THE MORNING OEEGONIAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1913. ixmtmt PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland, Oregon, Fostoffice as second-class matter. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance: (BY MAIL.; Dally, Sunday Included, one year . .$S-00 Daily, Sunday included, six months ..... l)ai)y, Sunday included, three montha .. Daily, Sunday Included, one month. ..... .i Daily, without Sunday, one year VU Daily, without Sunday, six months ..... a-9 Daily, without Sunday, three months. .. 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month -V Weekly, one year 1.50 Sunday, one year - 2. 60 Sunday and weekly, one year s.fio (BY CARRIER) Daily, Sunday Included, one year ....... -00 Daily, Sunday Included, one month ..... II . 1 ia t C.nri nnHtnfficfl mOMV Or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postotrice aaaress w full. Including county and state. Postage Kates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to HZ pages. 2 cents; 34 to 40 pages, a ceum, to to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 0 pages, 3 cents; 78 to V3 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree & Conk Iln, biew York, Brunswick building. Chi cago, steger building. San Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Co., 742 Market at. European Office No. 2 Regent street S. W., London. PORTLAND , MONDAY, AUGUST 11. 1913. GOOD REASON S 1XB. OPTIMISM. Optimism as to the business outlook is the dominant n'ote in the expressions of opinion from the leading manufac turers, merchants, bankers and rail road presidents of the United States publisher in The Sunday Oregonian. All tell of healthy conditions and nor mally expanding business, good crops salable at good prices, sufficient mon ey in banks to market them and heavy traffic on railroads. There are adverse factors, but they and their influence are fast passing away. One is the tariff bill, but, hav ing reconciled themselves to the cer tainty that the tariff would be re duced, manufacturers and producers have nerved themselves to stand the unequal and drastic revision now pro posed. Predictions of disaster to in dustry are few, and the great major ity have evidently discounted the ef fects of revision. The currency bill, at first a source of uncertainty, has become a source of confidence since its defects have been largely pruned away and good prospect has arisen that the leaders in Congress will consent to further improvements. Danger of rail road strikes has been practically elim inated by the new arbitration law. Assurance of peace in the Balkans en courages confidence that large sums tied up in European treasuries will soon be turned loose and will ease up the world's money market. With the certainty of good crops and ample funds to handle them; with the prospect of an early settlement of the tariff and the readiness of man ufacturers to do business under the new rates and not to sulk; with the prospect a little beyond that the new currency; system will provide ample money for legitimate business, to ex pand and contract with our needs, and will render panics a remote possibil ity, there is every cause for confidence and no cause for foreboding. Those who have felt the business pulse speak of banks eschewing specu lative loans and accommodating only their own customers, of railroads able to borrow only on short time and of scant supply of capital for public util ities, public Improvements and devel . opment enterprises. But the conditions which have brought about this tight ness of money are world-wide and the promised relief from these conditions is also world-wide. j Simultaneously with the financial pinch caused in Europe by the Balkan War, abnormally large Issues of se curities were offered on European markets with few takers. American securities were thrown back on our hands with few buyers on this side of the water. The stock exchange is running a bargain counter. The loos ening up of capital which is close at hand will absorb the undigested Eu ropean securities and create a market for those of the United States. Ex pansion of business will increase rail road earnings sufficiently to make their bonds again marketable. Then betterments and extensions can be made, which will facilitate the handling of a larger volume of traffic and will cause purchases of large amounts of material. With the easier money mar ket promised development projects will secure capital to go ahead and 5 per cent municipal bonds will not go begging below par. There has not been a depression; there has only been a lull in business. It has not extended to dealing in those things which we need for consumption from day to day, but has been con fined to branches of business which could await removal of the factors herein enumerated. A period of eco nomic readjustment in this country has synchronized with a period of. warlike disturbance in Europe. Both sources of doubt, both reasons for waiting, are being removed at the same. time. We are justified in expect ing a period of activity in production and development proportioned to the length and intensity of the period of lull, for work of this character has fallen behind. We must do during the next few years not only what should ordinarily be done in those years, but also what should have been done dur ing the past few years. We are going to put on a spurt and catch up. MARRIED WOMEN TEACHERS. Charles W. Eliot, the former presi dent of Harvard, has come up to the help of the New York School Direc tors against the women. Those for midable potentates are engaged just now in devising means of punishment for Mrs. Bridget C. Peixotto, who com mitted the enormity of marrying and bearing a child while she was em ployed as a teacher in the - public schools. Dr. Charles W. Eliot takes the trouble to write to the Directors and assure them that his sympathies are against the right of a woman teacher to produce babies. '"In my opinion," he says, "the em ployment of married women in the schools is not for the interest of the pupils, the teachers or the community as a whole." He says, too, that he thinks five years long enough for a woman to teach. If she cannot find a husband by that time, let her go to the poorhouse or become a suffragette, he would probably decide. All this is interesting because Dr. Eliot has en joyed a long experience of human af fairs and his opinions are weighted both with experience and erudition. Nevertheless, It would be stimulat ing to inquire just how much of that mechanical formalism which has blighted our publio schools could be traced back to the uniform employ ment of unmarried women. The fe male mind naturally delights in fixed rules and unvarying precepts. It de tests exceptions and would be glad to reduce the whole universe to a few algebraic formulas. Besides that, cen turles of slavery to the male have made women apt ministers of that mechanism which saves work to su perintendents and directors. It costs far less trouble to make out tables of statistics than to teach children, and consequently, under the regime of un married women teachers, with male superintendents, the energies of the public schools have been largely con secrated t,o the beautiful but arid work of compiling- long arrays of figures. Married women no doubt have some faults, but they are not as a rule ab ject adorers of men. Intimacy with the bearded sex has cured their illu sfons and made them more or less in dependent. This may be the real rea son why boards of male directors are so eager to get rid of them. "HE CAN LEAKN FROM LTVEKPOOL. If the Port of Columbia secures the services of a dredging expert from Liv erpool it will get the benefit of many years' successful experience in con tending with conditions similar to those existing at the mouth of the Co lumbia. At the mouth of the Mersey is a bar which has required continual dredging in order that a channel might be kept open. That channel is safely navigated by the largest trans-Atlantic liners, hence if we follow Liverpool methods we may expect to put to si lence the scoffers at the Columbia River, who chuckle over every mishap to a ship. While dredges on the Mersey bar do not have to contend with a long swell like that of the Pacific, they encounter in the Irish Sea nasty, choppy avaves like those of the English Channel. There is not exact duplication of con ditions, but there is close similarity. The Liverpool expert can also give our Dock Commission much informa tion on the construction of docks, piers and belt railways, for he has been in the employ of the Mersey Dock and Harbor Board. This body com bines the functions which are here divided between the Port Commission and the Dock Commission. Its juris diction extends beyond the limits of Liverpool, as that of our Port Com mission extends beyond the limits of Portland. It owns the whole frontage of the Mersey for miles- above its mouth and has provided splendid fa cilities of every kind for ships. In making Portland an up-to-date harbor with modern docks, operated at a min imum of cost to ships, we can learn much from Liverpool. WHY THE A IK IS CLEAR. Those who have lived a few years on the Pacific Coast can recall when the atmosphere at this season of the year was thick with smoke and the mountains were invisible from the cit ies for weeks at a time. The present clearness of the air is due to the work of the Western Forestry and Conserva tion Association in preventing and ex tinguishing forest fires. Beginning with a local association in the Coeur d'Alene country of Idaho, this association has extended until it covers the states of Oregon, Washing ton, Idaho, Montana and California. Composed mainly of private owners of timber land, it now counts the state of Idaho among its members and has secured the co-operation of the Federal Government and other states in its work. It employs 450 regular patrol men and a much larger force during the season of fires. It guards one-half the standing timber in the United States and last year limited fires to 14,000 acres, or one-sixteenth of one per cent of the timber protected, while the timber destroyed was only one seventieth of one per cent. In protecting their own property the tlmbermen are protecting the public interest. Destruction of timber is a loss to the community as well as to the owner. By extinguishing forest fires the association protects the home and often saves the life of many an Iso lated settler. By preserving the for ests, it protects the water-supply. It confers a public benefit, mainly at prl vate expense. FALSE PROMISES. Last year The Oregonian fought for the exemption law on household furniture and effects. It was a law for the good of the people (and The Oregonian editor.) But when a law is proposed to exempt $1500 of the toilers' improvements. The Oregonian fights it. That is not for the good of the millionaires and Idle lands. Oregon City Courier. The Oregonian may be old-fashioned, but it cannot conceive of taxation as a penalty. Taxes are paid for benefits, and the property which returns a profit to its owner and also re ceives benefits from public expendi tures ought to contribute its share of the cost of government. The household exemption has had very little fiscal significance. It did not disturb the equilibrium of taxa tion. The property excluded from tax ation is not income-producing and is a necessary burden rather than an asset. The laws' effect is general and proportionate to holdings and ability to pay. The proposed $1500 exemption is ar bitrary. It has no sound or scientific basis. It would disturb the distribution of taxation and compel a readjustment. That in this readjust ment the portion of the tax burden would be shifted to "millionaires and idle lands" is bald assumption. State and local governments require a given income. When expenses are not met by the revenues, the revenues may be Increased by enlarging the tax levy or putting tax values nearer a 100 .per cent basis. An increase In valuation could readily wipe out the whole effect of an exemption made specific as to value. The man paying on improvements and personalty valued at 11500 under a 50 per cent valuation would, notr withstanding a $1500 exemption, pay the same taxes if the rate were not disturbed and the valuation were raised to 100 per cent. Raising of the rate without disturbing valuation basis would have nearly the same effect. Methods heretofore practiced by as sessing authorities lead to the belief that one or the other -of these 'two courses would be followed. If idle lands and water power are not now paying a just share of taxation there is absolutely no assurance that they would under a law which merely af fected other property so long as that other property was assessed at its full value of the tax rate had not already reached the legal maximum. We presume the voters will be del uged again with meaningless, inac curate figures based on tax rolls as they were in 1912. That sly, Indirect attempt to buy votes for a single tax measure by promise that this man here and that man there would escape a just responsibility failed. The same oblique tactics, based on falsification, ought to fall again. The proposed law does not promise a saving to anybody. It merely forecasts a disturbance in the revenue collecting system. Chicago has a way of dealing with lazy husbands similar to Washington's law. The Court of Domestic Relations gives them the choice between jail and a promise to support their families. If they accept the latter alternative they are set free, but in charge of a probation officer, who sees that they keep the promise. Over 1000 men are now at work on these terms who would have gone to Jail under the old law. The remedy is found support for the family through the work of the man. FALSE ECONOMY. It is a lamentable fact that one of the Central Oregon counties which the Legislature sought particularly to benefit by the enactment of a law authorizing agricultural experiment and demonstration work, at partial state expense, has permitted the op portunity this year to lapse." Crook County, where this strange exhibi tion of lack of foresight and enter prise on the part of the county au thorities exists, last year established two demonstration farms with the ma terial aid of the railroad companies. This year, when the state is authorized to expend $2 for each $1 appropriated by the county, the work is permitted to lapse; Crook County newspapers, led "by the Bend Bulletin, are properly voicing indignation. Crook County presents wonderful opportunities to the new settler. The county is but sparsely settled and vacant lands are available in almost boundless extent. But climatic and soil conditions differ from those to which the average new settler is ac customed. He needs, that he may be successful, practical demonstration of the best way to farm in that district and ocular evidence of the productive qualities of the land as to various crops. Something on the order of the Oregon Agricultural College demon stration work la the most practicable means of preventing an immeasurable delay in the general development of the county. If the failure to profit by the law be due to efforts to economize the idea that there is any real saving in withholding an appropriation for this work in Crook County is a false one. Money so spent will return a thousand fold. THE CULT OF THE DICTIONARY. One of our Eastern contemporaries comments with disapproval upon "the stupid faith people have in diction aries." It quotes an author or two who have lately sallied out against the lexicographers and broken their spears in behalf of individual preferences in speech. The dictionary makers, we are told, must collect what little knowledge they possess, just as the rest of us do, from observation and books, and they are by no means in fallible in judgment. Too often they act like the lawyers and impose upon us the decaying relics of former ages as living and breathing usage. When a silly thing has once found its way Into a dictionary it is copied and re copied with dull docility so that one generation after another is fed upon the refuse of departed fools. This may all be true, and yet it must not be forgotten that there really is more or less dependable information in some of the dictionaries. The makers of them knew more, probably, than the average high school boy. It may even be assumed, though with hesita tion and doubt, that they knew almost as much as the average high school girl and their word may therefore be followed occasionally with profit. Still it cannot be denied that dic tionary worship has been pushed to a lamentable extreme in some quarters. There was a time, and perhaps there is still, when a certain brand of dic tionary wisdom was adopted by law in some states of the Union. In these enlightened commonwealths it was un lawful to pronounce "leisure" with a short vowel in the first syllable. "Ad vertisement" must be accented on the the second syllable on pain of public disgrace if not a fine and imprison ment. - The good old "wound" which rhymed with "bound" was transformed under this tyrannical regime into a monster that rhymed with "swooned and so on through a painful list. The despotism of the dictionary reached its acme in the Middle West bj the ministrations of young women school teachers who had graduated at nor mal schools, where Webster was set a notch or two higher than the Bi ble. Unhappy little boys and girls were compelled under fearful penalties to commit Webster's "diacritical marks" to memory. The seven sounds of the letter a, save the mark; the four sounds of o and the four of u must all be rattled off without an error and the proper symbol attached to each. In many schools of the Mid dle West it was a regular Friday aft ernoon exercise to recite the Web- sterian diacritical marks and spend a precious hour of two applying them to our nondescript orthography. It was imagined that by this hideous process young people would be taught to speL' and enunciate. The curious result was that they forgot how to do both. It is vividly remembered with what horror a Western student entering a renowned Eastern university heard the erudite president pronounce "leisure" with a short vowel. There must have been some serious defect in his educa tion even if charity conceded that he was not breaking the law with malice prepense. But, after all, there is some thing to be said for dictionary worship even when it is carried to the length of legal enactment. Just as the old maxim of the church, "one Lord, one faith, one baptism," secured a passa ble uniformity of worship throughout the Christian world, so the Middle Western adoration of Webster made the speech of that important region measurably the same from the Rocky Mountains to the Allegh.enies. AH Westerners speak alike. They pro nounce their r's with a rich fullness which delights the ear and satisfies the intelligence. They never flatten the a in "palm" as do the benighted natives of Philadelphia, nor do they prolong a final a to rhyme with er, as the Yankees do in their blindness. In a truly New England mouth "idea" rhymes accurately with "fear." No native of Illinois or Wisconsin would commit such an absurdity and his im munity arises from the worship of the dictionary which he was taught with his "Now I lay me" in the tender years of infancy. Human speech when left to ita own sinful ways tends - to break up into dialects. In poor old Europe every. lit tle valley and secluded hamlet has a usage of its own in pronunciation and often in grammar and vocabulary. From such variety of speech arises difficulty of mutual understanding and the ignorance of neighboring popula tions generates hostility and promotes the schemes of the military inciter. Had it not been for our National love of the dictionary and that adoring docility before it which the public school has instilled, the United States might have been long before this time divided into little nests of mutually , hating people whose enmity would have arisen simply because they did not talk alike. Everybody must . have observed the bitterness with which rural communities animadvert upon little differences of language. Let a family from Southern Ohio, for exam ple, move into a neighborhood peo--id Vow Englanders. No matter If the husband is a philosopher, the wife a saint and all the seven hilflren cherubim, that will not save the fam ily from public reprobation, because they will be sure to use certain locu tions which are anathema to the Yan kees. They will say "Johnny pailed the cow this morning," or "Susie shucked right smart of corn this aft- noon," or "Pap lowed to go to town this week, but he was tuck with a misery- in his stummlck and had to stay home." All these expressions. which are classic in Cincinnati, are loathed in Boston. Thus the begin nings of sectionalism arise when the dictionary is neglected. Perhaps what we really need is, not less devotion to that mighty volume, but a good deal more. The appearance of Senator James Hamil ton Lewis on the streets of Washington In a cream-colored serge suit and wearing a white silk shirt Is another reminder of the Jeffersonian simplicity of the Democratic administration. Springfield Union. On this . paragraph, the New York Herald comments: Can cold and gray New England never attain to proper appreciation of the re splendent glory of the virile, vivid and bounding West? Serge and silk properly typifies the pure jeirersoman lustre 01 the Hamlewls soul. It is noticeable that, as Senator Lewis has advanced in fame as the Beau Brummel of the United States, he has traveled eastward until at Washington he has reached the climax m a career which he began as "Dude Lewis" in Seattle. He knows where perfection of dress is most highly val ued and has carried his sartorial dis play to that market. President Wilson has got into trou ble with the negro-hating Senators by appointing A. E. Patterson, a negro of Oklahoma, registrar of the treasury. Messrs. Vardaman, Tillman, Hoke Smith and others had a violent attack of hysterics and the nomination has been withdrawn at Mr. Patterson's re quest. The President must now decide whether he will exclude all negroes from office at the dictation of the negrophobes or insist upon his execu tive powers. If other men who have the means and the ability would specialize as Will Crissey is doing in gladioli, some wonderful results would be attained in horticulture, floriculture and agri culture. The ordinary tiller of the soil is beginning to show respect for the work of what he has heretofore called "the gentleman farmer." The Iatter's work Is mostly experimental, and that is the way the biggest and best are produced. Once a loan shark, always a loan shark, seems to be the lesson of the case of Daniel H. Tolman, king of the craft. Fined $1000 and paroled on the understanding that, if he resumed business in any state where usury is Illegal, he returned to New York and was promptly arrested for bleeding a young man earning $12 a week of most of his income. The only way to stop Tolman's extortion is to put him in jail. Attention of the I. W. W. is called to the announcement that farmers in Washington and Idaho need men to harvest their crops. The I. W. W. love the open air, as witness' their fondness for open-air meetings, so here is a chance for plenty of It. They would also have an opportunity in the harvest field to rest their weary jaw- muscles and harden the muscles of arms, legs and back. Memory of the rains that prevailed over the Valley last Summer brings into prominence the lack of them this year, with suggestion to the county courts the advisability of using oil on the roads early and late to avoid the pestilence of dust. This treatment of a nuisance would be expensive, to be sure, but the relief would be worth all It would cost. The great Interest Jersey mosquitoes are manifesting in "slit" skirts would seem to dispose of the theory that it is only the female of the species that stings New York Herald. The slit might be covered with mosquito netting. In fact, women may come to make the skirts of that material. A few warm days in a row make the Portlander recall the good work of the water committee of years agone that brought Bull Run water into the city. One does not have to be very old to remember the temperature of the river water. Its chief quality was that it was wet. That his actors may see themselves as others see them, Charles Frohman has moving pictures made of rehears als, then causes the company to see its own performance. Now they can un derstand why some audiences are bored and why others laugh at the wrong time. Oregonians who have relatives in the prairie states where wells are go ing dry and other discomforts of a continued hot spell are felt must send them Oregon literature and weather statistics pointing the way to blessed relief. What the Governor of California will say to the Governors of Oregon and Washington at Redding next week may become memorable talk, if this rela tive humidity does not suffer a chill. Portland will have a milk show in a few weeks, with an exhibit showing the wrong way to produce and handle milk. Will that include milking a kicking cow on the right side? Can Castro come back ? That is the question in Venezuela,- Napoleon tried it, but was knocked out in the first round. Is Castro greater than Napo leon? Scoffers will note that all the inhabi. tants of a Spanish village were at tending church two miles away when the aerolite set fire to their homes. .... . -- -- P. I... rannl r?AnA V, I . win 'cx..c& uuo umuisa uig icutuij , But how are they to be caught? The harvest fields in the Inland Empire are calling for help. The work is hard, but the pay is good. A city ordinance requiring the owner of a hitching post to pay a license is worse than a war tax. All Kipling needs is to come to Ore gon and catch another salmon. IXSFECTIOX " NEEDED IX COUJfTRT Eating; Houses In Small Towns Need Cleaning; t;p. Says Traveler. PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (To the Edi tor.) Nine out of every ten restaurants in the rural and semi-rural communi ties of this state are run under the most unsanitary conditions. The kitchens are filthy; the dining-rooms are fly infested; the waiters and waitresses are careless about their personal clean liness. I believe that the state, and not the county, should appoint kitchen in spectors for all restaurants, cafes, "noodle" shops, dairy lunches and hotels. Only in that way can the health of the people of the entire state be properly insured, , - It is little short of criminal to allow such filthy conditions -as exist in our small town restaurants. We are ex posing our children to diseases, and In that way impairing the future health and prosperity of our great state. Good food, unless served properly, and cooked under proper sanitary condi tions, is just as likely to carry germs as bad food. I have seen milk stand ing on a counter exposed to dust and dirt and flies, and then served to a lit tle child. In many restaurants (this I have seen) men with nicotine-stained fingers pick up the butter with their fingers and place It on the butter plates. In one restaurant a degenerate, filthy youth of about 19, before serv ing some women and children a lunch eon (?) turned and spat his quid of tobacco on the floor. In several other restaurants I have seen men returning from the toilet and then picking up bread with their hands and placing It on bread plates and serving it to the guests. Goodness only knows how filthy and vile the kitchen conditions must be if such things go on in the serving room. The subject spoken of in this letter is very vital, and I believe has not been given the attention it merits. As an army crawls on its stomach, so "a state depends upon the quality of its food for its general vigor and vitality. Our little country girls, the future mothers, and our rural youths, the future fathers. should not be exposed to food, contam ination; neither should our grown girls and men nightly, in small towns, swarm around the table of the "noodle" or chop-suey restaurants, and eat food too often prepared In hastiness. One cannot help hut understand the reason for three out of five rural Oregon youths being pimply-faced, blotchy, unhealthy-looking young men, in marked contrast to the average city youth one sees in Portland and the Eastern cities. I believe that no man any way dis eased should be allowed to wait in a restaurant or cook or handle food In any way. The same law should apply to young girls. I believe that there should be no smoking or Bpittlng or chewing 'of tobacco in the kitchen of any restaurant. I believe in the rigid monthly inspection of all sinks, kitch ens, cellars of every place which serves food to the public. Water-closets should be far removed from the kitch ens of all restaurants. W. J. C. PALMONT. HARDSHIP IS SEEN IN NEW PLAN Quarterly Payments of Water Rate Severe on Needy Persona. PORTLAND, Aug. 9. (To the Edi tor.) I ask permission to state a few facts in relation to the proposed change in the time for paying water rates. An article in The Oregonian states that the people of Portland favor the quarterly payment plan by a vote of eight to one. As It is only those in authority who count the votes, it would be useless to question the statement, but If such a vote has been cast thus far, I, for one, honestly believe it is because the real facts are not properly understood. , Just one year ago a company of expert accountants made a report on the condition of the city's water de partment and after promising many things among which was the saving of $40,000 a year, were engaged to in stall a complete new system of - ac counting. How well they iid this is now evinced by a recent report in The Oregonian, whereby it is shown that instead of a saving of the promised $40,000, the expense has actually been increased to more than double what it was before. So sweet was this plum that those with the drag now want to make another change and "save" us $30,000 more. If it is to accommodate the public, why not let the public pay as they choose? If some have the means whereby they can pay three months in advance, why not let them pay that way? As things stand now they can pay as far as they choose. But when it will not accommodate the rich any more than the present method does, why force the poor to pay three months In advance when it is often hard for them to pay even one month in ad vance. As for the saving, what would It be to the individual if the Water Department did save all they hope to or $30,000 a year? It would only be 5 cents a month to 60,000 people. So, let not the average water user be mis guided by abstract figures. The popularity of the installment plan is evidence that people prefer to pay by the month. If it is advisable to pass legislation providing that street assessments be made payable in small amounts if one so desires, why destroy the same idea in connection with water rents and compel people to pay three months in advance when they can now pay any number of months they choose? I hope others will assert themselves and prevent the adoption of so undesirable a measure. C. KELLY. WATER RATE PLAN- OPPRESSIVE. Working-men and Renters Would Suffer From Quarterly Payments. PORTLAND, Aug. 9.r (To the Edi tor.) I am unable to see how the work In groan is going to be benefited by the- change in payment of water rates. In fact 'the requirement to pay water rent quarterly in advance is going to work considerable hardship oh him. Take the month of July, for instance. The sum of $1.75 is about enough to pay at one time for bouse and hose, but by paying three months in advance, -$o. 25, would have to be dug up, which Is a lot or money. And man who is Tenting would have that three months to pay for even though he might be reasonably certain that he would not be in that house for the next three months. He would have the bother of going to the office, stand ing in line for an hour and the strong possibility of getting nothing back. When a man has a meter (and we all hope to have one some day and pay for just what we use, be it 25 cents or $2) paying for it in advance before it is measured would be an absurdity. I believe that enough confusion would result from the change to pre vent any reduction of force or saving thereby. Some of that $30,000 could probably be saved, however, by having part of the bills oellvered by messenger, as our friends, the gas people, are do ing, and it would give some one job besides. - ANOTHER CONSUMER. Orljrln of "Oregon." PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (To the Edi tor.) I notice a few days ago that some one asked the origin of the name "Oregon." I have in my scrapbook an article by James. Elverson that gives this explanation: 'The name of 'Ore gon' is of Spanish origin and means wild thyme." " A READER. No Nosing There. Washington Herald. "You seem happier." "Yes," respond ed the clerk in the department store. "I've been transferred from the silk counter to the grindstone department And very few women out shopping in sist on pawing over that stock." IMMIGRATION RILING PROTESTED Hindu Calls for Justice to His Country men by America. PORTLAND, Aug. 9. (To the Edi tor.) Comes now a crippled Hindu to raise his lonely voice ss an appeal to the good" common sense of the Ameri can people against the high-handed action of a handful of the Immigration officers of San Francisco in an attempt to deport some Hindus simply because they .are Hindus, and as such they are undesirables. It is a regret that the American people, with so much love of justice, love of freedom, and all such good qualities that go to make a foremost republic on the face of the earth, should look upon this poor, in sulted and injured nation of about 300, 000,000 as undesirables. Every American in his grade school has learned that India was the cradle of the so-called Aryan civilization, and yet the discrimination against a hand ful of Hindus coming into this free country Is tense. If there is any other motive in prohibiting the Hindus from entering this country than merely a wage question, and their being Asiatics and Orientals, it pains me to say that the greatest of all the functions of the brain, the reasoning, which dis tinguishes human beings from lower animals, has not yet fully developed in the American proletariat, in spite or their boast of a World's Christian Citi zenship Conference, their boast of maintaining a large horde of mission aries in foreign lands, and the last and most important of all, their boast of love of freedom and justice. I am not here to discuss anything and everything, but when it comes to the total discrimination of a nation al most crushed under a foreign yoke, and when a handful of the so-called whites, in spite of -ethnology, though they be of Mongolian descent, can claim the citizenship papers, it is time for every right-thinking pers'bn, if he hap pens to belong to the same stock, to fight for the salvation of his people as well as for his own. By the fore going I do not mean to incite the Jap anese or the Chinese to clamor for citi zenship, but I maintain and assert that though the Finns can become citizens, which they: have done for so long, it is in spite of the fact that they ethically belong to the Mongolian race, which fact the authorities intentionally or un intentionally overlooked. (Vide Ency clopedia Britannlca, edition 11, volume 10, page 386.) This admission of the Finns, as every American should un derstand, is against the Constitution of the United States, in which there is no provision for a Mongolian to become a citizen. Now, then, is the Constitution or are" the authorities, who presume to exer cise the constitutional laws, to be blamed? ' I believe Mr. Wilson is one of the greatest authorities in history and political science, anU as such he knows the history and ethnology of the various nations. I, in the name, of the very religion that stands for the "brotherhood of man and the father hood of God," in the very name of the sublime maxim, "Righteousness exalt eth a nation," a'nd in the foremost sense of the love of justice and free dom of the Americans, demand the President and the people of America to dive deep into this and decide accord lngly. R. KRISHNA. CONCERTS DELIGHTFUL FEATURE Park Band Is Glowlnarly Commended by Lover of Music PORTLAND, Or... Aug. 10. (To the Editor.) The series of Summer con certs in our various parks given by the Park band are about to terminate. A season of delightful music by a superb organization has obtained, and it is with regret we witness the closing con certs. The writer has watched the growth of the Park band from its first season of a year ago, and while the concerts of last year' were a success and met with instant approval, how much more can be said in favor of the band this year! Better balanced, with more effi cient Instrumentalists, and the concerts interspersed with a greater variety of special features by the soloists of the band, together with splendid vocal and string talent than heretofore. It is safe to say that the citizens of Portland now look upon the Park band as a permanent institution, and point to it with Portland pride. That the money is well expended for the series of con certs by the city, and meets with the approval of the taxpayers the writer will venture to assert as a fact. As an advertising feature to the city the concerts act as a double asset, for they not only give pleasure to the home people, but leave a favorable impres sion upon the visitors sojourning in our midst and advertise Portland as a city of musical culture. One cannot dwell too strongly upon the good influence of the music as an educational feature to the young people of Portland, as witness the hundreds of children attending the concerts nightly listening with marked attention. That Director McElroy has proven himself to be a bandmaster of first rank is the popular opinion of the pub lic He has splendid control, is full of dash and an enthusiasm which perme ates the audience, and is as quick to respond to an encore as to be heard. The writer hopes to see the series of concerts of next season prolonged as they are much too short. W. B. PRICE. FLAGS, PROGRESS AND SOCIALISM Inconsistencies In Party Defenders Designated by Writer. PORTLAND, Aug. 8. (To the Edi tor.) In his last letter printed in The Oregonian "H. A. H." asserts that "progress is Socialism." Let him tell us how? His statement reminds me of some boys who formed a literary so ciety and adopted as their motto "Con tention Is Progress." He starts his letter by defending his definition of the red flag and what it stands for, from his point of view. Now if it stands for a "bloodless revolution a revolution accomplished by the bal lot," as he asserts, and if the Socialists believe as he states, that "we all know that the American form of govern ment is superior to all others today," then why don't the Socialists put the star-spangled banner, instead of the red raff, at the head of their columns, same as other parties, and accomplish their purpose under that honored emblem; Any flag except the stars and stripes is indefensible as the emDiem 01 political party in this Republic of America, and certainly the Socialists have become very meddlesome in our politics. Mr. Barzee In another letter defends the red flag of Socialism (which is also the flag of anarchy), partly on the ground that it is their "International emblem" and that the party (boclallst) "stands for internationalism." So does any party stand for internationalism to a certain extent, but Mr. Barzee should know that this Nation can get along very well for some time yet without the meddlesome interference of any "international party, especial ly one which is a nrst cousin anarchy. O. C R. ELLIS, to Spelling for Bryan's Benefit. PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (To the Ed. itor.) The English language has many peculiarities, chief 01 wmcn are the dif ferent ways of spelling a word to ex press various shades of meaning, and The Oregonian is most correct, as a rule, in bringing out these finer points in our language both in its news Items and editorials. I rather hesitate to point out a possi ble error in spelling which occurred a few days since in an editorial and wish to Inquire if tne word unautauqua when used in connection with the name of W. J. Bryan, should not be spelled Chaw-talk-wa. Would not this spelling express one 01 the liner shades of meaning which our language is capa ble of?- READER. Twenty-five Years Aga From The Oregonian- of Aug. 11, 1SSS. New York. Aug. 10. Tne steamboat Laura M. Starin, with James G. Blaine ori board, arrived today, having taken him otf the City of New 1 ork outside the narrows. Great enthusiasm" was shown by the 2000 people on board the atann. ...... Washington. Aug. 10. '-r- A steady stream of people poured in and out of St. Matthew's Church, where the body of General Sheridan lies in state, ail day. Albany, Or., Aug. 10: An indignation metting- was held at Scio last nisrht and C. N. Scott, receiver of the Narrow Gauge Railroad, was burned in effigy. Salem. Or., Aug. 10. The Oregon Press Association met todnv. with President M. L. Pipes in the chair. Colonel A. P. Dennison; formerly of this city, but for the rast ten rears a resident of California and now con nected with the San Francisco mint, is at the St. Charles. He is accompanied Dy nis son, a, j-i. .uennison. The county court contemplates addinsr a wing to the Courthouse on the south side. Last evening- the Harrison Club of Portland was formed andthe following officers elected: President, R. L. Eaton; first vice-president, W. L. Miller; sec ond vice-president, W. H. Wilton; re cording secretary, J. L. Watt; corre sponding secretary, C. C. Fisher; treas urer, C. E. Geiger; executive commit tee, O. Greenwood, Edward Dekum, L. G. Clarke and A. B. MeAlpin. The work of excavating for the foun dation of the brick buildings to be elected by Charles E. Sitton and N. J. Blagen on North Front street, between B and C streets, has been commenced. Half a Century Ago Prom The Oregonian of August 11. "1863. Cairo, Aug. 0. The splendid new steamer Ruth, valued at $150,000, burned last night opposite Island No. 10. She had on board eight paymasters, with their clerks, a number of pas sengers, $2,500,000, 600 tons of freight. 200 mules and cattle. There were about 30 persons on board, all of whom must have perished. Thanksgiving day was duly observed by the citizens of Vancouver. At the Methodist Church religious exercises were conducted in the morning by the Rev. air. Raynor and Rev. Mr. Bagley. A meeting was extemporized for the evening, designated by the president thereof, S. W. Brown, as a union jubilee. Remarks were made by L. Holmes, Hon. E. P. Oliphant, General Alvord. Hon. J. E. Wyche, J. J. McGilvra and Rev. J. O. Raynor. The Portland City Guards held a meeting last evening in the Council room. Mr. Lewis in the" chair. A "reso lution was adopted to reorganize the company under the constitution and by-laws of the old Jefferson Guards. D. Wertheimer, who fell behind the company he was traveling with from the mines and who, it was feared, had fallen a victim to the road agents, ar rived at home all safe last evening. This evening the young and favorite actor, Mr. Charles Graham, will take his first benefit in Portland. CAN SULZER . CLEAN HIS SKIRTS t Writer Calls Attention to Silence of "Reform" Journals.. , PORTLAND, Aug.- 9. (To the Edi tor.) The evidence given before the Lesislative committee of New York with reference to Governor Sulzer is somewhat disconcerting, to say the least.. .It . apparently - -chows, that he was .a heavy- stock speculator pre vious to and at the time of his elec tion, and that he omitted many cam paign contributions from his sworn re turn required by the corrupt practices act. While there may be nothing Inher ently wrong in a candidate for Gover nor speculating in Wall Street at the time . of his election, yet when . you consider that this was in the state of New York, where much legislation is necessary to regulate stock specu lations, it would be far better if the Governor had abstained from anything of the kind. v It may be that with reference to the campaign contributions Governor Sulzer will be able to show that be omitted these various items by mistake or lack of recollection in the matter. Cer tainly every good American hopes that he will be able to do so. But the thought that keeps running through my mind is this: Suppose these revelations had been made about some old-time Republican Governor; what would be the comment of our "reform" publica tions? The Governor would be used to point a mora'l and adorn a tale. He would be pointed out as an example to the youth of the country of the cor rupting influences of stand-pat Repub licanism. Every "reform" publication in the country would make the short comings of the Governor a text for a sermon of this kind. . - S. B. HUSTON. Fishing Rods Not Ordinarily Deadly. VANCOUVER, Wash, Aug. 9. (To the Editor.). Being a Justice of the Peace who wishes to be just, I write to correct an error in a dispatch from Vancouver to The Oregonian, which contains this statement: A fishing rod is a deadly .weapon Is the opinion held by the only woman Justice of the Peace in the State of Washington. Miss Edmonia Mills, in Fruit Valley precinct. J. N. Pullan was' arrested July 6 and. taken before - Mls-s Mills, charged with assaulting Bernard Surratt with a fishing rod. After hearing the evidence and weighing the matter she held Pullan to the Superior Court, and placed him under a bond of 60- It was not and Is not my opinion that a fishing rod is a deadly weapon. It is obvious that an ordinary fish ing rod, under ordinary circumstances, is not a menace to any individual but an individual fish. However, in this case neither the fishing rod nor the circumstances were ordinary. The unusual features of this particular rod will doubtless be presented at Mr. PuUan's trial in the Superior Court.. EDMONIA MILLS. : . What the Public Wants The greatest students of "what the public wants" are those men who are producing something, lor public consumption. It may be anything from safety-pins to bedsteads, but if these men are putting their time, money and brains Into turning out some thing that will meet the popular, demand, you may be sure they are putting the best results of their experience into placing xn the market an article that will .come up to the requirements of an exacting public. . . Not until they are convinced that the have an article that, will stand the test do they at tempt to sell it- 1 hen they place it before the people in the col umns of the best newspapers that they can find. You cannot afford not to profit by the work and experience of these men. The only way that you may reap the benefits offered by their brains and labor is to keep in touch with what they are doing by reading what they say to you in The Oregonian and equally good newspapers. ..... A