THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY. APRIL 5, 1913- 6 PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Orecon, poatenTlea aa , aeeond-claaa matter. I eubaciipusa Isatee Invariably la AvBoe: (BT MAIL) ; pally. Sandar Included, ona year , Dally. Sundar Included, alx monthe ... , Dally. Sunday Included, threa monina,. Z.-j p livy. Sunday Inciuded, ona month .... -" tafly. without Sunday, ona year J-J-J ' Ially, without Sunday, a'.x montha . e.l 1 tially. without Sunday, three months .. ' Daily, without Sunday, ona mourn .... -jo 1 Weeklr, ona year ' Sunday, ona year f-ri i bunday and Weekly, ona year.. ........ (BT CARRIER) Dally. Sunday Included, ona year t.JJ laiTy. Sunday Included, ona month.. . . . How ta Kemlt bend poetotttce money or der, cxpresa order or peraonal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at the tender's risk. Give poetofflce addreaa in Jul! Inducing county and slate. Postage Rataa Ten to 14 paces. 1 cent. 16 to lis pases, X centa; SO to 0 pasea. cent: eu to HO paaea. a centa. Foralan poatace. double rata. latter BuaUMea Offlcaa Verree a Conk l.'n. New York. Brunawlcla bulldlnx- tm cifo. Stexer bulldlnx. San Francises. OOlca R. J. BldweU Co.. 742 Market street. Enropeaa Office No. S Recent atreet b. W., London. PORTLAND, SATXTICAY, APRIL S. lsl. THE DESPOTIC LAND OFFICE. ; Not only do the laws governing ac ' quirement of public land need thor i ough revision, but the entire admlnls- t ration of the land .laws needs com I plete overhauling. Evidence submlt " ted to the Senate committee on public lands proves conclusively that the de I cision of contests has been despotic, capricious and frequently in violation ' of the plain directions of law. By its i interpretation of laws passed for the protection of homesteaders and mln i era. the Land Office has In effect re J pealed or radically amended them. Settlers have been bedeviled in a man. ; ner worthy of Russia or Turkey. The bias of each succeeding Secretary of the Interior on the subject of conser vation has colored decisions of his --subordinates. No precedents rule. , There is no certainty anywhere that . the principles laid down hi one de- cision will be followed in another ; parallel with it. The rules governing adjudication '. of land cases are based on the theory ; that they are simply deals between buyer and seller. Originally this was J a sonnd theory, for the land was sold J outright for cash. But our land laws r are now so complex that private equl- ties of great value grow up which are at the mercy of the Land Office. They '. are matters for judicial determination, ; but clerks and attorneys in the Land i Office have been constituted the ', judges, though they represent one of the parties to the transaction the ! Government. Only in rare cases is 1 appeal to the courts possible. Con ' gress has vested the Interior Depart I ment with wide discretion to make rules and regulations. This discretion ! has been used by the Land Office au- torrau to amend and repeal laws and to put in operation their own ideas of ; what the law should be. They are the great Pooh-Bahs. In administering .' the law they exercise executive power; in making rules, professedly applying the law but actually changing it, they ; exercise legislative power; in deciding ' claims and contests, they exercise Ju ', diclal power. They are all three dl ; visions of the Government rolled into one. They are the law. A land contest between two indi ' viduals is-tried before a Judge and jury, who hear all oral and see all ; documentary evidence. A land con- test between an individual and the ! Government is tried by the Govern- ment through Land Office officials. I with no Jury, and the Judge considers ' as evidence special agents" reports which are not put in evidence, but are withheld from the claimant as ."con- ' fidential." The same man who col- lected the Government's evidence may I try the case and decide the appeal 1 from his own decision. The statement that the Land Office ; has repealed laws may seem incredl- ble. but it is true. In 189X a law was ' - passed providing that after the lapse of two years from the issue of final receipt without contest a homesteader 'shall get & patent, but the depart - ment has interpreted away this right of the settler until it now arrogantly refuses to be bound by the law. Be cause the department found suspicious circumstances in seventeen entries in the Slletz country, it arbitrarily sus pended all entries In fifteen townships in that section. The Land Office has created a new class of homesteads which it calls "timbered homesteads," though the law recognizes no such classification. Though the law re quires a homesteader to reside on or cultivate his claim, it has been con strued as requiring him to reside on ad cultivate. This construction has been used to extend National forests by cancellation of entries on so-called timbered homesteads in states where the law expressly forbids such exten sion. Men who have spent years in improving homesteads have been driven out to make room for scrip fil . Ings by men who would hold the land for its timber. By requiring as much improvement on a homestead in the fourteen months' residence required for commutation as during the five years' residence required for a free , homestead, the Land Office has prac tically repealed the commutation homestead law. -Congress provided that reservation of public land should not impair the right to explore, de velop and purchase mineral land, but ;in 1910 the withdrawal, at the instiga tion of the Land Office, excepted coal, " oil, gas and phosphate land, and the - law of August, 1912, made the right of "miners apply only to metalliferous " minerals. This cut out clays, lime, marble, onyx, building stone, cement. - gypsum, borax, polishes and all other ... non-metallic minerals. President Taft proposed creation of - a land court to hear appeals from " the Interior Department. The friends "" of the settlers propose appeals to the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Cnlted States and to the district courts for .' coal claimants In Alaska. But. in or? ..- der that Justice may be done, the -- Land Office should be overhauled, its entire practice revised and the men who. through long habit, are mental- '- ly incapable of dealing out Justice should be displaced. We look to -"' President Wilson and Secretary Lane - to initiate these reforms and put an " end to the arbitrary star-chamber methods which now prevail. -I NWEPT. r"HOSRXD AXD rjiSVSG." : "Breathes there a man with soul so dead who never to himself hath said, ;: This la my own. my native land?' Whose heart hath ne'er within him burned as home his footstep, he hath j : turned from wandering on a foreign I strand?" Yes. there breathes Just , such a man and his name is Frank J. : Gould. He has been meandering ' around In New York for the last few : months half dead with ennui, bored to i the last limit of endurance. And now ', he is going back to France and there he will stay. America has seen the last of him. In France he owns a farm where he will consecrate his mental energies to raising artichokes. He is never coming back any more be cause "America is not amusing. Poor Frank. It is an everlasting pity that the American people have not turned their attention to making amusement for their bored million aires, as Samson did for the Philis tines. The only thing to dread if they had done so would have been that thev might Imitate Samson a little far. ther and pull down the pillars of the temple on the heads or tne merry makers. In this great land of promise, where the hope of humanity is beginning to blossom into reality, Frank Gould can find nothing to do. None of our prob lems interest him. None of our op portunities charm him. He is going back to France to raise artichokes in preference to taking a hand in the noblest and most difficult work the world has ever seen. No doubt some kindly instinct . has guided him to choose wisely. A man who can be content with growing artichokes and nothing more is hardly fit to help grow a Nation. America has done a great deal for Frank Gould and his brothers and sis ters. Our natural resources have been noured out like water for them. Thou sands of men have tolled to make them rich and are tolling for them still. The laws have been indulgent to them. Public opinion has endured many an insult from them and their kind. We might justly look for some better return than sneers. It is scarce, ly possible to believe that America was endowed by Providence with its nat ural wealth in order that empty-head, ed simpletons might grow artichokes near Paris. It is reasonable to believe that there must have been some other purpose in it all. SAME OLD PARTY CAUCCS. President Wilson sends for the chairman of the house ways and means committee, and Instructs him as to the Administration's views of the proposed tariff bill. The ways and means committee has a meeting and conforms with the tariff plans of the President. President Wilson sends for the Democratic members of the Senate finance committee (which has tariff legislation in charge) and notifies them that the Administration has a certain tariff policy which it wishes to bave incorporated in the tariff bill. The Democratic Senators express a willingness to yield to the President's desires, but are in doubt whether the entire Democratic majority can be whipped into line. ' It is evident that the President, through the Democratic leaders, in tends to use the party lash in order tn nrnciim legislation from Congress. The open doormat the White House has no relation to the open iioor or vou ..... h. iron rule of the Demo cratic machine is to override free de bate and independent action Dy con gress, or by Congressmen. The tariff hin nt th Administration and all other cardinal policies are to be crys tallized, perfected and adopted behind the doors of the party caucus. t bv narty. We support party because party stands for some well-aeiinea pnnctyte, code of principles. We elect a Presi dent because he represents certain ideas and policies, we elect a majur , rnnprpM because it upholds certain purposes, desires and aspira tions of the people. Thus there are some tnings we ei do as our unenlightened fathers did. ir w nnert a President and Congress to Ignore party and the party caucus. we must devise some otner way tnau through party to elect them. SENTTMEXT VERSCS FACT. A revival of the .activities of the .jiiu has followed the speech of Winston Churchill in the British Parliament, in which he ad vocated a year s truce among tin na tions in warship building. The World Peace Foundation quotes Mr. Church ill's words with approval and ex presses a hope for co-operation among Teutonic nations the United States. Great Britain and Ger many in the interest or peace ana ...tinn nt nrmaments. It rejoices in the refusal of Congress to build two battleships yearly, it quotes oet"j of State Bryan and Nicholas Murray Butler as advocates of the Democratic policy of a small Navy, peace and ar bitration. Mr. Bryan's utterances assume pe culiar importance by reason of his ap pointment to conduct our foreign rela tions. At the Mohonk conference, in 1910. he held up to ridicule the com petition in naval armament among na tions and declared that, if we told the world we did not believe In war and that we had no disputes we were not willing to submit to the Judgment of the world, we should soon have treaties of peace with practically all nations, and other nations would follow our ex ample until the day of war would be past. He spoke in the same spirit at Kalelgh. N. C, only a week before the Inauguration. These are beautiful sentiments, but what are the facts? There have been more wars among civilized nations In the last twenty years than in any like period for generations. We had the Chino-Japanese war in 1S94-5 . the Greco-Turkish war in 1897, the Spanish-American war In 1898, the Boer war in 1899-1901, the Russo-Japanese war in 1904-5, the Italian-Turkish war in 1911-12. and the Balkan war in 1912-13. Would any of the nations involved in these wars have been will ing to submit their disputes to arbitra tion ? We know they would not. There were issues to be settled which could only be settled by force, and the weaker in each case was beaten, re gardless of the abstract rights of the controversy. Every nation professes an earnest desire for peace, but when such an issue as that between Great Britain and the Boers or between the Balkan states and Turkey arises, they will accept no arbitrament except that of war. All nations follow Colonel Roosevelt's admonition: "Speak softly, but carry a big stick." To throw away our big stick would be equivalent to disarming the Sheriff and notifying the burglars that there is naught to fear. There is no reason to hope that Ger many will accept Mr. Churchill's invi tation to make a truce. That country has rejected every disarmament over ture at The Hague conferences. She will continue to arm, and other nations will do likewise. Our words will have weight in the congress of nations pro portionate to our power to back them with deeds. If Mr. ffryan has his way In the Wilson Administration, the in fluence of the United States among na tions will sink to a low ebb. Huerta now talks of retiring. He's been In too long. The Presidential term in Mexico should be reduced to ten days, with say 200 Vice-Presidents to replace Presidents who die of that quick malady characteristic of Mexi can politics. YVUKNOE COMETH THEIR HELFf Words of solemn admonition are ad dressed by the Nework Evening Post to any Democratic Senators who may dissent from their party on the tariff bill and to the leaders in the Senate. The Post calls for a firm attitude on the part of the leaders to overcome re calcitrancy on the part of those who Insist on protective demands in the in terest of their own constituencies. It continues: For any tariff bill tbat haa obtained, after full deliberation, the authoritative approval of the Prealdent and of the leader in Con greaa. It la now clear that, with ordinarily strong and a&aacloua party management, enoush votea can be had to aecure It paa eage In both house. Tboae who are going to fight for conceaslona of a protective na ture will have to reckon with this aituation from the start, and pitch their note accord ingly. There will be a hearing for dissen tients, bnt there can be no coercion by them, unless the men at the helm are weak, or un faithful, or Incompetent. The only danger, point ilea in the aa yet unknown character of the party leadership in the Senate. And those entrusted with that leadership should be nude to understand from the outeet that upon their shuuWlers rests a responsibility of the gravest kind. The party la in no extraordinary situation, but in the normal position ot a party in full control of all branches of the Federal Government and it must give a good account of Itself or suffer the penalty of failure. This Is a warning to the leaders to stand pat against the demands of pro tectionists within the party ranks. It is a hint to the protectionists that, if they persist in their demands, the leaders will find votes elsewhere to pass the objectionable provisions in face of their opposition. Where does the Post expect to get these votes? The answer seems "to be: From the Bull Moosers and the Progressive Re publicans. If the Louisiana Senators and those from the beet sugar states should bolt on free sugar, enough Republicans and Bull Moosers might be won over to off set the loss. Free raw sugar was a Republican policy until 1897, when the party went wild on protection, and can consistently be taken up again now that Republicans have regained their senses. To do so would not only be in accordance with party policy, but would be good political tactics. Re publicans could then claim a share of the credit for relieving the people from oppressive tariff taxes. The Democrats would be driven to impose a stiff in come tax in order to All up the hole in the Treasury caused by free sugar, or to curtail expenses most carefully. Either course would not redound to. Democratic popularity. It is extremely doubtful whether appeals to party loyalty will make any impression on the sugar Senators. They have more to gain politically by caring for what they regard as the interests" of their states than by main taining party solidarity. Perhaps the Western Democratic Senators will take the same view of free wqol. Then we shall have another demonstration of the truth of Hancock's saying tha the tariff is a local issue. AS THE TWIG IS BKNT. Pointing across the street at the town drunkard, "There but for the grace of God," exclaimed the great New England preacher, "goes Jona than Edwards." In his dialect the phrase "grace of God" was the symbol of something exceedingly complicated. It Included the Instruction and exam ple of his parents and teachers, the companionship of his boyish friends, the precepts which had been fixed in his memory as soon as he could speak, the Ideals that he had been taught to look up to, the habits he had been led to form long before he knew what a habit was. All these things and many more were included in the "grace of God" as Jonathan Edwards understood it. He had been saved from the miserable fate of the town drunkard because in his youth he had enjoyed good home training in a fa vorable environment. A writer in the Outlook quotes from Paul Dubois a passage of the same import. "If you have the happiness to be a well living man," he says, "take care not to attribute the credit of it to your self. Remember the favorable condi tions in which you have lived, sur rounded by relatives who loved you and set you a good example. Keep a grateful remembrance for all the teachers who have influenced you, the kind and intelligent schoolmaster, the devoted pastor. . Realize tha all these multiple influences have made you what you are." Had the early influ ences been different they would have produced a different man. The intelligent world is at last wakening to the Importance of edu cating children properly. Education is rising to the dignity of an Imperial problem. Everything else begins to look a little dwarfed in comparison with it. The world is becoming con scious of the tremendous fact that we could once produce a thoroughly well-educated generation of human beings the perplexities of civilization would melt away almost of them selves like dew before the morning sun. And with this thought goes the other, which is equally momentous, that all education begins and centers In the home. This is true in spite of all the regrettable facts that seem to point in other directions. There are thousands of children, some of them highly gifted, who have no homes. Vice, divorce, misfortunes of various sorts, have sent them out in childhood to fend for themselves in the hard world. Thousands of mothers are obliged to leave their dwellings daily to help earn bread for their families. To talk of their homes is mockery. Still the fact abides that the homeless child and the child, whose home is defective can never be educated as he ought. He loses something by his misfortune that he never can regain no matter how long he lives, and so ciety loses more by the dwarfing and perversion of his powers. The first step in public education ought to be to ste that all children have homes. It is as important as to see that all calves have good shelter. When this funda mental step has been taken we may cheerfully pass on to other considera tions. We may ponder, for one thing, upon what is called by modern peda gogues "the law of psychological de terminism." According to this law everything that a mature person de sires or thinks and every act that he does flow from his previous acts, de sires and thoughts... The mental states of early chi'd hood are more powerful than any oth ers in determining later conduct inti standards. It has been truly said that every man's ideal woman is his moth er. From her, or the woman who took her place when he was in his cradle, he acquired images of woman hood that will go with him to the grave and charm him to his 'as: breath. Almost equally enduring are the ideals of honesty, bravery, fidelity to truth and friendship, of patience under grinding tasks, that the child forms as soon as he can look around him and understand what is going on. If he lives In a family where bicker ing, deeelt, dishonesty are the dally order of life he will in later years practice what he has thus tteen'taught to believe natural and right. The law of psychological determinism tells us in learned language that the "thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts." They are the habitual thoughts of our lives. If they are bad they will be lifelong enemies. If they are good they will be lifelong friends. This portentous psychological law tells us again that there" is no influence in the world so strong as the "sugges tions" imposed upon us by our sur roundings when we are children. They give us what Bergson calls the "elan primitif," the original impulse of our course through the world. And not only that, they renew the impulse from instant to instant as long as we live." The wise parent cannot forget that tremendous scene in "Jane Eyre" where the forlorn governess resists Rochester's plea for an Illegal union. All the desires of, her soul, all her hopes of happiness said "Yield.' She was saved by harking back to the solid rock of youthful principle. No present strength of her soul rescued her. It was the strength of those old suggestions rising from the past and summoning her to righteous Judgment. What is education but forming hab its? All else is but splashes in the memory which perturb the child for a little while and then die away. But habit endures forever. Habit is char acter. It Is rectitude. It is practical skill. Even sympathy for the unfor tunate is a habit. Pity that does not end in action is a sort of debauchery It may even disintegrate the moral nature so badly that all practical ef fort for others becomes impossible. The classical tale of the Russian Countess who iwept over a heroine's sufferings in the theater while her coachman froze to death in the street embodies a world of warning to par ents. It is worse than useless to preach to children about their duties to others. The only effective teaching comes from making them go and do their duty until the habit is so se curely linked that it will never fail. After all Mr. Squeers had the right concept of education. "We tells them how and then they goes and does It" was his maxim. .Who ever found a better one? One of these days an indignant citi zen, somewhat of the build and tem perament of Colonel Wood, win saiiy forth in an ironclad automobile and court calamity (to the other fellow) for the hilarious glory of the dire con sequences. A Pannsvlvania man will walk 2800 miles to Portland just to show what a sober blue-ribbon man can do. Still, many a track-walking toper nas tramped as many thousand miles. Paris laughs at the mishap of the German aviators whose dirigible land ed within her borders. The Kaiser, however, will file the record in the card index, handy for the next war. Since California will have no exhibit at the Panama-Pacific- fair, visitors will have to tour the state in order to learn what it has to show. This will not leave much time to see the fair. Kanrllne- Mrs Pankhtirst to DriSOn for three years is a miscarriage of Justice. She should have been sent to an insane asylum, where her mal ady could be scientifically treated. The record of the Chicago man with four wives, all living in the same sub urb, is unparalleled. How did the neighborhood gossips let such a mor sel get away from them? nn nf th first thlnes American women need to learn after getting the suffrage is to mind their own business. Then they would keep out of English Jails and hunger-strikes. It must not -be assumed that the pretty Canadian waitress who mar rteH a. count twill not have to work any more. It may be that she will have two to support. St. Louis women refuse to draw the color line at a suffrage confer ence. Women are learniftg the sub tleties of the political game with amazing rapidity. A cigarette dropped carelessly yes terday caused a $100,000 fire in an Alberta town. It is little, however, the smoker of them cares for such consequences. Even the gloomy, gray stones of the Old Bailey must have shuddered at the scenes created by the suffragettes when the Pankhurst was sentenced. Mrs. Washburne's success at making West Hammond walk the chalk line furnishes a hint as to who will be boss In the Washburne household. At the rate exploration of the polar regions goes on, we shall soon know as much about them as we know about our own back woods. France has caught the English fear of German war balloons. Both na tions will need straight-jackets if these phobias persist. If President Wilson can line up the Senators and keep them lined up, he will prove himself a master-hand at managing men. AVhat will the Colonel say to the backsliders who returned to the Re publican party at the municipal elections? Astoria, with an Astorian, also has a paper called the Astorite. By and by she will likely have an Asterisk. Cnstilinrt nride must receive a se vere shock when we recognize John Chinaman, but fail to see Mexico. Japanese are active in the Mexican border disturbances. Time for the yellow-perlllsts to have a chill. Strawberries from the far South are in the market for people who can not afford to buy them. Theodore Edison, like his dad, is no quitter, though his first invention did blow up. Being a small state, hatpin points must hereafter be covered in New Jersey. Rains like these local showers would elsewhere cause panic. A census of the Presidents of Mex ico should be taken. IOW WAGES AXD VICES PROBLEM Writer Fanciea That Something la Gained Wateat Girl Goea Wrons. PORTLAND, April . (To the Edi tor.) It is true that low wages are not the sole cause of prostitution. But when the editor says, "To set on the theory that girls will follow the straight path at a higher wage, but will fall at a lower wage. Is to make female purity a, matter of mere dollars and cents. Such virtue is no virtue at all," girls who have had to work and support themselves and sometimes help support others as well, just laugh, be cause they know a man who could Bay such a thing as that about women has never needed money as bitterly as they have. He has never been hungry nor seen others for whom he was respons ible in need of the comforts of life. Oh, be may have missed a meal or two; that would only sharpen his appetite. But to be hungry, week after week never have a meal that satisfies the stomach's craving does he know what tbat means? To know that in one's youth the body is being so impover ished that perhaps healthy, normal womanhood will be forever denied her to live In the midst of the good things of life good food, good clothes, amusements, friendly people (only not friendly with her), and not to reach out and take any of these good things, but to remain cold and lonely and bun trrv. thousrh ever so Dure and virtuous it isn't a very attractive outlook, is it? Purity is a very fine thing; but after all, is it the one-and-only, the abso lute, the supreme good In a girl's life? Must the girl who works for the meager wage which is all she can com mand forego all the rest of life to re main pure? If she parts with her chas tity in order to obtain more food, bet ter clothes, some of the pleasures of friendly companionship in short, a little more life. In whatever form she most keenly feels its need, is she to be utterly condemned as one who "has no virtue at all' Rheta Childe Dorr, writing in Every body's a few years ago, said her Inves tigation of the living conditions among working girls convinced her that the great pity was, not that some of them had resorted to prostitution to lighten the misery of their existence, but that more of them had not done so. Lire is the great, the supremely desirable thing, for working girls as well as for other people. Not existence, but life, free from the haunting fear of where tomorrow's dinner is to come from, and what would happen In case of illness, accident, or an enforced lay-off from other cause. Pay us living wagee not just enough to buy bread and tea, but enough to live on; and then tacKle the causes of prostitution which remain. You will find your work wonderfully lightened. When we are no longer hungry, when we can afford to live in some other kind of home than a hall bedroom or an overcrowded flat, we won't have to meet our friends on street corners and in dance halls, and we won't be half so liable to tempta tion by "immoral men." Men know they can buy the hungry girl: they are more careful how they approach the girl who looks as If she did not need money. Then, when you pay our fathers and brothers wages enough so that our lit tle sisters won't have to go out and work before they are grown, you will find your task of seeking "but . the causes of prostitution will be very easy indeed because most of the prostitu tion will have disappeared. As for vice and Immorality outside of actual prostitution or the sale of 4he body for money that is another and very different story. W. M. L.ISSNER. It is so common a form of argument that it is perhaps useless to protest against the selection of an isolated sentence as the text for a criticism. This Is what the correspondent has done. The Oregonlan has very plainly stated that low wages have their in fluence on the prevalence of the social vice. But it has protested against the apparently growing assumption that chastity in general is maintained or lost as the result of the difference of a few dollars a week In income. In the exceptional instances the correspond ent mentions higher wages would tend to prevent sin, but downfall of girls Is accomplished In larger part by the offering of "pleasures" which would be beyond their means virtuously to enjoy even If they received the most liberal conception of the minimum wage.. The Oregonlan again admits that the payment of a living wage would lessen the social evil but it protests against the correspondent's assumption that there is more "life" in the existence of the prostitute than in that of the Im poverished girl In a respectable hall bedroom. To imply that there is is a base encouragement to wrong doing. The pleasures of the fallen woman are necessarily brief. Nature If outraged will exact a penalty. Loss of health, looks, youth, deprive the degraded woman of her resources. In 99 cases out of 100 her life ends in a degree of misery and poverty unknown even to the Hi-nourished, meagerly clad work lng girl, and, moreover, ends there quite speedily. There are as distinct stages of poverty In the underworld as elsewhere and the prostitute, almost without exception, descends ultimately to the lowest level, there to have her suffering augmented by disease. "Cant." PORTLAND, April 4. im tne Edi tor.) A. says there is no word spellfcd "can't," meaning cannot, etc. Will you please settle the argument? OLD SUBSCRIBER. The word "can't" is given in the Century dictionary and is defined as a "colloquial contraction of the word 'cannot.' " The word "cant" spelled without the apostrophe has several meanings. Trimming Leo By Dean Collins. Though Leo, in the City Park, Bo much In need of manicuring, There are, methinks. but few who hark The call, or think the Job alluring. So Leo's nails, day out, day -in. Make him more like a mandarin. Breathes there no man with soul so stout That he can enter, calmly smiling, Old Leo's cage and set about The task of polishing and filing? Is there no damsel fair, whose smiles May soothe the lion while she files? Df""air not yet. O Keeper Man, Though none accept the Job you men tion; I've figured out a way we can Employ for Leo's circumvention. And working it, when all else falls, Get rid of Leo's sprouting nails. Let park frequenters, each and all. While gazing at his kingly features. Sniff and with scornful accent drawl, "I hate such poor, moth-eaten crea tures!" And Leo, writhing on his shelf. Will bite his nails all off himself. S1XGLE DEFEAT DOES JfOT WRECK Republican Pnrty to Get Renewed Strensrtb. From Procreaalve Control. PORTLAND, April S. (To the Edi tor.) A few and only a few of Roose velt's admirers, now Indorse his conduct in refusing to compromise at the last Republican convention and Join in nom inating as the head of the Republican ticket a real Progressive, Hadley, of Missouri. His courage failed him and he could not take defeat: he could not see the principles he claimed so, dear to him represented by a nominee unless that nominee was "me." Why could he not subordinate personal interest to the success of progressive principles? His desire to head the ticket was so strong, that he was not governed by his better Judgment. Colonel Roosevelt did more during his two terms as President ' than any other President in many years to awaken the public conscience upon economic questions, but failed ut terly as a constructive execu tive. In fact, all remember at the time he so strongly indorsed and recom mended Taft as his successor be stated that Taft could accomplish more as President than he himself could, which was true, xtoosevelt, with his "big stick" tactics had so antagonized Con gress that it was almost impossible for him to fqree constructive legislation. Of course, Roosevelt made it possible for Wilson to be elected, not by any thing he did while President, but by splltlng the Republican party. Had he stood by and assisted in nominating a real progressive at Chicago, and not defeated him, as he did. be would Dave shown to the world that he was not governed altogether by personal mo tives. But before this defeat he was never a progressive, and while he was President was continually fighting La Follette In the Senate and other lead ing progressive Republicans. It was the popularity of Roosevelt that gave the Progressive party such a wonderful vote last Fall, not that they had adopt ed a platform of radical progressive measures not at all. Most of the fol lowing of the third party were men and women who are at heart Repub licans, and were temporarily carried away from the "grand old party by admiration for and loyalty to Theodore Roosevelt. Many really thought If the people had half a chance to vote for Roosevelt that he would sweep the country, but he was defeated, and car ried a larger vote than he ever will again, for it is always easier to defeat a man who has once been defeated. Of course Wilson does not quote Roosevelt and call La Follette to his counsels, for the reason Roosevelt was and is a progressive for office and La Follette Is now and for many, many years has been a stalwart progressive Republican. With La Follette, Cum mins, Hadley, Borah and other real pro gresslves In the lead and control of me Republican party the next convention will nominate the next President of the United States. Because once defeated by an accident there is no use in Being discouraged, and no reason to think the party annihilated. C. B. A. FOLLETTE. 63 East Glisan street. HOW SOCIAL EVIL IS SUSTAINED Men Make Girls Go Wrong, and Women .Make Them Stay So. PORTLAND, April 3. (To the Edi tor.) What makes girls go wrong? Men. Where there Is one girl wrong there are 20 men who are so delighted with her wrongdoing that they readily and joyfully pay her for wrong. What makes girls stay wrong? Women nice, moral, cultured, virtuous women. When, as a girl,' I made my first misstep. Immediately it was known I was ostracised; while trre young man responsible, who had spent half the Summer maneuvering and pleadinir for my downfall, was still in vited to social gatherings, and was as popular as he ever was, though his participation was fully known, and I was not the first girl with him, nor the last. While unhappy. I was shut out from everything, and scorned on the street. I fled from the village to the city, where I found companionship and sym pathy among the demimonde, who said "StOD your crying. What's the differ ence, anyway? They'd send you to the 'home for the lost,' whose stigma wouia attach to you if you lived to be a nun dred, while they'd likely do the same thing themselves, if they had your chance." If I had received humane treatment mv first sin would have been my last. It's about like this: "Why. how do you do, Mr. Rake? Come In and sit down. O, you naughty Doy: now dso vou treated poor little Stella! Tou ought to be ashamed of yourself. 1 saw her on the street yesterday, but of course I didn t speak to her. And she used to be such a nice girl so helnful in our charitable work. Don't go, my daughter will be right down. You won't fail to be at my party u nurs dav. will you?" I have had men tell me not one. but many how they have visited young girls at their homes or taken them for walks, and spent hour after hour, sometimes -for weeks, coaxing and pleading with them, trying to persuade them to wrongdoing. And perhaps they would "end by saying of some girl who had yielded after resisting for a long time, "She is now a common courte san. Oh, well, If it hadn't been I. It wnuld have been some other man." How are people going to manage, if certain courses are all right tor men and utterly, damnably wrong lor worn on. when the men require female par' tlclpants? Will not some women, of necessity, have to go "wrong to Keep men "right"? p. s. Why do men go wrong? M. J. B. New Road Laws. BE AVE RTON, Or.. April 2. (To the Editor.) Kindly publish the substance of the laws passed by the late Oregon Legislature relating to opening new county roads and assessing the dam ages? The bills are as loiiows: S. B. 41, 143 and 196. H. B. 220, 367 and 524. Of If it is too much to publish, would you please tell me where I can get the desired Information? . J. S. BROOKS. Road laws complete In pamphlet form will be published by the Secretary of State and may be secured about May 1 or shortly thereafter. Typewritten copies of laws may be secured from the Secretary of State at the legal rate of 25 cents per 100 words or. If desired, 2 extra for certification. S. B. 41 relates to method of reach ing by road land not already accessible by a road. S. B. 143 amends the present law, so that in districts containing less than 12 freeholders on petition of a majority of freeholders In such district roads may be laid out, altered, straight ened or restored. S. B. 196 relates to the manner in which corporations men tioned in section 6838 of the code may take portions of a road by constructing a similar road parallel or nearby. H. B. 220 gives the Railroad Commission power to pass on the question of a rail road crossing the line or right of way of another. H. B. 367 allows the County Court to pay damages from the gen eral county road fund In the case of a road laid from one county road to an other when all parties adjacent have the full use and benefit of such road. H. B. 624 is shown on the records as having failed to pass. The Son ot a Gentleman. Life. "Remember. Arthur, you are the son of a gentleman. Try to behave like one for just one day." "All right, mother, but it will spoil the whole day fox me." Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonlan of April 5. 18S8. Pendleton, April 4. The Democratic state convention today adopted the platform. E. D. McKie presented John M. Gearin for the Congressional nom ination. Huston, of Washington, pre sented A. S. Bennett, of Wasco. Smith, of Clatsop, presented J. K Weather ford, of Linn. Collins, of Baker, pre sented T. C. Hyde. Weatherford asked that his name be withdrawn. The bal lot stood: Gearin 106, Bennett 25. Hyde 17, Weatherford 9. The nomination was made unanimous. For Supreme Judge, Judge John Burnett, of Benton, was nominated by acclamation. San Francisco, April 4. At the an nual meeting of the stockholders of the Southern Pacific today the follow ing were chosen directors: Leland Stanford, C. P. Huntington, Charles Crocker, Timothy Hopkins, M. V. Hun tington, F. 8. Douty, W. E. Brown, S. T. Gage. Ariel Lathrop. E. H. Miller, Jr. San Francisco, April 4. Tyler Wood ward, of Portland, manager of the Multnomah Street Railway, is in town, buying material for more street rail way. San Francisco, April 4. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll, his wife and two daughters, leave New York on the 10th for California. At Oregon City a plant for the manu facture of cement is being put in at a cost of ,40,000. Polk County Institute The teachers' Institute was called to order by State Superintendent E. R. McElroy at Dal las Tuesday. Hon. J. D. Lee, of Dallas, delivered the address of welcome, to which Superintendent D. D. Vincent, of Washington County, responded. Pro fessor Van Scoy, president of Willam ette University, delivered a lecture. Rev. J. Q. A. Henry, pastor of the First Baptist Church, arrived at -his former home, near Chicago, last even ing. The Reach Tract Sold. Yesterday Mr. W. M. Killlngsworth purchased the above tract of 36 acres, near Al bina, for J35,000. Last evening the Republicans held primaries to select delegates to the county convention. The East Side. When the improve ment of N street, now in progress, is completed, it will be one of the finest in East Portland. It leads directly, out from the Willamette bridge to the cemetery. Half a Century Af o From The Oregonlan of April 6, 1863. Dr. H. H. King, of Jefferson, Marion County, lately had one of the fingers of his left hand entirely taken off and the remaining fingers frightfully lacer ated by contact with a circular saw. The Natchez Courier says the Hart ford, with Admiral Farragut on board, anchored in front of that city on the 16th and sent a boat with a flag of truce ashore, with a note to the Mayor stating that if the United States gun boats were fired, on by the people of Natchez or the guerillas he would bom bard the city. San Francisco, March 30. Informa tion has been received of a plot con certed by Napa secessionists to capture the Government works at Mare Island. Two hundred men were to take the Bteamer Guadaloupe on Napa Creek, cross to Vallejo and seize the Govern ment works and vessels in that harbor. The vessels were to be armed and bi ought down to use against San Fran cisco. At a meeting of the citizens of Port land, held at the Courthouse on Satur day evening, the following nomina tions were made for city officers: For Mayor, J. B. Congle; for Recorder. Levi Anderson: for Marshal, F. M. Arnold: for Treasurer, H. B. Morse: for Assess or, F. C. Pomeroy. H. W. Corbett, chairman: E. W. McGraw, secretary. In the First Ward Messrs, Schuyler, Cook and R. R. Thompson were nomi nated for the Council: in the Third Ward Messrs Graydon, Silver and Estes. The real estate property of the lata Buell Woodward, sold at auction last Saturday by Mr. Richardson, brought the following prices: Lots 1, 2, 6 and s in block 9, with Improvements, Including the residence and garden, were pur chased for $5000; south half of lot S In block 3, and fractional part of thi rear of north half of lot 5 In block 3, 25x30 feet, upon which is situated the store of Mr. DeWitt, sold in one par cel for 13400. We believe this prop erty was sold cheap. 1 The Roosevelt Autobiography Incidents of Boyhood Days In the second installment of his Chapters of a Possible Auto biography, Colonel Roosevelt gives a further account of the early part of'lris 'Kfe. Do not miss any part of this remark able story. A New Science It has been fonnded and would codify the whole universe. Cabinet Women A glimpse at the wives of our new Cabi net members, and an interview with Mrs. Bryan. The Brightest Boy At 18 he will shortly receive the degree of doctor of philosophy at Harv ard University. America's First Christians Were they the mound-builders 1 The question is gone into by an eminent authority. Children at Play These mod ern times it. really is necessary to teach the young folks how to play. $20,000 for Dress That is the sum per year the Trench Presi dent's wife will spend. Good-Bye, Seasickness De vices have been perfected which do away to a remarkable degree with the rolling and pitching of ocean liners. Wild Wheat It has been dis covered in Palestine and will be transplanted to America, with results of the most important character. The Compromise A domestic comedy by the noted author, W. Hodgson Burnett. A Romeo of the Orient An illustrated short story by Wil lard Holcomb. An Array of Other Features. Order today of your newsdealer.