquering man has left her, but Tyltyl is undaunted and we foresee clearly enough that her reign will not last long even if he does not carry off the Bluebird. In fact Tyltyl might peep into every cavern she guards and still not catch the elu. sive fowl. The mists rising by the graveyard are more real than nature herself. She seldom achieves such colors, such por tentous vagueness. And who ever has such afeeling of infinity from natural scenery as opened up when Father Time is about to appear and choose a new set of immigrants to the earth from the world of the unborn? Thus we might go on and account for one charm after another in the play by ex ternals, but we should mislead the reader if we did. It is the thought of the play that holds the spectator, thought as old as life, but at the same time piercingly true. As common, place as bread and fire and water, it continually touches strings In the soul that vibrate with eternal longing. Tyltyl and his timorous sister do not catch the Bluebird after all their seek ing, but what sources of happiness they explore as they proceed! There is the land of memory where the blessed dead dwell.. As long as the children stay the denizens are full of activity. Sweet emotions enliven them. They are free from the worries of life. But when Tyltyl and his sister go to the phantom heads droop upon the table, the semblance of life departs. Mem ory makes her own realm, and as long as we live in it, what more could be asked of heaven? But the children must go about their "serious business." The spell of pure joy Is broken. The Bluebird must be sought at the cost of a whole luminous' world. To reach the goal they must stop for nothing that lies by the wayside. Perhaps Maeterlinck's ' symbolism does grow a little difficult in the grave yard. The ghosts are to come out at midnight at Tyltyl's summons. He speaks his command boldly, but there is no response.. The heavy stones lie unshaken. The earth sleeps on as if no souls were prisoned down below. Tyltyl reflects upon the disappointment and it does not take him long to draw his -conclusion. "There are no dead." That is why they do not rise at his summons, as the fairy promised. He is a true scientist- He has just come from seeing the dead, the happy dead, in their own enchanted world of memory. When they came of their own will he forsook them. Now that they do not come of his will he rea sons that they "are not." He gets rid of the phenomenon which does not obey him by denying it. In depicting the world of the unborn, Maeterlinck pleases as much by his satire as he does by tender suggestion In the.land of memory. Here below mortals toil and strive to write poems, make plays, devise Inventions, reform their govern ments. Up there it is all fixed for thousands of ages ahead, fixed for eternity. Nothing can happen as it has not been planned. Everyone is born bringing his poem with him, his invention has been made already, his stupendous reform has been completed and discounted, and all the best of us can do is to work out in pantomime the shadowy reflection of the unalter able, Maeterlinck and Bergson would clash over the kingdom of the future. To the French philosopher the drama tists' babies waiting for Time to sum mon them with their destinies wrapped up in -bundles would be the worst of humbugs. Life does not take its goods in neat parcels ready for deliv ery. It creates them as It goes along Thus the sages draw us different ways. The play ends with the homely lesson that the Bluebird has been all the time hanging comfortably in a cage in Tyl tyl's own father's kitchen. All those he had caught in the cave lost their color in the light of day New Year revels, for example. This one could bear the light, but as soon as he gave it to a little girl who sadly needed a bluebird it flew away. "The Kingdom of heaven is within you." It cometh not with striving and it cannot be given away. It must be earned. Accidents occur now and then which appear to be altogether unfore seen and unavoidable, and this would seem to be the case in the unhappy ex perience of Frank Riggs, who, ran down a blind man. The blind man often walks easily and swiftly, so that he is not readily to be distinguished from an individual of normal eyesight. As he cannot see vehicles and must depend largely on sound, the blind man throws the responsibility of his safety on others. Which being the case he should indicate his infirmity in some noticeable manner or else secure as sistance in crossing a busy street in tersection. The open-air singing on New Tear's eve made but feeble headway against the hoodlums with their cowbells, but, as a beginning of better things, it was worth its cost in money and effort. Our local music is too stiffly pedantic to be very popular, but that is a trait of youth which may be outgrown. The way to overcome the hoodlum is to assimilate him. Teach him and his best girl some pretty songs and he will renounce his beloved cowbell. Next year there ought to be hundreds of such youths In the choir. Stimulated, perhaps, by the Panama Canal there has been a great revival of work on internal improvements in Ecuador. It takes especially the form of appropriations for the development of river navigation. Ecuador has sev eral Important tributaries of the Ama zon by which a. great commerce might reach the Atlantic if they were suit ably improved. No doubt the opening of the Canal will give a wholesome impulse to the entire continent of South America. The Asquith government shows its contempt for the House of Lords in two ways. One is the creation of so few. peerages on New Tear's day, as though Liberals had no ambition to be "elevated" to the Upper House- The other is the giving of a peerage to a Tory, a hint that peers have so little power as to make of no consequence an addition to the opposition party among them. There are respects in which Lady Isabel de VermandoiB was a super-woman, but they are not such as should cause her descendants to boast of their pedigree. There are many pedigrees regarding which it is discreet to be silent. It would be Impossible to convince the suffrage army that Governor Sul zer is "Just plain William Sulzer." To the travel-worn pedestrians he is the handsomest man in New York. Diven from France, in danger of ex clusion from the United States and not daring to land in Venezuela with out an army, Castro's lot is that of the man without a country. Perhaps Anna Held only divorces Ziegfeld this time that she may once more enjoy the pleasures of being courted and married by him all over again. The output of $25,000,000 the past year at Leadville and Cripple Creek shows something doing in' that sec tion of the bowels of the earth. The old pipe, cast into the dead grass yesterday, can oe found by the scent tomorrow, which period is the average length of reform. An exhibit by Holland involving ex pense of $300,000 will cause some of the larger nations to hunt up 'San Francisco on the map. Invasion of Canada by United States Steel will be decried -by brainless anti Yankee agitators as a step toward an nexation. Card men will look askance at pur chase by Cyrus K. Curtis of George W. Childs" Public Ledger. A chicken feed mine is the latest discovery among the exhaustless re sources of the Northwest. The new leaves turned over yester day are providentially loose bound. Did" the postman bring you a pump kin or bunch of carrots yesterday? The parcel post was an ideal New Tear's gift to the people. McCarty won! Erin-rgo-bragh: Stars and Starmakers By Lerae CaM Baer. Baker Moore, of the Baker Stock Company, has severed his connec tion with the organization and will leave for New York City next Sun day morning. Immediately on hie arrival he will start rehearsals in one of William Harris' (of the late Henry B. Harris company) productions for early Spring. Coming to the Baker as juvenile man b a royal favorite whose welcome back Is assured. He is Walter B. Gilbert. He will open in "The Virginian." The New York Morning Telefgraph has a tale to tell of Cathrine Coundss, who is back in New York following her special stock: engagement in Salt Lake City. Under a new picture of the smiling Miss Countiss is the headline "A Daring Holdup," then follows this: There was a holdup over - at the Criterion Theater last night. Robert Hilliard and his company, appearing in "The Argyle Case,' were the victims. Just after the curtain had fallen on the final act a young woman, armed with a hatpin, appeared on the stage, disguised in a heavy sealskin, coat, and ordered the players to give up their cash. "There was no way out of it, so they all complied. The daring highway woman collected a neat sum vxnd then revealed her identity. She was a cer tain Miss Cathrine Countiss, and she was committing the "crime' for the benefit of the stage children's Christ mas tree fund. The tree celebration will be held at the Criterion Sunday night. When the stage folk learned why they had been robbed they were glad the high way woman called. But, before the mystery was explained "Well, there was much indignation." A little New Year's message from Miss Countiss' husband, E. D. Price, sends greetings to Portland friends and tells that on Christmas day he and Miss Countiss were guests at tea with Mrs. H. C. Wortman and her daughter. Miss Helen Wortman, at the Marie Antoinette Hotel, fci New York. Miss Wortman is spending her vacation from the Baldwin school at Bryn Mawr. Robert Hilliard, in "The Argyle Case," of which Mr. Price is business manager, has made a tremendous suc cess ii his New York engagement and is booked for a lengthy run at the Cri terion Theater. m Charlie Thall, a San Francisco pro duct, and son of a famous father, Mark Thall, who was associated with the Belascos In early theatricals in Call fornia, is in Portland, touting a new musical comedy company, "A Modern Eve," coming direct from a successful Eastern run. Mr. Thall was for several years a member of the San Francisco Alcazar stock and 12 years ago went to New York ahead of Florence Roberts' com pany in repertoire. Since that time he has been identified with the business end of the theatrical performance, "A Mod ern Eve," of Berlin extraction, is un der management of Martin Beck and Mort E. Singer. In the personnel of its company is Henrietta Tedro In the title role. She was last seen here in "The Girl Question," in which she car ried off most of the honors. Miss Tedro and Georgie Drew Mendrum are re garded by producers as twin sisters in the art of comedy characterization. m m Mabel Berra, prima donna of "The Eternal Waltz," which headlines the Orpheum attractions at the Baker The ater, Is not a stranger in Portland. The chanteuse was on the Orpheum circuit nearly five years ago appearing here in an act in which she changed from one elaborate costume to another for every song in her vaudeville repertoire. Her own piano accompanist went from place to place with her on the circuit. Later Mise Berra appeared in Portland as the prima donna of "Little Nemo.' Then she went to Germany where she sang in English on the stage for a year. ' Another member of the "Eternal Waltz" company who has a Portland record is Edward Prince, stage carpen ter for the production. Prince visited this city for the first time 28 years ago with the Sea King Opera Company for which he was property man. Prince also was in Portland 14 years ago with the "Prisoner of Zen da" Company. In 28 years of theatrical service Prince has warked under only four managers. These were Daniel Frohman, with whom be was associated for 11 years; Frank Sanger, under whom he served for four years; the New York Hippo drome, where be was employed for several years and Joseph Hart, who has direction of the "Eternal Waltz." e David Warfield will be at the Heilig Theater in January, and will appear in David Belasco's latest dramatic tri umph, "The Return of Peter Grimm." Ethel Davis, a former Lyrlclan who was stricken with a serious illness In Fresno last week. Just after her first appearance there, is resting well in a Fresno hospital, .but it is not expected that she will be able to appear again for a month or more. Miss Davis is in private life Mrs. Will Armstrong. . Harry Burkhardt. star of "Circum atantlal Evidence." at the Empress, is an old friend of Harvey O'Bryan, of this city and was a- guest of Mr. and Mrs. O'Bryan at a New Year's dinner party at the Multnomah Hotel. Burk hardt and Mr. O'Bryan have been inti mate friends for the past 12 years. The Empress star appeared in Portland for the first time several years ago with Otis Skinner, under whom he played a prominent part. Later he made a tour of the Orpheum circuit with Elita Proc tor Otis in "Mrs. Bunner's Bun." He also appeared in Portland with Neil Burgess. C. E. S. Wood was a guest of Manager pierong, of the Empress, Tues day night to see Burkhardt's portrayal of the obdurate juror. Colonel Wood attending as a representative of anti hanging forces In Portland. Chief of Police Slover and five friends also at tended. Over at the Heilig last night all the little children who do so much toward making "The Blue Bird" such a wonder ful production, were given a big party on the stage immediately following the night performance. Arthur Weld, di rector, and Cyril Chadwick, the English comedian, with "The Eternal Waltz" at the Orpheum, were hosts at the party, and loaded the little ones with candles, fruits and toys. The big game of the evening was musical chairs, in which the English children fairly revel. A similar party was given for them last Christmas night In Seattle, at which the hostess was Winifred Harris, the lovely and statuesque English woman who plays Light in "The Blue Bird." BOSTONIAX'S STORY IS SCOUTED Harsry Cooaty Writer Minimises Edi tor's Hard Experience. BURNS. Or Dec. 27. (To the Edi tor.) I notice with regret and consid erable chagrin the delight with which The Oregonian copies the slanders of one A. E. Winship, editor of an educa tional journal in Boston, directed par ticularly at Harney County, your paper also taking- an editorial stand sub stantiating Winship's assertions, while, as a matter of fact, there is not a word of unvarnished truth in any of tha statements made by Winship. When he says there is no level road or level country between Lakeview and Burns by way of Wagontire, he mates an absolute untruth. 1 have been over 55 miles of the road from here to Wag ontire myself and made the drive last August with an ordinary light team between 8 o'clock in the morning and 5:30 in the afternoon, stopping more than en hour for lunch on the way, having a heavy buggy and four good sized passengers. On. that 65 miles there are no hills to cause a good auto mobile to change from the high gear and I could see several miles of the road farther on of a similarly level character. Winship tells of the dust he met with,, while the truth is there was very little dust anywhere at the time he came, early in October. I made a trip from Prairie City by auto at about the same time and there was no dust through Bear Valley, Silvies Valley or Harney Valley, good places for dust any time. The worst thing Winship has said. because there is personal Injustice and spleen in it, is that with reference to the place where he stopped for refresh ments at Wagontire. Winship and his crowd would have been well treated and well fed there had it not been for his boorish impudence and uncalled for demands, it will be seen by his own .admission that he arrived there at 2:30 P. M an hour when the-midday meal is over, the work done, the fires out and nothing ready for trav elers at a house which has no expecta tion or desire for keeping any. Winship entered with the air of a quarrelsome puccaroo going into a Chinese restau rant and demanding dinner. The lady, who is a woman of culture and refine ment and a member of one of the old, respectable Willamette Valley families, told him she could not serve them din ner, but she would make a cup of cof fee for them and then told them of a place some miles ahead which made a business of serving travelers, but he became overbearing;, impudent and die tatorial to such an extent that she left the room and refused to wait on them at all. Finally her husband, whose im pulse was to kick the fellow into the yard, made them some coffee and served oth-er eatables and let them go. There is not a more generous family in Eastern Oregon than the one re ferred to and the hospitality of the people of this section is proverbial. Nobody ever appealed in vain for re freshments at this house and it is not a question of money with the owners. either, for they could buy and sell the Bostonian and his party with ease. Winship and his crowd left Lakeview in the morning. They were accompan ied by State Superintendent Alderman on his motorcycle and that gentleman met with an accident which delayed the party over an hour. They also stopped at Wagontire for a time, yet they arrived in Burns, a distance of 175 miles, in the early evening. Does that look as though he were telling the truth about the character of the coun try? If Portland and the country ad jacent to it were treated by a traveler in the same way relatively and with the same injustice that Winship has written of this section, the Portland papers would be heard from In lively style, and yet Harney County is part of Oregon, part of the Portland papers field, a part, too, that ought to be re membered kindly by every member of The Oregonian staff who has come within its confines, FRANK DAVEY. A great many words are used in the foregoing letter over a very trivial matter. Mr. Winship's article was de scriptive of a lengthy trip to which he gave almost unlimited praise. He spoke highly of Burns and the new school building there. That he encountered some bad going between Lakeview and Burns, a distance equivalent to that between Portland and Seattle, is un doubtedly true. The portion of his ar ticle to which Mr. Davey objects was quoted by The Oregonian and com mented on solely and clearly for the purpose of pointing out that Mr. Win ship had not seen all of Harney Coun ty, all its roads or encountered the best of its hospitality. There are some poor roads and probably some poor agricultural land in every county in Oregon. It is not the duty of any newspaper or citizen - to condemn the visitor who mentions them. Nor are the Portland newspapers in the habit of doing it. Activity In Hljrfcwny Improvement. ' Springfield (Mass.) Republican. In 1912 over $150,000,000 were spent to improve highways in the United States. THE BREWERY BENCH. From the Blue Mountain Eagle. He sat on the bench at noontime. And all that afternoon. He scattered pearls of wisdom Down by the Brewery saloon. He told of things that never were, Of events that happened too soon. As he whittled away on the old pine bench. And talked that afternoon. He told of what fools others had been. How they mined and drew no pay; How old miner Dan once held a full hand, When the dealer drew the fourth tray. He told of the time when men never lied. And the church was leagues away; When a quart of dust was regarded as rust. And the getting of gold was play. He spoke of the time there was no law. There was nothing but Justice known And a cinch was a fact nailed down with a tack, And beer was more than foam. He knew the way they found John Day, And the date of every lie. He knew it all from Spring to Fall, From soup clear through to pie. He was here when there was no Can yon Creek, -And bunch grass grew on treats; When an egg was a common thing in town. And the street was paved with cheese. The old man sits on the brewery bench And he never bats an eye; For he loves to talk, and talk, and talk. And lie, and lie. and lie. The bench Is old and whittled and cut. And the men are wrinkled and gray; It has been their home, the talkers' throne. For many and many a day. When the census is taken for angel men. And they respond to the final call. We hope St. Peter will have a bench, That's big enough for 'em all. , PORTLAND'S OPPORTUNITY GREAT City by Proper Steps) Can Be Made See- end Greatest Port. DAYTON, Or, Dec 31. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian December 23 was published a letter from Mr. C. C Chapman, secretary of the Oregon De- velopment League, the subject of which was "Oregon to Profit by Panama." Mr. Chapman's communication was pertinent and to the point, especially with reference to the. apathy of Port land people in this direction, giving me also the opening I sought to present my views in the premises to the public A great deal of matter has been fur- nished the public by the daily press wltn reterence to the canal; the com merce It will create for us, the desir able and much required immigration it will bring to us, the numerous compan ies that are being formed to exploit this great tride and the ships that are beinft built in furtherance thereof; my reply and my emphatic statement to all of this, and I say It advisedly and with the utmost deliberation and without the slightest fear of contradiction from any authoritative source, that there is not one single vessel throughout the breadth and length of the United States designed for coastwise trade via the Panama Canal on the stocks today, and bear in mind I am making this deliberate statement in face of the announcement within the last 30 days of vessels that are named and in course of construction and orders placed for their duplication, and I reiterate they are not intended for our coast to coast trade and I know whereof I speak. There is a future for Portland in this evolution, the greatest ever confront ing any city in the world, if we will but take advantage of the opportunity. This city can be made-the distributing point, going as well as coming, of the products and requirements of the whole of that great territory to the east of us, the Inland Empire, as well as the entrepot of the products of that other great empire to the north of us, Alaska. I am neither an enthusiast nor an optimist when I say that Portland can be made the second in importance sea port of the United States if she but grasps this opportunity. I will state that I have made a study of commerce and have created some for the Pacific Northwest in the past 20 years. I have also specifically made a study of the possibilities and benefits that can accrue to this '.ity by an intel ligent action of its merchants and peo ple. I am not attempting to speak in enigmas, but having Interviewed sev eral prominent merchants on the sub ject, and having promulgated In part my ideas and plans and being invari ably met with such a reply as "Well, someone may come along and see mat ters In the same light and do this for us," I am rather loth to go further and to use a vulgarism, make a monkey of myself talking to empty benches. But if a respectale number of Port land's merchants and shippers will give me one hour of their time at any time or any hour of the day they will suggest, I will explain my meaning to their satisfaction and, I hope, to their conviction. RICHARD CHILCOTT. MAN'S RIGHT OP SELF-DEFENSE. It Is Simply Applied to Canxe of Society in Capital Punishment. PORTLAND. Jan. 1. (To the Editor.) Why should the law of capital pun ishment be eliminated from our stat utes? In those ca'ses where a criminal does not deserve the extreme penalty have we not two less severe sentences which may be imposed? On the strength that at such a time, when the circum stances justify the extreme penalty, why should we abolish the law because of the infrequency of its application? It is true that at some Instances of self-preservation one may be justified in taking advantage of the unwritten law when the punishment should be correspondingly less severe; but ill. a . case of premeditated, cold-blooded mur der, should the same punishment apply to each? Would It be fair to both? It is said that life imprisonment is much more a preventive of murder than Is the execution, and that would-be murderers dread the thought of a life sentence much more than they do the death penalty. Yet all under death sentence use their last and utmost ef forts to secure a change of sentence at the hands of the Governor. Statistics prove that of the number of life-term-? ers sentenced the average term of each is about ten years, .because, as time goes on, the horrible circumstances of their crime are forgotten and the later elected Governor turns them loose upon an unsuspecting public, a public per haps soon to furnish a new victim to the murderous attack of the habitual criminal. The opponents of capital punishment argue that the punishment should be reformatory. In the case of first-degree murders the punishment should be neither reformatory nor vindictive, but preventive. The law of self-preservation here applies, and society is absolutely warranted in the use of the only certain preventive of crime known after countless ages of humanity. We need only to cite the criminal record of one of the men lately executed. The crime fo? which he paid the just pen alty was the fourth of a series of crimes against the public. His prison terms previous to the last evidently did not swerve him from his criminal life, else why should the second offense have followed the first? One thing we now are certain of, we need no longer fear his further raids among us. The idea is, then, not to abolish capital punishment, but to make it cer tain to follow cases of first-degree. How many of the delegation that re cently went to Salem to oppose the death penalty would hesitate in using means of self-defense, even to the ex tent of taking life, if their own life were in danger? We venture to say were such a case a stern reality, there would be no hesitation as to the course pursued. As before mentioned, we maintain that the state has the same right of self-protection infinitely more so, as the lives of many are concerned as against the life of one. OSCAR A. EFFENBERGER. 666 Lovejoy street. Let Women Solve Social Problem. CORVALLIS, Or.. Dec. 30. (To the Editor.) I note what you say today in The Oregonian on the subject of the social evil. The last section of your suggestions was the best, but you did not finish it up. Better morals are not preserved to any great extent un less you have an honest enforcement of the law. The one must go with the other, or we can never hope to have good results. I will make the suggestion that the City of Portland confer police powers on the organization known as the vv. C. T. U., and ask it to take charge of the social evil problem. It will solve it satisfactorily and charitably. Make this experiment ana I am cer tain that it will succeed beyond our fondest hopes. This Is a woman's problem, and it will never be solved until the women solve it- They will solve it and solve it right if the right kind of women are given the power. JAMES E. JOHNSON. Arbitration and Self Interest. VANCOUVER, Wash, Dec 30. (To the Editor.) The letter In The Ore gonian today concerning Mr. Jones and his peaches is good. Continuing it fur ther: Suppose Mr. Jones had been per suaded to arbitrate the matter before a "strictly impartial" court composed of himself and the three neighbors In question, how many peaches would Jones and his relatives have gotten! W. R. S.