11 APRIL 2, 1913. rOKTLANO. OUCOX. Cr.tand at Portland. Orasoa. FoatolTlea ma eondc:aaa matter. fuMcripuua Kia InTartably In AaTane: CBT MAIL) Dolly. (dr rnciulet. on yar ? S? l-;r. Sunday Included, six month - -f L-aJir. Bandar Included, tar monio. al.r, Sunday Inc-uJaU. om monla .... Lai:r. wanout fc-tu.dy. on year ...... J-j Iai.y. without Vanuay. a: I anaoths --. . L-al.r. wubaot bvaday. tax month .. Lauir. lilbMt Bandar, oao saeata - Vely, on year. i"TT Sunday, on year. ........... -j?T bwaoajr and Weejt.y. ao yaar. -.. (BT CAKSIER Baity. Sunday uclaae. em rar J a: .y. Sunday Included, on montn. . . . . .1 Hoar to Kcmil oand poatollic "W r. ezareaa ordr or personal cneca 7"r local bank, felampa. csua or currency r ni t.l andr"a riaa- Glv postoftic auixesa in tiV.t inr!ud:nc county And alala. rMan Kaus Ten la 1 pas. eanl. IS to s paea. X cents. Su to t eenis: 0 to to pasta. 4 aaata. orl aoa'afe. double rata. to fcatra Bualaeaa OffVe Verro c"?." ha. New Yo.- Bruaaajick bui.dln. CH1 9xgo. bterer building. oaa fraodaro OB tea R. J. BldweU Co-. T42 Market arrest- - European Offlcs No. S Rereat trt a. w., uotaou. rRTLA-VD, WEDNESDAY. AFKIL , 191S. INCOME TAX AND ITS WORKINGS. When the Income tax comes up for discussion In Congress, the battle is likely to rage around the question of the minimum income to be taxed, and the adjustment of the graduated scale. When the same subject was being- de bated In 1814, W. J. Bryan, then a member of the Bouse, was a champion of exemption of small Incomes, placing the minimum subject to tax at $4000. In support of his contention he cited the example of foreign countries, Eng land exempting Incomes up to $750, Prussia up to $225, Austria up to $113, Italy up to $77.20, the Netherlands up to $260. Champ Clark was in favor of a higher minimum than $4000, but could not be pinned down to anything more definite than the statement: "I would fix it for the public good, whatever fig-are I fixed." There Is good reason in the minds of legislators for desiring a high mini, mom. The lower the minimum the more persons would be subject to the tax and the more persons there would be protesting against it, calling for economy and raising an outcry against "pork" bills. The legislators know that an Income tax. however popular in the abstract, is sure to be unpopular when actually collected. One Treasury expert has calculated that with a $5000 minimum 282,620 persons would be taxed, while another estimates the number at 412,360. If the minimum should be raised to $7500. estimates range from 182.620 to 212.360. The underlying principle of exemp tion Is that a person should not be taxed on the amount of income which is absolutely necessary to the mainte nance of his family In reasonable com fort. But this amount might be put at a much lower figure than $5000, or even $4000. Suppose, for the purpose of Illustration, that the first $1000 of every man's Income were exempt and all above that sum was taxed. Such a large proportion of the cltlxens would then be taxed that the rate of the Im post would become a matter of vital Interest to a great body of voters and economy would become a real election Issue. Merely perfunctory economy planka in the platforms would not sat. lfy the electors; they would demand tangible results. The Economy and Kfftclency Commission would be re vived Into feverish activity and barna cles would be knocked off the depart ments in astonishing numbers. Pork ould be dealt out with a sparing hand nd It would become extremely peril ous to propose and difficult to pass a building or pension bill or to secure appropriations for useless Navy-yards and Army posts. Public opinion would compel the adoption of a budget sys tem and the budget speech in our House would become as great a sub ject of news as it has long been in the British Parliament. There are good reasons for not adopting a low minimum Income sub ject to tax and they will not be over looked by the statesmen, who are poli ticians first and who dread an electo rate ever vigilant as to where their money Is going. One is that the smaller n Income is, the more difficult it is to discover and the easier Is evasion. An other is that the smaller the amount collected, the greater is the cost of col lection, until a point Is reached where expense equals, or even exceeds, re veipts. Direct National taxation, reaching the mass of the people, would, how ever, be a salutary experience, both for the people and their public servants. Our system of Indirect taxes, the mount of which Is hidden in the price of the article taxed, renders the Na tional budget a subject of academic in terest and is a premium on National extravagance. We need some induce ment to watch where the money goes. Rl l.L MOONK TROl'BLE MAKER. If any man imagines that the ap proaching session of Congress will be dull and uninteresting, he is reck oning without the Bull Moosers. stirred to action by Representative HInebaugh. of Illinois, they will cau cus, nominate a candidate for Speak er of the House and demand commit tee places. They will introduce bills providing for Presidential primaries, the eight-hour day. against child la bor and occupational diseases and for other ends. They mill worry commit tees which fail to report their bills, will filibuster and obstruct and gen erally make life weary for Mr. Un derwood and Mr. Mann. Their prob able choice for Speaker is Victor Mur doch, who in the Sixty-first Congress acted as an antidote to somnolence on the part of Speaker Cannon. Just how many Representatives will enlist under the Bull Moose standard cannot be known until they stand up to be counted. The out-and-out Bull Moosers are estimated to number fif teen, but Mr. HInebaugh expects to enroll fifteen Republicans of progres sive tendencies and his most sanguine hopes expand the number of the third party to forty-seven. That these hopes will not be realized has already been made apparent by the refusal of three men listed as Bull Moosers to fall in line. Others will probably do likewise. But the Bull Moosers count on home Influence" to swell their ranks. They will dare members in whose districts the Roosevelt vote was heavy to vote against their bills and then go home and explain. They lay great stress on the moral effect of the vote cast by their party at the Presidential election, which under the proportional plan would have entitled them to 119 members of the House. It is too early as yet to take a cen sus of the Bull Moosers in the House, but there are enough of them to create a great disturbance if they follow the flan outlined. A much smaller num ber than fifteen, the minimum esti mate of their strength, has been able to create much turmoil by taking ad vantage of kinks in the rules, by ig noring courtesy and by indifference to the necessities of public business. Although their original quarrel is with the Republicans, the Bull Moose will find occasion to worry the Dem ocrats when the tariff bill is up for debate. Each of them has pet Indus tries In his district which he wishes to protect and, when Mr. Underwood strives to take away the tariff pap from these Industries, the Bull Moose call will be loud, long and vociferous. TWO TIKWS or A STATESMAN. James Hamilton Lewis, the new Democratic Senator from Illinois, was long a resident of Washington state, and news of his triumph is received by the newspapers in Washington with varying manifestations of emotion. The North Takima Republic, which has a long and disconcerting memory, is reminded of the days when Lewis was a shining figure in Washington affairs, culminating in his election to Congress In 1896 and his defeat in 1898. It declares that "Lewis is the great National Joke. . . . The man is incapable of doing hard, honest work of any kind. He isn't as much of a statesman as Carrie Nation, used to be. ... Lewis' course while he lived in this state Indicated to many ob servers that he is thoroughly insincere, utterly conscienceless, and vastly in capable." The Aberdeen World remonstrates vcith the Republic for its uncharitable expressions, and sketches Senator Lemls' career from longshoreman to Congressman, and cites a few ex amples of his triumphs at the law. Among them he kept a murderer from the gallows, for eight years through the- successful interposition of tech nical pleas. "Maybe," remarks the World, "he has broadened since he left this state, and it is Just possible that he has acquired wisdom and knowledge. We don't know that this is the case, but why not wait and find out V It is well enough to -wait, for there Is nothing else to do. But what Is there to find out that is not already well known? Lewis has succeeded in Illinois by the kind of methods he used in Washington. He has a certain su perficial brilliancy and he is besides a consummate self-advertiser. But he has no fixed political principles, and he will achieve no real results beyond notoriety for Illinois or the Nation or the Democratic party. Long ago Lincoln said that no one could fool all the people all the time: but Lewis has proved in Lincoln's state that he can fool most of the people a good deal of the time. TRUE DEMOCRATS. The cheering news comes from Washington that the two Oregon Dem ocratic Senators have agreed upon a number of deserving gentlemen who are to hold the Federal places in Ore gon. But the Senators with great dis cretion decline to make public the names of the lucky Democrats until the nominations shall be sent to the Senate. Your disappointed office seeker Is a noisy creature, with an infi nite capacity for mischief. It is pleasing to know that a Port land postmaster is included in the ninM tn he Barreled out by the Sen ators. The place has been vacant for over six months. With great astuteness Senator Chamberlain circumvented all efforts to put a Republican in the post office Job. Just now he stands up. a stout Democratic oak, with the bark nn Tie in an much a Democrat that he and the other Democrat, Senator Lane, will refuse to permit any rtepuo lican to be reappointed to any Oregon nnatnfnrA even when an entire com munity desires It, if a Democratic ap- nlk-nnt can be found, or course ne can always be found. The assistant Democrats In the Re publican party who elected the two Oregon Democratic Senators now dis cover the difference between a Demo cratic candidate for Senator and a Democratic Senator. WILSON AND TOIJ. B.XEMPTION. ie t. e.renlrted that President Wil son will recommend repeal of the toll exemption clause or the Panama ca n,i luv. Tn so doing he would yield to the influence of those Eastern In terests which would protect the rail roads from water competition by glv in hm an advantage eoulvalent to the amount of the tolls. The cry of subsidy is now raised against exemp tion by those interests which have always been most greedy for subsidies and which have been gorged with them. The calloused consciences of ,h man who had to be dragooned In to fair dealing by means of interstate commerce and anti-trust laws nave suddenly become very tender over our National honor, over pretended viola tion of treaties. Whence comes the money with wnlcn the American Association for Inter ,!n,ai Conciliation is enabled to flood the country with pamphlets op posing exemption? This organisa tion has not hitherto been overbur dened with cash for sucti wiae puo Ilcity. Have not men with selfish In terests to serve been suddenly inspired ...i.v. .ani nf t nTornatinnal arbitration and furnished the funds for this agi tation? We have no means oi snow ing, but, when selfish interests eoln Ai.u vith tho enrl.e Bourfat bv the al truistic arbitrationists, we have good cause to suspect. Coastwise commerce ts already pay- hravr Indirect tax for the pur pose of keeping the American ship building industry alive. Were foreign ships admitted to our coastwise trade, freight rates would be much lower. The consumer pays the freight. He is taxed to the extent or tne increase in rates due to the exclusion of foreign ships. Railroads which compete with coastwise ships get the benefit of this increase and are subsidized to that extent. Then surely the consum er is entitled to the lower water rate which will result from toll exemption of coastwise ships as a slight offset to the burden he bears for the pur pose of keeping alive the shipbuilding industry, more especially as the canal was built for the purpose of promot ing water competition. Since the canal revenue will not suf fice for many years to pay interest on its cost and at the beginning will hnmiv lur oKt of ooeration and main tenance, no other nation can fairly complain mat we are imposing . burden on its ships which is not borne by our own. If we choose to charge the tolls which would have been paid by our coastwise ships to the account of interest on the cost of the canal, as Senator Newlands has proposed, we are free to do so and no man can complain. Congress doubtless had this In mtnH w-hon nnjislno the expmntlon clause. An amendment to the law creating a canal fund and making this provision would remove all doubts. Then, if any nation still protests, we shall have a clear case for an Impar tial arbitration tribunal. Whatever may be Mr. Wilson's opin ion on exemption, he is pledged by the platform on which he was elected to uphold the law as it stands in that particular, for the following plank was adopted by the Baltimore conven tion: We favor the exemption from tolle of American ships eneased In coaatwiao trade ptiilnit through the Panama Canal. We a. so favor legislation forbidding the nae of the Panama Canal by ship owned or con trolled by railroad carriers engaged In transportation competitive with tn canal. Mr. Wilson can. consistently with this declaration, favor arbitration by a tribunal which, in order to be im partial, should be drawn from non maritime nations, but he cannot favor repeal of the exemption clause. BASEBALL. Exit the Balkans, exit the tariff, exit Mexico, floods and disaster along with Atu. innip, nf nnjisirisr interest. Enter baseball. Henceforward we will be wholly absorbed in the greatest or out door sports. That considerable portion of nir nnnulace which constitutes fan- dom will have eyes, ears and other functions for little else. There's nothing that seems to arouse nuitA on miirh An t h 11 si asm and Interest as does baseball. The man who ac cepts the Job of manicuring Portland s big park lion will not display any more activity when the lion objects than any one of ten thousand fans in the ninth Inning of a hotly contested game. If th home team haDDens to be losing out, an individual with muscular rheu matism and St. Vitus' dance .would be calm, tranquil and comfortable by comparison. But to leave for the nonce tne pnys iology and psychology of baseball, it might be well to mention iu passing ht thf home team won yesterday. Yessir, the home team won, which is a portentous as well as a momentous In cident. It's the first time we've cap tnfrt an nnfninr eame since back In '06, in which year we also coouy ac cepted possession of the pennant. To be sure, we've been more fortunate, or more skillful, if you please, about win ning pennants than We have in win ning opening games. Portland may almost be said to have the pennant winning habit. There's something in the elements, fostered by the spirit of Portland's fan element, that renders pennant-winning quite the natural thing. We walked oft with the pen nant in 1910 and again In 1911, and would have gotten it last year except for the trifling fact that our team didn't measure up to the pennant-winning mark. This year it would seem that we again are going to live up to our once proud reputation as a pennant-winning community. Having captured the opening game, the rest, it would seem, must follow as a matter of course, al though we shall prefer to wait a few games before presenting that assump tion in the guise of a firm prediction. GERMANY AND AMERICA. Price Collier's articles on Germany and the Germans in Scribner's Mag azine have that quality of first hand knowledge which convinces while it entertains. He Is by no means an In discriminate admirer of German in stitutions. In many particulars he contrasts them unfavorably with those of the United States. He especially dislikes the Teutonic police supervis ion, which pervades the whole scheme of life and becomes unendurably- in trusive at times to a person who has grown up under our American free dom. Mr. Collier also finds the Ger mans as a nation somewhat flabby. Their excessive fondness for beery contemplation has led them to neglect physical exercise. They are too fond of coddling themselves and depend a great deal more upon the government for personal guidance than Mr. Collier thinks desirable. But on the other hand he sees many features in German life which are to be unqualifiedly com mended. For example he likes the general education which the young men receive during their years of in th irmv. It makes good soldiers out of them as a matter of course, but it does mucn more, it hardens their mental and physical fiber. Inures them to habits of regu lar industry, cultivates the spirit of organized activity and Imbues them with the brotherly feeling for men of their own race which Is going to be more and more the basis of national success. Naturally in the course of his studies Mr. Collier has occasion to contrast German Institutions and their influ ence upon men and manners with those of the United States. If they are inferior to ours we may nurture a legitimate pride by discovering where in we excel. If they are superior it is the policy of wisdom to improve hv observing our competi tors. This was the way Peter the Great prepared himseir to overcome Charles XII, who at the outset sur passed him in every particular as a military commander. Bvjt In the end Peter defeated him and drove him I-.- .iio PcT-hnns bv attentively studying the points where Mr. Collier thinks the Germans are our in time eoual or surpass them. Certainly we never can do so by de nying the facts. And yet mere am some newspapers which assume pre cisely that inexcusable attitude. In stead of humbly confessing our Na tional shortcomings and promising to bring forth fruits meet for repent ance they set up a shriek that Mr. Collier has been "sneering at his country." A calm statement of facts is anvthing but a sneer. Comparing the German civilization of the Nine teenth Century with ours, Mr. Collier finds In the former a massive solidity of culture which far outranked us. Admitting that Lincoln was the peer of any man in the world, he asks where an American of sober intelligence would look "to find a match for Bis marck as a statesman, Heine as a wit and song maker. Wagner. Brahms and Beethoven as musicians, Kant and Hegel as philosophers, Humboldt, Lie big. Helmholts. Bunsen and Haeckel as scientists. Moltke and Roon as sol diers, Ranke and Mommsen as his torians." and so on through a long list. The critics of Mr. Collier are ut terly routed as far as the Nineteenth Century goes, but they turn more con fidently to the Twentieth. Here, they say. we have Wilson and Roosevelt, Bryan and Root as states men. Sargent for a painter. McKim for an architect and the Standard Oil Company for a "commercial model of Imagination, scope and efficiency." What German philosopher of this day, we are asked, can rival William James and what historian ts the equal of t i -i snmn nf these examples are admirably chosen. Mr. Sargent is a painter of great merit ana n nunm James ranks high in philosophy, but what a perversion of taste it is to put forward the Standard Oil Company as an exemplar of our National culture. Germany Is not leading the world in art Just at this moment, but in every other civilized activity it stands as consplcuouslyi at the front as it did in the Nineteenth Century. Haupt mann still ranks as the greatest trag edian In the world. There Is only one philosopher to rival Eucken and he is a Frenchman, not an American. German historians are doing work which we imitate more or less faith fully but do not rival. German science in most departments is far ahead of us. German trade is push ing its way into all markets td the discomfiture of its competitors, and the German government has discov ered how to keep an Increasing popu lation healthy and happy. Mr. Collier concedes that the United States was superior to all the rest of the world in the last century In pro ducing "trust and tarifT incubated millionaires." No doubt we still maintain this bad pre-eminence. The mention of the Standard Oil Company as a sample of culture shows that some of us are proud of it, which is perhaps the saddest and most discour aging symptom In the case. There Is in this country a budding idealism which will presently bear fruit in art. letters and philosophy, but as yet It is scarcely visible above the muck of ma terialism which will by and by serve as its fertilizer. When we learn to el teem our native artists and musicians as highly as we do foreigners of no greater gifts, then we shall be on the right road to National culture. But Just now some of those who shriek most volubly at criticisms such as Mr. Collier's are the very ones who exhibit the most fawning servility to foreign ers when it comes to a question of en couraging American genius. As a Na tion we have some hard lessons to master before we are prepared to en ter the race of intellectual achievement on equal terms with other peoples, but we can perform the task if we honestly set about it. TT7KA .-..a., hosrn nf nflminST A nubllC school for a woman? Corvallis has "Waldo Hall," Dut tne tiue is n m honor of Mrs. Waldo, much as she de serves It by her services to the col lege. Several of Portland's schools bear men's names, but no women have been commemorated In that way. In Baltimore there is an agitation to remedy this slight, which la Nation wide, and treat both sexes with equal favor in naming schools. Bv establishing a centralized pur chasing department on the model of the Canadian Pacific Railway, New York hopes to effect a great economy In buying supplies. At present the city has 120 departments which pur chase without concord. Naturally there is waste and confusion. Con trallzatlon Is the remedy. It will usher in a reign of efficiency and honesty. The Government at Washington will follow New York's example some day and stop waste by putting its business in a. few responsible hands. In his coming visit to Europe Com manrlor Pearv will be showered' with dignities and decorations by foreign potentates ana learned societies. LP n ina nna.nt h hfLA received little reward at home and hardly any abroad for his great achievement, but the uae l tnrnlnc and he will die one of the most lustiv famous men of his time. The temporary blight of his renown he owes, of course, to the pernicious Dr. Cook. Plucky and prosperous Omaha wants no outside assistance. Neither does she care to be known as tn the belt of destruction. Just as San Fran cisco refers to the earthquake as "the big fire," so will the Nebraska city in time date affairs from the night of the big wind. xnw lot the United States send a warship over to Great Britain and with the bristling mouths of four i,.n.fni)i orima nnlnrino At Parlia ment demand release of the American suffragette in durance vile! Vaude ville needs her. Tn1a survivors, turn bald, announces a headline. Reading no farther we are left in doubt whether a tonsorial emblem or the earth's southernmost axis is referred to. nut If the Democrats had followed their original plan and started butch ering the tariff on April l tne cry of "April fool" would never have ended. Mrs. Pankhurst calls Miss Emerson, the suffragette who tried to catch pneumonia in prison, a heroine. Oth ers would call her by a shorter and less complimentary name. Portland's ready and liberal re sponse to the appeal from flood suf ferers Indicates not only the city e prodigal liberality, but its immense prosperity XT. K fnnrtJ tn nr-r-enr tho Job of trimming the park lion's nails. Make it a political Job and there'll be a thousand applicants. The Turk now thankfully accepts any terms offered. If the allies ham mer away much longer, ne win De giaa to escape with his skin. . t- it MccihiA thorn Am four second- class postoffices in Oregon for which no Democrat has applied? Are the brethren asleep? With a million and a half in auto mobiles in Oregon, $40,000 or more is not much to spend on grand opera in Portland. Now that Chamberlain and Lane are apportioning the spoils. Demo cratic tongues are beginning to water. With March setting a new pace in commercial activity, the year 1S13 looks brighter than ever to Portland. The office-seeker to whom President Wilson showed the door will now go home to nurse a "grouch." There is a subtle irony in designat ing April 1 as the opening date of the trout season. Doesn't it make you sore to read that the price of meat Is soaring again? The season of Joy is on for six days a week, jjetaiis are on tne score board. The Turk will take his medicine if the powers hold the spoon. Between grand opera and baseball these are exciting times. The crop of Woodrow babies is now being harvested. Haywood got what was due. ' JfATTRJE IS HEARTLESS IN LAWS, EllaalaaUoa of I'aflt Cans of Flarnes, Saya Gold Hill Mas. GOLD HILL, Or., March 37. (To the Editor.) Is the race threatened with the "white plague?" The impression that it is has doubtless been made on many lay minds by the wid discussion given to the subject recently. But the evidence shows that a very large part of the race is immune to it. But why immune? Because their blood has not reached the stage of physical degener acy peculiar to those who are not thus immune. There Is a well-marked difference In the chemical reactions in the blood of the two classes. Nature knows no mercy, but in her .seemingly cruel plan of selecting the fittest, has marked this unfortunate class for elimination. For good and sufficient biologic rea sons, but dimly understood, this suffer ing class has fallen below the stand ard set by tbe laws of nature as neces sary for the continuance of the race. No serum, I take it. can be devised that will set aside this decree of nature. The futile quest for the spring that would restore youth failed for the same reason. Youth once spent or life force lost can never be recovered. Some diseases leave behind as a result cer tain elements which act as barriers to prevent their recurrence, thus setting up a tendency towards "race immunity" and this well ascertained fact has led to the thought that a suitable serum might bring about a race Immunity to consumption, but this reasoning Is fallacious, because this disease Is fun damental. It leaves no barriers to pre vent Its recurrence. It is hard to say, but it is nature's executioner sent to remove a strain of blood which has lost race efficiency. Suppose for a moment that -rr. Freld mann has discovered a serum that will arrest the ravages of this disease In certain cases, yet I desire to say that It cannot be any more than a palliative. The patient, though his life may be pro longed, would still be a member of the decadent class, anf If married would have children of tbe same class, as liable to this disease as though the parent were never treated. To create this false hope would only be a greater menace to the race. That nature's conditions for race con tinuity are being more and more vio lated Is evidenced by the Increase in the army of consumptives. There is only one way to stop this inerea-ie, and that is to comply with these conditions. This hubbub to raise money "to fight the white plague" Is as futile as the Pope's bull against the comet. Why not look a stern and terrible truth squarely in the face? Nature has her laws for spacing proved by Avagodro's law of gases and everywhere evident, in Bode's law of planetary distances, in the number of trees that will live on a given space, in the amount of grain which should be sown to the acre, etc But manl Sow him thick! He seems to have no law. The plagues that devastate the world are nature's protest. Consumption has well been called "The White Plague." Its brother Is called leprosy, the same sign Nature's decree of extinction. Tbe most senseless cry of modern days is "race suicide." If Nature can be accredited with an altruistic purpose, she Is now trying to save the race from utter extinction by marking excess population with her fatal sign of elimination. Yet the world could support even more people than it contains without Invoking this fatal scourge providing the conditions ap pointed for race continuity were ob served. J. R. KENDALL. MALE ATTIRE NOT VERY MODEST Woman Charges That It Is la Need of Regulation. PORTLAND, April 1. (To the Edi tor.) Apropos of "Fashions and Mor als" as commented upon in an Oregon- Ian editorial, I, with other women, be lieve that it Is high time for the men of Mr. Bok's cocksureness to cease dwelling on the mote and take cogniz ance of the beam. As your editorial indicates "We grow accustomed to everything imaginable In the way of attire." If this were not true, pitiably true, the women of this country long ago would have risen up in revolt against the man who dons bifurcated garments and a cut-away coat. Time was when men wore flowing garb such as effectually concealed the unattractive outlines of their anatomy as effectually as did the gowns of the women before the era of the much condemned stovepipe skirt and peek aboo waist. But Just why the masculine mind should assume that the trouser as worn by him Is a garment of either beauty or modesty is a conundrum to the feminine mind. We have grown accustomed to it. It Is true. But It is not true that it can be looked upon as a garment in which are combined all sartorial virtues. Just why there is no limit set upon men's attire while every change in the mode that women affect is condemned fore and aft by the masculine element is hard for a mere woman to under stand. The cutaway or short sack coat worn by men is far more indecent than any fashion women have adopted even in this last decade and yet not even one reformer has raised his voice against It. A SOMETIME STRAPHANGER. HOW TO GET MOXET CIRCULATIJfG Eugene Man Suggests Way of "Busting the Money Trust." EUGENE. Or., March 31. (To the Editor.) You say in The Oregonian of March 24. under the heading "Farmers' Loans," that two honest and Industrious farmers wish to obtain a loan on land valued at SS00U or $9000 but without success. The best bargain they have been able to make includes interest at 8 per cent and a preliminary bonus of 3 per cent, which Is simply ruinous. I take it from the way you put it that the loans will not be made, hence those two farmers will do without this money. Results: Idle money and unimproved farms. This Is the fruits 6f a money trust. Let us burst this trust in this way: Let the Government go into this moneV-lendlng business, and cut out the 8 per cent and charge the S per cent. That perhaps would be sufficient to cover all cost. Results again: Thes men would get the money either from the Government or from these brokers. The brokers would beg these men to take their money at the same rate of interest, unless, perchance, they could otherwise Invest it so that it would bring a greater per cent. If they did the latter it would help society by put ting their money in circulation, where it belongs, and these men would go on and further improve their farms. This would prevent all hoarding of money and force it out In circulation, and there would be very little borrowed from the United States. D. HARBAUGH. One Jnmp at a Time. Washington (D. C.) Herald. "You say you're so good. Why didn't you enter the amateur broad Jump?" "Rules didn't suit me. "Why not?" "They wanted to start us off with a pistol shot, anil I do my best Jumping when I hear an auto born." Hnaband-and-Wife Logic. New York Herald. She You once said you would die for me, and now you refuse to get up and light the fire. He That's perfectly logical. If I died for you I'd be done with: but if I get up once and light tne lire you u want me to do it every morning. An Expression of Delicacy. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Jane Would you marry a man who was your Inferior? Mary 11 I marry at an. "IXWRITTKSi LAW" IS CONDEMNED It Is Snr-rtva or Day of SavasrerTi Saya Woman. PORTLAND. March 49. (To the Edi tor.) L. J. K. is firmly convinced of one thing and that is the essential justice of exclusively man-made moral codes. Hence be cannot see that he takes a one-sided view of the "unwrit ten law" and "dementia Americana' which The Oregonian so Justly con demned in the Ralph Henry case, and which any community claiming to be civilized must completely outgrow. L. J. K. objects because of my as sertlon that where the "unwritten law' and the insanity plea are upheld as they were recently, men regard their wives from the standpoint of proprie tary rights. Yet is not that the unaer lying theory of proclaiming the hus band as the "head of the family I the other hand. I regard mature wo men of ordinarv understanding as in dividuals who ought to have full control of their own actions so long as they do not trespass on the life, liberty or orooerty of others. Women cannot demand less than this if women are to be regarded as neither slaves nor para, sites. Immediately the sentimentalist puts this poser, as it has been put to me more than once: "Was your own mother a slave or a parasite?" Frankly, my own mother was not, because my father was a "woman s rights man In Mas sachusetts with Wendell Phillips as long as 40 years ago. His benighted fellow-citizens indulgently considered him as "eccentric" on that particular topic My mother and father were in perfect accord on Wis tuDjeci oi tree dom for women. Yet the "home wrecker" of L. J. K.'s imagination would have found his occupation gone In that particular domicile. But I am sure that if my mother had fallen in lova with another man after marriage. my father would not have shot him to death. Why? For the very reason that he believed in freedom, not ownersnip. for women, including his own wife. It was one of the deepest convictions of his life. He It was who gave me the first Inkling of the wrongs that women have suffered through the ages, and are now suffering, because men refuse to regard them as Just human beings like themselves, wltn tne same strengta ano the same weaknesses. Aiy parents re ceived their Inspiration from that great orator and maenilicent humanitarian Wendell Phillips. His was an abiding Influence in their lives. Their mar rlairn was based on absolute freedom unon mutual affection, forbearance and a recognition of each other's rights. I know they weTe all the happier for this complete understanding. Neither can I see where their children suffered be cause the parents regarded each other as free agents. . So I venture to say that L. J. K. has nothing to teach me in the way of mutual responsibility for husband and wife that I did not learn years ago from a -free father and a free mother. True, I am unmarried. But I have not yet been as fortunate as my mother to find the splendid type of manhood that my own father was. Most of tne men one meets have the same attitude toward wifehood that L J. K. has, namelv. Tjroorietorship. Luckily for me, my parents saw to It that I, their daughter, snouio oe economically in dependent and capable of making my own way in the world. Otherwise I might find myself In the position of so mnnv women I know who are unsatis factorily married but who, because of lack of independent means or of train ing, would be quite helpless cut off from their nusDanos- poc.etouwK.. women, as Inez Mllholland truly says, have been practically starved into sub mission by their husbands. What has all this to do with the Ralph Henry case and the "unwritten law." Just this: So long as man as sumes that he alone has "honor" to guard and that his wife Is to conform to that code unconditionally and under all circumstances, we shall have op pression and Injustice for women. We demand freeoom, eoucation, iu imj nnrtnnitv of obtaining economic inde pendence, and motherhood Inspired by a social and racial Ideal. Under such con ditions the "unwritten law" in all its disguises will come to be recognized as exactly what it is: a part of the ethics of savagery and not of civiliza tion. (Miss) it- v: m. LOST FAITH IX COL. ROOSEVELT. North Bend Man Disputes That "Great est American" la Great. ' NORTH BEND, Or., March 31. (To the Editor.) In an editorial in the Sun- t sntitlAri . "Theodore Roosevelt's Life," you say, "no one Just like Roosevelt ever uvea, kdu ou I can agree with you; but you also say .. v- i oat AnnnnMtfl Were for his own glory and Roosevelt'B have not been," and here l leave you. juoi let me say a few words on this subject and I think I will feei better. I once believed in Roosevelt as a moral and political reformer. I have lost all faith in him, as have millions of others. He i i . v. a fn,olhlA ovnnnnrler of uas uccu in".' i many beautiful doctrines, but when the people have lost latin in a prujjuot teachings are soon forgotten. He was the greatest self -advertiser that ever lived. Since he first appeared upon the scene he has gone about the u hinrino- a triimnet. He went to war like a drum-major leading a band. He marcnea into tne punnum arena showing his teeth figuratively ii a iitora ll v He made a set of teeth famous. He attacked with a club everything and everybody that got in his way. rle even penetrateu utti ncoi 1..! papH lnuder than the lions. He could not brook opposition. He continually cried aioua, inane nj Me. tt. 1 a wllllncr tn sacrifice ne n ... i' j o anybody except himself. His doctrine was "the people snouia ruie uuuusu .o. v- "v, has ftiwavs had in mind the welfare of the little fellow as dis tinguished from the big fellow." In the language or tne oay, sure. xi - nf him and Roosevelt was a politician. Moreover he was a steam engine, a steam roller ana a. iwuu iope combined. He was a wonderful Kii, nnt a fiTPftt HlAIL He WaS not big enough to put the interests of the Nation above his own personal amui ,i wv.or hitd the oooortunlty to make Governor Hadley his own certi fied Simon pure reformer President of the United States, ne reiuseu. m not ring true. He was not honest. He aroused enthusiasm and had a great following, but he never touched the hearts of the people. He was not great. Lincoln was a great, man and millions of Deople loved him. No one loves Roosevelt. A. S. HAMMOND. DO NOT LEAVES CHILDREN ALOXE Sack a Riafc Is Marked by Many Grave Dangers. PORTLAND. March 31. (To the Ed itor.) In reference to the tragedies of the past week in this city, Deputy Cor oner Dunning says "Parents should learn that matches should be kept out of the way of children." It seems to me there are several other things that parents should learn, and one of them is that small children should not be left alone in a house to care for themselves or to be cared for by Providence. The Lord is good and cares for the neglected and helpless, but often he permits tragedies even more horrible than burning to death, and some parents and whole communi ties get very severe lessons. It is ex ceedingly sad. but only too true. Why not take the lesson? Perhaps in face of these tragedies It seems a little hard to offer advice, yet it is only one who really cares who will take the trouble to do so. Parents should be thoughtful of the welfare of their children, and have love enough to prevent such terrible acci dents when possible to do so. NANNIE B. MOORE. The First Day By Dean Collins. With a brand new rod and a brand new reel And a khaki outfit that crackles With newness, and with a brand new creel And brand new "sortments of hackles. And bait hooks, too. and a box that squirms With more than a score of angle worms Huroo! Hurray! To the stream away. For it's open season for trout today. 'Twas a beaten trail on the streamlet's banks. Where a hundred boots had trod. And willows had broken their serried ranks To the march of the knights of the rod; And the shoreline offered a fair Im pression Of some sort of holiday procession. As up and down the stream they'd splash. An hundred anglers, bold and brash. There were anglers bold and strong. Who crept at the close of day Alleys and by-streets dim along. Nor paused In their onward way; Though open season for trout, 'twas true. Though the outfit was fine and fresh and new Which of the knights of the rod and reel Waa willing to have you inspect his creel? There are hundred anglers brave and bold Who wake on the second morn With the "Charley horse" and the cough and cold And a sorrowful look forlorn But though their catch, as a general rule, Was more or less of an "April fool," They smile through their troubles any how At least It is open season now. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of April 2. 1SS8. Chicago. April 1. The prospect of an Immediate tie-up has added a graver aspect to the railroad situation this evening than at any time sines the commencement of the Burlington strike, San Francisco, April 1. Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson, of Bournemouth. Eng land, wife of the noted novelist, arrived here from the East this evening. The popular dissatisfaotion with the United States Senate is voiced by the proposition now before Congress to have United States Senators directly elected by the people. The first annual commencement of the medical department of the Univer sity of Oregon will take place at Turn Hall thlB evening. The degree of doctor of medicine will be conferred on the following young men: H. B. Stanley, C. P. Thomas. H. A. Wright, H. J. Whit ney, J. Hunter Wells, Felix Callahan and A. E. Severance. Conferring of de grees: Honorable M. P. Deady, presi dent of Board of Regents. Charge to graduates: Dr. S. E. Josephl, dean of the faculty. A new black walnut pulpit has been added to Trinity Episcopal Church. The steamer Telephone No. 2 Is rap idly approaching completion. Governor Pennoyer, speaking to an Oregonian reporter, expressed the hope that the Democratic State convention, which meets In Pendleton this week, would speak in unmistakable terms In regard to opening the Columbia River. A bond for a deed, wherein Amos N. King agrees to transfer to George B. Marble, Jr., as trustee of the Industrial Fair Association, the property selected as a site for the fair buildings near the Intersection of Fourteenth and B streets, was filed Saturday. The asso ciation is to pay Mr. King $8000 in cash or one-half cash and the remainder in fully paid-up stock. At a meeting of citizens held at the West Shore office on Saturday, Messrs. H W. Corbett, Donald Macleay, W. K. Smith, Ellis G. Hughes and L. L. Haw kins were appointed to act as an ad visory committee to Mr. L. Samuels In his scheme to advertise the city of Portland in the East. Half a Century Ao From The Oresonian of April 2, 1883. A letter from Mr. J. W. Johnson to Honorable George H. Williams, says that Mr. Frank Rand, who was on the way to the mines with Mr. J. H. Boyd, of this place, was drowned from the steamer Cascadllla, being thrown over board by the concussion when the steamer struck a rock. On Sunday last several of our patrl- ' otic citizens obtained two anvils and fired 100 guns in honor of our recog nition as an integral part of the glori ous Union. Nine cheers for Idaho, "the gem of the mountains," were given in tones that will vibrate through every part of our beautiful territory. Lewis ton Golden Age. We publish this morning the request of many Union citizens that ward meetings may be. held this evening to make arrangements for the election to be held on Monday next. We trust that every voter who cares for the welfare and prosperity of the city will attend. It cannot be denied that the present In stitution Is a BUblimo humbug a ridic ulous libel upon intelligent city gov ernment. The Winter term of the public schools closed yesterday. A picnic was given to the children. NO EXCUSE FOR 'UNWRITTEJr LAW It la Held to Be Evil Because of Its Evil Source. PORTLAND. March 30. (To the Ed itor.) We are taught that two nega tives make an affirmative, but two wrongs do not make a right. There fore, the murderer should not be ex cused from execution, neither will the execution, proprltiate the crime. No act conceived In the darkness of the mind can be a just deed to .serve a just cause. Thus, the unwritten law Is an evil by virtue of Its evil source. The breaking up of Ralph Henry's home was the result of evil. The sub sequent act of murder was the result of a vindictive spirit that, unre strained, becomes the father of un written law. The first inception of the whole mis erable trouble traces back to the foun tain head of the real and Initial cause, but there is the rub. The solution Is there, the reward also, but what's the use, when humanity in its weakness must choose between chastity on Its throne of will power and self denial, or the devil on his throne of seductive pleasures? When the precepts of love in their fullness and purity are the only in centive for marriage and continue in control of the marriage relations, nt man or woman can enter a home and destroy its chastity. Likewise will go the unwritten law. O. G. S. A Matrimonial Enquiry. Buffalo Express. "Here is a story of a Chicago woman who says that present marriage laws make women the slave of man," said the square-Jawed matron as she looked up from the newspaper. "Why don't they enforce the law, then?" meekly asked Mr. Henpecke.