THE MORNING OKJSGONlA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1913. 12 rOETLA5U, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, pcstofflce aa pecond-claa matter. Subscription Ratee Invariably la Advanc (BY MAIL.) Dally, Sunday included, one rear SS.O ; ally, Sunday Included, six month - I ally, Sunday Included, three month. . -o : ally, Sunday Included, one ' month. .. -7 rally, without Sunday, one year aw L ally, without Sunday, alx month . - E ally, without Sunday, three month. . pally, without Sunday, one month Weeny, on year 1.00 - jnday, on year ........ J-ow t. indav unit Weelrlv. one vitr t (BT CARBIKR.) '. ally, Sunday Included, an year nalrvi Sundae Included, am month.... How to Remit Send Poetofflo money or. der, exprea order or personal check on your :-"al bank. Stamp, ooln or currency are at th nnder- rule Olv postotrice addre m full. Including county and atata Postage Rates Ten to 14 page. 1 W'i " to 28 page. 2 cent; to to 40 paorja, -nt; 40 to 60 page, 4 oanta. Foreign - .stage, dpuble rate. Eastern Beninese Offices Vsrree A Conk lln, New York. B run wick VnJJdlng. Cnl ago, Steger tulldlng. San Francisco Of lice R- J. Bldwen Co. 143 Market street. European Office No 8 Regent street B. London I OKTLAND. FKXDAT. FEB. 14. X1A. mrsrstsB jrnXRBOLE. Undoubtedly Mr. Roosvolt win be understood to be Indulging In his usual . ierheated hyperbole when he says ' at the Idaho decision Imprisoning the Boise editors constituted an "even rraver offense against Justice and de cency and an even greater blot on the American Judiciary than the Dred Seoat decision Itself." The Idaho in . lioMrt la a more or less sectional af fair, important to the persons con--n-ned and Indicative of the arbitrary and unwarranted methods of one mi nor court only In Its abuse of its pow ers and Its retaliation upon Its detain ers. The Dred Scott decision became the law of the land, and was, or was intended to be, the last word In the tremendous conflict over human slav ery. No wonder it shook the struc ture of the Government and aroused the whole people. That decision was recalled by the bloody arbitrament of civil war. Mr. Roosevelt savagely denounces the court for shutting the R'oosevelt electors off the ballot; but he has given us nothing but bitter Impreca tion and hot Indignation much thun der but little light. It would be a lit tle more satisfactory If the Colonel would let the world know wherein the Idaho decision departed from the Idaho law. In view of the Colonel's protracted and obstinate Bllence over the similar outrage in California where the Taft electors were excluded from the bal lot, the Impression lingers that Colonel Roosevelt's excitement arises mainly from the fact that he lost Idaho and not from the supposed fact that the Idaho court distorted the Idaho law. THE SETTLER'S GAMBLE. A few daya ago Secretary Fisher told In a letter to The Oregonlan of the benevolent purpose of the Interior Department toward the honest settler. Today an honest settler writes of the repressive effect of the department's rulings In connection with the three S ear homestead law. Mr. Haines, who nas worked ten years in an effort to reduce to cultivation a claim in un irveyed land, Is now confronted by lawa and regulations which did not xist when he began his labors on the tract. The survey is about to be ac- t pted. He will soon be able to file his application, but unless he can ob- . in a favorable ruling from the de p irtment in his particular behalf he ill lose his claim because It is im possible to comply with the cultivation i qulrements of the new law. The homestead law now demands hat one-eighth of the tract entered tpon. by the settler shall be In actual tltlvation, beginning with the third j , ar of the residence period and until final proof is offered. The cultivation must include breaking or stirring of the soil, planting or sowing of seed nd tillage for a crop other than native irrasses. It is safe to say that there are no vacant lands in Western Oregon whereon the ordinary settler could comply with these regulations. There lire meadow lands in the forest re serves. but the Western settler has learned to his sorrow the tremendous requirements of the forest service for agricultural lands for ranger stations itnu aam m iMiru. Live jjuiyuwo. Bhort, there Is no chance there for the settler. Meadow lands outside the reserves were long ago homesteaded. But there are vacant agricultural lands covered by alder, burned fir and cedar, BssMiAfsma over-mnture trees, or other- 1.n .nar.tv 1 1 ni hrod . Xrt .settler. nee can build his modest home. IIIP.S. IIULUUliUlIi. UltttO, imkuic necessary worn aminais anu iwus, yiu vlde a livelihood for his family and re dact twenty acres of such land to cultivation In three years. The Secretary of the Interior has authority to reduce the cultivation re quirements In Individual easea The homesteader must file application for the reduction In the first year of his entry. The Secretary specifically re aerves the right to delay action, if he so elects, until final proof Is offered. In other words the homesteader must take chances with the changing poli cies of the Interior Department, the whims or ambitions of Government in spectors or agents, the dreary circum locution of a Federal bureau. All the time perhaps three years he must hustle his hardest to grub, plow, seed pad till as many acres as possible and still live in doubt. Is any sane man going to risk the loss of three years' hardest kind of labor by filing on lands in Western Oregon? Such is the case of the newcomer or intending homesteader. But there re gain Mr. Haines and hundreds of thers in similar plight. They have .-one on unsurveyed land In good alth, have built homes, slashed tlm pr. turned unproductive acres Into asture. packed supplies over rough alls In short, pioneered aa did the en who crossed the plains half a ntury ago. Some have not twenty res that can be cultivated. Those ns turned to stock-raising or dalry- for their chief resource learn that ?,T have three years In which to ib the pasture stumps and turn the iai Into a strictly agricultural tract the time Is too short, or the re retnent too great, a paternal Gov . r: raant may, not must, diminish the p J demand. I'nder extremely fa rahle conditions they will have a gamvnff chance, but If a reservation Lst (the Pinchot type shall hold the Interior portfolio, and the law be not harifed, such settlers will have no hopefof patent. Thi vast number of people who are interBted in using petroleum and its by products are disturbed over con stantly Increasing prices. Crude oil is going up and gasoline has already reached an almost prohibitive figure All this has happened since the disso lution of the Standard Oil Company The "independents" seem to have Joined hands with the monopoly in exploiting the public. The oil fields are as productive as ever and new ones are discovered from time to time. Na ture Is doing her part, but some blight seems to have struck competition. Is there a new trust? . QUANTITY OB QUALITY. Thirty-one bills passed by the State Legislature in thirty-one days one bill a day la wltherlngly denounced by the uncompromising newspaper critics as a poor record a very poor record. These same censors have likewise roared with derision at the Legislature because nine hundred or more bills were Introduced, when there was and is no need for nine hun dred new laws. When there Is the prospect of too much law, they are not satisfied; when there Is the certainty of very little new law, they are still whlnlngly unhappy. If the Legislature acts with judr ment and intelligence on legislation for which there is an obvious public need and demand. It will have done well. If it makes Its appropriations with due regard to the expanding In terests of the state and to the service which the public institutions are called on to render. It will have met all rea sonable expectation. If It shall enact a compensation law, good roads leg islation and some other cardinal meas ures, it will have done its full duty. But if it shall send to the waste basket some eight hundred odd of the nine hundred bills Introduced, it will deserve to go thundering down the ages as the wisest Legislature Oregon ever had. SEVENTH STREET AND A THIRD KAIL. The Portland Railway, Light & Power Company now has its new fran chise (or will have after the Mayor shall sign), including the disputed territory of Seventh street. But the bargain or agreement by which Mr. Heusner and his suppositious interur ban cars shall be, or may be, admitted to Seventh street hereafter binds no body. Let that be understood now. The Portland Railway, Light & Power Company, by implication at least, failed to keep faith with the Seventh street property owners who were fight ing its battles for a franchise and were making common cause with It to prevent the laying of a third rail along one of Portland's busiest and most im portant streets. Just where they or the public have been consulted or con sidered in this little arrangement to let the Heusner company in later Is not apparent. Probably it will be said that Mr. Heusner has no franchise yet, and that the Council has given him noth ing, and the street railway company has given him nothing. Tet they defi nitely prepare the way for his occu pancy of Seventh street, and traffic and trade in rights and grants which exist only in expectancy. Later we shall hear from Mr. Heusner, of course, that he has been promised a Seventh-street franchise, and has in good faith Invested money on that pledge. Seventh street stands Just where it did, so far as the desirability or unde sirablllty of a third rail is concerned. Seventh street should never be given up to a combination of urban and ln terurban cars. There will be room for nothing else. OREGON'S OIVEKSITT. One hundred and twenty students from Oregon are said to be registered at a single institution in California. A large group of Oregon young men and young women help swell the mag nificent student body of the University of Washington. Other sons and daugh. ters of Oregon are scattered through the colleges and universities of the East and Middle West. It is probably not an excessive estimate that one-half the eligibles for education at the Ore gon State University go elsewhere. It may be considered sound financial strategy to have our boys and girls trained for their life work at the ex pense of some other state; but we doubt If it pays. What we have thus lost in neglect of our own State Uni versity is not calculable. All know that the University has suffered through the political vicissi tudes of several referendum cam paigns. Tet it survives; and it is clear that the people of Oregon believe that they should maintain a State Univer sity. It is noteworthy that so valua ble and Influential an organization as the State Federation of Woman's Clubs has enlisted for the University and purposes to do all it can to estab lish a secure foundation for an Institu tion having a vital relation to the moral and educational welfare of Ore gon. If the mothers of Oregon take up the cause of the State University, there can be no doubt of its future prosper! ty. Now the Joint ways and means com mittee at Salem agrees on a reasonable appropriation by the State Legislature for the University. It ought to pass; and this time we think there will be no referendum. There ought to be none. For it Is clear that the greatest use fulness of the University can be achieved only through adequate finan cial support. If the University is to be stunted, or starved, or stripped, we might as well abolish it utterly. ABANDONED FARMS. We do not hear so much as we used about abandoned farms in the East. The price of farm land in New Eng land has doubled In the last twenty years. This may not bo a very rapid Increase, but It is an increase. The day when population forsook the granite hills for the fertile areas of the West seems to have passed. Polish tenants now pay a yearly rent of $40 an acre for land which a few years ago could not be sold for $100 an acre. Agriculture is looking up In New England. The new state of things is owing to certain much-despised foreigners. It Is the Italians, Poles and Huns, the so-called Latin races from Central and Southern Europe, who are becoming the food-producers for the Atlantic section of the country. They under stand the art of raising a large quan tity of produce on a small tract Bet ter still, they understand the art of marketing what they raise. With these two qualities combined they are doing what the American farmer failed to do in the East. They are making the difficult soils of New England pay good returns on an In vestment of $200 and 1300 an acre. The Finns are doing something of the same sort in the Paclfie North west Wherever they have settled in considerable numbers they have placed agriculture on a new and bet ter basis than it had before. They know how to co-operate in community efforts and they break the terrible monotony of Isolated farm life by a variety of social entertainments. For eigners of these types enjoy one decid ed advantage over old-fashioned Americans. Every member of the family takes part In the farm work. Yankee pride lias never submitted to this. It has been deemed unworthy of women to work out of doors. We have preferred to shut them up from morninjf to night in the hot and stuffy kitchen from which they have gradu ated by the thousand to the lunatic asylum and the tomb. Foreigners let them out Into the fields to breathe with their Bons and husbands the free air. Hence their race Is taking pos session of the country. Even the young boys and girls in many families have a little business of their own. They win prizes by producing fancy grades of seed corn and potatoes. They produce and market eggs. The neglected poultry industry is singular ly suitable for girls and women. It is odd that more of them do not prefer it to typewriting and the laundries. A GOOD SUGGESTION. One of The Oregonlan's friendly correspondents made a suggestion the other day which was too happy to pass without comment The exact form in which he proposed his plan may not have been the best but there is no de nying that his reasoning was sound. We refer to the young unmarried man who said that he had been in Portland ten months without meeting a solitary woman whom he could dream of mar rying. According to his account he has a fair Income, is free from bad habits and not uncomely to the criti cal gaze. Still, in spite of his obvious advantages he cannot get married for lack of opportunity. He referred to the sad deficiency of meeting places foj the sexes. They can come together easily enough un der vicious auspices, but what society Is there either sacred or secular which opens a wholesome resort where young men and women may go through the necessary preliminaries to lifelong unions? Does not our correspondent touch upon a social duty which has been too long neglected? His sugges tion is that the Woman's Club lend its prestige to a monthly social meeting at which all decent young people shall be welcome. If this Is out of the question perhaps a society might be organized for the purpose. Whatever may be thought of this particular point, there Is no doubt that the want of decent meeting places for young people is crying in almost all our cities and that in country villages conditions are still worse. In many of the latter places a misdirected zeal for Puritanism has resulted In driv ing young men to the saloons for their Dniy amusement, while girls drift to the city as fast as they can find the means to pay railroad fare. The "social directors" who have been sent out by the University of Wisconsin to a number of country towns seem to have done excellent work toward bettering the situation In rural sections, though hundreds of them are needed instead of scores be fore the evil will be materially reme died. In the cities the new science of social hygiene Is moving in the right direction. A very little practice In matters of this kind is worth more than thousands of sermons, particu larly if the practice is based upon ade quate study of the situation. THE SALOON AND THE LAW. An esteemed and exceptionally able contemporary, the Pilot Rock Record, makes an attractive argument for mu nicipal ownership of saloons in an ar ticle which The Oregonlan has al ready commented upon briefly. The subject may appear important enough to many readers to warrant some fur ther consideration. The Record bases its argument upon the proposition that "if it were not for the license fee from the saloons few if any towns or cities would tolerate them." This may be taken for granted. We have never ourselves allowed any great weight to the "personal liberty" argument. It figures largely In liquor campaigns, but really there Is not much In It. If the liquor business is injurious to the community the individual's liberty to booze is of no consequence in com parison with the general welfare. So the courts have always held, and their decisions jibe accurately with common sense. Municipalities grant liquor licenses because they want the fees for municipal purposes and this is mainly the consideration which de cides the question in the minds of most citizens. There is another plea which often counts heavily for the saloons, though It seems to be losing ground somewhat of late. It Is that "prohibition does not prohibit; and if It does prohibit the toper is sure to replace his tipple with something worse." The public Is learning more accurately than of yore some of the reasons why prohibi tion does not prohibit. The shipment of liquor without much restraint in Interstate commerce is one of them. When Congress has definitely for bidden this Insidious practice we shall see whether there Is not something more than has been supposed In state prohibition. Meanwhile Kansas dem onstrates to the candid mind that It Is possible, even as conditions are, to rear a generation to whom the saloon with its sordid evils is virtually un known. If the population of every state in the Union had the firmness of character and indomitable inde pendence of spirit which we see in Kansas the liquor traffic would be less troublesome. Almost any law will suf fice to regulate It when the people are firmly resolved that it shall be regulated, come what may. Oregon, for example, has plenty of antl-llquor legislation, but it is ineffectual to a degree, not because It is not strict enough, but because the people as a whole care very little whether it is enforced or not. A3 to the plea that the toper de prived of his rum is sure to resort to morphine or cocaine, it is certainly true of the old sot But how about the young man whose habits are not yet formed? Is It not worth while to consider his case a little? Not being a drug slave as yet, the closing of the saloons would not necessarily drive him to the hypodermic syringe for re lief. As a matter of fact, the younger generation In communities where there are no saloons are undeniably of better habits than their contempo raries elsewhere. We dare say the Lord knew what he was about when he taught the prayer, "lead us not into temptation." So much for the Rec ord's premise that it is the license fee which keeps the saloon in existence. The conclusion from it follows, "Reve nue being the desideratum, why- should not the towns granting the licenses have all there is In the busi ness Instead of only a small part of It?" Thus our logical contemporary sees the way clear to municipal own ership of the saloons. To enforce the point that license fees take but a small part of the profit of the liquor busi ness, the Record cites the example of its own town, which has one saloon paying an annual license fee of $1500, while its net profits amount to some $18,760. "Why should Pilot Rock not have this Income?" the Record in quires. "The saloon Is here because we want that $1500." Would not tne whole $18,750 be still more agreeable? Alluring as this prospect appears at first sight, there are difficulties in the way. In Pilot Rock and In every other town in the United States there are people who look upon the liquor traffic as a crime and the profit of It as the wases of sin. In their eyes the license fee is a bribe to the moral sense of the community. The entire profit of the business would be only a larger bribe and all the more hei nous because it is more tempting. People of this way of thinking will oppose municipal ownership of the sa loons more bitterly than the license system. Their hatred of the tempter grows fiercer as his lures grow more seductive. They will make no com promise with the evil thing and they never will rest until his power Is ut terly destroyed. If they cannot gain their end in one way, they will try another, but we may feel perfectly sure that their agitation will never stop as long as there are saloons in the country- They plant their feet upon the proposition that the saloon, as it is conducted in the United States, is wholly indefensible. It Is always al lied with the worst men and the worst practices in the community. White slavery, gambling, corrupt politics, the luring of youth into vicious ways, all center about the saloon. It Is often said that every barkeeper is a law breaker. This is an exaggeration, of course, but it comes near enough to the truth to hold its ground in popular talk. The saloon stands In our cities and villages as a running sore. No sane person can say a' word to defend It. Even the plea that it is the poor man's clubhouse Is disingenuous. Provide the saloon frequenter with a cleaner resort, and he goes back to his sty, which proves that he goes there not for social relaxation, but for the vice with which it is saturated. Indefensi ble as the saloon is, still It has held its own in numberless communities, defying all efforts to abolish or even to regulate it. We can account for such as astonishing state of things only on the supposition that these ef forts are, upon the whole, not sincere. If the majority of Americans really wished to bring the saloons under sub jection to the law and make them de cent, the feat might prove difficult, but It would not be impossible. The average moral state of the popular mind is accurately reflected in its in stitutions. Our saloons are abomina tions because we do not care to have them anything better. If we wanted them to be different, nothing under heaven could prevent it. Future Robinson Crusoes will not be obliged to undergo as many hard ships' as their famous predecessor of De Foe's time. Thij isolated Islands scattered here and there upon the bosom of the Pacific where a voyager might possibly be cast away have been stored with supplies by the various governments which claim them. Food and clothing have been deposited and matches In sealed boxes have been left where they can easily be found. Thus the way has been smoothed for ship wrecked travelers. The Enoch Arden of the years to come will lack nothing but his Annie to make his sojourn enjoyable. When Representative Fitzgerald, who is crying for economy in the Naval bill, secures substantial provi sion for improvements in his district through the public building bill, we are led to reflect on the frailty of human nature. Senatorial deadlocks have become a regular event whenever Illinois has to elect a Senator. Life will be dull and uneventful at Springfield when direct election makes deadlocks impossible and legislators have nothing to do but legislate. Eugene has a new boosting organi zation called "The Radiators," whose object Is to let the light shine from that remarkable city. They will do it, for they have the energy and the material. Vincent Astor has joined the naval militia. Now If he should neglect to salute some shoe clerk In Admiral's attire he may find himself in irons. Edison is one of the millionaires whom we count among the beneficent, not the predatory, rich, and all unite In birthday congratulations to him. Some way must be found to prevent the walkout of 40,000 Eastern train men. The economic loss all around is too great in such procedure. Nearly $20,000,000 seems a large Bum for the Government to spend for health, but it is as good an investment as Uncle Sam could make. When the suffrage marchers reach Washington it might be well to pause and reckon the damage done to the cause. Colonel Blethen's losses by fires are great, but his other name is Phoenix and the ashes bring him into bold relief. Rosalie Jones' Invinclbles cannot be conquered by snow and frost, but go marching on to trembling Washington. An emblem is being devised for the new aviation corps of the Army. Why not crossbones and skull? Those Mexicans must have been gathering inspiration from the Balk ans' dispatches. Men must go back to 1830 for the latest style. It pays to store up the family clothes. Thank goodness, one war is ended that between Fritz! Scheff and John Fox, Jr. Why does not Roosevelt go to Idaho and denounce the Idaho Supreme Court? Sugar stays .down. But why can't this happen in the canning season? Yes, the Legislature is still in ses sion. The dogs of war strain at the leash. LAW AND THE HONEST SETTLER One Telia of the Barrier Erect) Agralnst Redemption of Land. ROSEBURG, Or., Feb. lz. (To the Editor.) I came to Roseburg today for Buppllea. 1 live 25 miles out. have 20 miles of wagon road and pack my pro visions for five miles on a horse, t live on unsurveyed land; have lived there for 10 years. The land has been surveyed but the survey has not yet been accepted. I called at the local office to ascer tain If I could make my final proof under the old law when I had filed my application, but I was informed that all homesteads that were filed after June 6, 1912, the date the new homestead law went Into effect had to be proved up under the new law, no mat ter If I had been living on my land or 20 years. I was Informed that I nust have 20 acres of the 160 acres In actual cultivation, plowed and seeded. As a matter of fact I have been 10 years getting as many acres as pos sible into actual cultivation. I have 20 acres seeded to tame grass, the brush and the timber being cleared off, the stumps being left In the ground. I have not got 20 acres on my claim that can be cleared and put into actual cultivation. I have a bottom along the creek, the balance being all mountain side and hills. Now, under the ruling of the Secretary I will lose my claim and my 10 years' work, and there are hundreds of others that are in the same fix. I noticed Mr. Fisher's letter in The Oregonlan today. He says that if any one wants to take a homestead, before they file on It they can take the matter up with him and if the facts are that 20 acres or one-eighth of the area of the land cannot be cultivated within the time limit he will, under a proper showing, make a reduction of the amount of land to be cultivated. Now, let us see how Mr. Fisher's plan will work. A man comes from Kansas. He looks over the country and, after much time and money spent In finding a vacant piece of land he thinks he can make good on, he goes to the land office fvo file, and upon asking about the home stead laws Is given a circular or Is advised what the law Is. He finds that he must cultivate one-eighth of the area of the 160 acres 20 acres in three years. Having examined his claim he knows that he cannot cultivate that amount in 10 years if he works every day in the year, but he Is advised thai, he can make application to the Secre tary of the Interior to have the area to be cultivated reduced. Now what will he do? If he doesn't file on the land at once probably some one else will file on it If he does file on It and the Secretary of the Interior refuses to reduce the area he has lost his right to take the homestead. If he makes application to get the area reduced it will go through the local office, then be sent up to the Commissioner, and by the Commissioner be sent up to the Secretary of the Interior, who will send it back to Oregon with instructions that a proper officer make a personal examination of the land. The officer goes out In the course of time and examines the land and then he makes his report If it Is favorable the Sec retary will, In the course of time, make the reduction, but In all probability more than two years will have elapsed since the claimant made the applica tion for the reduction. Still, Mr. Fisher says that his law Is in the Interest of the honest homesteader. In his article he did not mention the ruling that homesteaders or settlers who have lived on unsurveyed land for periods up to 20 years must come under the new homestead law. In all candor, I ask Mr. Fisher what is to become of these settlers? Many of them have filed on their claims since June 6 and their proof has all been turned down. Many of them cannot possibly ever get the required area of land into actual cultivation, for they have not the land to clear and put Into cultivation. All the decisions of the Interior Department have held that when a settler goes onto the land and builds his house and commences his residence thereon his rights are in itiated at that time. Yet the Secretary holds that such Is not the case and that he must make final proof under a law that Is enacted 20 years, perhaps, after he has settled on the land. It is not the settler's fault that he has not made his final proof, for the land during all these years has not been surveyed so he can file on it and make his final proof and get his title. Mr. Fisher says this is to keep the home steader from speculating In timber lands. But Mr. Fisher, the railroad company Is allowed to scrip a whole township of unsurveyed lands, and is allowed to secure its title under the old laws. Thank God that one great newspaper Is fighting for the poor homesteader. JAMES H. HAINES. STATE INSURANCE FOR EVERYONE Writer Would Greatly Broaden Scope of Proposed Workmen's Law. YAMHILL, Or., Feb. 10. (To the Edi tor.) That state accident insurance should have a much broader applica tion than is provided by the bills now before the Legislature is the task your correspondent has undertaken to make clear. Since every citizen Is subject to acci dental Injury or death. It naturally fol lows that all have a personal and vital interest in the question an interest that Is Intensified by the fact that the state can provide insurance at cost since all profit and waste will be elim inated. Such a great, useful public function should be for all and not for a part of the people. A law making partners of the state, employer and employe to serve some special Interest Is a subversion of government not to be tolerated. Such a principle, if once established, would grow and could easily become an ugly and dangerous barnacle upon our body politic. The state should deal directly with the citizen for whose benefit the In surance has been provided. It can be assumed that the average workman earns $1000 per annum, the correctness of the estimate being Immaterial, the object desired being to establish a bas is for the computation of assessments, which basis must be fixed and made uniform for all. This would place every trade and occupation upon an equally before the law. The amount of the assessments could be regulated to suit the needs of every trade or occupation. Under the plan herein proposed any citizen of the state could elect to be come the beneficiary of the state ac cident insurance fund by paying his or her assessment covering a certain pe riod of time. A law should be enacted to bar any employe from civil action against his employer providing the employer has reimbursed his employe for the cost of Insurance while in his employ. The self interest of the employer will com pel the operation of the law so far as the employe Is concerned. This would preserve the citizen's liberty and freedom of action unham pered by legal complications. It would reduce state accident Insurance to the utmost simplicity, which is much to be desired, since it would eliminate many useless legal processes, affecting the Interest of the citizen which, if neg lected, would lead to trouble and ex pense. PHIL WlTrtiuUiiJOti. A Mere Inadvertence. Chicago Record-Herald. "One of the preachers comes forward with the declaration that the devil Is not mentioned in the Old Testament" "What of it?" "Well, he claims that there being n mention of him In the Old Testament there cannot be a devil." "That's no proof. The Old Testament does not mention 'the Illinois Legisla ture, but there is one." WHAT CAUSES EXTREME POVERTY f Subject of Being; Dead Broke la Spec ulated U pon. PORTLAND, Feb. 10. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonlan of February 7 appears an editorial on "being dead broke," which was drawn from a pub lication Issued by the Inmates of the Stata Penitentiary at Salem. Have you ever been in this miserable condition and then had man after man turn you down when seeking employment with a curt "No help wanted?" The Ore gonlan, after commenting on the cause of said condition, and admitting that there are people In our city who are begging for work and unable to pro cure it, attributes the cause of this sad condition to maladjustment of our lives, from which I infer Is meant In ability to adjust one's self to condi tions as they exist. But that is rather a vague explana tion and tends to avoid a definite meeting of the question, and would confuse many. Now I wish The Ore gonian would come out and give us what it considers the underlying cause of a condition that forces a human being to teg of his brother a chance to work In order to sustain life. Hu manity Is struggling, and has been for a long time, to find a remedy for con ditions of this kind, and we have tried many remedies, which so far seem to have only aggravated the condition. A neighbor of mine, who Is a Social ist, when discussing the condition of the working people, said to me that the underlying cause of unemployment poverty and Its attending evils was the wage and profit system and went on and gave me a lot of Government statistics (which I after verified) showing that the producer was robbed or exploited of the major part of his product, and that present society and governments were based on this ex ploitation of the producers In society. He said the remedy was that the peo ple should own and use the means of production collectively, and that society should co-operate In the production and distribution of those products to society for use instead of profit But the compensating fact for this condition of being dead broke, which had come to the knowledge of The Oregonlan. appeared Just a little amus ing: to me, and that was: That a farm er of the writer's acquaintance has several acres of potatoes which he has not dug for the reason that the price would not warrant it I take It that this farmer Is a man who works, is familiar with digging potatoes, la lo cated permanently near where these potatoes are to be dug, his expenses are light compared to the city dweller he does not have to pay carfare, extra board and lodging (which a city man would have to do In order to get there and dig the potatoes), yet the writer thinks that this would be a great com pensating fact to the poor, unfortun ate, dead broke city worker to go to the expense of going out to the farm (or walk, as he would, of course, have to do if he was broke) and dig the farmer's potatoes for half, and pay the farmer, or some one else, to feed and shelter him while he was doing it, when the farmer who was located on the ground and with comparatively no expense could not afford to dig them and get all. This would work beau tifully for the farmer, but where would the poor city chap get on: F. CRABTREE. Not the Conductor. Harper's Bazar. An overdressed woman of a certain age met an old acquaintance on the train. "And how are you, after all these years? Yes, this Is my little girl, Just t years old." The little girl turned, whispering "Mother, look at his hat. You needn't lb; he s not the conductor. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonlan of February 14, 1888. At a meeting of the Board of Trade, Vice-president Philip C. Schuyler, in the absence of President Maclean, oc cupied the chair. Olds & Summers, Buell & Lambertson and M. H. Holcomb were proposed for membership. A com mittee reported condemning the Joint lease of the O. R. & N. to the Nortnern Pacific and Union Pacific roads. There Is loud continuous complaint about the condition of the bridge on East Twelfth street between J and K. Mr. A L Tozier, of this city, came back from the Cascades yesterday, where he has been making arrange ments to move today. He has a fish wheel below the Cascades. The new military company held a meeting Friday evening at Spokane and elected the following officers: Captain, W. J. Farrar; first lieutenant, Alva Summers; second lieutenant, F. D. Kel sey; first sergeant S. W. Smith. Rev. Alfred Kummer, pastor of Tay lor Street Church, will deliver his lec ture on "Shams" tomorrow evening. W. J. Footner, general superintend ent of the Northern Pacific Express Company, has resigned and on March 1 H. H Browning, assistant superintend ent with headquarters In this city, will succeed him. The guardian sale of land on the East Side (Murray donation land claim, near the Asylum road), consist ing of five and a half acres, was sold by Auctioneer Richardson to John Kenworthy at auction yesterday at $900 per acre. House Washington, Feb. 18. A bill was Introduced by Hermann, of Oregon for the establishment of an assay office at Portland, Or. Washington, Feb. 13. Senator Dolph called up his bill In the Senate this afternoon, which appropriates $500,- 000 for the erection of a public building in Portland, and secured Its passage. Columbus, O., Feb. 13. Among the guests who sat down at the banquet of the Ohio Republican League were Senator Sherman, Governor Beaver, of Pennsylvania, Governor Luce, of Michi gan, Gov. Foraker, Ben Butter worth, S. P. Foster, president of the New York League, W. H. Smiley, of Warren, Professor Scarborough, of Wllberforce College, and Murat Hal stead, of Cincinnati. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan of February 14. 1863. Mr. Lincoln frankly acknowledges that he was wrong In removing Gen eral Butler from the command of the Gulf Department The blockading fleet has captured 541 vessels of all classes, valued at $40,000,000 since the war began. Nearly the entire amount is British capital. James Watson Webb Is our repre sentative at the court of the Emperor of the Brazils. He Is noted for his pugnacity, which has led him into fre quent duels and street fights. The lat est exhibition of his temper consists in having challenged the British min ister at Rio Janeiro to mortal com bat. The bold Briton declined and took refuge aboard one of Her Majesty's ships of war. The Sentinel is agitating the ques tion of opening a road from Jackson ville to the John Day & Powder River mines. It Is the only possible outlet for the superabundant produce of the southern part of the State. Flour Is worth $5 a barrel at Jack sonville, and $40 In those mines. The steamer Pacific sailed for San Francisco by the way of Victoria. The Julia did not attempt the trip to the Cascades yesterday morning, but will do so today. Valentines By Dean Colllna. Muse, assist me; I have planned, Valentines to beat the band; Maidens fair of every grade. Status, quality and shade, Folk of every sort and style. With my songa I would beguile. Asking all. right down the line; "Be my only Valentine." Muse, stand by. If you have time; Dope me out a scheme of rhyme: Sighs and eyes, and dart and heart. Locks and rocks and part and smart Thine (or mine) and Valentine Muse, 11 Is a goodly line. Let me turn the rhymes you lend Into missives without end. L Ask me not, Phyllis, whence my sighs; Look for the answer In your eyes. So soft and bright the beams they dart Is It strange that they fired my heart? Caught in the strands of your silken locks. Like an anchored shallop my wild heart rocks; Endless yearning hath been my part Be the physician to heal Its smart And let me read, in those of thlna. An answer fair to thts valentine. n. Sylvia, I have sighed deep sighs. Have blown my nose and have wiped my eyes. And round th corner have made a dart To dodge the collector, with beating heart Had I th key to the ponderous locks. Of the safe that hoards up your store of rock; Could I pry It open and grab a part I would reckon myself both lucky and smart; And, so for a chance at that cash of thine, I'll take a chance as your valentine. m. Henrietta, I shake with sighs, Whenever you roll toward me your eyes; I tremble, fearing that you may dart In my direction to grab my heart Come stroll with me by the river's lockB; Til drop thee over upon the rocks. And gaily whistling aa I part, Relieved from tinior and woe and smart; "Adieu, good bye!" It shall be for thine; "Nix on the comic valentine!" Why should I deal In cries and sighs. When I can watch, with Indolent eyes. The wisps of smoke as they ourl and dart From the glowing, glimmering meer schaum's heart? Care's outside and I've turned the locks; The easy chair by the fireside rocks; Sorrow and pain have here no part For thy breath of Incense can heal their smart Lady Nicotine, I am thine Forever and ever, thy Valentine. Portland, February 13. Activity of Park Squirrels. Indianapolis News. In several parts of tne city it is noted that there are more squirrels in evidence In the parks and about the lawns than ever before, and that they have little or no fear of any one, even boys having come to treat these in teresting relics of the primeval forest with kindness and consideration. Many of these squirrels are lively young fel lows, born last April, who In the early Spring will set up housekeeping for themselves. These squirrels are Chick arees, which sounds much like the name of a tribe of red men. This vari ety Is found from Maine to Minnesota, and through the Middle West and as far south as Tennessee and Virginia. It Is the hardiest of the American squirrels and seems to enjoy the Win ter. It may be seen tunneling under the snow, shaking its fur clean when it emerges, as If coming from a bath. It is on the alert from dawn to sunset, and on moonlight nights such as we now have It may be seen having high fun disporting itself under the trees. It does not hibernate, and while It may have many enemies In the forest It has In the cities practically only one, the cat. A $650 Dress for Mla Wilson. Norfolk, Va., dispatch. The dress Miss Eleanor Wilson will wear at the inauguration of her father will be made from silk manufactured in Norfolk. It was given to Miss Wil son by a local silk company. Miss Wilson, In accepting the $650 dress, was asked to name the shade of silk she desired. She selected the color of the outside petal of the American Beauty rose. The material was made as she directed, and was sent to New York to a fashionable dressmaker. The President-elect's daughter had said she wanted to wear something made In Virginia at the inauguration of her father, who is a native of this state. Society Personal From Boton. Boston Transcript. She "Oh, Jack, I'm awfully glad you proposed." He "Then you accept me?" She "Well, no; but you see, your proposal puts me even with Kitty Cobb, who had the most of any girl in our set." n NEW SUNDAY FEATURES Washington as a Mason A full page of timely interest, de scribing an intimate and inter esting view of the father of his country. Motherhood and Art Do they agree? Madame Homer says they do and she has the living proofs. An illustrated article of particular interest to women. Gambling Wilen Jack Rose in his sixth article on underworld life tells of the devices of pro fessional card sharks for strip ping honest business men. Crank Town There is a whole city of cranks in England, and the place is visited by a corre spondent of The Oregonian, who makes the visit subject of a novel half page. Illustrated by photographs. Concerning the Ballet How the lithe and graceful maidens of the dance are trained. Oppor tunities and ways of the ballet. Gibson Pictures Anotherhalf page composition by the great est of pen and ink illustrators, Charles Dana Gibson. It is good enough to frame. The Rehearsal A rollicking dialogue presented by Helen Green Van Campen. Two short stories, three pages for women and many other fea tures. Order today from your newsdealer.