TITE 3IORXIXG OBEGOXIAX, . FRIDAY, .TATTJARY IT, 1913. 10 POKTLAXD. OREGON. Entered t Portland. Oron. Postotric Escond-elasa matter. EnbscrlliUoa Rtas InvsrlsAly ta AdvmBe (BT 14 All ) Ditty. Pnnflmr Included. n year S.0O Pally. Sundsy Included, six months... Dally. Sunday Included, three month. . Daily, Sunday Included, on month..... . . .7 6.00 Xa!ly, without Sunday, on year Dally, without Sunday, all month J-25 Daltv. without RubA&t three month. 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, on month Weekly, on year Bandar, on year Sunday and Weekly, on year (BT CARRIER-) .0 150 I. SO S.S0 r M SnMiv inlnded. on year. 0.00 Dally. Sunday Included, on month 7 How t Btimlt Bend Postoflice money or der, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamna cola or currency are i the sender' risk. Glre postoftlce addreas In full IndMIn count, and Stat. Postaar Bates 10 to 14 mM 1 Cent; 1 ta 28 uies. 2 cents: SO to 40 page. S cent 40 to 60 paces, 6 east. Foreign postac. double rate. Xaatern Bnalnea Office Verre a Conk' Un Now Tork. Brunswick boUdlns. Bun. Sterer bnllritr. 9 Ban Frauds Office R. J. BldwoU Cow. .T2 Market street. Enraoema OnTiee No. Resent Stret, S. W. , London. ynHTIAxn, FKIDAT. JANUARY 17. 1913. SETTLEMENT MADE IMPOSSIBLE. An amendment to the three-year ' homestead law introduced in the Sen sLta hv Senator Borah and in the House by Representative French, Idaho, proposes a change that is vast importance to the growth Of Western Oregon and the timbered sec tlons of other Western states. A tlme- w ai-tlrla on the xuhlect. written by B F. Jones, Register at the United States Land Office at Roseburg, printed in The Oregonian today, discusses the suirtlAn.r In detail. Tha Tin-sent law reauires the home- stud.r tn havn in cultivation at the end of the three-year period twenty acres of land. All who are laminar txrirh thn i hnr a.nd cost attending the clearing and grubbing of brush and timber land in western uregun mua realize the impossibility of the bur den thus imposed. For the settler who has little or no money, subjuga tion of twenty acre9 of timber or fcrush land to the point of cultivation within a period of three years is a nhreioi imnnsslbilltv. The condition is made more onerous by the fact that the settler who took up a homestead under the five-year law must now prove up under the provisions or tne three-year act. Relinquishment of their claims by scores of homesteaders ana tneir ae parture for Canada, where the land laws are more favorable to the settler, present a vital issue that must be at nnp. SpnRtnr Rorah and Representative French would put clearing, grubbing, fencing and plant ing of orchards on the same plane as cultivation, requiring tne improve ments to represent an average outlay of 11.50 per acre a year. - Thla would reanire the improve ments to be or an average -value of $720 in three years on a homestead of 160 acres. One hundred dollars an acre is a low estimate on the cost ol preparing timber land for cultivation. Thus the hnmMtonpr is now sunnosed to KO on timbered land, support himself and family and expend the equivalent of 42000 in three years. This, too, must be In addition to the fencing, building and certain other improvements tnat are always essential to care of live- tnck anri his own DroDer existence. The three-year homestead law has doubtless been a boon tn the settlers in the untimbered public land areas, but in its application to the timbered areas it is not encouragement to set tlement or development, nor is it con servation, it Is hardship, retrogres sion and reservation. COMPENSATION ACT IS LIBERAL. It is the opinion of some of the la ibor organizations that, inasmuch as the present liability law in Oregon is working to their better interests, the compensation, or state insurance, law drafted by the commislson appointed by the Governor should not be enact ed. These organizations have dis cerned one of the vital principles of liability and compensation acts. Such laws should be designed not only to compensate for Injuries, but to prevent injuries as well. But it is a mistaken idea that the proposed law does not do this, and it is equally incorrect to assume that Its enactment would change the provi sions of the present law relative to safeguards In industrial establish ments. No employe need accept the pro visions of the compensation act if he does not desire to do so. for it is elec tive in form. If he declines to accept its provisions his recourse in the event of injury L under the terms of the present liability act. Moreover, for Mm who accepts the compensation act there is a strong measure of protection aarainst accident in the provision which imposes increased payments to the insurance fund on the individual employer whose workmen suffer acci dents. Still another safeguard for the workman Is found in the sections which permit the employe either to take compensation or seek to recover by law under the liability act in the event his injury has been caused by failure of the employer to install the safeguards required by law. The proposed law, it would seem, cannot be Justly criticised on the score of failure to prevent accident, or for Its optional provisions in behalf of the employ. If employes would consider their be.terment as a class rather than as Individuals, the Mil would be ac cepted as a good groundwork from which might be built up as near an idea in compensation acts as limited experience in this country will per mit at this time. The impressionable character of juries renders no degree of fairness in awards for injuries. One workman receives more than he deserves and another receives less. Regardless of the liberality of the existing liability law, workmen as a class would receive compensation more uniformly Just than at present, even If the law were compulsory rather than elective. Very likely. In view of labor 6pposltlon to the bill in its present form, a compul sory act is not to be hoped for at this time. But with some few amend ments in other particulars the com pensation bill could be made a statute that would doubtless ultimately dem onstrate to the present-day doubters the superiority of complete automatic compensation. The convenient plea that college faculties were not morally responsi ble for thetr students' conduct has about had Its day. It led to sad laxity in discipline and scandalous neglect of study for the sake of sport. Worse still, the sport which faculty neglect allowed to thrive -descended to offen sive forms of commercialism. Now a reaction has set In and the colleges are resuming the parental attitude which is so much better both for teachers and students. Youth does not develop well In an atmosphere of moral in difference. WEST'S VETOES IN THE LEGISLATURE. Governor West is indifferent to the fate of the fifty-eight measures he sought to slaughter by his wholesale vetoes nearly two years ago. He says so himself. He Informs the Legisla ture through an accredited voice that he will keep his hands off. We have It from the same exalted source that he has no war to make on State Treasurer Kay. He seeks- harmony. He is not mad at anybody. All he wants is to be let alone, for he loves all mankind. What the Governor seeks just now is peace and what he needs Is help. He has provoked many controversies and proposed many innovations, and he finds himself at the end of the first half of his administration with out real legislative or public sup port. He is utterly unable to Justify before the Legislature or the people the greater part of the vetoes of the 1911 session. Some of them warrant the belief that they were inspired by personal animosity toward their re spective authors; others were recorded hastily and without due regard for the consequences; others had the taint of political bias; and others appeared to be written in a mere boyish spirit for a spectacular display of executive power. Others, like the district and county fair appropriations, had merit, undoubtedly; but they were by no means the larger number. The veto power was not placed with the Governor of Oregon for use arbi trarily, or insolently, or spitefully, or for any other than high reasons of state. It Is no plaything: nor ought it to be the instrument of pique or re venge, or the vehicle for the expres sion of personal whim or fancy. Governor West has vetoed, with or without cause, more legislative bills than any other Oregon executive. Probably the Legislature will pass over his head as it should the mer itorious measures that fell under his disapproval, giving him the unique record of having vetoed unavailing!" more bills than any other Oregon Governor. ANOTHER BAKER STORY. The ew Tork World has embarked on the unique enterprise of bringing about the election of William F. Mc Combs, the Democratic National chairman, and a resident of New York, to the United States Senate from Arkansas, vice the late Jefferson Da vis. The World argues plausibly that McCombs is a native of Arkansas and "there is nothing in the Constitution to prevent his election," and it would be a "refreshing change after Jeff Davis." Then it plunges into histori cal precedents with the rollowing amazing result: The historic election of Colonel Baker, or Ball's Bluff fame, to be United States Sen ator from Oreyon Is a case in point. A friend of Lincoln In Illinois In tnelr eany liars, he had moved to' California In 18.1 and soon became a leader of the San Fran cisco bar. Called to Oregon to try a case. he was Invited to address the State Legis lature at a time when It was deadlocked over the election of a Senator. The impres sion be made was so frreat that, dropping the active candidates, the Legislature chose Baker, then really only a visitor from an adlolnlnr state, to be Senator from Oregon. He was serving both as Senator and as Colo nel of a regiment he had raised in New Tork and Philadelphia when he fell on the battle field in IStSl. The World ought to have better au thority for it3 citation from Oregon history than mere hazy romance. Colonel Baker was a qualified elector of Oregon not a mere visitor when he was elected to the United States Senate. He had had a brilliant ca reer In California, but no political suc cess, and he responded to an invitation from Oregon to come here and accept the undisputed leadership of the young Republican party. Colonel Ba ker came in February, I860, estab lished his home at Salem, and made many political speeches throughout the state. The result was that the Legislature was wrested from control of the Lane Democrats, though no partv had a majority; and in the Fall of 1860. when the Legislature met, through a combination of the Union Democrats and the Republicans, Colo nel Baker (Rep.) and Colonel James W. Nesmith (Dem.) were elected to the two Senatorships. It was a glori ous conclusion to a well-planned coup by the loyal Republicans, aided by the loyal Democrats, of Oregon. LOCATING THE At'DITORIC.M, The reasons for selection of the Market block as the auditorium site are (1) availability and (2) cost. The city owns the property, and has no other or better use for it. Whatever necessary adjacent property it may be necessary to purchase may be had. probably, with means at hand. The people have refused to vote more money for the auditorium or site, and the commission is therefore under di rect mandate to do the best it can with 1600,000. The best is clearly the Market block. The $600,000 is plainly the limit. The Oregonian thinks that those en thusiastic East Siders who propose a referendum on the auditorium site are due for a rude awakening if they shall overcome the intervening legal obsta cles and get their project referred. The auditorium does not belong there. It belongs where It will be most con venient to all the public, in the civic center, which is also the transporta tion, theater and hotel center. If the question shall be submitted to popu lar vote. The Oregonian has no doubt at all that the Market block will win over all others. The East Side advocates might well chow their good faith and public spirit by donating a site, so as to eq mllze their offering with the Market block. Otherwise the only result of a referen dum will surely be further and need less delays, and nothing else, except the consequent vexations. PROFESSOR PATTEN'S HERESY. Persons who abuse Professor Simon V. Patten, of Pennsylvania University, for preaching the doctrine of extrava gance may not know that they are abusing Shakespeare at the same time. They would not care, perhaps. if they did not know it, but the fact is indisputable. Polonius advises his son Laertes to wear as "costly raiment as his purse can buy," and that is exactly what Professor Patten told the shop girls at the Spring Garden Uni tarian Church. His reasoning was that if they wore good clothes their employers would notice that "they dressed with taste and dignity" and straightway raise their wages. There was profound psychology In Professor Patten's counsel. The world despises a person who looks poor and does its best to make his fate con- form to his appearance. The surest way to starve is to go about looking as if you had never ' eaten a square meal. To him that hath shall be given and from him that looketh as If he had not shall be taken away even that he hath. Many sages be sides Professor Patten have ques tioned the wisdom of spoiling the best years of life to provide for a decent old age and a respectable funeral. They argue that it does not matter very much what happens to a person when the years have stricken him and his faculties are dull. He cannot en Joy his money even if he has it by the million and by the same token he cannot suffer much. He is half dead at best and is oblivious to both pain and pleasure. The time to enjoy one self is in the years when the body is vigorous and the senses acute. Thus they, speciously reason in the same direction as Professor Patten, though he does not go quite to their lengths. He means the same thing, however. Lying behind his Insidious remarks is the subtle plea that it is the business of society to take care of people when they are old or sick. He derides "thrift" because It prevents early mar riage and lowers the birth rate. The more solicitous we are for our bank accounts the less we shall be disposed to undertake the burden of wife and children. Professor Patten cannot be answered by sneers. His arguments are significant. WOMEN AND MUSIC. Genius, says a philosopher, is the power of doing easily what other peo ple cannot do at all. When one watches Maud Powell handle the vio lin bow and touch the strings it is perfectly easy.' At least it seems so. But when we hear a less gifted player try to do the same thing we begin to realize the magic wonder of her performance. How can she produce those miracles of sound? Does she Infuse Into the wood of the violin some emanation from her own soul? Is it the cofds of her inner being that we hear vibrate instead of the strings she seems to play upon? Between what an ordinary person can do and the feats of a genius like Maud Powell the gulf Is immeasurable. There are plenty of men and wdmen who can fiddle. Some can even make music flow from the strings, but there never are more than two or three persons In the world at the same time who can work the miracles she can. Some times she frolics with impossibilities, evoking unheard-of beauties with light, quick strokes of the bow that almost elude the eye in their facile deftness. Sometimes she draws it over the strings as softly and slowly as twilight falls through the tinted robes of angels on a cathedral win dow. And always, whatever she does, there flows from the" violin an un broken stream of perfect melody. Helmholtz says the weird cries that we hear in violin music when a Maud Powell is playing come from the over tones. Each part of the instrument has its own vibrations, which are heard mingled with the others but not lost. All sounding together, they make up that shower of pearls which she scatters over her audience. What a memory she must have to stand there and play .hose complicated pieces, never missing a note, never failing to give every one its -proper emphasis, and, above all, never for getting to fill each with that mystical meaning which all understand but none can put into words. It is poor music that ordinary language can in terpret. The great pieces say what speech cannot, and none of their meaning, elusive as it often Is, capes her. She catches the elfin be ings with her spell as they flit past and makes them march in the orderly procession of her melodies. We are prone to depreciate mere memory and point out how little it counts in com parison with reason. Judgment and other high-sounding faculties, but where would Maud Powell be without hers? She read very little from print ed scores as she played the other night. It was only when she was wandering up the fantastic channel of the Ocklawaha and in two or three other situations equally bewildering that her eyes were fixed on her music, but the audience always felt the dif ference. A veil had fallen over tire magic she wrought, a thin veil, but still it dimmed the brightness. The musician's memory is his best friend. Perhaps it is the one faculty which women, in the course of their repressed evolution, have developed equally with men and for that reason, among others, they perform upon the violin and piano as beautifully as their male competitors, while none of them has ever composed a symphony or an opera of the first rank. No doubt the most famous woman musician who ever lived was Clara Wleck, who mar ried Robert Schumann. When she was a child her playing astonished everybody who heard her. In her riper years she . composed In almost every musical form, but is it not true that her best title to enduring fame lies in the Inspiration she gave her husband? Without her Schumann would not have done his best work. If he had not fallen In love with Clara he might have broken down under his discouragements and perhaps com mitted suicide, but beside his compo sitions hers look pale and dim. Up ton's "Standard Musical Biographies" overlooks women altogether. Some are mentioned incidentally, but none for their own sakes. We must admit that Upton is a biographer of pronounced prejudices. He treats modern music as contemptuously as he does women, but after all his silence about them is significant. They have shone as in terpreters of others' work, but not so brightly as original composers. Still the annals of music are pretty well supplied with the names of wom en who have stood high, though never with the highest. There was Maria Theresa von Paradies, born in Vienna 1B0 years ago, who became totally blind when she was a little girl and yet astonished all Europe with her playing and composing. She had the good luck to be taken under the wing of the great Empress Maria Theresa, for whom she was named, and thus escaped the hardships which have so often beset young musicians of either sex. Her memory was even more as tonishing than Maud Powell's. She knew countless short pieces by heart and could play sixty concertos with perfect accuracy from memory. The reader will appreciate this prodigy when he stops to recall what a con certo is. Sometimes it seems as If that species of composition had no end this side of eternity. Maria re sembled Shakespeare in facility of production. She dictated her pieces without any revision. Not a note was ever altered, which may help to ac count' for the oblivion that has de voured them. America has produced a more stu pendous prodigy than Maria von Par- In Anna fh.,n,.- V. .A born in 1867 and became Mrs. Beach.' Her musical marvels began when she was only a year old. At that tender age she memorized pieces by the xiozen, being so susceptible to their sentiment that minor keys made her weep. At two years she was having her picture taken one day and in the middle of the process, burst our sing ing "See the Conquering Hero Comes." At the age of four Anna began to com pose waltzes and such musical kick shaws. The Chicago World's Fair gave her an opportunity to show what she could do before great audiences and she seems to have been equal to the occasion. One of her finest works was a "Romance for Violin and Piano" which she played at . the Co lumbian Exposition with Maud Powell. If a railroad train is wrecked, the other property of the company is lia ble for damages to injured passengers. If a ship is wrecked, the property recovered from the wreck is alone liable to seizure. The steamship com pany may own a hundred other ships, but they are exempt. The White Star Line's liability for the wreck of the Titanic is limited to less than $100, 000, though it owns millions of dollars of other property and by passing divi dends for a single year could probably recoup its loss, even though the Ti tanic had not been insured, a he in surance makes good a large propor tion of the owner's loss, but the pas sengers and their relatives cannot touch it. Were the insurance money made a fund for the compensation of passengers, and, after that was ex hausted, were all the company's prop, erty liable, shipowners would be more careful. The loss of a ship like the Titanic might cost them the price of another ship to pay damage claims. That is the principle governing rail roads and there is no reason why It should not also govern steamships. The prospect that the Pacific coun tries of South America will soon avail themselves of cheap labor from China and Japan in unlimited quantity sug gests some interesting reflections. They do not compete with us in many industries as yet, but with cheap Asi atic labor there is no reason why they should not do so. Chile in particular has a vast supply of water power which is situated not far from tide water. If she should establish manu facturing enterprises on a large scale, the Panama Canal, cheap labor and unlimited water power might insure their success. "I am a student just now. I also spend considerable time testifying be fore Congressional committees," said George W. Perkins to' the money trust inquisitors. He is probably studying the election returns of last November and the stubs of the checks he paid for the Bull Moose campaign; also how he can- get a profit on that in vestment by engineering the affairs of the Progressive party. Perkins is a deep student. It will be very sad If Representa tives Meek and Bonebrake are unable to produce sons more than 15 years old to serve as pages in place of those who have been sent back to school Every legislator is entitled by divine right to have at least one member of his family on the payroll. The law seems to interfere with that sacred prerogative in this case, but what is a Legislature for if not to. change the law? The city has grown so big that the registration of voters at the Court house alone causes an annual block ade, which will be aggravated this year by the registration of" women. The time has come when in a city as large as Portland district registration offices should be opened where voters may register near their homes or places of business. Now Governor Blease wants a law against misquoting public men. It would now be unlawful correctiy to quote the South Carolina executive in all his remarks and endeavor to send the matter through the mails, if we are correctly informed. A Cornell professor tells a eugenics meeting the- day of romantic love is passing. Possibly, in the hard-surface districts; but not in the green fields and sylvan woods, nor down by the sea, nor anywhere that youth is prone to gather. The allies are now willing to give the Turks a little more time, rather than press matters. We begin to sus pect that the allies have about run their course. Wilson's messages may be oral. We should like to hear the one that is likely to be transmitted sooner or later to a certain impressive Ne braskan. Rescue of a Portland woman from slavery in the Japanese quarter of Los Angeles reveals a condition that no doubt exists in all the Coast cities. Sage Hanley warns students against early specialization. Especially should the avoid that particular kind which leads to the altar prematurely. With eugenists combined in their assaults on Cupid, the little god of love was still smiling and unafraid at a late hour. "Bill" Hanley"s aphorism, "You can't make yourself big by making another little," is a warning to knockers. Perkins believes publicity is a sure cure for many of our evils. His ex perience in the matter qualifies him to speak. Always it is "highly respectable" people who indulge in automobile mysteries. The world is full of hum- buggery. New York is installing police dogs. Probably it is argued they will be better able to follow the cent. Not the least of Bill Frazier's hon esty In the old days was in being square on the racetrack. Hundfleisch is being noted on Ber lin menus. In America it appears in the guise of sausage. Really, why should anybody, city employe or not, get a free ride on th trolley cars? A good rule to follow in raising pay of city employes is to begin in the trenches. Mylius is not desirable. This coun try has enough liars of home growth. The Bull Moose is being sat on at Olympia. A Church Social at Irrigon By Addison Bennett. When I first went to the site of the little town of Irrigon the population was said to consist of "one man and a yellow dog." The man was F. B. Hol brook; the dog, having died long since, needs no other mention? I arrived there on the first day of August, 1903. There were two build ings on the site then, one of which was only partially completed. The place was called Stokes, there being railway switch there. It may be said that the river front of the place was early called Umatilla Landing, and much of the outfitting for the Idaho mines in the early '60s was done from there, the river boats then plying principally be tween Celilo and Umatilla Landing. Some years later a landing was begun at a point just east of the Umatilla River, and the town of Umatilla came into existence, which was soon quite a metropolis and capital of a county larger than many of the Eastern states. The promoters of what may now be called the Irrigon proposition were en gaged in putting water on several thousand acres of arid land lying ad jacent, the water being brought by a ditch from the Umatilla River. One of our first acts was "to name the embryo town. We took the two words, "irri gation" and "Oregon" and made the word Irrigon, a name we thought sug gestive of the location and the appli cation of water. A good deal of fun has been made of the name, .but it will some time become famous and uphold the wisdom of those who coined it. So far had the work advanced that the promoters began to sell land in October of the same year, and before the middle of November homemakers began to come in. By the first of the next year, 1904, we had two or three dozen houses and perhaps a couple of hundred people, and on January 27 of that year the first issue of the Irrigon Irrigator appeared. From the very first Issue the Irri gator was a success. It was only a small six-column weekly, but it was all home print, used no "boiler plate," ran no orelgn ads and would not take a patent medicine ad at any price. It sprang into almost. Instant public ap proval, for because, I suppose, it was different from other weekly sheets, had a real editorial page, said what It meant and said it as it pleased. Before the first issue of the Irri gator, before the office was completed, before there was any suitable place in town o hold a public meeting, we met In the uncompleted Irrigator office, sat around on the stools, presses and Im posing stones, and organized a Sunday school of nearly 40 members, and took up a collection of over $20. And always will I be proud of the fact that my name was on the call for that meet ing and that I was present on that oc casion. In due course of time, during the Spring and early Summer, we built a very nice little church, primarily be longing to the Christian denomination, but the subscriptions were, made with the understanding it was to be open to any preachers who might favor us by occupying Its pulpit and holding services on any Sabbath save one each month reserved for the Christians' pastor. As to the means the Ladies" Aid So ciety of the town took to furnish this church, much, might be said. At one social held in furtherance of this object about 20 baskets, each supposed to hold a "feed" for two, sold for $117. They were auctioned off and one of them brourrht $17.60. I mention this to show the liberality of the townspeople of Irrigon. After the church was completed and occupied we hjad several entertain ments therein of a social and financial nature, and finally, along late in Octo ber, 1904, when the town was about at its high-water mark, having; a popu lation of well over 300, we held a social which I have been leading Up to "the" social I might say. It was under the auspices of the Ladies' Aid, an ganization that was the leading society and gossip organization of the town. the arbiter of our trials and tribula tions, the "underwriters," so to speak. of the town's civic pride and the cltl zens' well being. The work of preparing edibles and a Drop-ramme for the. occasion was par celled out as is the custom, and it fell to the lot of one Miss Spinster to sup ply the coffee. As it was a sure thing that over 200 would attend it was necessary to have much of this bever age, and Miss Spinster wished to show that she was equal to the occasion, fane, however, was "ferninst" any beverage stronger than water, and was especial ly sure that the use of coffee was i pernicious habit. But she wished to show that she was no piker, so she bought a whole pound of ground coffee and on Monday morning bright and early put it into a wash boiler filled with water and started it to boiling. She kept it boiling all that day and late into the night; for was not the social to be pulled off Tuesday even lng, and was it not necessary to have the coffee done on time? Sure. Then Tuesday morning before daylight the fire was again started and all day Tues day she kept the wash boiler with its precious, but "sinful, contents boiling and boiling. By the time the social was scheduled, at 8 P. M. Tuesday, the coffee was tolerably well done, but Miss Spinster to make sure, had the boiler toted down to the church and soon had it boiling again over a cook stove set up in the church lor the occasion. Now when this coffee was served well, when cream was added to it It turned green, a deep green, and But here is what the Irrigator said about it the following week: "Sim Dipp irreverently said the cof fee was not strong. But we were look ing for quality more than strength. Then Sim butted in again and said he once made coffee for a church social by tying six grainB of coffee to a goose's hind leg and swimming the goose swiftly across the Columbia. Then he had a whole river of coffee, good coffee, reaching from Priest Rapids to Celilo. But let that pass.1 m w m For some reason Miss Spinster be came chilly, almost cold, towards me thereafter, and the Ladies' Aid took the matter up and severely censured the Irrigator for daring to make light of its coffee. VAST INFORMATION IN BOOK FORM New Edition of World Almanac Is Com pendium of Knowledge. Packed within the 832 pages of the World Almanac and Encyclopedia for 1913 is a vast compendium of useful knowledge, remarkably inclusive in its scope and at the same time generous as to detail. It is a printed information bureau which answers the thousands of questions raised every day in home, office and even in the school, bearing on political, historic, scientific, legal, commercial and other subjects. What is the question in your mind? The index gives you the subject and in less than a minute the page is open before you and your answer is there. What Is the Hay-Pauncefbte -treaty? What were the benefactions of 1912? What have been the Polar discoveries? What Is the population of Detroit, Mich.? What are the penalties for crime In the vari ous states? Who are the chaplains In the United States Army and Navy? What Is the Income tax? What are the trusts in the United States? These are only samples from the great store of information in the book. Art, music, literature, drama, geographical re search, electrical progress, sporting rec ods. marine disasters, the Panama Ca nal act of 1912, and the new pension law of 1912 these but hint lit the wide fccope of subjects covered in the book's inclusive range. It is a big little book. MCST GET TOGETHER ON ROADS Farmer Who Own Anton Indorses Measure Framed by Gransre. HILLSBORO, Or., Jan. 14. tTo the Editor.) Let it be remembered that we tried to pass road laws through the last two Legislatures and once by Initiative and failed in each attempt. It looks at present as if we will not succeed much better at the coming session. At least a half dosen measures are being prepared and if most of them are not withdrawn. Sure defeat will be the result for the bunch. I predicted defeat for both . road measures last election, as one faction tried to down the other and the out come was, both got licked. I notice that the Hotelmen's Asso ciation und the Pacific Highway Asso ciation are working hard for state highways and even they are split by advocates favoring roads on both sides of the Cascades and both sides of the Willamette River; the market roads have not received any consideration at all. While I know there is not the slightest chance to get such a bill through the coming Legislature. It will do much harm In blocking legislation that would benefit the whole state. I will state that I am an ordinary farmer living 16 miles southwest of Portland, six miles from any railroad and have never received any income from anv source except the farm. I have four wagons, 'two buggies and two automobiles and have driven each a good many thousand miles, and have a fair ' idea of how each driver treats the other when on the road. I have received as much or more considera tion from auto drivers while driving a buggy or wagon as I have from wagon and buggy drivers while driving an auto. So let us pull together and work for a law that is fair to all, and we will surely win'. The feeling that used to exist between the farmer and auto mobile man is rapidly passing as "we learn to understand each other better. It is folly for the farmer to think the majority of auto owners favor laws benefiting only a few. A committee appointed by the master of the State Grange composed of the legislative committee, the executive committee and several Others outlined a bill which I think is the fairest and best for the state in general that has been offered to the people or Legisla ture of this state. A state fund will be raised from two sources, first, a license tax of 25 cents per horsepower on all vehicles that travel the roads of this state, buggies and wagons based on number of horses or animals used to propel each vehicle, and all others standard rating used to determine such horsepower; second, be tween one-tenth and one-half mill tax levied op all property In Btate. It Is estimated the vehicle tax would raise about $200,000, and one-tenth mill about $90,000, one-half mill about $450,000. The proposed expenditures are as follows: First The sum of $10,000 of $12,000 is to be set aside for the maintalnance of the office of State Highway Engi neer and assistance. Second Twenty-five per cent of the balance is to be turned over to the state highway engineer, to be used at his discretion, in building roads with the assistance of convict labor, in sparsely-settled districts which receive a heavy through travel that connect different parts of the state in the rough or arid sections. Third The remaining 75 per cent is to be distributed among the various road districts or combination of dis tricts of the state in proportion to the rate of special levy for permanent roads and class of roads built. All roads receiving aid from the state fund must comply with specifications furnished by the state highway en gineer and be Inspected and received by him or his assistants before any award Is made. A road district may seem a small unit, but it is expected that a number along any road would combine and work together for the benefit of all. AH roads are to be let by contract unless all bids are higher than engi neer's estimates; in such cases the road would be i built by the local authori ties by day labor. The state highway engineer should be appointed by the state engineer, as his office is not political and I believe we can get better results from one man than If we had an expensive and unwieldy commission. One of the main purposes of this measure Is educational, as it will dis tribute a system of engineering so badly needed, and help out districts away from the large cities by giving them more than they are assessed for the state fund, which extra amount Is supplied by the vehicle tax and taxa tion or the large business centers, which are built by business derived from the state In general. Of course some automobile owners will kick at their tax and so will some farmers kick at their vehicle tax, but they are the persons Who are wearing out. the roads and are getting the benefit. In 1911 I toured the United States by auto and made a special study of roads in about 30 different states. I do not hesitate to say that every state that has made any success at road build ing has a state highway engineer, nor is there any place in the United States having property values as high as in Western Oregon that has as poor roads. Let us quit wrangling and get down to some common sense plan that will give results. FERD GRONER. Facts About City AltnlrS. PORTLAND, Jan. 13. (To the Ed itor.) Being a newcomer in your city and a student of municipal conditions, I wish to ask through The Oregonian: 1. Are the full proceedings of the Council meetings published in some pa per after each meeting, or is any rec ord kept of such proceedings; and where can such record be seen? 2. Does a Councilman, elected to represent a certain ward, disqualify himself for representing such ward by removing his residence therefrom af ter his election? 3. Are police officers required to have any special knowledge of the or dinances which they are supposed to enforce? Are the terms of various new ly enacted ordinances communicated to them in any official manner after the passage of the ordinance, or do they acquire such knowledge merely by "hearsay?" This with special reference to the abominable custom of spitting so prevalent in this city, and prohib ited by ordinance. 4. What city officer is charged with the duty of keeping streets free from Obstructions, such as buildings extend ing beyond the property line, wire fences, piles of lumber, etc. .' , 6. Does the city derive any revenue from the numerous wagons vending popcorn and such wares, standing on the street corners; or do these people pay rent to the storekeepers before whose premises they stand? ROBERT ELLilAJ. 1. The Council proceedings are not published in full, but the City Auditor makes a complete official record, which may be seen in the City Auditor's of fice. City Hall. 2. Yes; a Councilman must reside in the ward he represents. There are CouncIlmen-at-Large, however, who may move at any time without disqual ifying. 3. Policemen are supplied with man uals and an ordinance book, but they are not compelled to study, although they are supposed to study, the laws. New ordinances are communicated to the Chief of Police by the Auditor and these are posted at headquarters. 4. The police are the proper officials to enforce this. 5. Vendors pay an annual license ! fee to the city. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of January 17, 13. The steamer Scotland, the first of the Japan. China and San Francisco line of steamers, has arrived in San Fran cisco. Olympia, Jan. 13-An act to create and organize the County of Boise has passed. Murfreesboro, Jan. 7. General Bragg's army left without burying their dead. The Union Army is now doing it. The battlefield reveals terri ble slaughter in their ranks; it doubles ours. Wounded rebel officers estimate their loss at from 12.000 to 15,000. with great slaughter of leading officers. Our loss in killed, wounded and miss ing is 7000. The shipments of produce from the Willamette are on the Increase. With a degree of prudence not before allowed to Oregon farmers, the producers are availing themselves of the chance to get the fruits of their labor to market. The following territorial officers for Washington Territory were elected on the 14th Inst.: George A. Barnes, Pub lic Printer: R M. Walker, the Incum bent, Auditor; William Cock, Treasurer, and J. C Head, Librarian. Bookkeeper wanted A competent bookkeeper can obtain a permanent situation at a salary of $200 per month. For particulars apply to W. S. Ladd at Ladd & Tllton's Banking House Janu ary 15. 1863. The steamer Cowlits. Olson, com mander, will leave Portland every morning at 6 o'clock for Monticello. The steamer Belle. Captain Downey, will leave Monticello for Astoria every Monday and Thursday on the arrival of the Cowlitz. Fare to Astoria, $6. WHY BACHELORS ARB BACHELORS One of Them Says He Can't Afford Lnxsry of m Wife. PORTLAND, Jan. 13. (To the Editor.)- How could a man with the brains that J. H. Nolta is supposed to have think of such a thing as putting a tax on bachelors? They ought to be pensioned for the respect they have shown the women of the country. Most single men are not married because they think they cannot support a wom an, and they are right. Look at the man sent to the rockpile here in Port land for not supporting his wife and children. One-third of the married women and children are going hungry in the world today. No man ought to be allowed to get married till he owned a good home and money enough to keep it going for at least two years. No woman ought to be allowed to get married till she could do first-class cooking and housekeeping. Now for the woman that thinks this bachelor tax is just the thing. I don't think any girl in Portland Is in want for some boy to ask her to be his wife, and as the women have the say, why not tax them as much again as the men for not saying yes? If any good clear-minded woman will just take a little time and look at some of the married people around them, that ought to be enough, I think. I would like for Mr. Nolta to tell me where he gets his reasons for wanting us poor starving bachelors to take a nice girl from a good home and starve her to death. If we all had good Jobs, we might take a wife. They are mighty nice to have about the house. Did you ever stop to think of the life of a bachelor? Eating three meals a day at some cheap restaurant, with no one to ask us to eat Sunday or Christmas dinner, no one to say a good word when we get home. It is a cinch every bachelor will go to heaven when he dies, or ought to. POOR BACHELOR. Traffic Squads. PORTLAND, Jan. 13. (To the Edi tor.) In your Sunday article describ ing the new traffic rules you speak of some cities having "five officers constituting a squad at each important intersection, one standing in the mid dle of the street and signalling to the others stationed at the four corners." Will you kindly Inform me what cities have this system? Yours, READER. This rule is, or was, In effect in Chi cago, and is said to be in use in other places. One Million Textile Workers. London Standard. More than 1,000,000 persons are em ployed in the textile mills of Great Britain. GIBSON PICTURES The pictures that made Charles Dana Gibson greatest of pen and ink illustrators will be presented in The Sunday Oregonian, a strik ing full page being devoted each week. The pictures which tell "The Story of a Widow and Her Friends" will appear this Sunday. Under-World' Revelations In the third of his series of articles Jack Rose, lule gamblinfr partner of Lieutenant Becker, tells of po lice graft ajid how it reaches the tremendous total of .$10,000,000 a year. Avalanches Just at this sea son, when siiouslides arc wreak ing havoc in many quarters of the Northwest, a page study of the subject by an expert is of partic ular interest. Illustrated by pho tos. World '8 Biggest Boodle Pile It belongs to the Czar of Russia, who is the dean of all million aires. An absorbing half page from a St. Petersburg correspond ent. Centenaries of 1913 There is an amazing array of them, the 131h year of each century having been of importance in world his tory. The Subject occupies more than a page and goes back lhany hundreds of years. Go to Work! This is the ad vice to women of Alda Gatti, em inent prima donna. She disagrees ' entirely with the view that mar ried women shouldn't work. War Correspondent Adventures The fourth adventure of Ger ald Brandon in his experiences among the Orozco rebels in Mex ico. Three Pages for Women Sub jects of immediate interest to women are covered by these three pages. Old Doc Yak He and the other funny people of the new color comic pages have fresh frolics for your amusement. MANY OTHER FEATURES Order today from your newsdealer. I