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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1913)
THE MORXIXO OREGOMAX, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1913 PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Fostoffice aa secona-ci&aa matter. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance : (BY MAIL) Daily, Sunday Included, one year 8.00 Dally, Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 Daily, Sunday Included, three months. . 2.25 rally. Sunday Included, one month..... .76 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 uauy, witnout Sunday, six raontns s.zt Daily, without Sunday, three months. . . 1.76 Dally, without Snnriav. one month 60 Weekly, one year 1-50 Sunday, one year 2.50 sunaay ana Weekly, one year J.t (BY CARRIER) Dally, Sunday Included, one year 5.00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 76 How to Remit- Send postofftce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice address In full. Including; county and state. i'ostave Rates) 12 to 16 pases. 1 cent; It to 32 paces, 2 cents: S to 48 pases, 3 cents; 60 to 60 pases. 4 cents; 63 to 76 pasea, 5 tents; 78 to 82 pasea 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Kaatern Buslne" Off Ices Verree & Conk lln, New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steser building. Sam Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Co., 741 Market street. European Office) Xo. 3 Regent street S. W., London. PO RTLAN D , WEDNESDAY. JUNE U, 1918, LOST Of It NERVE. THAT'S ALL. Heavy liquidation has caused a great decline in the value of securities In the chief money markets of the world. Simultaneously has come a great increase In the offerings of new Mcuritles for sale. A-s a natural con sequence the new securities have very generally failed to sell and interest rates have advanced. This condition exists In London, Paris and Berlin as well as in New York. Some of the i auses are world-wide, others are pe culiar to particular countries, but .11 contribute to the general result. The result has been a feeling of un easiness which has moved a great financial authority in Iondon to say that the American investor has lost his nerve. Existence of like condi tions in other countries justifies the same remark about the British, French and German investor. All are in the same mental state. The pri mary causo was the Balkan war. Fear that the great powers would be drawn into It instigated hoarding of money in Europe and was the beginning of stringency. That cause has practical ly been removed by the signing of peace preliminaries and there is good ground to hope that mediation will prevent the allies from fighting over division of the spoils. But the great sums borrowed by the Balkan states and Turkey have been burned, and more must be borrowed to rehabili tate their wasted countries. Fear that they might become In volved in the war drove European nations to borrow money for increased armament and caused European bankers to hold the money they had and to turn securities into cash. Then came China, a new customer in the money market, with a loan which was placed only because interest was high and political influence backed it. Yet these bonds sold below par. Capital vhs demanded for new enterprises in this country, France and Germany, but the Balkan war had largely ab sorbed the supply. A large volume of these securities has been thrown on the London market, so that the vol ume of new issues put out there in the first five months of 1913 exceeds that for the same period of 1912 by 280,000,000 and Of 1911 by 200, 000.000. The investor was offered more when he was disposed to take less. He became nervous in London, Paris, Berlin and New York at the same time, sold securities rather than buy more, and sent prices down within 18 points of the low level of 1907. While this country was feeling the effect of the European stringency, the demand for money for new public en terprises did not abate, but rather in creased. New York state and city came into the market with bonds, but, though their credit la good, the city's bonds have fallen below par and the state has had to resort to an issue of short-time notes instead of bonds. Our great cities have been vastly increas ing their debts and continue to offer new issues. We are trying to borrow more money than there is to lend, and the more eager the borrower grows, the less willing is the capitalist to lend. Railroads tlnd that higher wages and higher cost of materials have swollen operating expenses faster than gross earnings have increased, and the Government hesitates to allow ad vances in rates. Thus demand for im provements continues, but money to pay for them is only forthcoming on short time at high rates. Industrial corporations are as little able to float new issues In this country as are their neighbors In Europe. The shadow of Sherman law prosecutions hangs over them and the new man in the Depart, inent of Justice threatens to go far ther than his predecessor in breaking up combinations. Industry also waits tor passage of the Underwood tariff, and its suspense is aggravated by un wise failure of the Democratic leaders to iix a date for that law to become effective so far ahead that manufac turers can plan with certain knowl edge of what is to come. The conse quence is production for immediate demand and hand-to-mouth buying, with depressing effect on the price of such staples as steel and copper. These are no signs of organic dis ease in business. They are signs that we are going through a period of re adjustment. The inherent Justice of the railroads' plea for higher rates must soon be recognized and they will then be able to secure capital for those improvements which will quicken business with better transpor tation and with liberal purchases of material. The'law is irradually separ. ating the sheep from the goats of the business community, and we are dis covering that the goats are not as nu merous as we have been led to believe A few months will decide on what tariff policy our industries must be based and the imperative demands of 100.000,000 people will force the wheels of Industry tq turn under the new conditions. Best of all, we are promised a bountiful crop of wheat and other farm products, which as sures prosperity In the great basic in dustry of agriculture. Whatever dis location of the financial machine of the world has resulted from the Bal kan war will be relieved, for the great powers will surely squelch the sputtering? of war between Servia and Greece on the one hand and Bul Caria on the other. Business la not sick: it Is organic ally healthy. It is merely throwing off some toxins which have Infected its blood, but which it Is abundantly able to eject, and Is recuperating for a new era of activity, the greater In proportion to the thoroughness with which reinvigoratlng treatment has been given. District Attorney Whitman has Lgreed to accept the nomination of the Citizens' Democracy, an independ ent Democratic organization, for Mayor of New York and he seems as sured of the Progressive nomination In case the Fusionists do not decide upon him. Republican leaders are working to land the Fusion nomina tion for him. Mr. Whitman has made a better record as a law-enforcer than Mr. Jerome made; he has stirred the people more deeply with his convic tions of police murderers and grafters than they have been stirred In many years. If all the anti-Tammany forces gather behind him and if Governor Sulzer aids him, he will give the tiger such a fight as it will not soon forget. MAYOR-ELECT ALB EE'S TASK. Mayor-elect Albee has wisely de cided to take for himself in the new commission government the depart ment of public safety, and has made appropriate assignments to the four Commissioners. Thus the Mayor will have direct supervision of the police and firemen and of the health depart ment as well. The policy of the administration in its exercise of the police power will make or break it, just as it has made or broken every administration for a decade or more. There will be no question under Mayor Albee where to locate the responsibility for success or failure. He definitely assumes it at the outset. The declaration of the Albee poli cies will be awaited with poignant anxiety in some quarters and with something more than passing concern by the public at large. The Mayor elect has said that he does not favor a restricted district, but he advocates a home and vocational training for fallen women. As to the saloons, he has said only that they must obey the law, and undoubtedly he means what he says. Specifically asked at a pub lic meeting "if the city had a right to enter into a partnership with an Il legal business," the Mayor-elect re plied: The Federal Government, the state and the city have said that the liquor business has legal rights, and I. as Mayor, having sworn to uphold the Constitution, could not do more than to see that the saloons obeyed the law; that I would do. That the saloons should do; and the people will approve any discriminating and determined course of the Mayor's that achieves that desirable result. We rather think, too, that the so called grills which foster the presence of girls and young women and permit them to be plied with liquor by un scrupulous men, young and old, are to have attention. The Infamies perpe trated there are infinitely more harm ful and demoralizing than the beer saloons at Second and Burnslde, or In the so-called South End. cost or city government. The Oregonian prints herewith for the general benefit the figures of the assessed property valuations of Port land for the past ten years: Assesaed Valuations. 10O4 $ 46,084. 510 1906 60.897. USO lSOtJ 131,197,550 1007 166,549.335 1908 213,579.945 1909 215,836,410 lUO 231.161,600 1911 274.SU4.720 1912 296.198.230 1913 308.975.22U The increase In property valuations in this brief period was eightfold, while the population had just about doubled. In other words, if the As sessor tells the truth, the average Portland citizen is worth about four times as much in 1913 as In 1904. The Assessor has made everybody rich in figures. Everybody being rich, It la well to see how the city spent more and more money in the succeeding years of the decade. The amounts raised by taxes, with the rax rates, were as follows: Rate. Amount. 1904 8.30 413.664.63 1905 9.625 467.44S.66 190 5.2 661.946.11 1907 6.7 915,463.21 1908 4.6 920,385.35 1909 6.6 1.369.516.06 1910 4.8 1,0S7.791.30 1911 6.0 1.586.0S5.69 1912 6.80 1.919.199.33 1913 7.70 2,283.941.82 Estimated. Thus we see that, while the tax rate has not materially decreased, the amount raised for municipal taxes is five times greater than in 1904. Whether everybody has more prop triy may be questioned, though of course many have more; but that all are paying more taxes is clear. It is the tendency everywhere. Living costs more and more, and government costs more and more. Possibly the new municipal com mission will find a way to stop the leaks, and make government simple, efficient and economical. But it is a big job. CONTROL OF iVATERPOWEB. The complete control of the Gov ernment over the water of navigable streams has been upheld by a unani mous decision of the United States Supreme Court. In a suit by the Gov ernment for the condemnation of '.and owned by the Chandler-Dunbar Wa-ter-Power Company on St. Mary's River, near Saw't Ste. Marie, Mich., the lower court awarded the company 8550,000 compensation for undevel oped water-power. Both the company and the Government appealed, and the question whether the riparian owner has any property light in the water-power was thus raised for final decision. In the decision Justice Lur ton said: Ownership of a private stream wholly upon the lands of an individual la conceiv able, but that the running water In a great navigable stream Is capable of private own ership Is Inconceivable. This decision disposed of the con tention made by Senators Borah, Jones, Nelson and others when the Connecticut River dam bill was under discussion, that ownership of water power rests in the riparian owner, subject only to the limitation that navigability of streams must not be impaired. It leaves Congress free to authorize construction of dams such as that on the Mississippi River at Keokuk, la., and to impose royalty on the power developed, as was pro posed in the Connecticut River case. The Government can either construct power plants itself or can grant fran chises to corporations for that pur pose. There appears to be nothing in the decision to prevent the Govern ment from co-operating with the states or from granting franchises to the states. The decision would not, therefore, stand in the way of ex ecution of the Celilo power project on the Columbia River by Oregon and Washington jointly, except that it would necessitate arrangements with the Government before the work could be undertaken. The Government's power to im prove navigable streams in such man ner as to earn interest on the invest ment is now established. The Upper Columbia from Celilo to the bound ary can be made continuously navi gable, and at the same time can be made to develop- immense power by construction of dams such as have been built on Eastern rivers, but with the addition of power plants. The power could be transmitted to every town, indeed every farm. In the In land Empire, and would immeasura bly stimulate Industry, while opening of the whole river to navigation would afford cheap water transportation. By implication the decision con firms state ownership of the water of non-navigable streams. They have the same authority on these streams as the Government has on navigable waters. The authority assumed by the Forest Service under the Pinchot regime to grant concessions for de velopment of water-power in Na tional forests rests solely on the Gov ernment's right as riparian owner. Unless state law recognizes this right, it does not exist, any more than the power company's riparian rights had any existence in the St. Mary's River case. The Government's hold on the water-power of non-navigable streams rests solely on its ownership of abut ting land and on the impossibility of developing power without using this land. The decision thus cuts both ways. While adverse to state rights on navi gable streams, it confirms those rights as to other flowing waters. MR. PLITLMKR'S QUALIFICATIONS. Mr. O. M. Plummer is an ideal can didate for the office of School Direc tor. His experience, sympathies and habits of thought qualify him to serve the public admirably in that position. Those who have followed his career know that he has a National reputa tion as a well wisher of the young. He has spent his time and energy gener ously for their benefit without looking for any other return than the approval Of his own conscience. Mr. Plummer's name is inseparably connected with the "better babies" movement, which is already Nation-wide in Its benefi cent influences. It is to Mr. Plummer's credit that he has educated his own children in the public schools. For this reason he regards the system from the stand point of an intimate and helpful friend. He has studied the schools from the inside and understands just how they might be improved by more co-operation among the directors, the teachers and the parents. Mr. Plum mer has a well-digested plan to pro tnote this most desirable end, and he has pledged himself to work It out if he is elected. The school and the home will be more closely united than they have ever been in Portland, should Mr. Plummer be chosen as one of the directors. His spirit would transform the en tire school system and make it a much more efficient instrument for educat ing the young by modern methods and with modern alms. He is a thorough ly progressive man in the educational field and perfectly understands the aims of those who are working to make the public schools serve the highest interests of the city. A man of keen intelligence, wide experience and deep devotion to human welfare, Mr. Plummer would bring into the public schools those ideals and aims which already have won him a Na tional reputation as a friend of chil dren. When a man of Mr. Plummer's qualifications offers himself as a can didate for School Director, the best thing the voters can do is to elect him. EUGENICS AND THE CLERGY. So far the Episcopal Church has been rather more active than the other Protestant denominations in making good health a condition prec edent to matrimony. Dean Sumner, of Chicago, began to demand certifi cates of physical soundness as well as marriage licenses from all candi dates more than a year ago. A little later the Episcopal Diocese of Penn sylvania followed his excellent exam ple by requesting the clergy to "Insist on a physician's certificate that per sons wishing to be married were free from incurable and communicable diseases." The purpose was "to safe guard the integrity of the race and the home," as the Pennsylvania church authorities stated lt The Protestant Episcopal clergy of New York State are considering a similar plan, as we learn from the Literary Digest. They have gone so far as to urge the state to pass legislation on the subject such as we have in Ore gon. The Times comments on their project with approval. "It is well," says that paper, "that clergymen should accept and heed eugenic truths and it will be better still when the state acts 'upon them." Best of all, it thinks, would be "such a wide spreading of information and intelli gence that no compulsion of any kind would be necessary." But the Times grimly admits that we shall probably have to wait for the millennium be fore this happens. That education and the diffusion of intelligence upon the consequences of disease in the marriage relation are sadly needed is proved by many facts. It seems to be a common im pression that the union of two per sons who are almost certain to bring defective offspring into the world has something sacred about It. Their wedding is supposed to have been ar ranged in heaven and any interfer ence with it is Indiscreet if not sin ful. The will of the Almighty, we are told, is that every human being should "increase and multiply," and what right have we miserable sinners to thwart this intent? The opinion that every person has the right to marry and bring children Into the world, no matter at what cost of suf fering, is exquisitely set forth by the Rev. Henry Woods, who writes in "America," a religious weekly, upon this subject. Mr. Woods takes the Episcopal clergy to task for their wish to require health certificates be fore marriage. "They are trying to establish a matrimonial impediment," he declares with true theological in genuity. The fact is, of course, that the impediment already exists and the Episcopalian ministers refuse longer to shut their eyes to it. The facts would survive Just the same if no clergyman said anything about them, and it is the facts that form the im pediment. But some theologians have always shown an enviable indepen dence of facts. The Rev. Mr. Woods calls the requirement of sound health in marriage "a new toy." The mother in "Damaged Goods" who found her child tainted with a loathsome dis ease would have called It something more serious than a toy and so would hundreds of women who are in veigled daily into marriages that every consideration of humanity and mercy ought to have prevented. It is to the everlasting honor of the Episcopal clergy that they have put common sense to the fore in this mat ter and left empty word-chopping to their critics. Mr. Woods gives a lovely example of what logic can do in defense of all that Is bad in the article we have cited. "Moreover, the idea of protecting the offspring by forbidding" the marriage of diseased persons, "is hugely absurd," he says. And why, pray? Because the off spring have not yet been born. Since they do not exist they cannot be pro tected. The Rev. Mr. Woods prefers to play with words rather than improve the condition of mankind. He has many a companion In his folly. In fact hfe does not seem to believe that we have any right to Improve human con ditions. "As death is the common lot of all," he writes, and the only gate way to heaven, we must not fight too vigorously against "the physical de fects that lead to death." If there were no diseases, nobody would ever die, and so nobody would "enter into immortality." We must treat the weddings of diseased persons with great tenderness, inasmuch as they Increase the number of those who may be expected to go to heaven speedily. If they produce idiots and epileptics, so much the better, since such individuals "give scope for the exercise of charity, patience and other virtues," which prepare us for heaven. It Is perhaps as well to assure the reader that Mr. Woods was not jest ing when he wrote this charming dis course. He was in deadly earnest. Could we ask for a better example of the effect of a certain sort of educa tion on the Intelligence? What he says comes to this: We must fill the earth as full of misery as we possibly can in order to prepare ourselves for heaven. When such men get to heaven they will want to repeat the same programme In order to prepare themselves for some other world to which they will then be looking for ward. They will never be happy any where unless they are miserable. The proper place for the Rev. Mr. Woods and his kind is in the socialist party, an organization which boldly opposes progress on the ground that it will delay the "great revolution." Write "heaven" in place of "revolution" and you have Mr. Woods' position pre cisely. Both he and the socialists fight against the forward and upward movement for the sake of a fancy which pleases them more than human betterment. Eugenics is going to be the most potent factor in creating a better race for the next three or four centuries. Ignorance and folly will naturally oppose it as they oppose everything good, but mankind has happily a way of forging ahead in spite of fools. One at least of Secretary Houston's new projects for the Department of Agriculture will be an Improvement. He intends to get rid of the stilted and pedantic language which makes so many of the "farmers' bulletins" unintelligible to rural readers. His plan is to establish a publicity bureau with a newspaper man at its head, who will deal out scientific facts to the farmers in a style they can un derstand. We hope he will find the right newspaper man. Aswell, of Louisiana, Introduced a bill yesterday to make a Jim Crow classification of Government employes. Nothing of that kind Bhould become Federal law. The Afro-American who aspires to a Government Job and gets It stands on equality with his white brother and is within his rights. Governor Foss of Massachusetts proposes to apply the Installment plan to the payment of fines rather than send petty offenders to jail and leave their families in want. He would sus pend execution of a Jail sentence im posed In lieu of fine so long as in stallments are paid regularly. Surgeons have replaced diseased vertebrae In a Los Angeles man with bone from his leg and he Is reported recovering. By and by medical skill will be able to give the weak brother a section of the backbone of the mule and enable him to amount to some thing. If the Taft Administration did bun gle the tobacco trust dissolution, which is by no means proved, we must make the best of it and rely upon Mr. McReynolds to make a better Job of the next trust dissolution. Rustling is a science In the Palouse. Three men stole an entire dairy herd of twenty-nine head, and the owner knew not of the loss until the supply of cream ran short. The chairman of the House pen sions committee is an Alabaman. Now watch for a bill to pay pensions from the Federal Treasury to Confederate veterans. After three years Porter Charlton must return to Italy for trial on the charge of killing his wife. Primeval man found uxorcide a diversion; this Is denied to civilized man. Californians and Washlngtonians certainly have the neighborly spirit and Portland will do Itself proud when her time comes for reciprocity. American and British refugees were compelled to pay large sums for the privilege of leaving Mexico. Still, its worth quite a bit to leave Mexico. A Chicago Judge having announced a closed season on "mate-shooting," Inquiries are in order as to the date of the next open season. The Balkan allies are now on the point of a free-for-all. They've got, separately and Individually, too much ego in their cosmos. The 5-cent fare to Milwaukie, Linn ton and St. Johns will spur to strenu ous endeavor other towns within the range limit. Sightseers who got home late made little complaint. This is the week of the year when a little discomfort does not count. Vancouver has become the modern Gretna Green since the Oregon hy giene test went into effect Sudden cold snap has hit the East. Sunshine and roses here. Von Klefn was kissed when he should have been hissed. We have a picture of the Kodak trust dissolving itself. The weather man bids) fair to be come popular. The Rose Carnival gets better as it gets older. More roses and finer roses is tht verdict, In the Land of Plenty By Addison Bennett. Ti- week Portland people are en dea :g to extend & hand of wel- corru nd friendship to every guest to the end that all may enjoy themselves and depart after the festivities feeling that Portland is a fine city and the Portland people worthy of friendship and esteem. But the Rose Festival has a higher, deeper, more exalted Interest in the welfare of Portland visitors than their mere amusement and entertainment. The roses are a mere incident toward the end of reminding them of our mag nificent climatic conditions. Their visit was made In June in June, when the East is sweltering in the breath of a tidal wave of heat In spots, of cold in other localities. In places in the Middle West during the last week there has been frost or flurries of snow, while close by people have almost suf focated with the heat and many have died of sunstroke. I say these things not in derision, but to contrast conditions and empha size the vast difference between their climate and ours. I believe the Pacific Northwest the most delightful place to live in that there is in the world the Pacific Northwest, mind you, not mere ly Portland. For the Portland people are not narrow; the Rose Festival Is not merely a local affair. The people of Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane. Vancouver and Victoria take the same pride In it that we take in the annual events giv en In these cities and all are given for the good of the entire Pacific Northwest. However, I wish to call attention to something of more importance than our large cities. There are hundreds of small towns in the Northwest In any one of which will be found pros perity such as It is difficult to see in any other portion of our country. For the reason the basic reason that the country districts are prosperous, the farmer, the fruitgrower and the stock man are gathering more than a usual percentage of gain for their labors. Therein lies our prosperity; thereby our greater cities are growing, our banks and mercantile establishments expanding and enlarging. In no other place in this country can the agricul turist, the fruitgrower or the animal Industry husbandman get so good re turns from his labors and investments as he can in the Pacific Northwest. So, if you have not studied our agri cultural advantages, you have in a great measure overlooked one of the chief aims of the Rose Festival. We want more people on our lands. This we want, first, for a selfish reason to build up the Pacific Northwest as a whole; secondly, and yet principally, we want more people on our lands be cause we know, with any sort of in dustry, economy and perseverance, there lies in wait for every husband man a fair measure of success. Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, Victoria, Vancouver and each of the smaller cities- the better people of these will tell you the same thing; and if you visit them, they will take pleasure In showing you their lands and getting homes for you at reasonable prices and on easy terms and after you locate, they will treat you as brothers, as we have treated you this week, for the people of all these places are men and women and children with great big, warm hearts. Coming down to those who are here for the avowed purpose of looking for homes, and there are many such, a study of the meat question for the last two or three decades will show that as population has multiplied our meat animals have decreased until we are approaching a meat famine. Meats will, perhaps, never again in this country be as low as treble the prices of three decades ago. Consider this and then look over our lands with a view to raising cattle, hogs, sheep or poultry, attended, of course, with such side lines as profit ably go with intelligent mixed farm ing the dairy, bee, egg, fruit, cereal and vegetable products. For the men who will go into any of our fine val leys or Into our splendid logged-off sections, or on our bench or prairie lands and wisely plow, plant, cultivate and harvest, and at the same time study how best to conserve his re sources by feeding the bulk of his products on his land If he will, In a word, become a broad-gauged, intelli gent farmer, animal industry farmer, there Is no place on earth where his efforts will count for more than on lands in this Pacific Northwest. PUBLIC INTEREST IN SCHOOLS It Should Be Shown nt Annual Meet ing, Says Mr. Alderman. SALEM, Or., June 9. (To the 9di tqr.) May I call your attention to the fact that there is no more important day In the year, as far as our state is I concerned, tnan the annual school meeting day, which occurs this year on the 16th day of June? The people get In any form of government about what they demand and if only three or four people attend the annual school meeting, it shows that their demand is lacking. School officers an-d teachers become discouraged, and, as a consequence, poor results follow. I would ask that the whole popula tion go to the schoolhouse, look Into conditions and make plans for the year? I find that some districts have much better schools than others, al though they spend but little, if any more, money. It Is not all a question of expenditure; it is a question of looking after things and having the right kind of co-operation. Members of the School Board of the state re ceive no pay, and are very seldom thanked for what they do. A few schools last year made much of the annual school meeting day; took time to look over their property, suggest Improvements, and plan for the future. In each of those districts conditions improved at once. I am sure a man or woman who attends the annual school meeting and does his duty will feel more like celebrating on the Fourth of July. I assure you that your co-operation in this matetr will be appreciated. L. R. ALDERMAN. Supt. Public Instruction. The Nolaea Get on Her Nerves. PORTLAND, June 9. (To the Edi tor.) I am an American and very proud of my country and especially of the beautiful city of Portland, from which I have been absent for a num ber of years, and have only known of the annual festivity, the Rose Carnival, through hearsay or the newspapers, consequently had promised myself a rare treat. A friend kindly accom panied me to a good point of observa tion on the bank of the river, where we seated ourselves upon the grass to await the coming of what promised to be a grand pageant. Small craft beautifully bedecked with flowers, some with music on board, sailed down the lovely Willamette to meet the royal craft which carried His Higness Rex Oregonus. The scene as the boats passed and the eound of the music float ing upon the waters was ideal. But the unearthly noise. An ocasional whoop might have been tolerated, but as the procession moved slowly up the river, the continuous un earthly screams of the whistles could only be compared to what we would Imagine would come from the lost souls of Dante's Inferno; not an Interval to the sweet music from the various bands on board, but the everlasting, continual schreeching. Deliver me from a like experience. I am not alone in my feel ing. I have heard many expressions of criticism in regard to this, the open ing feature of what should b a truly enjoyable affair. Is it because we, as Americans, must be nothing If not noisy?. MRS. L. H. ADVANCED SITFFR.4GE EXPOUNDED Independence Held - crriaary to Erad ication of the Social Evil. PORTLAND, June 9. (To the Edi tor.) Your exceldlent editorial beaded "Women Can Help Greatly" strikes the true optimistic note. In my opinion, women can help greatly in minimizing the Boclai evil by understanding the fundamental truth that any sexual morality not based on the Ideal of ra cial welfare and advancement is crim inal and should be wiped out. That is lust the reason why women should strive for the attainment of economic Independence and for the de velopment of that self-reliance upon which moral responsibility necessarily rests. They can then determine their own sexual morality, basing it upon their especial needs and functions as worrren and as mothers of the race. Once they have this racial ideal and this moral responsibility, they will not hesitate to send to the historical Junk heap tho exclusively man-made code of "morals," derived from patriarchal times, which ordains, as Havelock Ellis points out, that one group of women should be set apart to minister to men's sexual necessities, while another group should be brought up in absolute as ceticism as candidates for the privi lege of ministering to their household and family necessities and the need of providing legitimate heirs to their property titles. If we take the writings of Ellen Key as fairly representative of what Is go ing on In the minds and hearts of ad vanced women all over civilization, we are pretty safe in saying that they are going to Insist upon a single standard of morality truly enough. But It Is not going to be a standard according to which a woman will have to starve and stunt her affectlonal and maternal Impulses, to suffer In body and soul, until she agrees to the conditions laid down in our patriarchal man-made code. If she has economic independ ence and Industrial and political pow er, she is going to exercise again some of that freedom she enjoyed In every age and clime where there has been equality between the sexes. The free woman of the new age will make motherhood sacred. She will shame out of existence the brutal prac tice of ostracising the unmarried mother, while paying; homage to the sordid creatures who marries for so cial position, for wealth, for vanity or for mere conventionality's sake. We demand to be ourselves. We de mand the economic and social Inde pendence which will make self-development possible. The advanced woman Is ready to assume rioral responsibility for her acts, recognizing that on her falls the chief burden of making each succeeding generation wiser and stronger and finer. She seeks to be the companion and co-worker of man In striving for better things. She dis dains to be either a slave or a para site. When the vast majority of women have attained the point of being sat isfied with nothing less than this, the social evil will have been cured. MISS R. V. M. FORCE LOT OWNERS TO CLEAN UP Mazes of t nkempt Grass Brings Pro test From Busy Gardener. PORTLAND, June 7. (To the Edi tor.) The blue grass and clover lawn surrounding my bungalow has been given a haircut, shampoo and shave; It is smooth as velvet stroked by a lady's hand. The edges are trimmed as neatly as banker's Vandyke beard. The flower beds are spaded and raked and shaped to perfection. One hundred and thirty-six rose bushes are dressed In carnival robes of white and pink and crimson and gold. Between the rose bushes are giant pansies in miriad fancy hues. Across the front and along the sides of the bungalow great climb ing roses are reaching for the eaves. The steps and walks glisten like those of spotless town. I am ready for the show. Also I have mowed the lawn along those two vacant lots that intervene between my place and the cross street. The native grass and clover yields readily to the lawnmower, making a splendid carpet of green. I have done my duty to myself, to the community and society, by keeping things in shape and beautifying the neighborhood. Therefore, while I am reasonably content with myself and life in general. I don't like the attitude of the people who hold title to vacant lots In my neighborhood. One magnate who owns a score of lots and finds time, while waiting for unearned increment, to locate the auditorium and settle the public market question allows grass and weeds to encompass the home owners' grounds. A sense of decency should make him clean up. If he Is devoid of such sense then In that case he should be compelled to clean up his vacant lots and his attitude toward those who really do something for the upbuilding and beautifying of the city. Such men are willing to take all Increased valuation given their prop erty by the efforts of others, but they persistently refuse to contribute any thing to society, except advice. For years and years I have puzzled over the question of who is the mean est man in the world. I now believe him to be a man who puts a for sale sign on his lot, holds it at twice the purchase price, allows weeds to cover the walks and underbrush to cover the land, refuses to clean up for the Rose Festival, and gives the public advice. My contribution represents $4000 and a pair of hands like rusty hams. My place is a model of cleanliness and artistic endeavor. I'm proud of its beauty, but I don't like to wade through a Jungle to get to It. R. G. D. THE ftlEES OP POSTCARD LAND Madamotselle Marabath Is the Loveliest Model in Europe. Chicago Tribune. Cast in so slight and exquisite a mold, so mild and gentle, so pure and beautiful, that earth seemed not her element, nor Its rough creatures her fit companions. Dally before a photographer's win lows in the Graben, the Austrian Boulevard des Itallens, Viennese of high and low degree jostle one another to gaze upon the lovely face of Mile. Marabath, the Postcard Queen of Eu rope. Mile. Marabath has become the fav orite choice of Parisian dressmakers and milliners to carry the styles afar from the French center of fashion. At Christmas time her face goes around the world on postcards, and at the season of valentines she thus bears sweet messages from lover to lover. Mile. Marabath has been posing for photographers ever since she was a little girl. In Vienna it is the custom, just as, indeed. It Is elsewhere, tor beautiful girls and women to have their photographs placed on exhibition by photographers and sold for the in come they will bring. Many a woman of fashion has earned pin money In this easy way. And more than one poor girl has thus found her face to be her fortune. There are Innumerable models with whom this young girl competes, but she easily carries off the palm through the delicately Intellectual quality of her sweet young face. In figure she is slender. Her feet are slim, with well-arched insteps. Her hair is superb and her even teeth are as white as milk. Her complexion Is clear and fresh. She has a pretty trick of archness in her glances and her manners. The delicate tint of her cheek, the deep shadows of her eyes, are lustrous with health. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of June 11. 1SSS San Francisco. June 10. D " B Murphy and John McGlnnls. of Port land, are at the Baldwin. Yesterday at the request of the prin cipal and graduating class of the Eaat Portland public school Rev h k HIm-s r. rx, delivered a discourse in Methodist Episcopal Church of this F,R.e,T IArthur J' Bron. pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, was called t?,an. rjincisco by the death of his wife's father. This evening Rev. Ezra Haskell will Pvmr a" adJress the Mechanics' l Uion on the vices prevalent in the City of Portland, on the laxity of offi cials in enforcing the laws and on the EE"??' ,0,crreaort on the p of ciu- cTr?i " Up and lmProve muni cipal government. irnteVen,0n- the well-known San Francisco oarsman, arrived in the clty .C,K ttnu l0oay will meet with Z ?,-?ranse a race to take place on the Willamette. Robert J. Burdette preached yester day morning at the First Baptist Church in East Portland; 4 o'clock found him addressing an audience at 1. M. C. A. hall and four hours later he was In the pulpit of the First Baptist Church in this city. Half a Century Ago From The Oresonlan of June 11. 1S63. The new town at the Umatilla Land ing is said to be thriving wonderfully Less than a month ago there were only three buildings In the place; now there are more than 20 substantial struc tures and new houses are being erected as fast as the lumber can be furnished. .u0n?r Iay last week a gentleman of the Vt ebfoot persuasion arrived at The Dalles, having with him a cargo of cats. He had heard that in California in the early days cats commanded $10 each and thought an invoice of cats safely landed at Boise would pay. He had a number of boxes fitted up in menagerie style and, gathering up all the loose cats in the valley, he started out. Wagon, cats and all reached The Dalles by the steamer Iris safe and sound, and the next morning our Web ..oot friend started out. He had driven out but a few miles on the Boise road when an accident occurred. The couplings of his wagon were rather frail and in going down the hill there was a general smashup. in which the cages were stove in and every mother's son of a cat escaped. New York. June 4. A peace conven tion was held at the Cooper Institute yesterday. The principal speaker was Fernando Wood. Chicago. June 5. A telegram from General Burnslde tonight says the President has revoked his order sup pressing the Chicago Times. CITY VISITORS IN THE COUNTRY They Often Cfeuse a Lot of Bother, Says BerrrzrOKer, BEAVERTON. Or., June 8. (To the Editor.) It Is natural that city people should enjoy getting out in the coun try, especially during the Spring and Summer, and all farmers like to have their friends visit them, yet there are two sides to this question. The city man spends six days between brick walls and dreams of spending Sunday with friends or relatives beyond the suburbs. At the same time the coun tryman tills six days in the week and during harvest time almost six nights as well. He looks forward to Sunday as a chance to get his breath or a few hours' needed sleep under his favorite cherry tree. Berry growers who live in outlying districts, especially those who sell at the early market, literally work day and night in the berry sea son, as they start with their loads anywhere from 11 P. M. to 3 o'clock in the morning. What would you do? Stop Sunday visiting? By no means. But let the callers look at It from both sides and make their visits rather few and lim ited in the harvest season. The farmer is lightly known as a friendly host, but often it is at the cost of aching backs and tired muscles of which the office man is (luckily for him) entirely ignorant. And then the "good wife." It is a fact that company causes more extra work for the women than for the men, or at least the women allow them selves to be put to more trouble. Of course, the visitor will say, "Now, don't go to a bit of trouble for me,' and the hostess responds: "O, no; it is no bother at all!" Both are sincere, yet the hostess puts extra effort into every piece of work she performs and will do so as long as time continues. Still the farmer and his family enjoy company and some, especially those who were raised or have lived In town, think the country would be unendur able without it. BERRYGROWER. "The Biplane" Sculpture, by Rodin Paris Cor., Philadelphia Ledger. Details have Just come out of a re markable work of sculpture that Rodin is now engaged on, which he calls "The Biplane." It is only sym bolical and is described by those who have seen it as of marvelous beauty. The sculpture consists of a tall, slen der, unadorned shaft surmounted by what may be described as a length ened sphere on which twin figures stand side by side, their bodies, which almost touch, curving gracefully back ward. Their faces are upturned. Only one foot of each rests on the sphere, which seems to spring from beneath them in the moment of flight, and their wings are only half opened. The two figures, which seem to aid and support each other in flight, symbolize the two wings of the biplane. How Newspapers Can Aid Advertisers A former advertising manager of one of the largest drug con cerns in the United States, in a forceful speech before a New York club, said newspapers were in a position to render adver tisers valuable co-operation. It was his experience that his salesmen were not able, gener ally speaking, to report condi tions in local fields as they should be reported. 1f The editor of the local paper, he maintained, was best quali fied to supply National adver tisers with reliable information concerning his particular local ity. This is a subject worth thoughtful consideration by publishers generally, arid it should also bring to the mind of the national advertiser the universal usefulness of the daily newspaper the one medium of communication with everyone, everywhere.