THE MOR'IG OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1913. 2T.(0rJtrotttnu PORTf-AND, OREGON. ' Entered at Portland, Oregon, Postotflce a second-class matter. Subscription Bate Invariably la Advance: BT MAID Dally, Snnday Included, one year 18-00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months ..... Dally, Sunday included, three months . 2-23 Dally, Sunday Included, one month, Dally, without Sunday, one year Dally, without Sunday, six months . . Daily, without Suaaa, three months. i-ti Daily, without Sunday, one month 00 Weekly, one year ! Sunday, one year J v Sunday and weekly, one year (BT CARRIER) rtatlv RnnllillflKlnri MlkMlf . . 9.00 Dailv. Sunday included, one month . 1a Hew to Remit Send poatotfice money or der, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice - address in lull, including county aad state. Postaa-e Bates 12 to 1 oases. 1 cent: IS to ii pages, 2 cents; 84 to 4S pages, S cents; 60 to so pages. 4 cents; 62 to To pages, o cents; 78 to W pages. cents. Foreign post age, aouoie rates. Ful.r. Rnrinn, Offleps varreo at Conk lln, New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steger building. baa Frmaclsco Offioe R. J. Bldwell Co, 742 Market St. European Office No. 2 Regent street & W London. PORTLAND. SATTBDAT, ACGC8T 18, 19 IS. LET CONGRESS FINISH ITS WORE. The decision of the Democratic Sen ators to prolong: the present session of Congress until the currency bill, as well as the tariff bill, become law will be approved by the people In general. What we need is settled, sound condi tions, under which we can do busi ness. The sooner we get them the sooner we can go ahead with the work before us. The tariff bill will not establish conditions entirely sound, but it seems Inevitable and the country is recon ciled to giving: it a trial. That being so. the sooner the process of adjust ment to the new tariff duties begins the sooner it will be over. It is all well enough for Republican Senators to propose amendments and - Insist upon a vote on them. That is all that is necessary to place them on record as having opposed the bill and upheld their principles. But save us from oratory; do not waste time In speeches which do not change a single vote, are not read at homo and only prolong the waiting. We have-been surfeited with tariff speeches for five long years. We know how every man stands. The country calls for the question. The main provisions of the currency bill are acceptable to the country. Crit icism is aimed chiefly at the measure 'of Government control proposed. This can be modified to make It less objec tionable. The House will be through with the bill in time for the Senate to take it up when the latter body has passed the tariff bill. If the harmoni ous Democratic party can avoid a wrangle, the legislators may be able to secure a brief rest before beginning the regular session in December. There is no excuse for holding over the currency bill until that session, for there is plenty of work blocked out to occupy it. One measure, even of the magnitude of a tariff bill. Is not sufficient output for a session at which no other legislation of consequence was passed. Had both houses buckled down to work in earnest at the out set they might have finished much earlier. Instead, the Senate marked time while the House worked and vice versa. Congress should pay for loaf ing by sacrificing its vacation, if nec essary to finish the job on hand. THE ALASKA HOLDUP. The real purpose of the Forest Serv ice in Inducing the creation of the Chugach National Forest in Alaska, which has proved one of the chief ob stacles to development of the coal fields, was extorted from W. B. Gree ley, of that bureau, by the Senate com mittee on territories. Mr. Greeley was very unwilling to tell and only persist ent cross-examination by Senators Plttman, Jones and Walsh drew out the truth. It had been charged that 90 per cent of the so-called forest was nothing but bare mountain and forest and that the timber on the remaining fraction was of no value. Tet the whole area has been locked up, and railroads have been forbidden to use Government timber In construction, though that privilege has been freely granted to new railroads in the main land of the United States. Mr. Greeley said that the reserve contained 11,250,000 acres, the boun daries having been established by the "major topographic features" Instead of by the fact of its being covered with useful timber. He admitted that only 4.000,000 acres are covered with what he considers commercial timber, the other 7.260,000 acres being "almost wholly barren, mountainous land of no commercial importance." According to him, the timbered portion bears only 28,000,000,000 feet on an average of "000 feet to the acre, some tracts running up to 10,000 or 15,000 feet. By close questioning he was forced to admit that the timber is worthless for building, has low durability and ten sile strength and is used for piling, wharfing, building log houses, fuel and sometimes for railroad ties. But It is so useless for general construction that only four sawmills have been built and only two of these are in operation. Almost all the lumber used is imported. None is exported and the best use for the timber of which Mr. Greeley could think was to make pulp for paper mills. Mr. Greeley's excuse for the cre ation of the reserve was the conser vation of this timber. But the bulk of It is within five or six miles of the coast and he was unable to say why the reserve was extended so far inland. This prompted Mr. Walsh to say it looked as if the purpose was "preventing that railroad company (the Alaska Central) from taking the timber that it was permitted to take under . the provisions of the act to construct the road." Forced to concede that the forest was not paying its way, that the tim ber was so poor that little was bought by residents and that there was no danger of its being cut down, Mr. Greeley fell back on the excuse that the Forest Service was conserving the title "from acquisition by private in terests and its holding and exploita tion." Mr. Plttman said to him: So far you have done nothing toward conservation. I say. so far. mind you. not wbst msy happen 1000 years from now, but so far you have done nothing toward con servation that would not have naturally happened It you had not been there. Mr. Greeley's only answer was: "We have preserved the title to the land." Asked how the land or the title would have been injured if the Forest Service had not preserved the title, Mr. Greeley said: There has been soma demand for that timber, sufficient to result In indiscriminate cutting. Danger to timber which is worthless except for piling, fuel and wood pulp, and which is so sparse that no logger would cut it for lumber! Chairman Plttman proceeded to put Mr. Greeley on the rack in this wise: The chairman Ton say yon have protect ed the title, and I ask yon how. Mr. Greeley Unquestionably by with drawing it from enlry. The chairman Then I ask. what danger haa there been up until now? air. Greeley I do not know. The chairman Can you not Imagine any? Tell me what danger there has been op to now. - . . Mr. Greeley I understand 'the homestead laws are applicable to Alaska. The chairman Do you think that would Injure the title? Do you Imagine a home steader settling there would injure that title? Mr. Greeley It has Injured the title to millions of acrea In the States. The chairman Are you opposed to home steaders? Mr. Greeley No, sir. The chairman Are yon opposed to bona fide homesteaders on any land? Mr. Greeley There is no such thing as bona fide homesteading except on agricul tural lands, and any homesteading on land which is not agricultural is fraudulent. The chairman Cannot timber land be ag ricultural land? Mr. Greeley Oh. yea. The chairman Are you opposed to home steading land Just because it has timber on It? Mr. Greeley No, sir. The rhairmsn Is there not agricultural laxd within that preserve? Mr. Greeley Our reports Indicate a very small amount of widely scattered tracts, forming altogether a perfectly negligible percentage of the whole. The chairman Now I understand what you have done. We have come down to this point so far: That you have taken In 12. 000.000 acres of Isnd. 4.OO0.000 acres of which haa some commercial timber on It. according to your own testimony, the com mercial timber character of the land being estimated at 700O feet per acre. You have done nothing toward -conservation other than would have naturally happened If yon had not been there. The Government can refuse patent to a homesteader who attempts to se cure land by fraud. It -can prosecute a man who Illegally cuts timber on Government land. The timber is of small value. If any, and covers only one-third of the reserve. There was ob viously an ulterior motive in creating the reserve. That motive was to prevent settlement, to prevent open ing of the coal land, to obstruct con struction of railroads until Congress could be induced to pass laws govern ing the disposal of the public domain such as the reservatlonlsts approve. They are engineering a hold-up. QUARTERLY. WATER PAYMENTS. The Information is given by the De. partment of Publio Utilities that, al though water users may now pay one or three or more months in advance, the great majority of bills are sent out monthly. Tet when asked what advantage a compulsory quarterly pay ment plan would have for the con sumer, the reply is made that "it is more convenient to pay bills three times a year than to pay them twelve times a year." It is obviously .more convenient to go to the pay station three times a year than it Is to go twelve times, but convenience also embraces ability to pay. Apparently a great majority of the water users find it more conve nient from a financial standpoint now to pay monthly, as they sacrifice the optional convenience of paying quar terly. Convenience is not wholly a matter of time expenditure. There is hope held out that the an nual saving to the water department by the quarterly payment plan will make feasible a reduction in water rates. The Oregonlan offers a guess that if a 10 per cent deduction were of fered today to all who would pay water bills -three months in advance, a ma jority would still pay by the month. It is a dull man who does not know that he can save materially on living expenses by buying a season's fuel and a year's household supplies in advance. But the man-w ho. cares most about such a saving is generally the one who has not the cash in hand to effect it. Compulsory payments of water rates by the quarter would doubtless cause more delinquencies and more cutting off of water supply. The city might not suffer- from such result, as the 50 cents fee for turning on the flow again no . doubt reimburses it. But the man whose necessity compelled him to neglect payment would have small comfort in the saving of trips to the water ' pay station or even in the knowledge that his current bill had been reduced when he measured these "conveniences" against the ex torted half dollar. MAKE FOREIGN POLICY NATIONAL. It is well that President Wilson has taken the Senate committee on for eign relations into his confidence on his Mexican policy. It would have been better had he invited the aid of the committee in formulating that policy. With the co-operation of the leaders of both parties, he could have been sure of the backing of a prac tically united Nation. Small opening would have remained for the intrigues of those Americans who for interest ed motives seek to provoke war and of the agents of the Mexican factions. Foreign affairs should be taken out of the domain of party politics, as they are in Europe. The Government should work hand in hand with the men -who through their ability, ex perience and position in the Senate, are qualified to render aid. Senator Root, through his experience as Sec retary of State and through the knowl edge gained on his tour of the Latin- American states, is peculiarly quali fied to give such aid. So. in a leas degree, are Senators Lodge and Bui ton. Had Mr. Wilson called them into consultation, they would doubtl-.ss have met him in the same spirit, would have forgotten party in patriot ism and would have joined him in for mulating a policy which would com mand the united support of the Sen ate and the Nation. As in his inaugu ral address, the President invited the co-operation of all forward-looking men, without regard to party, in do mestic legislation, so in his conduct of foreign affairs ho. should call to his side all patriotic men who are qualified to advise him and are in a position to help. htm. This eourse would have been -pecu liarly wise for a President whose mind has been turned more to internal than foreign affairs and with a Secretary of State who is "green" at the business. But Mr.. Wilson has not even taken the leaders of his own party Into his con fidence. He decides on matters like the Nicaraguan treaty without ascer taining beforehand that It has good prospect of ratification, and learns with surprise that some members of his own party oppose him, while some of the opposite party support him. Had it been announced that the re call of Ambassador Wilson, the refusal to recognize Huerta and the mission of John Land had been decided upon after conference with, and with the ap proval of, the leading men of both par ties in the Senate committee, adverse criticism would have been stilled and public Judgment would have been sus pended to await tha outcorie of the steps decided upon. By this - means much comment which cannot but have aggravated the tension with Mexico would not have been made. The skill with which the Administra tion has so far promoted its policy in internal affairs contrasts strongly with its bungling of foreign relations. Oth er administrations have invited the aid of the opposition; this Administra tion does not even invite that of its own supporters. In the Mexican af fair it has gone ahead with a mystify ing secrecy, though it might have pre vented the mischief it now seeks to undo. In the Nicaraguan affair had acceptability of the treaty by the Sen ate and the attitude of other Ceniri" American states been . ascertained, there would have been no occasion to back up on the proposed protectorate. Good Judgment would have inaugu rated the Bryan peace policy with the signature of a treaty with a first class power, not with a midget like Salvador. That would have won re spect instead of ridicule for it. The foreign policy of every Adminis tration should be neither Republican nor Democratic, but National. It should confine Its politics to domestic affairs. RESULTS MORE IMPORTANT THAN FORM. The man who loves a technicality better than Justice may agree with cer tain newspapers which are criticising Government activity in the Dlggs-Cam-inettl case. The Mann white slave law was enacted to curb and prevent importations to one state from an other of women for engagement in commercialized vice. But here we have the Government invading the po lice powers reserved to the State of California to punish persons who were not engaged in actual white slave traffic and who could be prosecuted under state laws just as well. So runs the argument. The reasoning Is not entirely novel. When the Mann law was before Con gress it was attacked on the theory that, as the white slave traffic is not interstate commerce, the law would be unconstitutional, and it was also con tended that the law would invade state rights. Perhaps a sufficient reply is that the United States Supreme Court in the lottery case upheld the right of Congress to prohibit a business in the interests of public morals. But it is argued that the Diggs-Caminettl epi sode had no commercial Incentive. It was not business. It was merely a wild and immoral escapade. But how short a step it is from elopement with a married man to commercial prosti tution is known to all. It Is the al most inevitable end for the girl in the case. With this fact in mind one can hardly distinguish a difference between the Reno case and one in which a city procurer lures an Innocent girl from the country into a prison house of vice. Naturally, the critics of the broad application of the Mann law reserve a high regard for law enforcement and punishment of evil-doers, but we see small cause for worry over the method adopted to Inflict a proper penalty so long as the method is guarded by fair legal formula and insures adequate and speedy Justice. Moreover, Federal recognition of such crimes promotes more certain conviction of the guilty. States are rarely able to secure con victions under adultery statute. Simple adultery is known as the hardest crime to fasten legally upon him who com mits it. The Federal white, slave law Is the most effective instrument we have ever had in curbing a widespread form of Indecency and immorality. Its value should not be hampered by worship of abstract doctrines or by bowing to shadowy jurisdictional prerogatives. TUB NEW1 SCHOOL READERS. Once a year the Independent has the useful habit of publishing a list of the new textbooks it has received and making some comment upon them. This year the list is a long one and in many respects encouraging. It is particularly interesting to observe the industry of the textbook writers who are concerned with the mother tongue. The Independent mentions 125 of their works, and we suppose there must be others which that periodical haa overlooked. Supplementary reading seems to call for a great deal of ef fort. We all know how arid the old fashioned school reading book was. The selections were usually of a high ly moral tone, but there was little else to recommend them; Their style was dull and their substance often silly. It seldom occurred to the maker of reading books for school children to select his matter from good authors. Like the fatherly Chinese fish which chews the food for its little ones into fine hash, these laborious providers cut and slashed and diluted until noth ing was left that resembled literature. In the up-to-date supplementary read ing books there is a praiseworthy at tempt to give children Fomethlng sen sible to occupy their minds. The regular reading books of the course may be as fragmentary and empty as ever, but those Intended to fill In the mental chinks and crev ices are quite human. One of them contains six pioneer stories which seek to make children acquainted frith the early history of some of the Western states. Oregon, among others, enjoys this distinction. Another supplemen tary reading book gives the story of Hawaii, while still another tells about the stars. Such volumes must be in comparably better reading for pupils than their ordinary textbooks. It were to be wished that they might be used in classes to the exclusion of the "adopted series," but we suppose the law will not permit. In the olden time children, were starved at school. There was nothing for them to read except their primers, fourth readers and so on. Now there Is a plethora of matter and their intellectual stom achs are as likely to be destroyed by overfeeding as by hunger. The school master of former days was on net tles lest his pupils should read too much. He wanted every sentence an alyzed and parsed, every word traced to its derivation, every allusion pur sued to its source. Reading was made a slow and exceedingly painful proc ess, so slow and painful that children hated it and never opened a book after they left school if they could avoid It. The modern teacher encourages wide reading. Volumes are heaped up around the child and his mind flooded with stories both orally and from the printed page. We should imagine that the Ideal method might lie somewhere between these two extremes. Most men who have made an In tellectual mark in life have been great readers, but not of rubbish. They have managed by hook or crook to get hold of the world's best books and devour them. William Cullen Bryant, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lin coln were omnivorous readers, but al ways of books which were famous. Benjamin Franklin tells in his auto biography what a struggle he made to obtain the world books, as they have been-called, i and what an effect they had upon his mind. Holmes says that in his opinion every bright boy and girl ought to be "turned loose in a good library" and allowed to select whatever books they like. They will read some which they cannot under stand, but what of It? Intelligence will fill in the gaps later on in life. It is a thousand pities that so many young people of -our day pass through school without reading Plutarch, "Par adise Lost," "The Pilgrim's Progress" and half a dozen other books of that rank. Why should not Bacon's "Es says" be made part of the regular course? If it is not read in school it never will be read in all likelihood. We do not mean that it should be an. alyzed and parsed. Heaven forbid that we should be so foolish. But children might read those immortal essays with infinite profit even if they did not understand more than half the text. Then there is Pope's "Essay on Man." the finest didactic poem ever written. It contains almost all the great platitudes upon which virtue is nourished and heroism sustained, and they are put so melodiously, and slip so smoothly into the memory that, once read, they become possessions forever. Boys of ten are ready for "The Essay on Man." It will do them more good at that age than ever aft erwards. What school course contains even a vestigo of it? The supplementary reading books which the Independent catalogues are, most of them, sensible and scientific to the last degree, but they are not lit erary. Now we contend that the lit erary quality Is the one thing needful In teaching the young to read. Sci ence they will get later. Sense will be driven into them by the harsh cir cumstances of life. But if they do not acquire the literary taste when they are at school they never will. When are they to read Plutarch, "Don Quixote," "Gil Bias" and "Paradise Lost"? We have heard a man of ripe years and great eminence roll off page after page of Milton's great poem. He had learned it by heart at college and never forgotten it. What place has "Paradise Lost" as sheer poetry in the modern college? Would not the ordin ary fraternity or sorority member smile cynically at the very thought of wasting time over a book so out of date? In our opinion -the return to great literature Which was attempted in the schools and colleges a few years ago was a most praiseworthy move, or would have been If it had not been spoiled. The Inveterate pedagogical love of cutting everything by the tape line intervened and turned literature into wooden blocks. If teachers could only have allowed the children to read books as books, what a blessing it would have been. Even now it Is not too late to go back and correct the fatal blunder. Instead of flooding the schools with new and watery supple mentary reading, why not introduce the children to the great and eternal books before It is forever too late? In view of the facts that our exports in the last fiscal year reached a total of 22,465.000,000 and that 1 1.600.000, 000 of this total consisted of manu factured or partly manufactured goods, our foreign commerce seems to experience a tolerably healthy growth under the protective tariff. Tet one of the loudest pleas for a revenue tariff is, that protection shuts us out of foreign markets. How did we get that SI. 600. 000,000 worth through- the barrier? That is a great controversy existing between the Humane Society and its friends and the health people as to proper floors for stables for the horse. The health faddists insist that concrete la the only sanitary material, while the humane followers Just as vigorously advocate plain dirt. If the horse could talk, it is likely he would ex press preference for the harder ma terial, with plenty of straw bedding, and he would be more than half right. Theoretically the battleship fleet which attacked the Long Island forts in the recent maneuvers were sunk, but we shall never know whether the defenses of New York are impregna ble until a real attack Is made with real Bhells and the forts retort In kind. There is a psychological difference be tween men engaged in maneuvers and men engaged in battle. A Chinese newspaper estimates that at the rate at which the work is pro gressing the framing of the constitu tion will take twenty-three years and cost 280, 000, 000. Why don't the Chi nese hire Mr. URen to prepare a con stitution for them? He would polish off the job, with all modern improve ments, in a week. The New York Sun always had a weakness for poking fun at freak names. It gave Hoke Smith no rest when he was Cleveland's Secretary of the Interior. .Now it has discovered Leake Carraway, secretary of the Greater Charlotte Club In North Caro lina, and Peru Hutt in Pike County, Ohio. i Bryan might also apologize for his personal conduct in flitting around on the lecture platform when foreign re lations demanded his presence in Washington. ' California harbor bonds carry 4 per cent Interest and a 10 per cent com mission to anyone who can effect a sale. What alls them? Lawson rot no answer to his offer of millions to fight Tammany. Perhaps they don t take him very seriously back home way. As a special feature cubeb cigarettes might be added to the grapejuice menu of an official banquet in Washington. Miss Pankhurst had to be released to prevent starvation in a hunger strike. Chip off theold block. There are 100,000 more men than women in Oregon. Cheering news for the spinsters. That surpasses hades, to put it po me i. There are prospects that the next Rose -Festival will be worth while. Another man didn't know it was loaded. Notice of funeral later. Congress will remain in session until the snow flies. Cold outlook. The Morning Call follows the Forty- niner and the Silurian. "Beavers Win Again" is becoming a familiar headline. The Mazamas will have to -try Mo Klnley next. The Colts, too, are playing some ball. NEW COMPETITOR IX THE FIELD. Cheap Japaaeae Cotton Goods Grave Factor In Fixing Tariff. JACKSONVILLE. Or, Aug. 14. (To the Editor.) Is there a deliberate at tempt being made to ruin the manufac tures of this country? How Is it pos sible to have two sets of legislator working in opposition to each other. We In Oregon are raising the working class to a higher plane, and our Sena tors at Washington are In favor of free trade. Constant tariff Irritation Is as bad as war. Let every laboring man give his experience of scarcity of work when our tariff tinkers get to work. On every hand we hear of the great free trade boom In Britain: but how few mention the fact that 3S7 se curities on the British Stock Exchange on June 20, 1907, represented in value 3.843.000,000 and on June 20, 1912. they had depreciated 488,000,000. A great cry Is raised by the free traders about cheaper clothing. Everybody should know that York shire. England, is the center of the woolen trade, and Lancashire Is the center of the cotton trade. I would like the Oregonlan to give us an idea of the freight bills alone, paid by us, for those goods. We cannot raise cotton In Oregon; but we can and do, on a small scale, raise wool. Furthermore, as an ex-Lancashire mill manager, I can say without fear of contradiction that no place has the climatic and power facilities that Oregon possesses for the successful operation of mills. Neither the East nor the South can compare with Washington and Oregon. If the farmers, gardeners and orchard men of Oregon could dispose of their surplus here, how much freight money would be saved to them? But if our learned professor President signs the present tariff bill in Congress, our natural resources must lie dormant. I maintain, from practical experience, also from present conditions, that free trade la the very life of Britain s manu factures. and will be the opposite to our Industries. Our main articles of clothing are made from cotton. Before the Payne-Aldrich bill was passed, our President (Mr. Taft) had a commission appointed to go fully into the condi Hons here and abroad. I believe it would be of great service in combating the present proposed cotton schedule, again to quote the difference in wages of Lancashire and American cotton mills. Our mills made only an average of 4.79 per cent In 1913 to the English man's 12H per cent. For the benefit of the free traders, I quote the trade re turns of 1912 In cotton goods exported from the United Slates aud Great Brit ain. The United States exported 142, 500,000 worth of cotton yarns and cot ton manufactures, against Britain's fell. 000.000. I can see the satisfied smile on the free trader's countenance as he reads these figures; but let him. and every true American, ask himself, 'How was this accomplished?" Having gone through the mill, I will give you my version of it After the Civil War English and American capitalists realized that the proper place for mills was near the cot ton fields. Textile mill machinery was imported in great quantities and em ployes in large numbers. Then arose the question of competition. Labor here demanded higher wages and to protect them a tariff had to be estab lished, and It is Just the same in all our Industries. In time the snrewd American employer realized that Rus slan ant Italian work people would be cheaper than the English and Ameri cans and they gradually adopted them The Lawrence strikers were of this class. Docs our President desire tha Ameri can people to compete with Japan or England? How would he like his boy or girl to get up at t A .M., go to work at o'clock and work until S A M-, then eat -his breakfast out of a lunch basket; at 8:30 A. M. go to work again until noon; then, tired, go to school for half a. day, and be com pelled to keep up with his studies? In Japan, boys, girls and women work 13 hours per day, seven days per week. Their mills work day and night and their wages are one-sixth of ours. They are a new competitor and In 1912 they exported $44,303,362 worth of cotton goods after supplying their own wants of 62,000,000 people. And they have done this with only 2.192,000 spindles. Of course we were their best custom ers, taking over one-third. It seems to me we need labor representatives in Congress, not professors. My chil dren are born here, and It Is my duty to protect them. Who else wilL If we must admit one necessity, why not an other, free of duty? How would it suit Mr. Wilson to admit a few Jap anese professors? How many of your department stores In Portland have for sale a spool ot sewing cotton made in America? Take the balance sheet of J. P. Coates for 1912. It resembles Morgan's banking bouse more than an Industry. If I buy a spool of the "American Thread Com pany" I notice that it Is British-made. It is a small concern and here Is the yearly balance sheet for 1912. After charging 8248.000 for bond interest and 523,36o for depreciation, the profits for the year 1912 amounted to $968,210 and $922,215 was brought forward. A dividend of 12 per cent was paid, car rying forward $968,155. Why not take off the present duty and annihilate American opportunities? Let us con tinue agitating for free trade, if we are prepared to live as other na tions do. Some free traders make the assertion that England has no farming land. That is false, and before many years Lloyd George will frame laws to enable the people to farm tbeir land, and then our surplus will not be as easily dis posed of. The country Is far from over populated; In fact, there Is today 17, 500,000 acrea of permanent grass land that could be sown to grain. When this land is thrown open to the people, and we have free trade, it is a certainty that we shall have to accept the same class of wages, and be on the sarhe plane, as all European countries, or else close our mills, reduce our produc tion of cereals and clothe ourselves in Japanese cotton goods. If the press and labor unions of this country do not exert themselves to defeat the new tariff bill. In a very few years great discontent and poverty will cause our legislators to undo their work. JOHN GREAVES. Saare Hem Defended. PENDLETON, Or., Aug. 13. (To the Editor.) I note your reference in an editorial column to a reported plentl fulness of sage hens In Eastern Ore gon. Your comment thereon indicates that the writer does not consider the flesh of the sage hen of suitable qual ity for palatable food. The natural in ference, based on this assumption, would be that this fine game bird is not worthy of legal protection. Did tbe writer of the article in ques tion ever taste the flesh of a sagehen? I "ha ma doots." If be did he must surely have gotten hold of an old tough cock, out of season, or else, or whoever prepared the dish, must have been totally ignorant of the proper method for preparing and cooking it. The sage hen is a fine gam bird, both from the viewpoint of the sportsman and that of the epicure. They do not appear to resist the influences of ad vancing civilisation, however, and seem to be getting scarcer every year. I for one am anxious that tha apparent trend toward extermination may be checked by an Improved sentiment of obedience of our fairly good game pro tective code. C. F. CRANSTON. Mosst Hood Route. PORTLAND, Aug. 14. (To the Edi tor.) Please mention In The Oregon lan, for the benefit of autoists, that the road to Mount Hood on the north side of the Sandy River, from Bull Run east to where it connects with road on south side of river, is in good condition for travel and is not impas sable, as Is generally believed. WM. HAIGHT. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan ot August 17, 1863. F. W. McDanlela. formerly Deputy Sheriff of Wasco County, was shot at Canyon City by Van Tlchnor, the Boise expressman, and died on the following Saturday. ' Lieutenant George Williams, of the Regular Army, son of Hon. Elijah Wil liams, of Salem, distinguished himself by his fearless and patriotic bravery at the recent battle of Gettysburg, though be was so severely wounded that it was necessary to amputate one ot his legs. A small secession performance is go ing on at Visalla, Cal. The Union men ana ineir opponents are greauy exas perated. The Wells House was burned Inai nlirht TK. .An..ainnilt thrMiB retaliation and declare civil war com- mencea. The congressional Investigating com mittee In the New York custom-houBe has discovered that the beads of that institution receive the following sal aries: Collector Barney. (83.600 per annum; Surveyor Andrews. $61,430, and Naval Officer Sennison, $81,930. Several of our most enterprising merchants are taking active measures to urge upon Congress the propriety and necessity of making Portland, a port of entry and of establishing here a branch mint and a marine hospital. The dedication of the new Beth Is rael schoolhouse took place last Sat urday. The pupils. $5 in number, bear ing a beautiful Union flag, marched to the -new schoolhouse. The company were entertained with speeches and songs In English and German by the young ladles and gentlemen. Master Myer Harris recited Drake's "Ode to the American Flag." Mr. Mansfield ad dressed a few remarks to the scholars, after which Governor Glbbs delivered an address. The steamer Rival, plying between this place and Oregon City, broke her crank near Milwaukee on Saturday on her way up the river. The E. D. Baker went to her assistance. QUERIES ON WATER PAYMENTS Pertinent Iilormilloa Given Relative to Quarterly System. PORTLAND. Aug. 15. (To the Edi tor.) I have heard so many conflict ing statements concerning the pro posed new method of collecting water rates that I am unable to decide what really would be best. Therefore, for my benefit and the benefit of others as well, will you please publish the tacts concerning the following ques tions: 1. Can a person pay for three or more months under the present plan? 2. What advantage would the pro posed plan have over the present plan as far as the consumer Is concerned ? 3. Would the estimated saving of $30,000 on the present system bring the expense down to where it was on the old system a year ago? 4. Would all meter deposits, whether large or small, be Increased to three times the present amount? 5. In case of a leak In a house hav ing a meter would the tenant be liable for the' total amount of the water as shown by the meter for the full three monthsT 6. Would the owner bo held liable for the water bill of a tenant who might move out without paying the bill then due?. 7. Would there be more than ten days, as at present. In which to pay a quarterly bill before the water would be turned off? VIOLA PATTON. The following answers have been uupplied by the -City Department of Publio futilities and are the views of that department: " . -' 1. Yes, but unless a uniform sys tem is adopted whereby all accounts are billed quarterly no advantage is gained, a with the great majority of the bills being sent out monthly no reduction in the force of accountants is possible. 2. ' It is more convenient to pay bills three times a year than to pay them II times a year. By the estab lishment of the quarterly payment plan It will be possible to effect a great sav ing annually and the mora the cost of operating and maintaining the water system is reduced the more likelihood there is of the annual water rates be ing reduced. 3. This estimated saving would, ot course, be one element in reducing the cost, though not the only one under the proposed rearrangement. 4. All meter rates are now paid In advance. After the first month the consumer pays for each ensuing month a sum based on the consumption of the previous month. Under the new system the first quarterly advance payment would be based on the experience of the quarter Immediately preceding. In a case where a primary connection is made the first advance payment would be three times the minimum monthly rate. If a consumer moves at any time he Is entitled to a refund ot the unused portion of his payment. 6. The same rule would apply as at present. The consumer is respon sible for all leaks Inside the property line. 6. It is the plan of the Utilities De partment ultimately to make the prop erty liable for the payment of water bills, but for the present the rules now in effect apply and the consumer is required to pay in advance. 7. There would not be more than 10 days allowed. Holland Colny to Be Founded. PORTLAND. Aug. 15. (To the Ed itor.) In one of your editorials today you say: "It were greatly to be de sired that some wealthy and patriotic citizen should take up the work of founding one of these foreign colo nies " The very work you wish for Is being done by the Willam ette Valley Irrigated Land Company, who have had a representative on the road for several weeks visiting the Holland-American dairymen in a cer tain part of the United States, making them attractive propositions to form a Holland colony on the company's Iar.d near Marlon. All the company requires is thrift and ability. The colonists do not have to make any pay. ment for two years. On the other hand, the company will buy them the neces sary dairy cows, for which they can pay out of the cream checks. All the newcomers have to do 1s to erect small homes and get busy. Such families can be bad without having to go to Europe for them, and the Kreat advantage ia that they are acclimated and can use their voice to make their wants known, while the imported foreigner is absolutely help less in that respect and has to spend years in gaining a knowledge of our tongue and methods. JOHN H. HARTOG. How He Advertised. Houston Post. Wife Be sure and advertise for Fido In the morning newspapers. Next day the wife read the follow ing: Two dollars reward Lost, a 'mangy lapdog, with one eye and no tall. Too fat to walk. Responds to the nama of "Fido." Smells like a monkey house. If returned stuffed 15 reward. Twenty-five Year Ago From The Oregonlan of August IS. 1S3 Portland. Me.. Auc. 15. Btaine ar rived here at 1 o'clock. There was a large crowd at the depot and loud en thusiasm. Seattle. Aug. 15. Today Ed Clark and J. D. Symons killed in the North End of town a large she bear and a small cub. Indianapolis. Aug. 15. About 600 visitors from Kush. Decatur and Dela ware counties cal cd upon General Har rison this morning. Mayor Van B. De Lashmutt yesterday voted an ordinance for the repair ot Multnomah street by the city. ; The vote was unanimously sustained. D. P. Thompson and C. H. Dodd.. as a committee from the Board of Trade, asked the Council to attend to the dredging of Swan Island bar. Professor T. H. Crawford has com pleted his 11th and final report as Su perintendent of Schools. Mr. Dana, of Portland, has ascer tained the altitude of Mount Adams to be 13,785 feet. - G. F. Telfer, corner of Ninth and G streets. East Portland, is the first to beat the Salem record for peaches. The largest of the Salem peaches measured 10V4 inches In circumference. Mr. Telfer sends a peach measuring Inches. The horse attached to tha delivery wagon of Malarkey's market ran away down Morrison street yesterday, throw. Ing out the driver, Henry FriedenthaL The wagon struck Dr. Perry's buggy, damaging It somewhat, - The Unitarian Church will be opened next Sunday and services will be con ducted in tha morning by Rev. E. C Smith, a recent graduate of the Cam bridge Divinity School. Major-General James R. Carnahan, of Indianapolis, commanding the uniform rank of the Knights ot Pythias, ar rived in the city yesterday. The river and harbor bill provides for a board of engineers to investigate the feasibility of constructing a boat railway at The Dalles and Celilo. MORS OX WATER PAYMENT PLAN City Proposes to Profit From Depriva tion of Many. PORTLAND, Aug. 14. (To the Edi tor.) The plan proposed by Commis sioner Daly to pay water rates three months in advance, at first . glance seems all right. And according to Mr. Daly's statement would save to the city something like $15,000 per an num, as a result of a reduction of ex penses made necessary in the custo mary monthly collections heretofore. This seergs quite an item in favor ot the city as a whole, but what about the few who" are deprived of said amount In the- interest of the city at targe? No doubt those from whom the year ly amount of $15,000 shall be with drawn will feel the loss quite percep tibly. It la simply robbing Peter to pay Paul, when Paul Is much more able to stand the loss than Peter. Then, be sides. It is claimed that the plan will not inconvenience nor make any dif ference in price or otherwise with the consumer. But If they take the last three months as an average for the entire year, as has been suggested, it will make quite a difference In cost to many, as their water bills are al ways much larger during the Sum mer months on -account of water used on lawns and gardens. And unless some allowance Is made for this there Is sure to be a great deal of dissatis faction. B. JUST. Preferences In Languages. . Everybody's. Magazine. A boy who had been absent from school for several days returned with his throat carefully swathed and pre sented this note to his teacher: "Please don't let my son learn any German today; his throat Is so sore he can hardly speak English." Diplomacy at tke Barber's. Life. Mr. Almost Bald Tony, my hair Is getting thin.' Tony (the barber) So! Which on? Features for Sunday GIRL BUYERS Fifteen hun dred young bnsiness women invade New York to pur chase for the great depart ment stores of the country. Why the girl buyer ia com ing more and more into de mand is shown in an attrac tive page feature. CARRANZA Is he the Moses of Mexico! A correspond ent gives the inside story of the leading revolutionist and his methods. The article is illustrated by snapshots. 15,000 LOVE LETTERS They were written by one woman to one ' man to Vic tor Hugo. A half-page fea ture. IS MAN LOSING HIS MAS CULINITY? Frau May rader says he is and blames civilization for making of man an effeminate creature. SACRED CATTLE FOR MEAT How Zebus are be ing crossed on the Texas ranges for American mar kets. BASEBALL CIVILIZES THE FILIPINOS Although the islanders opposed our bayon ets, they have taken up our baseball with a will and are becoming ardent fans. MORE SUMMER GIRL CON FESSIONS Rita Reese writes of the secret of pop ularity with men. Sympathy, she says, is the most potent and powerful weapon a girl can have in winning hearts. POLICE COMMISSION DAYS Theodore Roosevelt . con tributes a chapter on the days when he was remoulding the New York police department. THREE SHORT STORIES COMPLETE SUNDAY Many Other Features Order today of your newsdealer.