I PORTLAND. OKJMiOJf. Er.tnri at Portland. Oregon. Fostoffle- eond-elas matter. Sunpi.oa Hate Invariably In Aovance: (BY MA1L Callr. Fundaj Included, mi year 'J-J? Is,Ir. Sunday Included, all month! ... 4.-- I31Jy. unday Included, three month.. Z--. Xa:!'. Sunday lr.c.uded. one month .... Xajly. without EunddT. one year -' IAily. without Fundajr. a: monthi Dai:y. without Sunday, three month .. la;ly. without Sunday, one month 1 Weekly, one jr'ar.. feunday. one year.... .........- gJnday and Weekly, one year. -" (bT CAKK1ER) Dally. Sunday Included, one year J" Iai:y. bunay Included, one month . - How le Kenut fcved poetomce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at tne head-re rUk. Olve postodic addreaa in fui!. including county and slate. -. iv -. r.n to 14 uacee. 1 cent. 1 to lis pa. 2 cente; SO to 40 pagea. eents- 40 to AO nuel a cenia. xi pos:e. double rale. taslera Buetne Office Verree at Conk lin. ,tt lor. uruniwiG " " cairn, f.terer bulldinc. hen Knnd-ro Office R. J. Bldwsll Cbi- Co.. T4 Market street. . European OA Ice So, t Recent atreet V."., London. PORTLAND. TTESDAr. MARCH 1. 11. I HY E1CRVBOKT IS CALM. The extra session of Congress has been called to revtse the tariff, and ', still the world wags along in the same I old way. The tariff has been revised ' before, and the worst always happened ' to the producers and manufacturers before the revision. Now. when they ' know the protective tariff is at the mercy of Its avowed enemies, the thin, skinned manufacturers and the thick. skinned producers are at peace with each other and all the world. . All seem to agree that the worst -cannot happen: perhaps because it has already happened. The Democrats talk free raw products, and that is ail. They preach tariff for revenue and thev Dractice protection. They are willing to take the tariff off the other fellnw's product or commodity, but never their own. The tariff cannot be revised much. Let us take Schedule K. In the good old days when Secretary Bryan was out of office, but hoped to get in. he was loud for free wool. But now Brother Underwood says the tariff on raw wool will be 20 per cent ad valorem. It may be more: It cannot be le.s. There is no great difference be tween the Underwood proposal and the La Follette proposal, or any other pro. posal likely to find serious acceptance bv the Democratic Congress. Colonel Bryan will not make the tariff this year. The country must have revenue. We are a long ways yet from a free-trade basis. No wonder the Interests are calm. TNCU5 JOE" STILL STANDS PAT. After more than half the members of Congress had fought and beaten ex. Speaker Cannon, they all Joined in giving him a farewell dinner and at testing their affection for him. That is one of the characteristics of American political life. Here the victors dine the vanquished and the latter retire with the consciousness that they have been fairly beaten in a good fight. " In the republic south of us the vanquished fly to the back country and start a " revolution unless the victors have as sassinated them before they can get away from the capital. In short, our politicians are good losers. That is one secret of the stability of our re public. Mr. Cannon Is respected and loved because he Is a game fighter, has strong convictions and Is frank and outspoken in expressing them. He is a Republican by heredity, having been taken by his father In boyhood from North Carolina to Indiana In order to net away from slavery. His father was a Quaker physician. When a member of the church In North Caro lina died bequeathing fifty slaves to his daughter, she submitted to the church the question what she should do with them. The church decided that they should be sent to Indiana, land pur chased and homes made for them. Mr. Cannon's father was selected to carry out this plan. When the slaves ar rived at a landing on the Wabash River, a mob opposed their debarka tion, but Dr. Cannon, with drawn re volver, overawed it. He carried out the plan successfully. Joseph Cannon was left an orphan at the age of 14, his father being drowned while attempting to cross Sugar Creek on horseback. After graduating from the Friends' Academy at Bloomingdale. he attended law school at Cincinnati, and then read law with John P. Usher, of Terre Haute, who later became a member of Lincoln's Cabinet. He began prac tice at Shelbyville. 111., but. finding no clients, tore up his diploma, stamped on it and moved to Tuscola, There he was elected State's Attorney for seven years, beginning in 1S61. In 1S72 he was elected to Congress and has been re-elected for each succeeding term with one exception until last Fall, thus 'rounding out forty years of service with a break of only two years. Sprung from such parentage. Mr. Cannon could not well have been any thing but a stanch Republican. His most determined political opponents have not questioned his honesty In championing his principles. He has been a faithful public servant and has had a hand In nearly all Important leg. Islation. For nearly thirty years he had a part In the expenditure of the public funds, either as a member or as chairman of the committee on appro priations, and no word has been said against his Integrity. As Speaker. Mr. Cannon served eight years, or longer than any of his predecessors with the sole exception of Henry Clay. He has served In the House with more than 6000 men, over two-thirds of whom are dead. When he entered Congress his hair was red and he was twitted with being a hay seed. He had a ready retort and has never been worsted in the rough-and-ready verbal combats of succeeding years. Now he retires a white-haired old man of nearly 77. but the kindest words are spoken of him by those at whom he has aimed the doughtiest blows in debate. When Mr. Cannon conducted the proceedings of the House according tt the rules which earned him the title of Czar, he merely did as his prede cessors In the chair had done. Pub lic sentiment had so changed that what was approved when done by former speakers was condemned when done by , him. But he believed that the House could not transact business under any other rules and was proud of being called Czar. He predicts that the Itfmocnu will yet find necessary a re turn to the rules which they have dis carded. He is no trimmer, but stands his ground when the air is full of hos tile shafts as when he was leading a victorious and united party. - In these progressive days such men as "Uncle Joe" are regarded as sur- rivals of a bygone political epoch, bat they are entitled to their meed ol praise for good work done In their day according to the accepted standards of the time. If he had changed in his old age, we might have had cause to doubt his . sincerity. Since he still stands pat, we can continue to honor him, though we move on with those who call for progress. LOOKING TOO TAB AWAY. It may be assumed that the School Board is postponing the election of a new Superintendent of the City Schools until It shall have been able to give thorough consideration to the merits and records of all applicants. On no other basis can the hesitation or the delay, or whatever it is, about the se lection of L. R. Alderman be explained. If a better choice than Mr. Alderman could be made, the Board's duty is clear: but it ought to be demonstrably better and the public ought to be as sured that It Is better. Where is such a man? The Oregonlan knows that there Is an opinion that an Eastern man ought to be named to succeed Mr. Rigler, for the reason chiefly that he comes from some point outside of Oregon. But it is not a good reason: it is indeed a very poor one. There can be no Justlfica- tion for going East or anywhere else for the new Superintendent unless he shall be known not guessed nor sup posed to be the right man for the place. It seems strange to The Oregonlan that the opportunity to get Mr. Al derman was not at once seized by the School Board. He Is a man of original Ideas, but they are practical, as he has shown. He has initiative, address, Interest and local knowledge. He is Identified with no faction. He would take the schools to the people, and they would know all the time what he was doing. He would make it Known everywhere that a man of inventive genius, broad vision and practical knowledge was at the head of the Portland schools. While we are looking for the un. known guide and teacher of the young to come out of the East, we overlook entirely in our midst a man of National reputation for doing the things we want done in the schools. ' KOW TO GET ALONG. The Oregonlan is dally asked for advice on a variety of subjects. Some of the requests it answers publicly, and others privately, or not at all. But here Is one which we think worthy of a remark or two for the benefit of all whom it may concern. It comes from Waitsburg, Wash., and is as fol lows: lit Wht An vnu thlnlc will be the op portunities for the Journalist In the North west auritik tne next nan cemurj -pared with those of the agriculturist ? is t Would you advise a hlsh school gran n,t who im hetter nualified for Journalism than any other profession, but who has no special ltkloc lor such work, to uute ti 1,-f pnnru Tn Iniimallsm ? 13) How does the average Income of Journalists compare with that of men of other profession? Approximate answer sat. isrctory. We are able to say only in answer to the first inquiry that a half century is a long time, and we hope and expect that there will be an enormous agri. cultural expansion In that time and a commensurate Journalistic develop ment. The young man who has an aptitude for Journalism will get along, and so will the young man who has an aptitude for agriculture. We should advise (2) the high school graduate who is better qualified for Journalism than any other profession either to take a college course or to go to work at once; but we gravely question the premise of our corre spondent. How can he be fit for Journalistic or any other work if he has no special liking for It? The average income (S) of the Jour nalist compares well with the pay In other professions; yet the highest fi nancial rewards are not for your news paper worker, nor the lowest. It Is a salaried occupation, for the most part. while your doctor or lawyer or preacher gets what he earns, if he can collect it. If our young friend has no liking for newspaper work he would better stay out. If he fancies that nevertheless he Is fit for the arduous tasks of news paper service, he Is mistaken. He should go where his interest leads him. if he can: If he cannot, he may worry along, but he will not reach the sum mit. WHY EAT IintBLE PIE? The appeal of the Carnegie Endow ent for International Peace in favor of repeal of the toll exemption clause of the Panama Canal law assumes that there is only one side to the question. Congress is asked to confess practically that the Sixty-second Congress ana President Taft knowingly violated the Hay-Pauncefote treaty by passing the exemption clause. This humiliating confession is demanded of Congress when the way is open for undoing any wrong we may have done by submit ting the question to arbitration. We are ready to accept that means of de ciding the question. That is all that Is necessary for maintenance of the high principles which the Carnegie endowment sets forth as a reason for repeal. Congress passed the exemption clause In honest belief that it con formed with the purpose of the treaty. The President approved it in the same belief. The Secretary of State defend ed it when the British Government protested that It violated the treaty. Now all the peace organizations, all the advocates of arbitration, egged on by all the organs of the railroads w-hlch have a selfish interest in up holding the Dritlsh contention, call upon us to eat crow. The peace and arbitration bodies may be sincere tn the belief that our position is untena ble and that the only honorable course Is for us to surrender. The railroads, which Tor half a century delayed con struction of the canal and which are now confronted with the early cer tainty of Its competition, have no such excuse. They preter repeal Decause they fear that we should win at arbi tration. There are strong arguments In favor f our right to exempt our coastwise ship from canal tolls. There are good reasons why. if we have this right, we should exercise It. There Is. therefore, every reason why we should not aban don It until it Is proved not to belong to us. This can be proved, if at all, by arbitration before an absolutely Impartial tribunal. Since Great Brit ain conceives that she has an Interest in the denial of this right to us, so has every other maritime nation. Then Switzerland, a wholly Inland nation, alone can furnish Judges free from possibility of bias. Let us offer to sub mit the question to a Swiss tribunal. By so doing we shall uphold the lofty principles enunciated by the Carnegie endowment without lightly surrender ing any rights we may have and with out eating humble pie before the world. THE PEREJTXTAL WHITMAN MYTH. The February number of the Maga zine of American History has a queer note on Marcus Whitman. After tell ing a wondering world that Whitman was murdered by the Cayuses at "Waulatpus, Oregon," this learned periodical goes on to remark that "he contributed largely to the settlement of Oregon," and "it is conceded that Oregon was kept under American jurisdiction through his activity." This shows how hard it Is to kill a fable. Whitman helped comparatively little to settle Oregon. His own colony was evanescent, though a later settle ment grew up at Waiilatpu, or near it. He served as a guide in the "great emi gration" of 183, and no doubt saved the travelers many a hardship by his wise counsel, but it Is not proved that he was much of a factor In assembling the party. As to "keeping Oregon un der American Jurisdiction," Whitman had nothing to do with it. This has been proved over and over again, and yet the story persists and finds its way at this late date into a magazine which is supposed to be strictly accu rate. . Whitman's mission was neglected by Its Eastern patrons and he made his famous Winter Journey to the East to solicit funds. The course of events by which Oregon was saved was well un der way before he began his trip and he did nothing to accelerate or alter it In any way. His trip was made under conditions which tempt the narrator to fall Into romance, and many have yielded to the seduction. Riding through Winter storms to save a vast territory from British rule appears more magnificent than merely begging money for a mission, so Whitman's purpose is enlarged to meet the exi genciesvof art. Being a conscientious man himself, how little esteem he must feel, if he still regards earthly affairs, for those who turn his stern and meager career into a romance. Had no mission stations been found ed but Whitman's in. Washington, the Oregon country would not have ac quired an American population in time to save it from permanent British oc cupation. When the colonists came, as they did in' 1842 and 1843, they passed Whitman's settlement by and betook themselves to the Willamette Valley, where Jason Lee had prepared a welcome for them. TOO MANY SHORT STORIES. Mr. Howells, the distinguished nov elist, is distressed by what he calls "the overwhelming prevalence" of short stories. The raging torrent of big novels that pours from the presses of the world does not disturb his com posure, but the short stories appal him. Not that they are so bad, but that there are so many of them. Every year some 25.000 are published. At least twice as many more never see the light. More likely a hundred times as many are doomed to oblivion by insensible publishers and their mis guided critics. But let us be mod erate and agree with Mr. Howells that onlv twice as many are rejected as get into print. This makes 75,000 short stories which are written annually. The quantity is truly enormous. Others besides Mr. Howells may well shudder at its magnitude. The magazines swarm with them in all their forms rrom the insipid, thinly artistic sort to the wild vagaries of the cowboy and the sailorman on the South Seas. Does everybody read them? We doubt it. The taste for short stories of any kind is not nearly so devouring as the mag azine publishers imagine, unless we miss our guesj. Mr. Howells dreads lest the present rate of writing them will exhaust all possible plots by and by, so that no more can ever appear to delight the world. He might spare his worry. The plots were all used up long ago, but to each generation they are as new as they were In the beginning.' The best tales that come to light in this day are variations upon some such old theme as "Cinderella," or that of "Lit tle Red Riding Hood," or "The Ugly Duckling." They assume a myriad guises, but the basic framework is the same for all of them. John Mase-' field's "Tragedy of Nan" is nothing but poor old "Cinderella" with a tragic ending. Mrs. Frances Hodgson Bur nett is Just now experimenting wltn an ugly duckling of the masculine sex who will presently develop into the most beautiful of swans In the an cestral halls to which he has been transported. We need not bother our selves over any threatened paucity of plots. The 1.000.000-year-old plots would be as fresh today in the hands of a master as they were in the tents of our Aryan forefathers who invented them. What one really ought to dread is the overrefinement of the short etory. Mr. Howells consoles his misery about the overproduction of fiction by the thought that it is growing better all the time. No doubt it Is from one point of view. It is growing better. just as Greek literature did when the inspiration of genius had forsaken It and it began to be produced by scholastic rules and academic precepts. The current short story of the kind that Mr. Howells finds satisfactory is a wan and ghostly fabric, put together by fixed rules, just as a stone mason builds a chimney. College professors teach whole classes how to turn out the dreadful things by the dozen. Imagine a professor teaching Poe how to write "The Gold Bug," or Mark Twain the rules to follow in inventing "The Man That Corrupted Hadley burg." When a literary form has been reduced to set formulas it is as good as dead. It is only the short stories which violate the professors' precepts that anybody outside neuralgic coteries of tea-drinking spinsters cares to read. The rest are so perfect in form that they contain no substance. ' One of the most noticeable traitB of the magazine short story is Its predilec. tion for fads. Somebody, for example. writes one in which the tale is told by a drunken cowboy in a saloon. It achieves a success. In other words, the critics say it Is "ideally excellent." Forthwith all the millions of young girls who hope to amass wealth and oonauer fame by their pens adopt the same method. For months every short story written will be told by some per son who. with his pals, is elaborately described In the "introduction." This miserable fad compels the weary teader to get acquainted with two en tirely different sets of characters for one story, and that usually a pretty noor one. If the reading of short stories kept pace w-ith the writing of them, we should share Mr. Howells apprehensions and add a good many of our own to them. But thank heaven It does not. Most magazine readers religiously skip the stories and turn to the articles about the Panama anai, Captain Scott and the South Pole, or the new mammoth wireless stations In the United States and Germany. Truth is not only stranger than any fiction we are likely to get under cur rent conditions, but it is incomparably more interesting. Anybody who can write a decently amusing short story can put his ability to vastly better ad vantage by turning to the facts of this amazing world we .are privileged to live in. The experience of public librarians shows that there is no such popular craze for fiction of any kind, long or 6hort, as publishers and official critics seem to believe. The greatest readers of our day are woman of leisure and workingmen. The women of leisure, are Interested in good literature. They take up Ibsen, Shaw and writers of that sort who have something telling to say about social conditions. Ellen Key has a larger audience than any woman who merely writes novels. The stories which are read by really Intelli gent women are such as Selma Lag erlof writes. They travel the same road as Ellen Key's essays. The work ingmen, who are probably as great readers as the women, take up books on social science, electricity, philoso phy. Bergson's "Creative Evolution" has been widely read by wage-earners. So has W'ard's 'Dynamic Sociology." Mr. Howells thinks- everybody Is read ing weak fiction, because his view is limited to a little coterie,, the cultured set of New York. Like most New Yorkers, he has forgotten the country west of Manhattan Island and thinks he has described the whole Nation when he has only described its money center. The British suffragettes are getting a stiff dose of their own medicine. As Shylock said to his enemies, they have set the example and it shall go hard if the roughs and hoodlums do not show them a few new points in the game. Violence begets violence. The suffra gettes disregard all rules in fighting for their cause. They cannot complain if their enemies do the same In fighting against it. People who sow dragon's teeth need not be surprised if they raise a crop of furious giants. But what a strange phenomenon the suf fragettes are, taken for all in all. Mexico has become so accustomed to official prevarication about revolutions that Huerta's underrating of the So. nora revolt is not likely to deceive. Huerta should take a hint from the famous Italian statesman, Cavour. Falsehood had become so thoroughly accepted as the first principle of diplo macy that, when France and Sardinia had decided to make war on Austria, he lulled Austria into security by tell ing the truth. A sudden outbreak of truthfulness on the part of Huerta would be a refreshing novelty. In the whirl and flutter of his peace propaganda Dr. David Starr Jordan retains some sparks of reason. Speak ing of "the federation of the world he says in his pamphlet on "Naval Waste" that "a single unified world government with centralized rule un der one set of men at one place Is only a dream, and not a cheerful dream at that." And yet, cheerless as it is, this dream has been fulfilled more than once and would be again if some de vouring Rome should find us as unpre pared for resistance as Dr. Jordan would have us. It costs only 1525 for North Carolina students to haze a fellow-student to death. That is the logical inference to be drawn from the hiring out of the hazers to their own fathers. Is North Carolina a civilized state? The trusts see no evidence that there has been a change of administration. The commanding general in the field has become chief of staff; that Is the only change In the situation. The Oregon hen must needs hump herself this week to provide the eggs for which Portland schoolchildren will hunt In the parks next Monday. She is equal to the strain. The clergyman whose wife ran away with the society burglar is much too human to take her back. Her peni tence did not appear until after mis fortune overtook her. Colonel Hofer announces he has quit politics and will write another novel. a aemiol In which his hero attains suc cess a lap or two ahead of senility would be a tnriner. "Uncle Joe" Cannon says he will never abandon politics, but adds that he will follow it as a private citizen. An obviously necessary concession. - en- thAiiBanrl children will hunt eggs in the city parks next Sunday. Such a rorce win oversnauow tne pie hunting brigade for the time being. Democratic aversion to free lemons may be due to fear that the voters will hand around a few of them at the next election. WTiy Is not Oregon among the states which have agreed to co-operate with Illinois in suppressing white slavery? , , j i- r,ori Kv th office- ; t .ri u i u 10 5 "-..., j - - - seekers and has put up the bars for ten days, ret tne ranniut oro uuusw. The hungry horde after the Job of Federal appraiser do not seem to know they are riding a dead horse. .Tames Hamilton Lewis appears will- lna- to combine with anybody in order to land that Senatorship. How can we expect homo rule in fashions so long as the fashionable go to Paris for their gowns? So that "F." on the new nickel Is the Initial of the designer. We thought it stood for "freak." , By and by the lazy man can lie abed all day and have the news phoned Into his ear. . The new excess baggage rules are a precaution against return of the Merry Widow hat. That 2 50,000 tunnel robbery reads like a chapter from Jack Rose's me moirs. The pawnbroker who is robbed is an unfortunate upon whom most people smile. ' That Chinese tong war is far more deadly than the strife in Mexico. When tong men begin killing, the white man hates to interfere. English suffragettes were plastered with mud. Dirty trick. The Alabamans should come north and thaw out. BOSSISX AND THE JOB SEEKERS, Writer Think Democratic Committee men., Take Tafalr Advantage. PORTLAND, March 17. (To the Editor.) The mutual admiration socie ty, called the Democratic State Com mittee, is furnishing food for thought, and Democrats especially are wonder ing that will be the product of the peculiar situation. Several of these honorable gentlemen are not satisfied with holding offices of political honor and trust In the so called "party management," but are using the prestige thus obtained to boost themselves for fat Federal jobs abusing the trust the people placed in them and trying to manipulate It for their own personal pecuniary gain. They have indorsed themselves and each other, in violation of correct eth ics of the implied trust, and thus con tinue that system of party bosses so obnoxious to the people a policy of "you tickle me, I'll tickle you." By this system, corrupt in its morality, they suppress aspirations of competent Democrats who have earned party rec ognition for Federal offices. Senators Chamberlain and Lane seem to approve this course of party bosslsm and if correctly quoted In the dally press have become irritated because some competent Democrats have ap plied for Federal appointments. These Senators and committee members are already covered with party honors: the people composing tne uemocratio party in tender kindness reached the party hand into the shades of oblivion and placed these ger.ilemen in the llme- liftht. It was not Intended they should be come bosses and dictators. It was by overthrowing just such bossism that Woodrow Wilson became Governor of New Jersey and then President of the Upited States, and true Democrats in Oregon, who do not register as Repub licans, appeal to the President to save us from this Impudent effort to estab lish selfish bossism. Many of these committeemen are good men, but very few of them are fit for the offices to which they so unfairly aspire. By their committee member ships they have an undue advantage over other applicants for these federal offices, and if they are fair men they will resign from the committee post tlons they hold. Senators have no legal or moral right to reward their per sonal henchmen by fat Federal jobs. It smacks too much of using publlo office as a private snap to pay off private po litical debts. The Democratic doctrine is that "a public office is a public trust." HI C, TOD. SHOULD VOTI.VO BE COMPULSORY Medicine Recommended for Indifferent or Stay-at-Hoaues. Century Magazine. After every fair allowance has been made, however, the fact Is notorious that many citizens entitled to vote do not go to the polls. The registration figures often fall far below what they should be. and the ballots finally cast and counted reveal a surprisingly large number of indlfferenta or stay-at-homes. Hence the demand, which seems to be a rising demand, that the citizen be compelled by law to do his duty as an elector, if he will not do It un forced. Compulsory voting has been advo cated of late by the Attorney-General of the United States. The people are sovereign, but if only a portion of them speak, how are we to know the real voice of authority? There have been elections, some of them passing on statutes referred to the electorate, some on important Consti tutional changes, in which the votes of only a majority of a minority were ef fective. If that should become common, the case for compulsory voting would obviously be stronger. Objections to it at present He mainly against details. It la urged, for example, that no compulsion should be laid up on the voter to choose between two can didates neither of whom could he con scientiously support. But in that event he could cast a ballot or a "scratched" ballot. He is within his right in re fusing to express a preference between two equally offensive nominees; but it may be held that he has no right to remain away from the polls. It has been argued that all who fail to vote should be "counted in the negative," but that Is to put a premium upon sloth. An active negative by ballot Is much more significant than mere abstention. We know too well what "apathy" means in elections: but we should be much better-off If, Instead of their apathy at home, we had all our citizens expressing their honest zeal or their burning indignation at the polls. The whole subject is not yet ripe for positive remedies embodied in law, but the deep interest taken in it is both suircestlve and encouraging. It helps on to believe that the democratic experiment will continue to keep level with its problems as tney successively present themselves. Whatever the exact method ol reiorm mat may oe uupicu It must not omit to tie up intelligence with duty. Voting, whether it snouia be made compulsory or not, cannot aafelv be severed from education. The two must always go together. Use Ore iron Onions. HTLLSBORO, Or., March 17. (To the Editor.) Thank you for your kind item in The Oresronian last Friday, in whirh vou refer to the possibility of a slump in the onion marKet, ana aavise consumers to "buy 'em by the sack." It la nrnhabln that an "onion day in Portland would be hard to popularize, but if this lowly vegetable were more generally consumed it wo.uld be no detriment to the health of the public Owing to the ridiculously heavy plant ing of onions by the Japanese in Cali fornia last year, resulting In four- fifths of the crop there going to waste. wa Orecrnn erowers nave luunu uui moderate plantings almost unmarket able. Now we are told by the J-Toni- street dealers that the Texas ana Mexican Bermudas will soon be coming this way, and that the movement of our home-errown onions will be still morA sluersish. There are no milder, sweeter onion3 on earth than our Oregon Danvers, and Just why consumers will be willing to nav in to 15 cents per pound for these foreign onions, while ours can De naa at a nominal price, is nam to umiemiaDo. .Tnat the other day. for want of any kind of an offer, I dumped out a big wagon-load of undersized onions, hard as nuts, which, when stewed by a cook who knows how, make a dish more de lectable than any Spitzenberg apple sauce. These are still lying there in good condition, and the poor, the hungry and the Federal officer are at liberty to help themselves from the heap free and unrestrained. Every onion-grower in mo state ia InKinir monev this year, ana, since there never was any sense In "shipping coal to Newcastle," I trust that the consuming public will turn down these Bermudas ' when tney arrive ana give th Oreeon homegrown product a chance to do somebody a lot of good. Fair Acres Farm. On Civil Service Examination. rnt.rMBL'S. Wash.. March 16. (To the Editor.) When and where will the next civil service examination be given In Washington and Oregon? M. R. Dates for civil service examinations vary and depend upon what depart ment of the service the applicant seeks to enter. If the applicant has deter mined what position be wiBhes to take examinations for, Information as to the date when such examinations will be held can be' secured by addressing the secretary of the Civil Service Board for the Eleventh Division, Seattle. Dr. Woods Hntehiaaoa Defended la Tiewa on Flaely Bolted Flour. PORTLAND, Maroh 17. (To the Edl. tor.) In an editorial in The Oregonlan, there is rather severe criticism of Dr. Woods Hutchinson's expressed opinion of various food values. Particularly does the editor criticize the doctor's opinion of the value of prk and beans and bread made from finely bolted flour. Suppose the issue was put up square ly to the writer of this editorial, as a question in the exact science of die tetics, and he were asked to state the value of a plate of pork and beans say eight ounces of beans and two ounces of pork. SO per cent of which was fat and 20 per cent lean just how much efficiency in the way of muscular power, of heat and constructive value would it possess, measured in calories or heat units, and for repairing nitro genous tissue, waste or contributing to growth or increasing the bulk of the nitrogenous tissues of the growing in dividual? It is quite likely that the editor would be unable to make a correct reply. The value of all foods depends upon their chemical constituents and the perfection of the physiologic machine to reduce them to a form available to build up, warm the body and give it the requisite force to perform Its func. tions. The power of the physiologic organism properly to dispose of in digested foods, depends to a consider able extent also upon the nature of the Individual's occupation and his en vironment. For example. It would be difficult to conceive of a better food than pork and beaus for the strenuous laborer in the pine, or fir forests, where so much ozone Is developed by the pitch-bearing trees, hastening the oxi dization of the food and making all of its constituents available, while the sedentary Individual living In a poorly ventlated room or shop would get only a fraction of the value from the same amount of the same kind of food. As to the value of whole wheat bread over that made of finely bolted flour, it Is wholly mythical. As a mat ter of fact It has been confirmed by careful laboratory experiment that a larger percentage of the nitrogenous content of the grain Is used when bread from finely bolted flour la eaten than when bread made from the whole grain is eaten. Very likely this is due to the irritation of the lining membrane of the alimentary canal, by the sharp scales and spicules of the cellulose of the wholly useless and Indigestible hull. Dr. Hutchinson, too, was wholly right when he said a teaspoonful of egg would make up the deficiency be tween them. Man 1b not normally a vegetarian. Vegetarianism Is unwise because the proteids and fats of the vegetable world are more difficult of digestion than those of the animal kingdom. But ter fat is the most easily digestible of all the fats; after that comes the fat of the sheep and deer, the fat of horned cattle and lastly that of the pig, and there Is no form of nitrogenous food so quickly available as that of animal origin.- All of these facts are matters of careful laboratory demonstration. Dr. Hutchinson, who was my class mate. Is a brilliant man who states scientific facts in a taking way. He is honest and sound in his medical writ ings and is doing a good work. DR. JOHN MADDEN, Rivervlew Hotel. The Oregonlan does not question Dr. Woods Hutchinson's brilliancy, but It finds many esteemed authorities who question his "scientiflo facts," and In the editorial Teferred to by this writer we gave some examples of their stric tures. Dr. Maiden may please his fancy if he likes by supposing that The Ore gonlan does not know the common facts about food values. This is a matter that does not Interest us, but we may as well remind him that calories are not the only things to be considered In diet. Pork and beans are excellent for those who heed such food. For those who do not they are far from excellent, rich as they are In calories. One man's meat Is another's poison. As to fine white flour. Dr. Woods Hutchinson makes extravagant statements In' com paring it with whole wheat. Those statements have been contradicted many times by men as competent as he is. The reader must deciae ror nim self who is right about it. Freedom of Speech. PORTLAND. March 17. (To the Ed itor.) It seems to me we are all at sea in this country on the question of free speech. We need some authority to give us a clear definition, and set us right on what is and is not free speech. I do not believe the freedom to speak my convictions, or state my position, or niMfl mv case, carries with it the lib erty to denounce, malign Qr abuse any on else or any institution. I do not believe I have any right under the laws of free speech to hold up to ridicule and scorn any company, institution or cause that I may happen to dislike. Nor have I any right to denounce anything that some one else may regard as sacred or holy. ... We are altogether too tolerant with the vaporings of disordered minds, until everybody who has a grievance, either fancied or real, is permitted to break forth in public or private and denounce everybody and everything he or she may think needs a dressing down. I am a firm believer in soap box oratory, provided the orator keeps to his text and does not interfere with the rights of others, but when nine-tenths of the message a man delivers is denunciation ancr calling of ugly names I think we ought to call a halt and say to the ora tor, "Your right to speak ends where the rights of your hearers begins." LEVI JOHNSON. Batter Wrapper. DAYTON, Or.. March 16. To the Ed itor.) I am selling my butter In Mo- Mlnnvllle, and some of the storekeep ers tell me It Is required by law that I use wrappers on which are printed my name and the weight of the butter, else I am liable to a fine. Is that the law, or Is It Just for their convenience that they wish me to do this? Please answer through your paper. -A. SUBSCRIBER. The law requires that the wrappers must have printed or stamped th words: "16 ounces; ful weight," or "32 ounces; full weight," as the size of the roll demands, and that the butter must be full weight as labeled. State Food and Dairy Commissioner Mickle has also ruled that the wrappers must have printed or stamped upon them the name and the address of the person producing the butter. A brief of the principal points. In the butter laws ol the state Is being prepared at the of fice of the State Food and Dairy Com missioner in Portland, and will soon be available for all producers who care to send for it. . Harvard Tuition. GRESHAM. Or., March 17. (To the Editor.) How much is the tuition re quired for a person entering Harvard University, and what are the require ments? SUBSCRIBER. The annual tuition at Harvard Is 150, except for the medical and dental course, which is 20. An entrance ex amination is required unless one has graduated from some preparatory school, accredited by the university. Annual examinations are held in nu merous large cities, including Portland. Fer detailed, information address the Registrar Harvard University. Cam bridge, Mass. The Pressing Duty By Deaa Collin. Alone at his desk the new Senator sat. And mapped out the work he should do On currency, tariff, canala and all that. Ere his term in the Senate be through; But bis thoughts were disturbed by the roars of a mob That surged round his door crying "Give us a job J" Each thought he minht think Was put on the blink By clamors for pie aud so what could he do? He dreamed of the thrills that should run throush the hall When he rose for his maiden speech; How cheers on his ears from his col leagues should fall; And how they should dub it "a peach"; But his current of thought was dis turbed by a slob Who crawled through the window and asked for a Jub; While right at his door. He heard, o'er and o'er. The chorus prolonged, of the pie-hunters' screech. He felt on his shoulders, oppressing and vast. Full ninety per cent of the weight Of the burden of duty the Nation had cast For tinkering up the whole state. He shouldered the load, as he gulped down a sob And a voice through the keyhole amid "Give me a" Job!" And he turned, with a sigh. To dividing the pie "This business Is urgent; the Nation, must wait." Sail on ship of State, in the oast way you may. Though billows of turmoil roll highi Sal on gallant Union, I further would say. And hope that all storms mar blow by. Though in a vast crisis you stagger ana reel. Exouse for a while, from a post at ths wheel. The Senator new. For he simply must do His duty to those who are hungry for pie. Portland, March IT. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Orerontan of March IS, lftSS. Colonel John McCracken, Mr. C. H. Lewis, Mr. William M. Gibson, Mr. H. W. Scott Mr. Henry Falling and Mr. C. A. Dolph left Portland yesterday for New York City In response to an In vitation from the managers of the O. R. & N. Company to come and confer with them concerning the proposed Joint lease of the O. R. & N. propertiea In Oregon and Washington Territory to the Union Pacific and Northern Pa clfio Companies. It will be the business of these gentlemen to set forth why Portland protests against this lease. "Olivette" at new Park Theator to night, i Mr. W. B. Gilbert will deliver his lecture on Mount St. Helens before the Alpine Club on Friday evening In their rooms In the Portland Savings Bank. Governor Pennoyer and Fish Com missioner Thompson went up to Ore gon City yesterday to make investiga tions In regard to salmon fishing. The Pacific Improvement Company yesterday purchased block 108 in this city from Mr. Ira F. Powers, paying therefor $20,000. The County Court of Clackamas County on Thursday unanimously de cided to build a free bridge across the Willamette River at Oregon City. New York, March" 17. With refer ence to tne suit Ol tsaaeau, orougnt against the widow of General Grant for compensation for services claimed to have been rendered In preparing the General's memoirs, testimony to be of fered by members of the Grant family will probably cause a sensation. Gen eral Badeau claims to be part author of Grant's memoirs. Colonel Fred Grant says: "Badeau was employed by father to do amanuensis work and the drudgery of preparing copy for the printers." Half a Century Ajo From The Oreg-onlftn of Maroh IS. 1868. Our morning dispatches contain sev eral Items of local Interest, Among the appointments for Idaho we notice those of Richard Williams (supposed of Salem) as United States Attorney and W. B. Daniels as secretary. The latter is presumed to be an intelligent gentleman of that name from Yamhill County. Attention la turned to the Beaverhead country, where the miners have taken out from $5 to $50 a day. About a thousand persons have Wintered there. Rich quartz lodes have been discovered. Small boats are successfully ascend ing Snake River above Lewiston. Some have reached Pittsburg Landing, about 100 miles above Lewiston. Chicago. March 10. Today's Times has a ppeciai dispatch dated Coldwater River, March B. which saya that Grant's expedition left Moon Lake Wednesday morning, reaching the end of the pass yesterday at noon, 12 miles in three days, and half of the boats were much broken In light upper-works, but not one was damaged in hull or machin ery. The soldiers and seamen were occupied at every turn In cutting down trees and opening the channel. There was great danger of being dashed against the trees. Later dispatches say the expedition has advanced an other 20 miles. The new steamer E. D. Baker re turned from Vancouver yesterday about 11 o'clock A. M.. all decked off wltn flags and flying colors and bringing with her a large portion of the goodly citizens of that plaoe. After remain ing a short while the Baker started up the river, crowded to overflowing with pleasure-seekers. Mllwaukie and the hunt returned and went on to Van couver in the evening. We were shown yesterday by Mr. I. F. Block, of Block. Miller & Co., Dalles. Or., the richest specimens of quartz gold that we have ever seen. The 16 ounce nugget was full nine-tenths gold and the 13-ounre more than one-half. These specimens were taken out c Canyon Creek. John Day mines, by William Accrle & Co. Board Feet In Stick. WENDLING, Or., March 15. (To the Editor.) I would like to learn the number of board feet In a timber 12x12 inches on one end, 6x6 Inches on the other and 40 feet long. Also give rule for obtaining the hoard feet of lumber. It. F. MAHT1NDALE. Find the number of entire feet in the stick and divide by 12 to obtain number of board feet. A simple formula for determining the cubic feet of the tim ber mentioned may be obtained by using fractions. Add the upper, lower and mean bases and multiply the sum by one-third the length. The upper base Is one square foot. The lower base is one-fourth square foot. Multiplying these two areas and extracting the square root gives the mean base of one half square foot: One plus one-fourth plus one-half equals seven-fourths. Multiplying this sum by one-third of 40 and that product by 12 gives 280 as the number of board feet in the etick of timber. ' I A