1 THE MORNING OREGOXIAX. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 29, 1913. 10 POKTXA2TD. OREGON. Entered at Fortlul. Oresoa. PostoOlc as 6eond-clss mttur. Subscription Pit w Invariably la (BI MAIL.) Dstly, Bon day tncluded, on year.......-" Illy, Sunday Included, atx montna... -2 Bally, Sunday Included, three months... X2 Daily, Sunday Included, on month... Daily, without Sunday, one year.... IMIlv. Httunt RnBdH el UABthf TS 6-00 a. 23 Daily, without Sunday three months.... -75 Dally, without Sunday, on month.. Weekly, one year ......-.-. Sunday, one year ...........-.. fiunday and Weekly, one year (BI C1RKIXB.) 60 1.50 X.50 I.M Dally, Sunday Included, one year -00 Dally, Sunday Included, on month.... Haw t Bemlt Send Postofflc money or der, express order or peraoaai check on your local bank. Stamp, cola or currency axe ii the lender's risk. Olee postofflc addreaa la Poetace Ifelre 10 to 14 pace. 1 cent: ! to 2S 2 cents; SO to eo pace, t". 0 to 60 pas, e cents, roreica poatac. doubi rate. Eastern Baalaeaa OHloe Verro Conk !1n New Torn. B rune wick BuUdln. Chi CUft. Steaer building baa Fraodse Office B. J. BldweU Co.. 2 jaaraet street, Kureoeaa Ogles No. a. Basest st ret. & W., London. PORTLAJTD. WrU)-ESDAY, JAN. t. ltO. WILSON'S ANTI-TKCST BELLS. Governor Wilson's measures for tiffins; from New Jersey the reproach of being; the mother of trusts are of unusual Importance, both because oi the hints they give of the policy he will pursue aa President and because they mark the abandonment or tne "wide-open" policy towards corpora- tions by the state which first adopted that policy. But we are warned by Wilson himself not to over-estimate the bearing- which these bills have on his policy as President, for, when questioned on that point, he said: They (the proposed laws) embody my Meas of the way New Jersey should deal with i ths question. National legislation might aar to be different. Wilson is committed, both by his speeches and his platform, to the prln ciplo of state rights, to treatment of Federal legislation against trusts as supplementary to state legislation. Nevertheless his seven bills give valu able hints of the lines on which he will ask Congress to legislate. He has hitherto talked generally on this sub ject; he has now put his policy In def inite form with the aid of the two lead ing legal authorities In his state. He places foremost the principle that guilt is personal by providing that directors of corporations be held per sonally guilty. He has adopted Bryan's slogan, "send them to jail, by pro viding for either fine or imprisonment or both as the penalty for offenders. The Sherman law Includes similar penalties, but the difficulty has been to Induce Juries to convict or, when they convict, to induce Judges to im pose prison sentences. It remains to be seen, should these bills become law, whether New Jersey Judges and Juries will be more stern than those of other states. One of the bills attempts a more ex act definition of restraint of trade in order to gratify those who complain that the Sherman law Is so vague that they cannot know whether certain acts are lawful or unlawful. The pen alty is fine or imprisonment for guilty individuals or revocation of the com pany's charter. This is the definition: Any combination or agreement between two or more corporations, firms or persona, to create restrictions In trade, limit produc tion. Increase prices, prevent competition In manufacturing, transporting or selling any commodity, to fix prices to the publlo, to make any agreement directly or indirectly precluding a free and unrestricted competi tion, to make any secret oral agreement or arrive at an understanding without express agreement whereby the same thing Is ac complished. Watering of stock is forbidden and exactly defined by a provision which would prevent such operations as that by which John W. Gates transmuted $24,000,000 of stock in a corporation he controlled into $90,000,000 of stock In a new corporation, of which $26, 000,000 mysteriously disappeared. Mergers are to be allowed, but new stock Issued In payment must not ex ceed in value the property acquired, which also must be cognate In char acter and must be used by the pur chasing corporation "In the direct con duct of Its own proper business." Certificates of such purchases must be filed with the Secretary of State and false statements expose the guilty persons to punishment. Purchase by one corporation of property or stock of another corporation "for the pur pose of restraining trade or acquiring a monopoly" is made a misdemeanor. Corporations may merge only with the approval of the Board of Public Utili ties Commissioners, but one corpora tion may not hold another's stock. Holding companies, which are a pe culiar product of New Jersey, are for bidden, but this bill applies only to future corporations. It does not dis turb existing companies, though It pre vents them from extending their hold ings. One of the bills makes it a misde meanor to organize a corporation with Intent to promote or conduct any un lawful object or intended to restrain trade or acquire a monopoly. Another bill forbids discrimination In price be tween sections, communities or cities with intent to secure a monopoly or to drive out a competitor. These bills are received with ap proval in most unexpected quarters. The New Tork Sun, for example, says: Generally speaking, the proposals of the seven bills will strike the Impartial mind a meritorious. They are in the line of progress by the proper road. Opposed to the Eagle's view Is that of the New Tork Glob, which, while praising the New Jersey bills, though doubting whether the prison penal ties will be enforced, says: As to the chief difficulties surrounding trust organisation and control, the bills, of course, contribute nothing. The trust prob lem Is a National one and the states can not aolv It. Even though forty-eight states could be brought to enact similar laws and they cannot be) there would be differences In enforcement and Interpretation that would make a common policy Impossible. Soon or late there must in some form be Na tional Incorporation. The Boston Transcript says that if Wilson's attack on the trusts suc ceeds, it will "take from her (New Jersey) a fruitful source of revenue, but it will very appreciably enhance her respectability" and the whole country will be the gainer. The Globe puts Its finger on the weakness of the state right's policy when It says that, even though the forty-eight states should agree on a common policy; some form of National incorporation would still be necessary. New Jersey set the example by offer ing corporations unlimited powers in exchange for enormous fees. Other states, greedy for fees, followed her example In a competition for the Issue of letters of marque to corporate pri vateers. The evil they have done can not be undone, for the Wilson bills are not to be retroactive. The best that can be done now Is to stop the evil by amendment of the laws of each I state on the lines laid down by Wilson. 1 It is hopeless to expect that every state will do this. So long as one state re mains wide open to trust organizers, state action will be powerless as a remedy. Federal incorporation would encounter such general opposition from the states, hungry for fees, that Its adoption is not possible. The al ternative is a Federal license to state corporations engaged in interstate commerce. This would - allow the states to keep their fees, but would in effect nullify the laws of those states which bid for trust organization. HARMONY. Mr. Davey sends from Burns a loud call for the Republican party to get together on a platform of progressive ness and reform and of explicit and unquestioning adherence to the Oregon system. We would not discourage Mr. Davey in his laudable purpose; but, if the Legislature is to be used as the basis of the new harmony movement, it would seem to be plain that the Republican majority is doing a first- rate Job of getting together and stay- in together. The Governor did it with his little ax; the Governor's po litical newspaper marionettes are help ing it along mightily by their sneers and Jibes and slanders of the Legisla tures; the Governor's Democratic jan issaries are demonstrating its clear benefits by their whining uneasiness and discomfiture. For Republican lack of harmony, long a Jest in Democratic mouths. Is nevertheless the Democratic opportunity. There are no Progressives (with a capital P) In the Legislature; though there are two or three pseudo progres sives elected as Republicans and work ing their own little game. But for the present they hardly count. Later they will undoubtedly seek to explain to the people that the old standpat Republi can machine has been in control, and that the people have been betrayed and robbed at every turn, and that the wlll-o'-the-wisps and Jack-o'-lanterns they have created out of a fertile im agination as beacons of legislative and social reform are yet the real thing. How long will the really wide-awake supporters of Colonel Roosevelt follow the blind and seinsn leaaersnin or nis local lieutenants? The Davey platform Is all right. The Republican party in Oregon stands there now. But the problem is to get the stray sheep (the Progressives) back into the fold. MR. SHEEP ANT) HIS F1UEND9. The woolen manufacturers are in tears before Congress over the pro posed reduction of the wool tariff. The industry will be ruined. If you touch one brick or stick or straw of the sacred tariff edifice, they say. All we want is to be let alone with our cheap foreign labor and our easy profits. But if you've got to reduce something, reduce the tariff on raw wool. That is what Bryan says ought to be done, and so It Is sound Democratic doctrine. Incidentally, the cheaper the wool the more profits for the manufacturer; but surely the Western woolgrower ought to be satisfied to make a further sac rifice for the benefit of the Massachu setts men who buy his wool, and pay him sometimes almost as much as it is worth. We guess the woolgrowers of Oregon now understand that tne eastern manufacturers believe in a wool tariff on the manufactured product for their own benefit and on free wool, also for their own benefit- - It Is strange that their only protection is a Democratic house which proposes a 20 per cent tariff; but It is not strange that the same Democratic house through Its leader, Mr. Underwood, has Intimated that ultimately we must entirely re move the tariff. The wicked schedule K is now the only real solace of the sheepman: but It will soon be only a more or less fra grant memory. WOM EX A3 JURORS. The philosophic mind is moved to melancholy reflection by one of the ob jections made to women Jurors In the Colorado Legislature. A bill came up In that sublime assemblage the other day aiming to bestow this inestimable Tivilege on the fair sex and a mem ber voiced his opposition to it In this way: "I should hate to see the time come when my wife or my daughter would be chosen for Jury service and be locked In a room with several men urora one night or for several nights." It can hardly be denied that his ar gument has weight. Such an experi ence as he describes would be terribly disagreeable for a woman of refine ment. To be locked up all night in a close room is not pleasant for anybody. We are nut convinced that men enjoy It. Still we do not believe that the anger of temporary imprisonment un der disagreeable conditions ought to prevent women from serving on uries. It ought rather to stimulate them to join In a demand for better treatment of those who have to per form this wearisome and thankless public service. , The customary treatment of juries Is a relic of feudal barbarism. We In herit It from the days when it was as sumed as a matter of course that every man not of aristocratic connec tions was a liar, a perjurer and eager to sell himself to the first bidder. Juries were formed from the men of low degree living in the neighborhood where the suit on trial originated, and, their character being base because their birth was ignoble, they- were treated about as cruelly as the accused himself. The judge berated them and even imprisoned them If they did not bring in the verdict he wished. If they were Inclined to debate over the evi- ence they were locked up and starved In order to bring them to terms. They were not permitted to discuss the case with anybody for fear their infantile minds would be perverted. They had listened to the unadulterated truth trom the opposing lawyers and that was enough. It Is time that these fe rocious practices were done away with and the fact recognized that jurors are fully as intelligent and often more honest than some other wheels In the machinery of Justice. There Is no more reason for locking them up than there s for imprisoning the judge over night. and so far as bribery is concerned, the average Juror will stand the test.wlth good many lawyers. OBSTINACY AXD WAR. Two great concourses of people, each with Its own unalterable viewpoint. cannot be brought to modify their atti tude. One set insists upon possession of a city that is not essential to its welfare or happiness, but Is held as a ripe token of superior military prow- The other set does not need the city, but is unwilling to give It up be cause of fond traditions and rich re ligious sentiments. ' The city is Adrl- nople, the differing peoples those of Turkey and the Balkan allies. After several weeks spent in discuss ing the divergent viewpoints of these two great sets of people no modifica- tion of the ideas of either side has been secured. It is an unhappy side light on human nature and present- day civilization that the two sets now plan to proceed to settle their differ ences of opinion through the medium of horrible slaughter upon each other. Steel-Jacketed projectiles, destructive explosive shells and keen-bladed Day- onets will be employed to supplement logic. Each side contends it is right. and so might must decide. Eventually one side or the other, weakened, wounded, humiliated, devastated, will reluctantly yield. But even tben the Question will be settled only tentative ly. Forever after bitter racial and sectional feeling will follow. We are far enough off to be clear of the little antagonisms which form the underlying current in the Bar kans affair. Hence we are able to view the matter with a cool, calm per. spective. In the light of that perspec tive it is with Infinite pity that we see the triumph in the Balkans of shallow obstinacy which only serves to unleash the monstrous dogs of war. It is only when people and nations learn to yield and step free of provin cial fetters that the dove of peace can hope to propagate its kind unhindered. POOR JOHN' BITA. There is no need for England to "seek the woman" at the bottom of her troubles, as the French proverb ad vised, for woman is at the top, middle and bottom of the island's woes In these days. England need not seek her, for she rides on the crest of the wave of disturbance. She splits Cab inets, parties, skulls and shop windows with Impartiality, and glories ln the devastation she creates. Although the Speaker declares that male suffrage cannot be extended and woman suf frage granted by the same bill, she snaps her fingers at him and vows that male franchise shall not be extended unless woman is granted the ballot at the same time. Woman in a rage is above all laws and parliamentary rules; she scorns them. We do things better in America. In some states we gracefully surrender to the woman voter and heap honors and duties upon her. In other states we allow her to block the streets while she orates on her rights, and we stand and admire while the fairest of women lead their less prepossessing sisters in suffrage parades. We take the edge off her temper, the angry shrillness out of her voice, either by giving her what she asks or by our good-humored pas sive resistance. John Bull does not know how to manage woman. He is too sot in nis ways," too stiff-necked. He has ig nored her demands until she has worked herself up Into the frenzy of a virago and him into a state of sad bewilderment. Poor John wrings , his hands, mops his brow, looks askance at his raiment tattered in the last en counter with the suffragettes and won ders what the country is coming to. You would better let woman have her way, John, You will have no peace until you do. AJf AMERICAS ACADEMY. Congress has been asked to Incor porate "The American Academy" with the following list of members, all of whom are supposed to be immortal: Woodrow Wilson, William Dean Howells, Henry James, Henry Adams, Thomas R. Lounsbury, Theodore Roosevelt, John S. Sargent, Alfred Thayer, Mahan, Daniel Chester French, John Burroughs, James Ford Rhodes, Horatio W. Parker, William Milligan Sloane, R. Underwood John son. George W. Cable, Andrew D. White. Henry Van Dyke, William C Brownell, Basil L. Gilderslceve, Arthur T. Hadley, Henry Cabot Lodge, F, Hopklnson Smith, Edwin H. Blash- fleld, Owen Wister, Augustus Thomas, William M. Chase, Thomas Hastings, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Brander Matthews, Thomas Nelson Page, EHhu Vedder, George Edward Woodberry, Kenyon Cox, George Whltefield Chad wick, Abbott H. Thayer, John Muir, Charles Francis Adams, Henry Mills Alden, George de' Forest Brush, Will lam Rutherford Mead, John W. Alex ander, Bliss Perry, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, James Whltcomb Riley, Nicho las Murray Butler, Paul Wayland Bart lett. George Browne Post. The first thought that comes into one's mind on reading the list through Is that no woman can ever expect to become immortal. The names are all men's, even in those departments where women have done Just as good or bet ter work. No doubt, in thus discrimi nating ngainst women, the self-chosen Immortals of this list have followed the Illustrious example of the French Academy, which declined to admit Madame Curie for no other ostensible reason than because she was not a man. No doubt envy played a part In her exclusion, for none of the male scientists in the Academy had achieved anything like her fame, but of course they kept that to themselves. Henry Van Dyke, Brander Matthews and H. W. Mabie are very respectable minor essayists and critics. Van Dyke has even written, a good deal of what some people call poetryi but not one of this estimable trio has done literary work which can be compared with Edith Wharton's and she will be re membered when they are forgotten. There are a dozen women novelists in the country who are doing better work than Thomas Nelson Page, who is dis tinctly Inferior in merit to the require ments of an "Academy." The short story writers fare badly in this selec tion. Not one of them appears, al though their literary art is more truly American than any other. Some might perhaps call Owen Wister a short story writer, since his "Virginian" first ap peared in that form, but we imagine he was allowed to shine on this Olym pus because of his novels. One natur ally assumes that the reason for con demning the short story to outer dark ness is because those who have culti vated it most successfully of late years are women whom it would never do to admit to this exalted assemblage. The parasitic side of literature, as It has been somewhat severely called, is mar. velously well represented. Critics and writers about writers are more numer ous than any other brand of authors. Henry Adams, Lounsbury, R. TJ. John eon, Brownell, Mabie, Matthews, Woodberry and Thomas Mills Alden have all earned muoh of their glory in this manner, though some of them are editors and others have done a little poetry in a small way. The scholastic spirit pervades and just about destroys the value of the selection. College professors of all de grees abound In it. It may be that one of them, Gildersleeve, will be remem bered a few years after he is dead, but the others are there simply because it was supposed that their names would sound Imposing even though nobody knew or cared who they were. - It is one essential of an "Academy"-of this sort that most of Its members should be nonentities. This gives the stars of the first magnitude a better chance to shine. And besides that. It always seems as if the college Influence ought to predominate in any body which goes by the name of "Academy." The scholastic feeling is exemplified by the three college presidents who adorn the roll of immortals, Hadley, Lowell and Butler. Not one of these men is really distinguished as an educator In the same way as Dr. Charles W. Eliot. Hadley is an economist, Lowell a writer of some eminence on interna tional politics and it would be a little difficult to say just how Dr. Butler has made himself immortal, but as thinkers and doers In the educational field Van Hise of Wisconsin and Jor dan of Stanford are miles ahead of them. Lowell was made president of Har. vard because it was thought best to put in a steady-going conservative to check the radical impetus Dr. Eliot had given the institution. Hadley was elected at Yale because ,his father wrote an excellent Greek grammar, and Butler at Columbia because he under stood the fine art of pulling wires. Not a solitary educational leader of note as such appears in the list. Evidently the Academy does not intend to pollute itself with new ideas any more than It intends to permit the brilliancy of its few really eminent members to be obscured by too many rivals. Science seems to stand about on the same level as women in the estimation of those who chose these Immortals. America has some scientific men of great dis tinction, but they are not worthy to be listed beside Thomas Nelson Page and EHhu .Vedder. We dare say the astronomer Lowell is. quite as likely to be remembered by posterity as the college president of the same name. but he Is omitted. Nor are any of our famous inventors included, though mechanical invention is the field in which this country has shown most brilliantly. The drama is condescend ingly patronized by admitting Augus tus Thomas, the author of "Arizona," and some other trifles, but Percy Mac- kaye, who has wTitten powerful plays, as well as poetry, far ahead of the academic verses produced by Henry Van Dyke, is shut out. Perhaps he is not old enough for an honor so dis tinguished. He was born in 1875, while most of the chosen hail from the early sixties or even farther back. We might add indefinitely to these strictures, but no doubt enough has been said to make our point clear. It is this. When any half dozen or dozen gentlemen, no matter how eminent, set about writing themselves and their chosen friends down as Immortals, it is pretty certain that they are actuated by vanity and they will give free reign to their prejudices. Nobody will be truly famous in their eyes who does not belong to their clique and share their views of men and things. The makers of this list live east of the Alle ghanies and are therefore unaware that there is a country or population across the mountains. They people their Olympus from New York and Boston and lock the gates on all the rest of the Nation as placidly as if their contemptuous ignorance had an nihilated it. It is a queer question, but the oppo nents of the death penalty now stand as the firm friends of hanging; for they object to tha expenditure of any amount to install a new electrocution apparatus at the State Penitentiary. They say that the expenditure is un justified, since the people may abolish the death penalty at next election. A sufficient answer is that the people at the recent election, by a large major ity, declined to abolish capital punish ment. What right has the Legislature to assume that the people do not know their own minds? Yet the clamor for the Legislature to pay no attention to a popular mandate comes from the same mouths that habitually repre hend the Legislature for Its failure to respond automatically to the public will. People do not eat enough apples. That is one reason the market rules low. The apple is better than patent medicine, and tastes better, but its trivial cost in comparison is against It. People with a "misery" love to spend money on it. The woolen trust threatens to pass on tariff reduction to its workmen, ignoring the fact that their wages are already on a low tariff basis, for the trust has been convicted of importing labor. A San Francisco preacher resigned to become an undertaker, with the Idea of dispelling customary gloom at funerals. Evidently he will be aB much out of place' on the new Job as he was on the old. Senator Warren's re-election means that Wyoming's graft on the Army ap propriations is unbroken. He will see that as many dollars are appropriated for Army posts as there are sheep In his state. The man who voted for Jackson and let his hair grow until Cleveland was elected has offspring due for a trim ming when Wilson takes office. Many Democrats are consistent in their ob stinacy. English tourists now understand that only gunmen and their police pro tectors are allowed to carry firearms in New York. The good citizen's safety lies in giving up on demand. The man who beats the mother of his eleven-day-old child should be tried before a Jury of women. It is libel on some excellent animals to call him a brute. But of course the new International Harvester Company has wisely incor porated before Wilson's new anti trust bills made New Jersey inhospit able soil. Why should a city employe have a free ride, while the man beside him, who must dig up the money for the employe's salary, pays for his own ride? Testimony regarding the steel rail pool would seem to suggest that the essence of a gentleman's agreement is that no gentleman lives up to it Those Britons toting guns in New York thought they were doing the way they should, don't y know. If one-tenth of the proposed laws are passed, the next ballot will be a record-breaker. Perhaps the Arizona messenger had too much in the Jackpot at Chicago to Jar loose. Economic waste continues in the un filled Federal jobs. Warren has Wyoming well in hand, j LET REPUBLICANS GET TOGETHER Harmony Call I Sounded From Bum by Mr. Davey. BURNS. Or., Jan. 23. (To the Edl tor.) I do not believe that party poll ticai success should be a paramount consideration under all circumstances, but I do believe that the best govern mental service in a Nation of such ex tent and diversity of industry as the United States can be achieved through the agency of political organization, and I believe, too, that the Republican party in its basic designs and principles is the best for the country's welfare and prosperity that was ever conceived. Believing thus, I hold it to be the duty of its best and most unselfish minds to interest themselves as soon as possible for the reuniting of the party's forces upon the broad and patriotic principles which underlie its aims ana purposes, and to fortify these with the true progressive ideas demanded by modern conditions. If the effort be considered worth while the period of the legislative ses sion is a good time to set it going. Strong, Influential citizens from all parts of the state are numerous in Salem and Portland at this time, and they should be brought together in one or more meetings, either at the capital or the metropolis, for "earnest and oraverful action" toward an organiza tion for an aggressive campaign of education in every precinct in Oregon, which will ultimately Testore the party to public confidence and consequent numerical supremacy. I believe it Is only necessary at the outset for all elements of the party leaders to impress the public with the fact that the Oregon system tne pri mary law, the initiative, the referen dum. Statement No. 1. etc. is the ac cepted system of Government in Its best sense and purity, and that any attempt to change or amend it must proceed only from a desire to strengthen and perpetuate It. with such an understanding, all xuture at tempts at the change of such laws can be considered on their merits and not In the way they have been so far dis cussed. There must be no reserva tions In the sweeping declaration on this subject to be issued as a fir3t pro nouncement of such a gathering. The Republican party was founded upon liberty for the oppressed; its earliest efforts vera in the interest of the masses; even the greatest mistakes charged to it along the lines of high tariff were founded upon a desire to provide the means of good compensa tion for the industrious worker in the ranks: It is the natural abiding place of the home-builder, the family man. the orderiv citizen and promoter ot good moral life, hence It must have no barriers against the common herd; It must take them all into its confidence, sympathize with their ambitions and labor for their elevation. It must pledge respect for and protection to the rights and privileges the people have of late years secured to them selves in law-making and choice of officials, and in every way proclaim Its fidelity to the common cause. The voters of the state gave a plurality to the Democratic candidate for the Presidency last tall, DUt it was not a sincere expression. Demo cratic candidates for United States Senator have carried the state twice in succession, but neither of these verdicts was truly representative o the majority feeling. We all know this. The great interests of Oregon do not desire legislation according to Democratic policy and will not trust themselves to that party If given a fair show to vote otherwise. I believe, then, the leading Republi cans of the state, in the Legislature and visiting it. should get together In public meeting and invite a union of all the voters upon some sucn piatiorm as the following: Complete loyalty to the Oregon system- Strict economy and honesty in all deDartments and institutions. Regulation of hours of labor and establishment of a minimum wage scale, also compensation for injuries. .Strengthening the code provisions for the suppression of vice. Remodeling the system of court prae tlce so as to facilitate the settlement of litigation. Of course, the fertile brains of the men who would take an Interest in the matter would have no trouble in pro ducing several other items of advisable state policy and then - the following could be laid down twitn otners mat will suggest themselves as safe Na tlonal policies: Protection for productive industries. Low tariff or free trade for all manu factured goods shipped to foreign markets and sold there cheaper than at home. No nrotectlve tariff unless It Is clear ly shown that labor employed in th industry affected obtains the benefit of it. Stringent laws against "cornering" or speculating in any of the necessities of life. Making the term of President six vears and no re-election. Reforming the currency system to make artificial financial panics impos sible. Conservation of National resources In such a way as to encourage their practical use and prevent their waste or their absorption Dy monopolies. Wiping out the "special agent" avstnm in the land department aa now understood and substituting a corps of agricultural instructors, advisers and helpers. In suggesting this movement I have no Incentive except party patriotism born of the beliefs expressed in the first paragraph. I have been a worker in the narty ranks nearly 40 years and I know there Is every reason that the nartv should live. I am a pioneer In unselfish adherence to the doctrine of the rule of the people, lor there were few advocates of It when I stood out as Its almost solitary champion ten vears aero now, therefore the most radical of those calling themselves progressive cannot question the sin cerity of my motives in the present advocacy. I sincerely hope The Oregonlan, the Salem Statesman and other leading papers of the state will take up this subject editorially, forget the obscurity of the writer. Ignore the many weak nesses of his details and work out the general intention with the Improve ments which they are well able to sug. gest. FRANK DAVEY. AUDITORIUM FLOOR SHOULD DIP Arrangement of Public Building; Held Matter of Special Importance. PORTLAND, Jan. 27. (To the Ed itor.) Now the Auditorium Commis sioners have determined to build the new auditorium on the Market block, perhaps it is right for those who pay the bills to put in a word. It was first intimated that the floor will be perfectly level so as to accom modate expositions. It is all right to havo such exhibits in the building, but, I understand, in other places they do not have the right of way and make the building unfitted for its primary purpose of an auditorium. The floors elsewhere are inclined toward the stage, and, in spite of this, dances and expositions are held Just the same. We can never have grand opera or any great spectacular shows here at popu lar prices because the seating capacity of the theaters will not guarantee the expenses except at greatly Increased prices of seats. If this new auditorium Is really to be for the benefit and com fort of the people, now is the time to Insist that Its stage shall be designed for large affairs, and the floor shall be on a suitable Incline for general com fort, and convenience. Our theater people can then rent it when they have something big to give us, and accom modate people who are generally barred out of such affairs because they can not stand the prices. I would like to hear some public ex pression on this Important matter be fore it is too late. ROBERT C. WRIGHT. MORALS ANTEDATE CIVILIZATION Eves the Early Savages Bad Their Codes) of Morals. PORTLAND, Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) One may be pardoned, I hope, for expressing surprise at the letter of Mr. Cronise demanding the suppres sion of street speaking, after profes sing himself a believer In Jesus Christ, who is credited with saying: VBless them that curse you, and do good unto them that despitefully use you." There are several other surprising things in Mr. Cronlse's letter. For in stance, he claims that "morals are a product of civilization." That state ment Is certainly not borne out by the conclusions of scientific research. We have the word of Professor William G. Sumner, of Yale, that morals are "folkways;" that is, the customary ways of doing things. The etymology of the word "morals'" Itself gives a good hint as to the origin of morality. Savagery has its own morals Just as surely as that stage of social develop ment we call civilization. Society fur nishes its own sanctions for certain kinds of conduct in each social stage. in accordance with what is conceived to be best in the Interests of individual and social security. According to this principle, the greatest single factor making for genuine morality is knowl edge, meaning thereby an unaerstana ing of the true qualities and relations of things: in other words, science. Mr. Cronise says: "The morals of America and Europe are the product of a civilization based on Christianity.' If this is true, is it not strange that the virtues and moral precepts now said to be distinctly Christian, were ail taught and practiced thousands of years before the present era? More over, thev are practiced by human be lngs who have never come into contact with Christianity. If "civilization has always been based on religion of some sort," as Mr. Cronise claims, then he must hold that religion is really responsible for mor ality. Now, this is just the opposite of all the facts disclosed by modern anthropological and ethnological . re search. Tylor's "Primitive Culture." spencer's "Principles of Sociology" and Morgan's "Ancient Society" contain a vast array of facts which contradict Mr. Cronise. In another thoughtful and encyclo pedic work, "Morals in Evolution, the author, L. T. Hobhouse, professor or sociology in London University, after reviewing all the various moral sys tems of the world and of religion in connection therewith, lays down that. instead of religion being the basis of ethics, ethics is the test to whicn re ligion must conform. Indeed, any reader of this authoritative work can not but be struck by tho fact that a developing ethics frequently finds itB most powerful opposition in tne pre vailing religious belief. Let us not be afraid to face tne facts of evolution. We shall all be the bet ter for It. And, above all, let us keep in mind the words of that wise states man, Thomas Jefferson, when he said, Error of opinion may well De toier ated where reason is left free to com bat it." H. C. UTHOFF. JEALOUS OF OREGON'S CLIMATE California Papers Take Liberties With the Weather Reports. PORTLAND, Jan. 26. (To the Ed itor.) I have Just returned from a trip throughout the East and the southern part of the country and Northern Mexi co, and, in particular Southern Califor nia, and wish at this time to protest against the small, mean and Jealously Inspired methods of the papers in Los Angeles and San Diego concerning the weather conditions 1ft Portland. Not that, our weather here has been all balmy and sunshiny, but yet it has been nothing to cause us great worry. Dur- ing a stay of nearly a month in these cities not once did an item appear In any of the papers under a Portland headline which told good tidings, or even ordinary news concerning the city. But let an unusual rain or an unusual snow appear and . the Item would immediately appear on the front page under a Portland headline. Even then it would not be so bad if they would only observe the ordinary pro prieties of the truth. I quote a few Instances. On January 6, when California had its first big frost, which practically de stroyed the entire citrus output, amounting to 150,000,000 or $60,000,000 of damages, Portland had a Govern ment report of 30 degrees above Zero, while the weather in Los Angeles and San Diego was as low as 18 degrees above. However, it was impossible to find the Portland temperature given anywhere except at the United States weather observatory. As soon as th weather turned cold in Portland, the Portland temperatures were on the front pages, but while Portland had good weather the papers, not daring to print the correct Portland tempera tures for fear of putting their own dis tricts in a bad light, printed a dis patch, under a Portland headline, stat ing that there was zero weather east of the Cascade .Mountains. The same thing occurred the following day, stat ing that Halfway, Or., was the coldest place on the weather map for that day. It is at once apparent that a statement of this kind In these papers would at once identify this cold weather with Portland, when, as a matter of fact, at the tlmeB mentioned Portland weather was far superior to and far balmier than that of Southern California. Seattle fared the same as Portland in this respect, and now that the riv airy between Seattle and Portland has been practically eliminated, it would be a good thing if they would both Join hands and in some manner appease the dense Jealousy that the southern cities have of our climate. C. T. HAAS. FREE TEXT BOOKS ARB FAVORED Schools Must Be Kept Up by All Classes of People. PORTLAND, Jan. 26. (To the Edi tor.) In looking through the com munication of W. Vernon in The Sun day Oregonlan I find some things which appear to one as very super ficial and misleading. In the first place I cannot see how the "property- owner" pure and simple can have any interest except such as he takes volun tarily in the public school system of the State of Oregon. It is the heads of families, property-owners or renters. whichever they may be. And by the way, I consider the man who pays rent just as important as the property owner, as he pays the taxes, interest on the money invested and other in cidentals which the property-owner charges up to him in the way of rent. A great may people have studied the free textbook proposition on purely economic and patriotic grounds. Under a free textbook system there is a great saving in books and stationery, where the students must practice care and habits of cleanliness in handling the materials lent to them by the public. For Instance, take a book owned by a student in either the grammar or high schools in the City of Portland and compare it with the book lent by the Public Library, and one can read . a story without words. Further, is it In keeping with our American institutions to ask the children of the indigent poor to step up to the teacher's desk and say, "I am a beggar, can I have a fie? book?" Young Americans seem to have some feelings of their own, more than some American adults who, because they are "property-owners," seem to think they have some particular cinch on American institutions. They forget that the renter carries a pretty big load himself towards these institu tions and things in general. Of course, people who do not have children must pa school taxes, too. They ought to, with interest- A RENTER. The Fan's Rubaiyat By Dcaa) Collin. Wake, for the Spring Is fumbling at the knocker; Soon Winter furs are destined for th locker: Wake, baseball fan, the season speeds apace In which men think of basketball and soccer. Soon the warm sun, returning on Its beat. Will touch the land, in spots, with Springtime heat; And heroes of the diamond will adorn The pink expanses of the sporting sheet. Though still the frost may linger, and the fall Of Winter snow may spread without thy hall, , Draw out thy dope sheet, limber up a bit And gamble on the future of baseball. For soon to California's land of drouth. Bound for the Springtime training camps down South, The Northern teams will ramble o'er the rail. And many rumors fly from mouth to mouth. And we shall watch them vanish down the track, The diamond artists of the subtle "Mac," Raw from the Winter, and we'll try to guess What sort of lineup he will bring us back. Of past transactions I remember well. Which. In the seasons now departed, fell Say, does a manager e'er buy a man One-half so precious as the ones he'll sell? Full early 'tis to cast a horoscope. And - on the Beavers draw a line of dope; But It is easy at this time of year To open up a copious can of hope. Let, then, the records of past sorrows die, Begin to take a new slant at the sky. And in your visions over Portland's field Behold the nineteen thirteen pennant fly. Fans, to the glowing future cast your lamp. For though the present month be dour and damp. Full soon the time is coming when your soul Will bang expectant round the training camp. For Spring already fumbles at the knocker: The season soon will come and none can block "er When we must eat and sleep and talk baseball. And scorn the feeble Winter sports, like soccer. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan of January 29. 1863. The colored population of Victoria fired an artillery salute from Beacon Hill on the receipt of the news that Mr. Lincoln had issued his emancipa tion proclamation. For this they were fined, as the hill Is used to fire signal guns on the arrival of ships, and its use by the colored people gave a false signal. Walla Walla, w7"T-. Jan. 23. Miners are moving for the mines, especially for the Boise Valley. There are now, it is supposed, 2000 there. There are 200 buildings already erected in Placor ville. The Oregon Steam Navigation Com pany is going on with giant strides to connect the river navigation by rail roads. The Cascade road is nearly completed. The Deschutes road will be completed in May or June. A lot of stray Indians from the Riletz Agency are hanging about town. There are also some Spokanes In this vicin ity, who have been working for citi zens or making a livelihood by less re spectable means. Night before last the members of the two contending tribes engaged in a free and Indiscrim inate fight, characterized by a great deal of ferocity. The Indians on the Oregon Indian Reservations appear to be immortal as the everlasting hills. Since the es tablishment of the reservations, none have died and doubtless many have been born. This appears to arise from the fact that rations are regularly dis tributed at the cost of the Government to these savages. Of course, they would not die for fear some agent would draw the cost of the rations the same as if they were alive. Canal and Merchant Marine. VANCOUVER. Wash., Jan. 26. (To the Editor.) (1) Does the act of Con gress exempting United States coast wise vessels from tolls for passage through the Panama Canal violate th Hay-Pauncefote treaty? (2.) Has the United states a mer chant marine such as Great Britain and other European governments? (3) Where could one obtain a copy of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty? A. J. MILLS. 1. That is the question In contro versy between the United States and Great Britain. The Oregonlan thinks it does not. (2.) The United States has a mer chant marine, but not such as Great Britain and other European govern ments. The total tonnage of the Amer. lean merchant marine is 7,714,183, Out only 923,225 of this is engaged in for eign trade. The British tonnage is 19.240,817 and the German 4,326,723, the great majority of which is In for eign trade. 8. Write to the State Department, Washington, D. C. Playing the Joker. IRRIGON. Or.. Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly decide the following: In playing a "no-trump" hand In the game of 600, A claims that the joker may be played at any time regardless of suit; B, C and D take the opposite vinw. (21 Has the rule on this point ever been changed since the game of 500 originated? The joker may be played only when suit Is exhausted. A Family Matter. Harper's Weekly. A man who was greatly troubled wi'h rheumatism bought some red flan nel underwear recently, which was guaranteed In every respect, and a cou ple ot weeks later returned to the store where he maae nis puronase. - These flannels are. not what you claimed them to be," he said to the clerk. What is the trouble with them.' asked the clerk, "have thsy faded or shrunk?" Faded! Shrunk!" cried the purchaser indignantly, "why, when I came down to breakfast this morning with one of them on my wife asked me: "'What are you wearing tne DaDy s pink coral necklace for?' " Is the Mode. She's slender as the graceful reed. A tight skirt vision rare. But where are all the petticoats That Maggie used to wear? Richmond Times-Dispatch,