THE JlOKSLMi OKiSliOJMAJN, FK1UAY, JAAUAKY 34. 1913. 10 PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Poatofrica as econd-claaa matter. Subscription Rate Invariably III Afirance. BT MAIL.) Dally, Sunday tnclnded. one year Dally. Sunday Included, alx montha.... -2 Dally, Sunday Included, three montha... Dally. Sunday included, one month....- -7 Dally, without Sunday, ono year ?? Dally, without Sunday, all montha Daily, without Sunday three montha.... Dally, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year -',n Sunday, one year ......... - tr'-i iuaiiay and Weekly, one year (BI CARRIER.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year " 2? Dally. Sunday Included, one month J How to Kemit Bend Postofflce money or der, ezpreae order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the aender'a risk. Giro postofflce addreaa In tuil. Including county and atate. Postage Katee 10 to U page. 1 nti, " to 28 pages. .2 centa; SO to 40 page. S 40 to 60 pases, 4 centa. Foreign postage, double rate. Eastern Bnelnesa Office Verree Conk lln New Tork. Brunswick building- Chi cago. Steger building. bam t'ruclaco Office R. J. Bldwell Co.. 742 Market street. European Office No, X Regent stret. S. W., lxindon. I'OKTI-t Nil, FRIDAY, JANCABT M. 181S. LET SWITZERLAND BE THE Jl'IXJE. The position of the United States on the exemption of coastwise vessels from canal tolls is well stated in a letter from Colonel Roosevelt to Rev. Lyman Abbott, editor of the Outlook. He maintains our right to free bona fide coastwise traffic from tolls, but he also maintains that we cannot hon orably refuse to submit the question to arbitration by The Hague tribunal, however difficult it may be to get an unbiased tribunal. Colonel Roosevelt contends that, as no foreign ships can engage in our coastwise traffic, there is no discrim ination against them in exemption of our own coastwise vessels. He be lieves the only damage would be done to the Canadian Pacific Railway and he might have added that that com pany can only suffer damage through decrease of Its power to abuse the bonding privilege. He offers this most forcible argument in defense of our position: I do not think that It site well on the representatives of any foreign nation to make any plea In reference to what we do with our own coastwise traffic; because we are benefiting the whole world by our action nt Panama, and are doing this where every dollar of expense is paid by ourselves. In all history I do not believe you can find another Instance where as great and ex pensive a work as the Panama Canal, un dertaken not by a private corporation, hut by a nation, has ever been as generously put at the service of all the nations of man kind. Roosevelt admits the difficulty of getting an unbiased tribunal, saying that "Switzerland is almost the only community which has not some com mercial Interest in the Panama Canal," but he holds that we are under a "moral obligation to arbitrate the question if Great Britain so insists." He continues: It is to be presumed that we made the promise with our eyes open and were aware that it might not be wholly pleasant to keep It. I waa certainly alive to this fact. But the very fact that the promise may not be easy to keep Is the reason why we make It with the aolemnity attending a treaty. A promise to arbitrate is worthless unless we mean to keep it on the precise occasions when It Is unpleasant for us to do so. More . over, this arbitration must be. if Great Britain so desires, at the Permanent Court at The Hague, unless we are prepared to violate our solemn arbitration treaty. Certainly if Great Britain insists on arbitration, we must consent. If Great Britain insists on arbitration by The Hague tribunal, we must also con sent. If we made a bud bargain In signing the arbitration treaty, we can take our medicine. We are not re pudiatlonists, treaty-breakers. Our In terest in the sanctity of treat- obliga tions in general, which would be up held by our consent to arbitration, Is Immeasurably greater than our In terest In the maintenance of our posi tion in the canal controversy alone. We would better carry that dispute to The Hague with practical certainty of an adverse decision than brand our selves as a Nation without honor. But while accepting the principle of arbitration, we might fairly point out to Great Britain that, when the arbi tration treaty was signed, it was not contemplated that a controversy might arise wherein every power represented at The Hague, except one, had inter ests Identical with those of one of the parties concerned. We might propose that, for this reason, the tribunal be composed solely of Swiss judges, since Switzerland, having no maritime in terests, could impart no bias to her representatives. The British protest has been couched In such friendly terms that this proposal could not fail to be well received. Great Britain could not reject it without, exposing herself to the charge that she Insisted on having her case tried by a court known to be open to bias and that she feared to submit that case to a court which was rigidly impartial. Switzerland Is eminently qualified in every respect to supply the tribunal. It was the first republic in Europe and it was the scene of the Alabama arbitration. It has long been the chosen meeting ground for peace and arbitration conventions. It is the neutral ground among nations. Commenting on Roosevelt's letter, the Outlook proposes, that we shall avoid the necessity of arbitration by repealing the exemption clause of the canal law. To do so would be to ad mit that we had consciously or care lessly violated a treaty: It would be to abandon without contest a possibly valuable right, which we have asserted. We are not prepared to make so hu miliating a confession, nor to abandon any rights we believe to be ours. The canal law was passed in the belief that we had the right to enact every pro vision contained in it. We owe it to ourselves to uphold the good faith of our actions: to maintain that, if we misconstrued our rights, we did so honestly. By agreeing to arbitrate, we should defend our honor, even if we lose. COMPLETE THE CKLILO CAXAL. Completion of the Celilo canal will make the Columbia River navigable for 400 miles from its mouth, the Snake River for 200 miles from its mouth. It will extend the open rivers to Priest Rapids and Pittsburg Land ing. It will multiply manifold the area having the benefit of water transportation at the very time when the Hamburg-American line, the larg est steamship company In the world, begins reaching out for traffic In this region by establishing a line to Port land. That company's experience on the Elbe has made it acquainted with the immense advantage and economy of river steamboat and barge lines as feeders to ocean lines, and it may be expected to use to the fullest extent the great waterways of the Pacific Northwest In gathering freight from the Interior to load Its steamships. The memorial sent to Congress by the commercial and development bod ies of the Interior proves that that sec tion is fully awake to the advantages of water transportation. They have united their energies with those of the lower river country In pressing for ward a work for the common good. The Celilo canal completed, they will move next for removal of other ob structions until the Columbia be comes an open waterway to the point where It touches the Canadian Pacific Railway. COVKKNMEXT WITH A VETO CLUB. The attention of Governor West is called to the constitution of the State of Oregon, article V, section 15, defin ing the veto power. If, says the con stitution in substance, a measure passed by the Legislative Assembly shall be approved by the Governor, he shall sign: but if not, he shall return it with his objections to the house where it shall have originated. Two years ago Governor West ve toed fifty-eight measures, after the session had adjourned. It was notori ous that a part of the vetoes were in spired by pique or anger toward the authors of the bills, or by a definite and unconcealed effort at revenge. The Governor now threatens other vetoes if his legislative programme shall not go through. He proposes that the members shall line up, or take the consequences. When the Governor sends in his ve toes, let us hope that he will abide by the constitutional requirement that the bills shall be returned "with his ob jections." When his real objections shall be entered in the record. It will be seen how far constitutional gov ernment at Salem has been superseded with government by passion and prejudice, and how far' a sacred con stitutional prerogative -has been per verted into a vicious executive club. RECOGNIZING THE FACTS. "Oregon now has, through the Ore gon system or will have after March 4, 1913 two Democratic United States Senators and a Democratic Governor," remarked The Oregonian the other day. The Oregonian Is astonished to find that its simple statement of fact is disputed, for a Democratic news paper of Portland declares solemnly that it was "not the Oregon system that caused the election of these Democrats." It was through the Oregon . system. and through no other agency, that the Republican Legislature of 1909 elected a Democratic United States Senator and the Republican Legislature of 1913 elects another United States Senator. Except for the Oregon system It is unquestionable that those Republican Legislatures would have chosen Re publican Senators. Except for the Oregon system, the next Senate, which will be controlled by the Democrats by a bare majority of one or two, would be controlled by the Repub licans. That old Legislatures were corrupt and boss-ridden, and the old system venal and wrong, and a change was desirable and Inevitable may be true enough. But it is idle and useless to minimize the consequences of the change. The Republican party may have deserved to lose all It has lost. In any event it has lost, heavily, through the political changes of recent years in Oregon and the political revo lution everywhere. How will it get back again? Can It come back? EASTERN POCK FT BOO KT NOW PRO TESTS. Light on the Government's forest policy Is breaking in the East. One heretofore staunch defender of Pin- chotism, the Saturday Evening Post, has discovered that the Government refuses to sell ripe timber in the re serves at a lower price than that fixed by the large private timber owners or the so-called timber monopolies. Hav ing reserved one-fifth of the standing timber to prevent private monopoly, the Government, says the Post, has "adopted a policy that in fact amply protects monopoly at every point." It also remarks: Another effect of this policy Is that the Government's rljie timber is not cut. but stands and decays. The "fair profit on his Investment, but no more." which the Gov ernment offers to the timber operator, does not attract him. as Is shown by the fact that It is selling only one-tenth of the timber It should sell to keep the forests In a healthy condition. While some intelligent observers may read the approximate condition in the West from the report of the Sec retary of the Interior, it Is probable that the East will not possess a true sense of reservation under the guise of conservation until the policy still more roundly smites its pocketbook. When lumber cost to the Eastern con sumer becomes unbearable perhaps we shall have an official inquiry which will show the extent to which overripe timber is rotting in the reserves. But this one wasteful policy of the Government so openly disclosed ought to be of sufficient weight, without a personal application of its hardship, to cause a reconstruction of that senti ment in the East so ably expressed by Colliers when it declared that our Western natural resources were en tirely surrounded by thieves. It ought also to give some weight to the other complaints voiced In the West con cerning land-locking and retarding of development. HOME RTLE FOB OREGON. No notable percentage of the people voted to adopt the Initiative with any idea that it was to be the vehicle for attempts to make Oregon an experi mental field for new schemes in gov ernment conceived or advocated by theorists scantily scattered through out the United States and Canada. Yet In the last two elections it has been so used. Men who have no personal interest whatever in the financial standing of the commonwealth, or In the prosper ity of the people, or in the general wel fare of the community, poured money into Oregon in an endeavor to obtain a practical test of the soundness of or fallacy of their own reasoning. They perhaps had confidence In the outcome should their views be adopted. and wished us no ill will, but they had no more than a theory a theory that had never been demonstrated, that Involved one of the vital functions of orderly and prosperous government, and that as a theory had received the condemnation of the great majority of political economists of the day. Interference with or attempted guid ance of legislation in Oregon by per sons not residents or taxpayers in Ore gon produces political turmoil, involves expense to the state, encroaches on the interest of the electorate In home bred issues, and when heavily financed, as it has been in the past, calls for a defense fund that is a drain upon pri vate resources. It is antagonistic to home rule and generally wrong In principle. Senator Thompson has Introduced in the Senate a measure aimed to defeat this cardinal abuse of the direct legis lation. In brief, he proposes that it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, association or corporation within the state to accept pay from sources out side of Oregon for services performed to aid the adoption or defeat of any measure submitted to the people. The bill is for a law that would affect only the busybodies. The direct legislation machinery of Oregon is so readily workable that no proportion of Oregon's electorate is deprived of opportunity to present its views or desires at the polls on its own behalf. The electorate itself is com petent to judge what is' good for Ore gon without the advice or paid propa ganda of citizens of other states or. countries. The bill is to prevent undue harassment of the voters and the state becoming a hotbed of agitation. It ought to pass. ARSON AS AN INDUSTRY. Discovery of a well-defined and well-developed arson industry in New York and Chicago will not occasion much surprise. It is merely crime In another Insidious intrenchment and we are getting used to stumbling upon the reptile In strange stripes and un expected places. The arson business is the complement in lawlessness of the gunmen. It Is the stepbrother of or ganized police graft and a first cousin of dynamiting. It is crime modern ized, crime Imbedded in modern condi tions, crime driven under the surface and breaking forth again in new places. The morally oblique sons of greed must devise new fields of operations. While they must have no conscience, no regard for law or for fellow human beings, they must have resourcefulness in order to flourish, and as they are driven from one field of crooked en deavor they take refuge in another. Burglary and thuggery and common murder do not appeal to the peculiar sensibilities of all our criminals. For one thing, the beaten paths of crime are both dangerous and unprofitable. Burning down buildings for a price is a most reprehensible crime. Human life is thrown into great Jeopardy. Women and children may be burned to death. But of this phase of the in dustry the perverted creatures who en gage in the work take no account. The risk to themselves Is all that con cerns them. In the case of arson it appears the risk was not very great, for the industry flourished very nicely until the competitors for "trade" dis agreed over the spoils. Now, it will be noticed that these new crime ideas breed In the larger centers of population. Thence came white slavery and the whole category of modernized crime. Eventually these pernicious industries are driven to the smaller cities. Inasmuch as the fire bug industry is being run out of New York and Chicago, we might do well to see that headquarters aren't opened here. CHINA UPROOTING OPIUM POPPY. . There has been much talk of aban donment by China of suppression of the opium traffic since the revolution broke out. On the contrary, the work of suppression has been pursued more vigorously than ever since the republic' was established. Persons interested in the traffic have endeavored to induce the British government to revoke the opium agreement on the ground that China did not enforce it. The London Times said, "The fields of China are aflame with poppy today," at a time when one season's crop had already been harvested and the next season's crop had not been sown. The Central China Post has been at pains to ascertain the truth and has published letters from twelve prov inces. All show that, while there was a temporary cessation of enforcement of the law in some provinces during the revolution, measures for suppres sion have been more rigorously en forced as the country became quieted. Troops have been sent out to see that no opium is allowed to grow, magis trates tour the country on the same mission, crops are rooted up before the harvest, the death penalty has been proclaimed in five provinces and enforced in four and large quantities of opium have been burned. Only In remote districts, where the new gov ernment has not yet fully established its authority, does cultivation continue and there it is gradually being re stricted. When China Is exerting herself so strenuously to deliver herself from thp opium curse no other nation should dare to force ' it upon her again by withholding co-operation. Were Eng land or any other nation to withdraw from the agreement it would well de serve the name "foreign devil" among the Chinese. PARCEL POST ZONES CONDEMNED. The parcel post is hardly in good working order when agitation for change begins. The Postal Progress League condemns the zone system and the subdivision of the zones into squares thirty-five by twenty-seven miles as having been "concocted by express and railway interests" and as having "practically confined within distances of 600 miles of their respec tive localities the business of the peo ple on the borders." It demands the substitution of the flat-rate system, "now the common law of the postal world, and the common custom of the American railway world." The zone system was copied from Germany and Austria and was adopted because of the much greater distances over which parcels are carried in this country than in England, where the parcel post was first introduced. The cost of collecting and delivering par cels In railroad parlance, the termi nal charges Is the same whether they are to be carried fifty or 3000 miles, but obviously the cost of transporta tion increases with distance. In the case of letters, which are all of ap proximately the same weTght, this in crease does not enhance the total cost. Including terminal charges, sufficient ly to prohibit a flat rate, but in the case of heavy, bulky parcels, the en hanced cost of carriage is consider able. This is one reason for adoption of the zone system. Another reason is that a flat rate would enable mall-order houses to in vade the field of the country mer chants. The zone system meets the objections of the latter, who were the most strenuous opponents of the par cel post, for it practically imposes a protective tariff in favor of the local merchant and preserves to him the home market. But the parcel post law is most elastic in its provisions, for it vesta In the Postmaster-General power to revise rates, zones, weight limits. The present rules are and were intended to be purely experimental. From his observations of the practical working of the system, the Postmaster-General will be able to revise these rules to meet all objections. He is more likely to reduce than to raise the rates, to raise than to lower the weight limit, to broaden than to narrow the zones. If experience should show him that a flat rate Is practicable, he will not hesitate to abolish the zones, or. If that should be heyond his power, to ask Congress to do so. The Postal Progress League should give the Postmaster-General time to work out his problem before indulg ing in such criticism. Had Congress been legislating for express and rail way interests, it would not have given him so wide Tfliscretion. Should the result of the ' first year's operation prove that he should revise the sys tem and should he fail to do so, it will be time to criticise. In the meantime give the man a chance. , A cat show is an Innocent diversion for people who can think of no better way to dispose of their time and money. Compared with the noisy and obtrusive dog, the cat is an agreeable animal. Sometimes she Is useful, which must be more rarely said of the dog, who has acquired a great part of his reputation on false pretenses. As a kitchen ornament the cat is inconspic uously harmonious with her surround ings. She chimes In engagingly with pots, pans and dish clouts. In the par lor she seems less happily placed. No doubt her true habitat is the barn, where she thins out the rats better than a trap. WTe pay a willing tribute to the cat's merits, but feel no burning desire to hug her or to see her caged up at a show. Still, we extend our charity to those who differ with us on these points. We forgive them and will try to remember to pray for them. One result of the Balkan war is a proposal of the monks of Mount Athos to organize a republic with their patriarch as president. Mount Athos, which Is 6350 feet high, is the tip of the easternmost of the three fingers Into which the peninsula of Chalcldice, southeast of Salonica, divides, and was cut off from the mainland by Xerxes with a ship canal one and one-half mi lea lnne- In order to avoidtaking his ships around the cape. The ambassa dors of the powers are said to iavor the proposal, which aims to make a duplicate of the tiny republic of An dorra in the Pyrenees. Andorra has an area of 175 square miles and about 6000 people. Mount Athos has about the same number of monks. Margaret Hubbard announces in the New York Journal that red hair will be fashionable this year. Fiddlesticks. It has always been fashionable. Sappho had red hair. Lucretia Borgia's locks glowed like a crimson sunset. Queen Elizabeth's were more gorgeous stills What real heroine in fiction or out of it ever had hair that was not red? This is one of woman's glories which fash Ion has no power to dim. The fickle goddess may issue as many edicts as she likes for the ensanguined crown of beauty or against it, and nothing will happen. The world gave Its verdict in favor pf red hair a million years ago and made the judgment perpetual. D. O. Lively Is stirring up Oregon livestock men to induce the Legisla ture to make provision for adequate representation of their industry at the San Francisco fair. The important place held by livestock among the in dustries of the state and the position Portland has attained as the cattle market and packing center of the state impress upon us the wisdom of a good exhibit. A part of whatever sum Is appropriated for the Oregon exhibit in general should be specifically set apart for the livestock department, that we may hold our own with other states, some of which will give special premiums. How good a thing the Government was giving away by leasing the seal fisheries of the Pribilof Islands is shown by the results of the Govern ment's operations in 1910 and 1911. The catch of 1910 was sold for 3403, 946, but under the leasing system rnii iim-A hrnueht onlv 3131,007. The catch of 1911 brought 1385,862, but would have realized oniy under lease. In addition, sales of blue and white fox skins brought rn 315,096. Woman suffrage in England has di vided parties so completely that all of them have agreed to let their members go as they please. While Grey Is its champion, his chief, Asquith, is Its bitter opponent. Like division exists among the Tories and Nationalists. A Populist convention was not a circum stance to the scenes which the eternal feminine will provoke in the House of Commons., ' What is believed to be the .last lot tery drawing authorized by the Italian government has been held at Rome, and thus Italy falls in line with those enlightened governments which refuse to swell their revenue by pandering to the gambling passion among the peo ple. The winning ticket, worth $100, 000, has been lost, and one theory is that it was on board the Titanic. That mention of efficiency and merit rather than partisan politics as Wil son's guide in making appointments may send cold shivers down the spines of some of the hopeful, but when they recall that similar statements have been made by former Incoming Presi dents, only to be forgotten a few weeks later, their confidence trill return. If Thompson's bill were to become law, prohibiting campaign contribu tions from outside the state, many people would have to work for a living. Orange, Conn., offers a dollar a head to all babies born within the town. A dollar Is little Inducement, but might be welcomed as a sort of salvage. John Bowman, who falsely accused himself of train robbery, evidently mis took his sweetheart's taste In boldness. Election of Senator, once the stellar legislative event, is now about as ex citing as approving the payroll. ' Los Angeles women are agitating lower car steps. Wider skirts would accomplish the same end. Turkish diplomacy having failed, Turkish sprinting capacity may get another turn. In the Darrow case it is prospective jurors who are on trial more than the defendant. Adrianople is given up and by and by all left of Turkey will be the giblets. Why doesn't someone put through a bill to amend this weather? It is a cruel, ruthless war they are waging on Os. Borah would recall Fisher. He'd better hurry. . ROAD SITUATION IS ANALYZED Mr. Albert Kinds Election FUrnrea Guide to Plain Programme. SALEM, Or.. Jan. 20. (To the Edi tor.) During the last two years there have been no roads built in this state under the provisions of the constitu tional amendment adopted by the peo ple In 1910 authorizing counties to create indebtedness for the purpose of building permanent roads. No such roads have been built; first, because after the Legislature at its last ses sion had passed an adequate law en abling the counties to avail themselves of the provisions of this amendment, the Governor, yielding to blandish ments of disgruntled lobbyists, after the adjournment of the Legislature, vetoed this bill. I refer to House bill 224, providing the method by which voters of any county in this state may provide for the issuing of bonds or county war rants by that county for the construc tion of permanent public roads in that county. There was much contention -over the provisions of this bill, principally re lating to the preliminary proceedings authorizing the issue of the county bonds. One party contending that the people should locate the roads to be improved, the other that the people should simply vote upon the issuance of the bonds, leaving the County Court to designate the road or roads to be built. After amendment and re-amendment, the former Grange method pre vailed and the bill was passed finally as amended, the vote standing on its final passage as given above, and I believe should become a law, notwith standing the veto of the Governor. Should defects be found in the law, there is ample time during the 40 days' session of the Legislature to make any required amendments. As the result of discord and division on the part of the Grangers (the old guard) and the tin soldiers, all the county and state bonding bills, high way commission and state-aid bills presented by Initiative were defeated at the polls. But the people have spoken in no uncertain voice upon these questions. Nearly every voter in the state has voted for one of the three county bonding bills only through ig norance or carelessness have any voted for more than one of these competing measures. Yet the official returns show that of 144,133 votes the total cast on all questions. The grange bill received 49,699 The so-called harmony bill 43,447 The Jackson County hill 38,568 Making a total of 1S1T14 votes in favor of the issuance of coun ty bonds for permanent roads. Fur ther, the greatest number of votes cast for and against county bonding was on the so-called Grange bills, viz.: 125, 289. So that, assuming that only 6000 voters were ignorant or careless In registering their votes on this ques tion, it carried unanimously in the state. On the question of a highway com missioner or commission, the vote stood on the Grange bill: "Yes." 23.872: the Harmony bill, "Yes," 30,897; total, 54,769, out of a vote on the question of 107,718, showing a majority in their favor of 1720. This vote is not a fair voice of the people, because in order to vote in favor of the so-called harmony bill it was necessary to vote in the same bill for a monstrosity approving the reduc tion of the state Issues of bonds to 31,000,000 and for a sinking fund for the redemption of serial bonds. These acts were resented by the state-wide committee and by the intelligent voter. As in the case of the county bond ing bill, the last Legislature passed House Bill 368, creating a State High way Board. This bill, ' like the former, was a compromise measure passed on the last day of the session and was like wise vetoed by the Governor. This bill is also still pending and. like the former, should be promptly passed over the Governor's veto. The bill of the people in the matter of state aid as voiced in the last election should not be misunderstood or disregarded. The adoption of the constitutional amendment authorizing the state to issue bonds for the building of per manent roads can only mean that the people are In favor of state aid. Re jection of the so-called state aid bill of the harmony committee can be traced to the complicated and imprac ticable provisions of that bill," more especially that provision which - ap propriated one-third of the proceeds of the bonds for the exclusive use of state roads. The last Legislature, al though not authorized then to issue bonds to furnish funds to aid the counties in building roads, passed a state aid bill entitled: providing for the payment by this state, to each county In the state, of a definite sum of money for the years 1911 and 1!)12 to assist such county in the construction of permanent public roads in that county, prescribing the conditions upon which such money shall be paid to such counties and the manner In which It Bhall be expended and making- an appropriation for carrying out the purposes of this act. This bill was also a compromise measure and, like the other two passed on the last day of the Legislature and vetoed by the Governor after adjourn ment. Now, although this bill provides the expenditure of only 3160,000 per year and for the years 1911 and 1912, pay aable out of the current revenue, yet it should be passed over the Gov ernor's veto because it fixes the de tails of the apportionment of state funds which can be made applicable to any amount and for any time by amendment as to dates and amounts appropriated, after it becomes a law, and if the Legislature enacts a law putting Into effect the state bonding amendment the appropriations for aid to counties can be made payable out of the proceeds of sales of the bonds. The people have spoken unmis takably in favor of county and state bonding, including state aid,: and a highway commission or commissioner, and must look to the Legislature to pass the laws necessary to accomplish the end. To recapitulate The Legislature should authorize the issue and sale of a definite amount of state bonds annu ally, and create a highway fund to re ceive the proceeds together with the net proceeds of auto licenses; this in addition to the three bills pending on the Governor's veto or if they be defeated, then three new bills covering the same ground. J. H. ALBERT. "Webfoot Route" Not Good Name. ROSEBURG, Jan. 22. (To the Edi tor.) The people of the tlmpqua Val ley expect the Portland, Eugene and Eastern Railway to be extended through the Umpqua Valley. In 1910 we had 99 cloudy days and in 1911 we had 97 cloudy days in which .01 of an inch or more rain fell, which Is not enough rain to develop "webfeet" by any means. Whether or not It has any significance more inquiries were re ceived by the Roseburg Commercial Club from California last year than from any other one state, and practi cally every visitor from that state seemed surprised that it- was not con tinually raining here. Most of them said: "They told us in California that it rained all the while in Oregon." The name "Webfoot" is suggestive of excess rain. "The Webfoot Route" will furnish another handle for the California hammer without doubt. It will create a false impression of the climatic conditions of Western Ore gon,, and in the opinion of your humble correspondent is not a proper nor a comprehensive title for the new system to adopt. Our drawbacks are, indeed, few, much to the regret of competing communities, but it will not pay us to capitalize one of them (If such it can be considered) for the benefit of our California friends. Here In the Cmpqua Valley we haven't webfeet, and no webs will grow on the new railroad. G. P. SCHLOSSER. Publicity manager Roseburg Commer cial Club, PLEADINGS AND COURT PROCEDURE Prevention of Litigation More Im portant Than Technical Reforms. PORTLAND, Jan. 23. (To the Edi tor.) Would it not be well to devote more time and thought to laws which will prevent and discourage litigation? We all know that there is too much litigation and much of it not only use less but an absolute injury to all parties concerned. In business, engi neering, medicine and other lines the aim Is to prevent loss of time, money, energy and sickness. Why should the law be an exception? Is not the pre vention .of litigation, rather than -the manner in which it should be carried on, the most important consideration? Litigation, like sickness, sh'ould be prevented. This can be done In various ways. One, by shortening the time within which actions must be brought and appeals taken. As an illustration: In this state one may wait six years before commencing an action upon a contract or liability, express or implied. In the State of California it is two, and in Washington three years, unless founded upon a written Instrument. In this state an appeal to the Supreme Court may be taken in six months; In Washington It must be taken In three. The enactment of an employes' com pensation law will prevent many cases being brought and do away with a great deal of the work of our courts. There are now too many groundless, speculative cases In court. The law should prevent and discourage these cases In every way possible. 'This can be done by making it unprofitable both to the lawyer and to his client to bring such cases. This would give the courts more, and very likely plenty of time properly to hear and determine the honest disputes and controversies which arise and which apparently could not be adjusted out of court. More time and money should be spent in preventing than in punishing crime. This would do away with a large amount of the work of the courts now taken up with criminal cases. A large majority of what are called and punished as crimes could be prevented by proper attention to the removal of the cause. All -men, women and chil dren should be furnished with the means of securing the necessaries of life. If able to work they should not only be given work to do but com pelled to do it. If they are sick, too old, too young, or for any other reason unable to work they should be properly taken care of until they can. thus re moving not only the cause for begging but one of the causes for the commis sion of crime. Those who are defec tive, weakmlnded or temporarily In sane should be treated with considera tion and pity instead of with publicity and punishment. Those who are engaged in business or who own property, real or personal, are required by law to make state ments under oath to the Assessor re specting their business and property. Corporations are required to make full annual reports to the Government; rail roads are required to make detailed an nual reports to the state. Why should those who have no business, occupation or apparent means of support not be required to make statements showing clearly what they are doing? If they are earning an honest living they will not be injured by making it known; and if they are not. It is best for them and the community In w'uich they live to have it known. In order that the authorities may take such timely action in each individual case as will likely prevent the commission of crime and thus reduce the number of criminal cases on the docket. By proper treat ment of those who are ripe for crime, before and not after Its commission, their energies could be directed in channels which would result in profit and honor to themselves and the com munity in which they live. Our present system of court pro cedure may be and perhaps is defec tive in some particulars, but on the whole I think it compares -favprably with that of any other state or coun try. The difficulty is not, it seems to me, due to our system of pleading and practice so much as to other causes, some of. which I have pointed out above. ARTHUR C. EMMONS. SCHOOL SUPERVISION IS NEEDED Educator Gives Reasona for Retaining; Present Rural Syntem. BROWNSVILLE, Or.. Jan. 22. (To the Editor.) One man who under stands farming, milling, railroading or the managing of a store, can supervise a group of unexperienced persons and succeed to a great extent. The foreman oversees his farms or mills and by suggestion and organiza tion gets results otherwise impossible; the floorwalker shows the clerks where articles may be found, how to keep them In order, how to meet the customer and quotes prices, etc.. while the section boss works a bunch of unexperienced foreigners and thereby keeps our great railroads smooth and solid. The rural school supervisors of Ore gon have over 800 new teachers every year, three-fourths of whom are total ly unexperienced and have no train ing above the eighth grade. Is it not true then that the rural schools most need supervision? What the expert does for the farm, mill, railroad or store can also be done for the school. You may say, "Don't employ the un trained and inexperienced." That would be good, but first remember that the Oregon code requires each dis trict to maintain at least six months of school and further makes attend ance compulsory. What, then, will you do with the shortage of qualified teachers? Let us not rashly criticise the office that is the making of our rural schools. Even poor supervision is better than none. Any meeting where teachers discuss ideas, plans, programme, methods, apparatus, is for the good. You may say, "Let the County Su perintendent supervise these schools." That is good as far as it goes, but let us reason together: For example, take Lane County, which contains 184 dis tricts, 350 teachers and 6000 boys and girls. These districts are scattered over a vast territory from the summit of the Cascades to the Pacific, Ocean, and from the summit of the Calla- pooyias to within- about 15 miles of Corvallis. The school year consists of 180 days, saying nothing of holidays and six-month terms. Assuming that it is possible for the County Superin tendent to visit each school once in a year, what could he do? Pray tell me what would be the result on the farm. mill, on the section or in the store If Mr. Supervisor made but one visit a year? Teachers are but human beings, hence that which gets results in one case will reap the same for the other. When the Sheriff, County Clerk, As sessor or business man finds his work beyond his power, deputies are ap pointed and the work carried on, but our poor County Superintendent must drag along bewildered and head that thing, education, which is supposed to lead and qualify "the citizens for lead ership, but in reality is behind in method and system. If you say the supervisors have done no good, just visit a few schools in different super visory districts and take notes, then compare to previous conditions. We are aware that our schools are yet lacking in many respects, but are pleading for a fair trial of the present deputy supervisory system, or a sug gestion that will improve our rural schools. P. E. BAKER, School Superintendent. The Real Joy in a Party. Exchange. "The girls are getting up another party. ' "Well, inviting people to one's house is a delightfl pleasure." "True; but the keenest enjoyment seems to come through leaving people out," Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of January 14, 1843. Chattanooga, Tenn Jan. 11. The Fankees have advanced their lines seven miles this side of Murfreesboro. They have been guilty of the most out rageous enormities, stealing private property, robbing peaceable citizens and running off negroes. 1 Washington, Jan. 12. The full offi cial report of the capture of Holly Springs, Miss., shows the ruffalnlsm and barbarity of Van Dorn and his soldiers. An attempt was made by them to destroy the general hospital, containing over 500 sick. A lot of ordnance stores were piled in front of the hospital and fired before there was time to remove the sick. The walls were riddled with flying balls .nd shells. Twenty sick soldiers were struck by missiles. A hundred and fifty sick were forced to rise from their beds and fall Into line to be marched off by the rebels, who threatened to shoot the - medical officers for ex postulating. Cairo. Jan. 12. A Vlcksburg paper says that Banks and Farragut are coming up the river in large force; also that the rebels received large re inforcements and that their numbers now inside the fortifications are 100.000. Cape Race, Jan. 10. The'jura, from Liverpool on January 1 has arrived. At a meeting of the working men of Manchester held December 31. resolu tions supporting the Federal cause were adopted and an address to Presi dent Lincoln was agreed upon. The resolutions expressed high satisfaction at the emancipation proclamation. If some of our subscribers who are owing us will remit in 3 and 1-cent postage stamps, we will be much obliged to them. John Durrah, .of Wasco County, has been appointed a captain in the Ore gon Cavalry Volunteers by Governor Glbbs and will open a recruiting oftiov in The Dalles. The Mountaineer says that ship carpenters employed at Celilo recently struck and refused to take greenbacks at par. Suppression of Soap-Box Oratory. PORTLAND, Jan. -21, (To the Edi tor.) rThe suggestion of the G. A. R. to suppress street speaking is a good one. This thought must have suggested Itself to many persons who have from time to time heard the trea sonable and vilely blasphemous utter ances of certain uninformed and mis guided "persons who do not understand the sublime function wnlch religion plays in life, both that of the individual and of society. I have heard God Almighty referred to In terms positively appalling and In a manner agonizing to a believer In the divine gospels of Jesus ChriBt. These speakers are undermining our civilization and our whole morality, for it is a well-known fact that morals are a product of civilization, and it is our present civilization that these speakers attack? In assailing Christianity as they do. it must also be recognized that they are seeking to destroy our civilization, for the morals of America and Europe are the product of a civilization based on Christianity. Every scholar knows that civilization has always been based on religion of some sort, but I have heard speakers on our streets denounc ing all religion. I ask, do not such con vict themselves of being enemies of mankind, and ought not Government and society have the right to protect itself? , , Let all who believe In liberty with order, truth and righteousness, unite in demanding that our public officials put down treasonable and blasphemous speech-making. WILLIAM CRONISE. Captain Jack Crawford. WENATCHEE, Wash., Jan. 22. (To the Editor.) I should be pleased if you could tell me where I can find Captain Jack Crawford's poem. "The Indian Scout." In Captain JackCrawford's book of poems, "The Poet Scout," the poem, "The Indian Scout," does not appear. "The Dying Scout" Is given, the first verse being: Comrades, raise me, I am dying. Hark the story I wilt tell. Break It gently to my mother. ; You were near me when I fell. Tell her how I fought with Custer, How I rode to tell the news: Now I'm dying, comrades, dying. Tell me, did we whip the Bloux? The book mentioned was published by the Burr Printing Company, 18 Jacob street. New York, and can be consulted at the Portland Publlo Li brary WHEN MAN IS PERFECT That is the subject of one of a number of absorbing special features that will appear in The Sunday Oregonian. It is a glimpse into the days of 1000 years hence, when the human family has evolved apace. The picture is drawn by prominent scientists. 25,000 Crooks That is quite a lot of them for one small dis trict, but Jack Rose reveals how they live and thrive in crime in one section of -wicked old New York. This is the most absorb ing yet in the Rose series. Why Do So Many Babies Die? The question is one the United States Government has set out to answer. An important page study of the subject of infants and infant mortality. Mrs. Sage's Bird Haven An illustrated account of the great hunting district a charitable and tender-hearted old lady has wrested from the grasp of the hunters and converted into ren dezvous for game birds. Bulgaria's Chance Although the fact is not generally known, f that chance was provided by an American newspaper reporter. An illustrated page. Billy Hanford The arduous exploit of a first-class fighting man of the United States Navy. Gibson Pictures A Bother page of the pictures that made Gibson famous as a pen and ink illustrator. Three Pages for Women, Four Pages of new color comics and many other features. Order Today From Your Newsdealer. D