n THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 15, 1913. 8 PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oreson. Postofflcs as Eecond-cl&ss matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (BY MAIL.) Daily. Sunday included, one year $5.00 Daily. Sunday Included, six month".... s-25 Dally, Sunday Included, three month... 2-25 Dally. Sunday Included, one month..... -73 Dally, without Sunday, one year " Daily, without Sunday, tlx month" 8.25 Dally, without Sunday three month.... LT5 Dally, without Sunday, one month...... Weekly, one year .- J0 Sunday, one year ............ ..i..--"-- Sunday and Weekly, one year 60 (BY CARRIER.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year S.OO Dally, Sunday included, one month.... .75 How to Benilt Send Postofflcs money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank, sumps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoBlco address In full. Including county and state. Postase Kates 10 to 14 pases. 1 cent: 16 to 28 pages. 2 cents; 80 to 0 pages, S cents; 0 to 80 paces, 4 cents. Foreign postage, double rate. Eastern Business Offices Verreo sr Conk Hn New Xork, Brunswick bulldlnr- Chi cago. Btcger building. Kan 1'ranclseo Office R. J. Bldwell Co.. 742 Market street. European Office No. 8. Regent stret, S. W.. London. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JAN. IS, 1913. WHY TIGS ALARM T Recent speeches of President-elect Wilson have spread alarm among cer tain Eastern newspapers- that he cherishes dire designs of radical as sault on the business Interests of the country. It Is difficult to conceive what cause exists for this alarm. Wilson's latest speeches, all of the same general tenor, have been only what might be expected of a man nominated distinctly as a progressive on the Democratic platform. His speeches are general in their terms; they do not propound any specific - measures. , At Staunton Wilson said that men who legislate for sectional advantage would have to be mastered; that busi , ness men must give full value for p value received and must not expect to get something for nothing; that he objected to monopoly; that the Gov ; ernment must safeguard ' the rights of men who cannot struggle to the top; ' and that he would fight for these prln l ciples. At Chicago he condemned ex- - elusion from bank credit those against I whom the Inner circle discriminates; " he said that all should have equal ac- cess to the resources of the country , and to the Justice of the country; that ' honest men were at a disadvantage in business; that business must be free ,". from every feature of monopoly and must be based on genuine capital. At Trenton he Baid he would pick only ' progressives to aid him; that he wel comed a change of attitude among business men, a yielding "to that great ' Impulse that now moves the whole people of the United States," but that " he would fight those who resisted this impulse. What is there In this to alarm any ; honest man who means to deal Justly -and . to obey the law? In fighting . monopoly, restoring competition, com pelling Just dealing, he will only con tinue to do what Taft has been doing ' and would still have done, had Taft been re-elected. In enforcing equality of opportunity, equal Justice for rich ' and poor, he will but carry out the principles to which all parties are pledged. His attitude Is conciliatory; he is not spoiling for a fight, for he welcomes a disposition of some who have, been disregarding the law to change their conduct. But he is ready to use the Whip against recalcitrants, as Taft has used It. None need tremble on reading Wil son's words except those who should be made to tremble. Would they have their fears quieted, let them go to him as penitents, forsake the ways of monopoly, and give value for value. The cry of alarm which goes up from certain quarters suggests a guilty con science, a shrinking culprit whom only the whip of Justice can turn from his evil ways. To such Wilson promises no mercy and the country will applaud him. GOV. WEST TO THE LEGISLATURE. In a message to the Legislature a Governor cannot be expected to give his Ideas in exhaustive detail on all the many subjects it Is his duty to dis cuss. It would have been pleasing, however, had Governor West enlarged a little on some of the most important topics embraced in his biennial advice to the lawmakng body. The good roads problem Is dealt with charily, for example. Tet In view of the Governor's veto of a construc tive road programme two years ago, his Ideas on the subject would doubt less have been Interesting, as the pres ent Legislature will desire that any plan It adopts shall finally become ef fective. Commissions, committees, social workers and' conventions have been . at work on a number of important subjects of legislation such as work men's compensation. Judicial revision. Insurance code revision, irrigation, minimum wage, widows' pension, but the Legislature Is In the dark as to whether the Governor has any opin ions at variance with the Important details embraced in the complex meas ures and recommendations already prepared and given publicity. As to care of the unfortunate and criminal classes he has a good deal to say. A charitable and progressive spirit in this respect is certainly to be commended, but the general public welfare has at least an equal claim upon the attention of the lawmakers. It is learned from the message that the time has at last arrived for the friends of the Oregon system to cor rect its defects. It has been a long wait for the accepted day and the Legislature will no doubt be compli mented by the Implication that it may be trusted in this important work. Only one small detail is named, how ever, as needing change. The signa tures on Initiative and referendum pe titions should be confined to those of registered voters. The suggestion Is good as far as It goes, but the change would cure only part of the evil of paid petition hawking: it would not prevent the suppression of petitions by use of money; it would not avoid defeat of the majority will by submission of a multiplicity of measures on the same subject; It would not forestall the joker, nor Initiative log-rolling, nor resubmission of measures known not to be desired by the people, nor the necessity of raising large defense funds against attack upon the state's financial credit by foreign experi menters. We trust that he who attempts to get at the basis of direct legislative abuses without Impairing the princi ple Involved will not by that act alone lose his Identity as a friend of the system. The stand-pat representatives of a minority that purposes to fasten its own ideas upon the majority "will not hesitate to make such the result of effort honestly to Improve the direct legislative method. But we shall not hastily put the Governor in alignment with these busy experimenters. Per haps, In recommending only one scant Improvement, he is merely feeling his way into what some have been led, by the protests of a noisy few, to believe is dangerous territory. LAND AND WATER GRABBERS. The Indians form only a fraction of the Interior Department's care. The man who is to fill this post will have charge of a do main larger and more valuable than many European kingdoms. It all belongs to the people of the United States, and It Is en tirely surrounded by persons and corpora tions who are steadily bent on stealing some of It. Comer's Weekly. Here, bluntly and coarsely stated, Is the ultra-conservationist's view of the settler, the homesteader, the squatter and the power and colonization con cerns that have developed the great West. They have stolen, or are steal ing, or desire to steal, something from the United States Government. They are not homebuilders, but felons; not farmers, but outlaws; not irrigation ists, but thieves; not community de velopers, but organized land and water-power grabbers. The problem of the West is to get the lands settled and cultivated, the water-powers appropriated and devel oped, and the forests logged and made Into lumber. Yet the Government is directed by the conservationists of the East to withhold Its lands, streams and forests from use on the extraordinary ground that the way to make a nation great is to balk and to stigmatize as criminals the men who by their labor and their money would reclaim the wastes, populate the wilds and utilize the water powers. The pioneers "steadily bent on steal ing" some of the public domain made up the great Western movement that left the Atlantic seaboard and built their pioneer cabins on the public do main of the great Middle West and of the Pacific Coast. But for them the United States would today be in great est part a tremendous wilderness or a barren plain. FORCE DISGUISED AS LAW. The Boise Statesman complains that the news accounts sent from that city as to the State Supreme Court's de cision against the recalcitrant editors misrepresented the facts, insofar as it was stated that the insolent Journalists were sent to Jail for printing the Roosevelt telegram and "criticising" the judges. The Statesman declares that "it was not criticism that formed the basis of the court's action, but ma ligning the court, and broad insinua tions that its decrees were dictated by predatory corporate and mendacious political interests." We apprehend that the public un derstands the Idaho case pretty well, though yellow correspondents may have sought to drag in the revered name of Colonel Roosevelt and make it appear that he is the real object of the court's punitive wrath. The facts are, broadly, that the court rendered a decision and was bit terly assailed by a hostile newspaper. The court then undertook upon its own Initiative to punish its critics by making constructive contempt out of plain libel. The real position of the court is that the editors, after the ac tual decision, defamed the judges; it Is not that they committed ( contempt by any endeavor to influence the court's action, or interfered with its processes, or impeached its decorum while in session, or in any other than a purely technical way made any com ment whatever on a case still pending. They libeled and scandalized the court tor what it had done, not for what it was doing or purposed to do. If the action of the Idaho court, in citing these editors for contempt, prosecuting them, passing as jurors on the facts, sentencing them as judges to Jail, was not an arbitrary exhibition of force under the thin disguise of law, what was it? INCREASING THE RACE. Payment of a birth bounty under the British national insurance law and the efforts of the French government to find some means of stopping the decrease in the birth rate mark a re action from the gloomy theory of Mal thus, which had much vogue a cen tury ago. Malthus' theory was that the population of the earth tended to Increase faster than the food supply and would soon overtake substence, but for the check of vice and starva tion, unless the human race practiced self-restraint. He therefore believed that there was no hope of ameliora tion in the condition of the poor. Against this gospel of pessimism later generations have set the gospel of optimism, which holds that the productive capacity of the earth can be increased to keep pace with the increase in population, unchecked by war, famine, pestilence, vice or even moral restraint. It holds that the growing of two blades of grass where one grew before justifies the birth of two babies where one was born be fore. It holds that, as necessity is the mother of invention, need of food will prompt man to find new articles of food and new ways of Increasing the products of the soil. It holds that so far as we can forecast the future, the food-producing capacity of the earth can be increased indefinitely and in a degree sufficient not only to maintain, but to improve on our present stand ard of living. A glance back at the last century justifies this belief. The standard of comfort of the poor is now much higher than in the decade immediate ly following the battle of Waterloo, though the population of the British Isles has , multiplied threefold. A much larger population of the people was on the verge of starvation then than now. Steam and electricity have disproved the doctrine of Malthus. New discoveries, such as wireless tel egraphy and aeroplanes, have followed so quickly that we may reasonably expect others to follow, all encourag ing the hope that invention will con tinue to multiply the fruits of the earth in ample measure to feed all of earth's growing family. GOOD ADVICE AND BAD. Hanging as a penalty for misleading the President, as recommended by Representative Sims, would be pretty severe, but would it bring about the desired result? If a man could only give information or advice to the president at the risk of his neck, most of those who had no personal end to serve and whose advice was, therefore, safest to follow would be discouraged from seeking the President's ear. On the other hand, the men with schemes, with evil motives or of violent preju dices would be most likely to take the risk, and the plight of the President would be worse than before. It is up to the President to sift good advice from bad, fact from falsehood or misrepresentation. He is the one man chosen among over 90,000,000 because of his presumed ability to do this. It is inevitable that ho blunder occasionally, but if he blunders fre quently or habitually, it is because he lacks the faculty to distinguish good advice from bad. He must take the consequences in the shape of public censure. i There is no real analogy between the President of the United States and a constitutional King In this respect. Our President is elected because of his presumed ability to do the work, power is placed directly in his hands by the Constitution and he must exer cise It and be personally responsible. A constitutional King succeeds to the throne because he is next in line of succession, not because of his known capacity to govern. Therefore power is exercised in his name by ministers chosen on aceount of their capacity. If our people err in the choice of a President, they are responsible and they suffer the consequences. In a limited monarchy they have no right to choose the King, hence guard them selves against the -possibility of his tyranny or incapacity by depriving him of actual power and reposing that power In their chosen represent atives. The essence of a republic is popular sovereignty, with which is necessarily Included popular responsibility. The people cannot escape the consequences of an unwise choice of rulers, nor of those rulers' unwise choice of advis ers. We cannot enjoy the ballot with out paying the penalty for its unwise exercise. Our present degree of ef ficiency in its exercise is the fruit of a thousand years' experience and. we have many times paid dearly for that experience. SURAL SUPERVISORS. It appears that, the law providing for supervision of rural schools stands in some danger of repeal at this session of the Legislature. If that should be done, it would be unfortunate for the state. It would be particularly unfor tunate for the rural population, whose educational interests have always been neglected. The country schools need competent supervision at least as vi tally as the city schools, and this act Is about the first attempt on record to provide it for them in a sensible and efficient way. It has been on trial for two years only, not long enough to demonstrate its merits fully or bring out its defects, if it has any. But in those two years the supervisors ap pointed under the law have done won ders for the rural schools. If their work is not interfered with by the hasty repeal of the act, they will do a great deal more. We are in a position to mention defi nitely some of the good points of the supervisors' activity. For instance, they have saved money for the country districts by giving advice about the purchase of books and apparatus. Persons who are at all familiar with rural schools know how prone the di rectors are to' be misled by shrewd salesmen, who persuade them to buy all sorts of things which the schools cannot use. Expensive books, globes and scientific apparatus are sometimes foisted upon the district, while simple appliances which it sorely needs are not provided. The rural supervisors have done a great deal to better this state of affairs. Under their quiet management the districts are spending their funds for the supplies which are of daily use in the school work. But that Is not all. The supervisors are helping effectually to introduce those Industrial branches which the rural schools so badly need. The old-time cut-and-dried substitute for genuine education will never give way in the country schools unless there Is some body at hand to speak constantly for better things. This the County Super intendent has not time to do. He has too much other work. It must be done by the supervisor or not at all. Again, the supervisors have been busy encouraging the wider use of the school property in the country dis tricts for social and civic purposes. This work Is so essential that its abandonment would be nothing less than a calamity to the state, and who Is to look after it if the supervisors are thrown out of office? In proportion to the good they do the supervisors are not expensive of ficials. Under the law as it stands rural supervision costs 76 cents per child in Marion County, while super vision in Salem costs $2.50 per child. Certainly the country pupil is as well worth caring for as the city pupil, par ticularly when it can be done for less than a third of the expense. NEW AUTOMOBILES. "When it is January," said Henry Ward Beecher in one of his sermons, "April is not far off." In another month Spring will be here, or if not quite here it will be so near that everybody will be getting ready for it. The automobile men are getting ready now. As the time for sunny skies and dry roads approaches they are filling the magazines and newspapers with advertisements far more brilliant than the blooms of May. Some of the great weeklies have put out automobile num bers where the reader may luxuriate at his ease amid the varied beauties of the latest models and picture to himself the joys of owning a $10,000 car and driv ing it far and wide throughout the world. Every true American is resolved in his heart to own a car sooner or later. If he has to mortgage his house to get it, well and good. What is a mere house in a world barren of delight? The man who has no car feels as gro tesque in modern America as a guest who goes to an elite dinner In his work-a-day coat. The automobile has become the earmark of the civilized human being. To live without dining is comparatively easy in these days of Fletcherism, but who wants to under take to live without his motor? The actual number in use of these vehicles so modern and so marvelous, is one to every 110 of the population in the United States. In Denver there Is an electric car for every 217 inhab itants, to say nothing of gas motors. No doubt the capital of Colorado is a singularly pleasure-loving city, where wealth more abounds than it does elsewhere, but the figures are signifi cant. Relatively speaking, in those parts of the country where roads are at all decent, motors are as common among the farmers as in town and their popularity Is increasing every day. Not long ago The Oregonian had occasion to mention that several hun dred country churches had been shut up in Kansas within' a year or two. A correspondent explained the phenom enon by telling us that the people had not become irreligious all of a sud den, but that with their new automo biles they had taken up going to town to church. We think they are envi ably judicious. What comparison is there between the service of the city church with its melodious preacher, its trained choir. Its comfortable pews and its artistic Interior and thp starved worship of the country town? It 1b not the rural church alone which will suffer from the popularity of the gaso line vehicle. The country store and every other rural Institution must ex perience the same fate. We should not be surprised to learn that a move ment had started among the farmers to live in the suburbs of the big cities and go to their land every morning in their automobiles. Either they will do this or they will manage somehow to create the best of city conditions Jn the country. The mission of the au tomobile to the farmer and his family is civilization and comfort. The center of automobile manufac ture in the United States is Detroit. It is in that city that the new models are devised years ahead of the calen dar. Those who are wise on the sub ject whisper that the models for 1914 are already far on the road to com pletion in the mysterlons inner sanc tums of the great houses. The buyer who obtains a 1913 model with its powerful and reliable engine, its long body and beautiful lines of construc tion imagines that he has the best and latest that ingenuity can devise. But he is mistaken. Not only are the 1914 models already under construction, with excellencies all undreamed of by the unsuspicious public, but plans are pretty well completed, for the 1915 model. Those who bought their cars last Summer supposed that they were getting excellent bargains and in most cases they were. For the modern au tomobile has passed the stage of ex periments and silly breakdowns and can -be depended upon in most emer gencies. But the models for the com ing season are far ahead of anything that could be bought last Summer at the same price. For one thing, the automatic starting apparatus has been made practicable and is to be obtained on all the, good makes. More power can be bought for the same money than last year and the entire structure of the cars Is more convenient. The general rule that we must pay more and get less for our dollars every year does not apply to automobiles. There is actual competition among the mak ers and they are all doing their best to give the purchaser his money's worth. The conveniences of civilization often come as a pleasant surprise to Americans who have dwelt all their lives subject to the extortions and un reliable service of our monopolies. Mr. Kyle, of Florence, may have been per fectly content to pay three or four prices for the carriage of small par cels from Eugene as long as he knew of no better way, but now that the parcel post serves him more efficient ly for a quarter of the expense, could he be hired to go back to barbarism? His breakfast bacon is a small mat ter, but the convenience of getting it by mail when he wants it symbolizes a changed world. Even if the Archbald impeachment cost $100,000, as some writers esti mate, the country will count the money well spent.' The outcome of the trial will tend to quiet a good deal of criticism aimed at constitutional processes, which are beautiful in the ory, but in practice, the grumblers have said, will not work. Now we know they will work. It is possible to get rid of an unworthy judge with out the recall. A good deal of the trouble with the Constitution arises from the fact that it has not been ap plied except in a half-hearted way. Common sense is making encourag ing headway among the farmers of SUverdale, Wash. They have organ ized to sell eggs directly to consumers in Seattle and have invoked the aid of the Mayor and the Woman's Clubs to carry out their plan. It Is only a question of time when new and more direct machinery for food distribution will replace the cumbrous processes we have been depending on. The SU verdale farmers expect to get more for their eggs than formerly, while at the same time the consumer will pay less. When the Balkan allies renew the attack they may' find themselves con fronted by a well-prepared foe. The courage and spirit of the Turkish troops have never been questioned. Lack of preparedness was responsible for the Turkish reverses. And it is altogether probable that while the Turkish peace ministers were stalling and quibbling the Turkish army was substituting steel artillery projectiles for soap and destructive small arms clips for wooden dummies. Re-election of Senator Borah as sures the presence in an influential position in the Senate of a man who will do most to promote the interests of the West. It also retains in the Senate a man who will lead in vin dicating the position of the Republi can party as the progressive party. Election of road supervisors will fail of results. The road system of a county should be under a competent head, who appoints subordinates to carry on the work as planned. Other wise confusion and poor work result. Sheriff Mass, of Clackamas County, Is entitled to the thanks of Multno mah County for closing the Milwaukie Club. With the roadhouses closed, many Joy rides which end in sorrow will be prevented. - Mr. Taft, in abandoning his world tour in the Interest of peace, possibly concluded that Europe is entirely too much interested in wars and war talk to pay much attention to him. An Oregon City family awakened to find the bed in flames. Many of . us have awakened lately wishing such were the case. ' Prime steers sold at $8.25 in the yards yesterday, keeping up Portland's record as the "best beef market on the Coast. - Pint in OrMit Britain are to re ceive $7.60 each for new babies. That sum, In England, Is considerable or an inducement One million for the mouth of the Columbia is not too much. That is a maw of great capacity. Citrus fruit men say their greatest need is lower freight rates. How about better weather? The two presiding officers at Sa lem are men who make things go. The Washington electors are an nn gallant lot. It is a reasonably safe bet that Jack Johnson will finish In the poorhouse. Promotion of Police Captain Moore is recognition of merit. BACHELOR SEEKS WIFE IN VAIN Be Had One Chain hut Girt Did at Appeal to Him. SPRINGFIELD, Or.. Jan. 11. (To the Editor.) I have read with a great deal of Interest the various letters of the bachelors and old maids published in The Oregonian and believe a great good could be accomplished if some means could be devised by which these un mated ones could be mated. I sug gest that the city of Portland or the state create an office of public chap erone to be filled by some one of high character and respectability to whom one could go with explicit confidence that the question of his or her heart's desire would receive due and most careful consideration and be sacred from the world. This is one of the most delicate and yet one of the most Im portant questions of human nature, to bring together two lives In one union that will endure throughout their nat ural lives. Under the present system of education it is becoming more and more difficult. I have so far been unable to find a mate. There are girls or women in my community and of my acquaint ance who are worthy of the best of men, but they do not appeal to me. One I have all reasons to believe could bestow all the affection I could ask of a wife, but I rather evaded her, not that she was unworthy of me for she did me more honor than I deserved, but I could not bestow all the devotion and affection upon her which I wish to bestow upon a wife. Therefore I could not bring myself to the point of accepting a life of hypocrisy to fool a trusting heart to live and toil for what she deserves but did not have. Better far that I leave her free to find some one who could give her his whole soul's devotion which every loyal, faithful and helping wife deserves. I could by decision and force of will live the life of a true and affectionate husband until perhaps by force of habit I could finally give her my unqualified love. But this has not been my idea of pro cedure in married life. Perhaps I am mistaken. For the rapidity with which some marriages are set up and the rapidity with which they are dissolved convinces me that many do not hold my view. Marriage for social or com mercial reasons has never appealed to me, yet they are much more easily brought about and I cannot dispute the fact that many of them prove sue cessful. After all perhaps they follow more closely the natural law than in those where true love and affinity are the chief conditions upon which the marriage relations are established. Among the heathen, who only follow the natural laws, the most homely as well as the most beautiful have equal chance for a mete. There are no dis criminations because of their varying charms. I have often wondered if one could really love and adore one whom he or she knew was extremely homely. I have met people whom I thought could give me light on that subject but felt a delicacy in approaching it. As to my wife, she must look good to me. I do not believe I could ever love. a woman who was to me really distasteful. This, however, is largely a personal taste. What would be beau tiful to me might be quite ordinary to someone else. But the woman whom I could admire most, must have a beau tiful face,, not as the stage classes beauty. A doll is pretty but not beau tiful in that broader and deeper sense that reaches the soul. A woman never becomes really and truly beautiful until a beautiful character has matured suf ficiently to leave its record upon her face, of loVo, charity and hope of calm content because she Is at peace with herself, her nerves, with Qod and man. I would love a woman in the first place because she is feminine and not masculine feminine in her noble char acteristics of love, hope, confidence and patience, and love for the gentle arts and duties put upon her by nature. I could go on Indefinitely upon this most absorbing theme of beautiful woman but I am afraid all the old maids would think I was getting personal. Suffice to say I have seen one woman that to me seemed most beautiful. But such women need never long to wait. And for them men will use the best of bait, and before I had appeared upon the scene a happier man had made her nueen. Then a Lochinvar came swoop ing down and took another girl I had found. Another girl I learned to know instead of me loved another beau. Such is "the experience of a common bachelor, who plods along through life alone still in quest of that beautltul life in which love Is love's reward. EL MER. MB. GEER EXPLAINS HIS ' WORDS What He Meant By Comparing Farm er's Work to That of Male. PORTLAND, Jan. 14. (To the Edi tor.) Until today I had overlooked the communication of Uncle John Minto's In The Oregonian a few days ago, in which he criticised a paragraph in my book, "Fifty Years in Oregon," which he quoted in part, only. What he copied was as follows: "The man whose occupation re- quires all his daylight hours and whose duties call for the constant bending of the back, the crooking of the elbows and the straining of the arms, really leads a life that differs so little out wardly from that of the , work-mule that the difference is hardly worth considering." Of course it was a plain oversight which caused Uncle John to omit the preceding sentence which radically changes the Idea tnat was presented. The following is what was said, found on rjaee 309: "I rather cultivated the tendency (of writing communications to tne news papers) during my farm life. Indeed, I found It the only aiversion irom really hard work, and without some mental rest or recreation to vary the dally grind of farm labor, the life one leads there is not so omerent irom that of the horses one drives every day and for whose physical necessities he provides." Then follows the quotation which Mr. Minto criticises. But to the objec tion he urges I myself made the qual ification that that condition would pre vail excepting for the diversion the farmer receives from some sort of "mental rest or occupation." If this had been included in his quotation there would have been no necessity for bis communication at all. In fact, I was deeply sympathizing with the very hard lot of thousands of farmers in this country In the quota tion alluded to and was not In any way desiring to "discourage the students of our universities and colleges who contemplate farming or cattle raising." Not at all. On the contrary, it is to alleviate as far as possible such condi tions as I was describing, or those similar, that such a very worthy insti tution as our State Agricultural College has been established and is liberally supported. Indeed, its very existence, and others doing a similar work, is a recognition of the hitherto unsatisfac tory condition of our farmers and a tangible protest against its continu ance. And certainly I had nothing at all to say of cattle raising, though Uncle John's statement that I might have been a "cattle king" under other cir cumstances, warrants the expression of the opinion that, with the possible exception of a well-located bishop, there is no man on earth to be more sincerely envied, so vast is the gap between hi condition and that of the average farmer, than a real, live cattle king. T. T. GEER. BENEFITS OF FAIR QUESTIONED. Hood River Man Views Matter Thronfen Blue GoKBlea. HOOD RIVER, Or., Jan. 12. (To the Editor.) As a citizen and property owner of Hood River, would it not be better for me and my community to have $500,000 expended in our town than in the town of Podunc? And as a state would it not be better to spend that sum of money within our borders for something that is lasting; and per manent, than to put it into an exhibi tion building in Sun Francisco, to De soon turned over to a wrecking crew and razed to the ground? Are we so flush with money as that? It this state does construct a building there, what shall we put into it to exhibit? Apples? No. Our apples must b handled by brokers with capital and experience, and who are well estab lished in. business in the East and Eu rope. The consumer of apples has noth ing to say In the matter. Ho takes what the grocer offers him at the low est price commensurate with quality. The same is true with prunes and other fruits and hops which grow in this state. Our fish cannera on the Columbia and elsewhere have nothing to gam by exhibiting their products with a huge mass of other stuff in San Francisco to a string of pleasure-seeking sightseers. The canner's product is tried out on the consumer's dining table all over the world by the consumer mmseir. Tne lumber business of this state ranks first in volume of business, v e all know that they have to find an outlet of their products through well-estab lished and reputable houses, located in favorable places, determined by rail roads and other lumbering sections. And it is up to these retail houses to show ur the good qualities of tnis lum ber to people who are in need of it. and to the actual consumer. This is a wool-producing state. Should our woolraen spend money for a wool exhibit at the San Francisco fair? No. They can put their money to better use. Let them build a woolen mill with their money within the bor ders of this state and manufacture their wool into cloth which we as loyal citizens will buy of them, and again keep our money at home. There is not one single reason or excuse for our Legislature to make an appropriation for the San Francisco Fair. If a small pavilion is desired for Orego.iians to meet in, well and good, that is all we need. Let us invest our money in develop Ing our own state. Our city streets and our country roads need vast sums of money for the proper development of this state. We need it for our irriga tion projects, experiment stations, agri cultural school, insane asylums and other state Institutions. These things need our support, and we can then point to them with pride to our friends and visitors who come to see us. l cio not think much of state-aid for roads, but even that would be far better than investing our money in a building in San Francisco. Suppose that this state appropriated $500,000 for a state road from Portland to the Idaho line, and the states of Idaho and Wyoming continued this road to a Junction with the National Highway from the Atlantic to the Pa cific Coast. Would this not be far more remunerative and enduring than a temporary fair building equally as expensive at San Francisco? Haven't we city parks everywhere that sadly need Improving, which would be an at traction and an inducement for stran gers to locate among us? If our tax payers will vote down a bill carrying an appropriation for our university and other state institutions, what will they not do with a bill carrying an appro priatlon for a building at San Fran Cisco? F. P. FRIDAY. SIMPLE APPAREL FOR STUDENTS Fancy Dreaa Produces Mediocre Mind Saya Former Teacher. PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 14. (To the Editor.) I-n The Sunday Oregonian of January 6 appeared an article advocat ing plain and simple dress for school girls. The article appealed to me as a thoroughly sensible one, and I, for one, a mother and an ex-teacher, wish that all mothers could be influenced to nut into practice .the ideas there ad vanced. The writer spoke of the estnetic and also the moral side of the question. I think she was absolutely right. One kind of dress for swimming, another kind for the gymnasium, still a third kind for the schoolroom; all are convenient and appropriate for the re spective exercises of body and of brain. Ail our school girls should be brought to see that the schoolroom Is the place to exhibit brain work, not to display party clothes. A party dress Is, to my mind, as out of place in the school room as In the gymnasium or the swim ming tank. Most teachers will agree that a display of clothes in the school room usually accompanies mediocre minds. Would that a sensible public sentiment could be fostered among the mothers, and that they all could be brought to see that such a display of clothes In the schoolroom is as mucn out of place as a swimming costume would be, or, let us say, a ball gown on the street. A MOTHER. NATIVE WOODS FOR 1015 FAIR Oregon Building Should Be Permanent SrmMurr. Says ProfeMor FlinK. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene, Jan. 13. (To the Editor.) Oregon Huuuiu uu" u j ....... , . building at the Panama exposition. Let US nave a struciure iiitvi oiiiii nut. witij De iittue in 1 . - tive woods, but shall represent at the same time tne aDimy or our uusu 1........C, anrl maohjiniN. UllliUircia .. Walls, roofs, floors, framing and all parts, botn structural ana uriianieindi can be constructed in units convenient for erection and for transportation by After the fair this building could be taken down and shipped home to serve as a permanent exposition or art, u ence and education or for other appro priate purposes. The general plan of using an expo sition building on another site Is not new. There is now standing In the City of Mexico the magnificent structure which formerly graced the cotton ex position in New Orleans. Let us resolve to have, instead of the too-common sham of lath and plas ter, a real building that shall repre sent our state from the ground up. within its walls, "If you are looking for our cmet csiuun, iuu F. G. FR1NK. A NEW COIN FOR BRITAIN. Suggestion That Elghtpence, or Sixteen Cents Be Minted. London Globe. Since the insurance act came into i , ..i, criitinnal work has been thrown on cashiers in large business establishments owing w me "' of deducting small sums from the weekly wages. Incidentally, it has led to something of a copper famine, and the suggestion , i tviat thA mint should IIU3 UU ......... ' ... issue a new coin, of the value of eight- pence, to be cieariy msuusiuSu ; the shape or design from the existing .- tv. w. . inn fa that many wages now amount to "something and elghtpence. ... . .tffhtnAHnv rtlArA werA is sued it would be easy to distinguish it from the existing nnw tuimBo. simplest method would, of course, be to use nickel, which would enable the eight-penny bit to be large enough to nrevent its being taken for a shilling .. n r. A i -. 1 1 1 H f nrl lior or sixpenny .- .- be distinguished by the presence of a small nole in tne center. i """" has been adopted in the case of the new i In Ka earn. TTitnl In. r-renuii vumaeo cidentally. we should have small change of a mucn cleaner naiurB Liu. v bulky coppers. His Maiden Speech By Dean Collin. He hath pondered long and hath pon dered deep. And hath pondered with zeal and care: He hath vlsloned a scene in the Senate hall. When he shall be standing there And, in awe-struck silence, the Sena tors each Shall list to him in his maiden speech. There's a bill drawn up by a careful hand: Doped out by a level head: Which he .Is to father and to defend Ere the Senate session be sped: And in its defense he hath planned a peach Of a line of talk, for his maiden speech. The pipe draws well, and he hath a dream Of galleries thronged with folk. Who weep when he hits the tremolo stop. Or roar at his well-timed Joke. And nod assent as they hear hint preach With wisdom and weight in his maiden speech. He sees the Senators shedding tears; He hears their applauding snout. When, with three hours of his eloquence He hath put his opponents to rout; And in his dream, doth he hear them screech For mercy after his maiden speech. With shout and cheer to his side they rush. In spite of the gavel's fall. And hailing a Webster in their midst, They tote him about the hall: And eager Journalists, jostling, eacH. Pleads for the manuscript of his speech, L'ENVOL Oh Imp of Perversity, stay your hand When the day he hath dreamed shall . . fall; In mercy fasten the doors and keep His colleagues still in the hall. Lest, as he orates, they have a hunctt. All to slip out and go to lunch. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian, Januaiy 15. 1863. The Washington Territory Legisla ture has appropriated $500 to buy a stand of colors for the First Regiment of Washington Territory Volunteers. The Jacksonville Sentinel says that Jackson County has 1000 voters in it and that five men have been killed in it during the past year in fights and quarrels. Snow fell at Steilacoom. W. T to tha depth of eight inches on January 2, but went off quickly. From this time forward it Is a pun-i ishable offense to refuse to take green backs at par in Washington Territory. The penalty is $500 fine or six months imprisonment. George Francis Train says McClellari has fortified Washington so well that no army can reach the White House but the army of contractors. In view of the extensive Importation of United States legal tender notes for the purpose of speculation and the consequent loss entaled upon the trade here and elsewhere throughout the state, the undersigned hereby agree to accept them at the rates current in San Francisco as published from time to time in the daily papers of Portland by Ladd & Tilton, bankers, (Signed by 79 merchants.) Legal tender notes thi day 83 84o. WASHINGTON METAL PRODTJCTIOX Incrensed . Production of Copper anil Sliver Occurred In 10VS. Although the output of gold, which is the principal metal produced in Washington, ' decreased to about $679, C00 in 1912, according to preliminary hgurea by C. N. Gerry, of the United States Geological Survey, the total value of all metals produced In the state was greater by nearly 7 per cent than that of 1911. This was due to the increased production and better market price of both silver and cop per. There were no shipments of zino ore, and only a few cars of lead ore were marketed, against a nominal out put of zijic and a production of 848,584 pounds of lead in 1911.' Interest cen tered around the new cyanide mills at Republic, in Ferry County, and the copper mines at Chewelah, In Stevens County. The decrease in gold output of about 20 per cent, or nearly $163, 000, was the result of fewer shipments from. Republic, where much ore was s accumulated for the two cyanide plants which weie operated during the lattr part of the year. After changes made in the crushing department, the North Washington mill was treating 126 tons of ore per day In September. The ore averaged $7.75 a ton and the extraction was said to be 95 per cent. The San Poll mill, alBO rated at 125 tons, made its first bullion clean-up in September from $12 ore. During the year ship ments vrore continued from the Sur- prise. Knob Hill, San PoiL Insurgent and Qullp mines at the rate of 300rt tons a month during thn first half o the year, and at a somewhat decreased rate thereafter. Besld33 that from the Republic plants, bullion was sold frurt mills operated in Chelan, Kittitas and Okanogan counties;" The estimated increase in silver pro duction of 63 per cent made the total output for the year close to 398,000 ounces. Copper ore produced in Stevens County is to be credited with this in crease, as well as with the increase of 295 per cent in the state copper out put, which brought the total copper production up to about 1,250,000 pounds in 1912. The United Copper Company shipped five times as much ore as in 1911. and there was much activity in development in the Chewelah district. Lead ore came from mines near Boss burg and Turk. The lead plant at Ta- coma was closed In July and Improve- J merits were made for copper smelting, including blast furnace, basic converter and electrolytic refinery. Care of Sidewalks. PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 13. (To the Editor.) Can you inform a mere tax payer what department of this city, or what individual official of this city, bas supervision and control of the side walks within its boundaries? The writer has made diligent effort to ascertain whose duty it is to force derelict property owners to keep their part of the public thoroughfares free from obstructions and dirt, but up to date has been unable to induce any department or official, either Council man, police, engineer, or street, to In it tht owners of abutting property shall keep their sidewalks in proper shape for the use of pedestrians, and not compel them to take to the street in order to reacn a destination. There is. in my mind, one location in particular, on one of the main arteries of travel, in a select neighborhood, where fallen dirt covers the walk for hundreds of feet, and no appeal for its removal so far has met with acknowl-orte-oment or action, except one very courteous reply from the Superintend ent of Streets to the effect that his province extends merely from curb to curb. Have we a Cornelius Vanderbilt in charge of us? H. 11. 1.L.A.U. Tt Is the duty of the police to en force an ordinance which provides that nroperty-owners shall keep clear their own sidewalks. It has not been rig idly enforced, however, and many times the City Engineer has sent out men to clear a sidewalk for the general good of the city. Any property-owner who neglects to comply with this ordinance may be arrested- by the police and prosecuted m Municipal Court, but it is said by City Engineer Hurlburt that this has never been done.