. . TTTT? rUni mJ9 V mm m m . Intend at Portland. Orgon. Poatofrir. u cond-elas matter. . SubscrlpUoa K.te lnTrlsblr In Adrnnce. CBT MAIL) Dally. Fonday Included, ona 7ax ? ., Llljr. Sunday Incladed. six months J Jlly. Sunday Included, three m .ntns . .- "7 Iaily. Sunday Included, one montb lially, without Bunday. one year ,jj taily. wltbeat Sunday, sis montha J--6 Daily, without Sunday, threa rooatna "M Dally, without Sunday, one rnont Weekly, one year 10 fcnaday, one year s.&e Suaday and weekly, one year (BT CAKRIR) M00 JaJ!y. sonasy Included, ni year " Dally. 6unday Included, one month Bow t. Kaaalt Send rto'tlce money . upreea order or "rOD',cS5."y are local bank. Stamp, cola or addreae at aeadera riak. Olo P,.0"'c aa" la full, tncladlnc county and atata. Poata R.tia to IS pit's. 1 -.J,' to 2 paaea. a eanu; M to 4o Hi. tau; 78 to Id pass, cents. Forai n ace. double ratea. ' v Eaater. Boalaoa Offlcea Verree Co"; II n. jj.w yora. BrunawicK tulldina. cm caio. btefer halldLna. taa Fran.. Oil ice It. J. Bldwell Co, T4il Market atreet. POKTXASI). WED-MIAY, DEC. 11, . BrRXESOCE THAT STINGS. The ridicule heaped upon the Wil son policy In the Philippines by the arabao Club stings because it ex presses the opinion entertained of that policy by men who know the Philip pines from having served there and from personal contact with the Fili pinos. It is an opinion held not only by Army and Navy officers, who com pose the Carabao Club, but by civilian official who have served In the is lands. It is the opinion of the men who know as opposed to that of the men who theorize at long range. The men who poked fun at the Ad ministration policy were open to cen sure only because they seem to have gone beyond mere harmless fun and because they occupy responsible posi tions under the officials they hold up to ridicule. Their antics differed from those of the Gridiron Club In the fact that there was a sting in their satire, and that the latter body, being com posed of newspaper men, who owe no loyalty to the men they lampoon, need not consider co'nsequences. either to the Administration or to its mem bers. The Carabao Club men, being instruments for the execution, of the Government's policy, were not free to give public expression to an unfavor able opinion of that policy. But in making the Carabao Club's doings the occasion for public con demnation, the President and his Cab. Inet officers have made a mountain of a molehill. They have advertised the fact that their policy is condemned by those who. having personal knowl edge, are In the best position to Judge. The surest way to take the edge off satire is to make light of it. By tak ing it seriously the President creates the impression that his jovial critics have made a palpable hit. A private reprimand would have better gained his end. for it would have deprived the critics of that publicity which he should have least desired. One can read between the lines of the dispatches that the censure of the iarabaos had its source in Secretary Bryan. In the eyes of -the Secretary of State every person wearing- the uni form of the Army or Navy has horns and cloven hoofs and is a votary of the hated militarism. From him came the Inspiration of the new Philippine policy, and he takes to himself per sonally any criticism of It. Yet Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bryan are reaping only the natural fruit of their entire foreign policy. They have caused the United States to shrink Into Us shell. They have meddled in Mexico and threatened to meddle in all Latin America, yet have renounced the only means by which other na tions can be induced to tolerate their meddling. Is there any wonder that these policies come in for occasional satires? Mr. Bryan has removed the men of training, experience and proved ability from the diplomatic service and has turned over to spoilsmen the offices by which we cultivate friendly rela tions with other nations. He recalls Rockhill and appoints Plndell, who is so obviously incapable of holding his own with the able diplomats he would meet In fit. Petersburg, and whose ap pointment was made under such cir cumstances that the Senate committee on foreign relations has unanimously called for the entire correspondence relating thereto and has held up the appointment until it Is produced. Mr. Bryan has sent to Santo Domingo a mediocre lawyer and stump orator, whose arrival was promptly followed by a scandal. These things aro done after we had been for years building up a diplomatic service to mnteh those of other nations, a service where nwrlt was everything and party was nothing and which had lifted us to our proper ranks in the estimation of the world. The splendid work of Sec retaries Hay. Root and Knox is thrown to the winds In order that the hungry spoilsmen may be fed. - The methods by which our diplo matic service was enlisted in the service of American commerce in ac cordance with the practice of other nations, were branded "dollar diplo macy, and were repudiated, but what have we in their place but BO-cent diplomacy? The office must not be degraded by being used to help our merchants to extend their trade, but it may be degraded Into a reward for po litical service. The Bryan policy has become an object of reprobation to newspapers of every shade of political opinion, not excepting many of the staunchest up holders of Mr. Wilson's domestic pol- icy. Mr. Bryan has, therefore, be come touchy, and when a social gath ering of Army officers, recalling mem ories of their Philippine campaigns. sings one of the songs of the lnsur ' rection possibly with no thought of current political affairs, he flies to his chief with a demand that they be dis ciplined. The Carabaos may be disci plined, but the chorus of disapproval of the ignoble Bryan foreign policy will only sound the louder. VICTiAuAX AOS DESPISED. A proposition by Mrs. Horton, of Buffalo, that the woman of America erect a statue of Queen Victoria has caused the argument about women to break out in a new place. The ' good Queen's friendship for this coon try when we needed friends Is for gotten by American apologists of the suffragettes, and Edna Kenton. In The Century, scoffs at "the early Victorian woman" as "the logical finished prod' uct of woman molded perfectly to man's world." and the Victorian era is called "the falsest of eras." Frederic Harrison, In The Nin teenth Century and After, struck sav age blows at the new Georgian era. which has followed the Victorian, by saying: The saw craaa under which wa are now aufferlns is the Cult of the Foul worehlp or admiration of the oily, the natty, the brutal, poetry, romance, nrmw, ... sculpture, muilc. manners, even dress are now recatt to en It popular taste, by adopting forme which hitherto have been regarded as unpleaslnff. rroae or actually loathsome. To be refined la to be g-oody-s-oody"; gutter lane le lo "actual" : If a ruffian tramp knll hia pal It le "o strong"; and If on Ihe stage hla ragged paramour bltea off a rlvara ear the half-penny, press ecreame with delight. Painters are warned against any thing "pretty." ma they dab on bright tints 10 look Ilka a linoleum pattern, or they so for subjects to a thieves' kitchen. The one aim In Ufa, aa In art. la to shoe one's ra mother. And when the aoclety yon1" danoea In bara lege, the op-to-data girl can dreaa like a atable lad. As the pendulum swung from the Puritanism of Cromwell to the liber tinism of Charles IL. so it seems to have swung again from the prudery and domesticity of Victoria to the blunt frankness and the outbreaks of feminine riot in the days of George V. It may swing back with the sec ond advent of the crinoline. LOCATING Tins ACBTrfcRIUM. Commissioner Brewster announces his purpose to take up anew the pro posal to build an auditorium for Port land. It will be recalled that the city three years ago voted 600,000 in bonds for the construction of a public auditorium and that a commission ap pointed by Mayor Simon carried for ward the preliminary work through the stages of deciding on the archi tectural plans and making a tentative selection of the site; but when the bonds were offered for sale there were no bids on terms acceptable to the city and required by the terms of the proposed issue. Now the bond market Is better, and there is a fair prospect of selling the bonds at par. or better. Meanwhile the new charter has been adopted and the project rests with the City Com mission. The public has observed a diligent ffnrt to secure location of the audl- Slde, on me City 8 means are jiiiau . . . ... . otner reason is in vjm. vm. of tne East Side want the auditorium I It appears now to be taken for granted that the previous large plans for a structure covering more than a block must be modified, and that a single block must be held to be ade quate. There are many single blocks In Portland belonging to the public, and more than one of them is suitable for the auditorium. They are (1) tn Of I HO aUUIlVtlUliit - w r I plaza blocks, (2) the old Lincoln High shnni fSl the Armory. (4) the Me thanics Fair, (5) the present Couch School. The city, the count'and the .school district are all represented In the ownership of these respective blocks; but all belong to the public. It is strange that no practicable proposal for trade or negotiation has been made between these various owners, all Interested alike, or very nearly alike in an auditorium, so as to give the city a desirable site. Here is a practicable problem for some one ,or more of our many pro motion or welfare organizations to take up. BILL OR BEAR OX HOPS The Oregonlan some days since re ported the sale of 200 bales of hops at North Yakima at 25 cents; and it had from one of the parties to the alleged transaction an immediate de mand for correction, or retraction. fnim the other narty The Oregonlan received later a letter also denying the authenticity of its report. Due cor rection was then made, it is timeiy to make a quotation from the North Yakima letter: Thla. aa wall at many of your articles on v i. WMn enrf varr mleleadlna. aa The Oregonlan t the family bible for the hop rrowere. and they look to It for their guid ance. When the hop market la weaX lot of bull artlclea appear in your paper. What do the growera naturally think? They think that you are giving the "right dope"; and that we legitimate dealers, who are trying to bux. hops at their fair value, are bearing tha market. The Orearonlan Is not much con cerned at what the hopgrowers think of the hop dealers, and it is very lit tle concerned about what some hop dealers think of The Oregonlan: but It Is a great deal concerned about what the many thousand hard-work-in r nrl deserving? hODRTOwers of the Northwest think of The Oregonlan. That they regard it as their family Bible is a tribute to the worth ana honesty of its market and other col umns, and' to their knowledge that The Oregonlan Is neither long nor short on hops, and has a primary in terest in seeing that the producer gets full value for his crop and Is not bull dosed or deceived into selling too low, on the one hand, or waiting too long for a better market on the other hand. The Oregonlan frankly tells this hop dealer and eVery other that It is a bull on hops in the sense that every grower is a bull: and It tells them that it is a bull every day in the year, and every year, while your bull dealer of this year is last year's bear, dependent en tirely on how he has guessed the mar. ket, and on whether he has sold long or short. But Its purpose, day in and day out, is to learn the facts about hop quotations, so that it may neither mislead itself nor mislead others. For obvious reasons It Is impossible to rely on the dealers, but it roust determine by its own, study and observations what world's hop conditions are, and it bases its quotations upon actual transactions. Thcra are various reasons why the principals to any sale do not desire, or at least are not concerned; aDout, re porting the price or the details, and not infrequently The Oregonlan is led Into error. But the public knows, as The Oregonlan knows, that the only hasU for the market Is bona fide sales. not mythical, or possible, or condi tional, sales; and the Dona nae rec ord The Oregonlan seeks to give. If there were a hop exchange, or a pub lic market, the task would be easy; but there Is none, and in the conflict nf Interests between the dealers, and often among the growers themselves. the work of giving an autnenuo rec nrJ la attended hv constant difficulties. The Oreronian will continue to do the best it can, and all it can, to give tne iacts. ii ji is ui jicmiuiujiw enough to suit the bear dealers, or the hop ganrblers generally, it will have to worry along without their esteem and support. But .what would the hop facts. It k is not pessimistic mar.. " ' te it n-.r. tn Tin Tart ,h Th. Oregonlan to tnemr " '. 77 In hU remarks upon tne carabao Club dinner. Secretary of the Navy Daniels said. Tha whole Phlllpplna policy of the Got- ernment baa changed, thla Administration mlkln. ayarr- effort to giro Independence . i-- mininnk when they are ready for it IW Ml, " . . . . 1 jr mat Ware a true ucuuiuuu ui mo . . . . 11 . 1 1 Jl torlum on tne iui ouc, v year, iiie ucaui ""'""b - sround partly that sites within the employes was ,7.46 per thousand in . . I.VU tYmnr ln.l,,.o , a Uh 0.91 in Administration pviiy, iugib nvum uc i imbou tuivue . ... n - wy no change. The Roosevelt and Taft tal does not seem to have entertained . . . ... I . 1 w.tl KT JnilK, 1.A mnrmtrmrA Administrations were uiemiug every effort to give independence to the Philippines when tliey are ready for It." The change is aue to tne ract mat the Wilson Administration Is turning MORNING OREGOXTAX. WEDNESDAY. ' T. the government over to the Filipinos before they are ready ror u. XATIOXAL EMERGENCY CORPS. t Secretary Garrison's report presents the Army in a new light. We have been accustomed to regard it as a body of men trained to fight and loafing around waiting for a Var. Mr. Garrison shows it to be an object lesson in sanitation and an ever ready machine for the building of canals and levees, for relief in time of flood, fire and cyclone, and for repair of damage wrought by such disasters. We wanted a canal at Panama mnd sent Army officers. We wished to test a typhoid preventive and we tried it on the Army, with wonderful success. Floods wrecked Dayton and swept down the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys; we sent the Army to aid the sufferers, guard the wreck age and restore the towns to some semblance of order. Forest fires raged, and again we sent the Army. How efficient Is the Army in sani tation can be Judged from its suc cess in conquering typhoid, the dis ease which claimed more victims than bullets among our troops in the Span, lsh war. Compulsory immunization reduced the number of cases to 18 in the year 1912. and five of these occurred in recruits, who had been Infected prior to enlistment. There were only three deaths from typhoid, none of them in immunized cases. Compulsory preventive and other measures reduced the number of cases of venereal diseases In 1912 to less than one-half of the average of the preceding five years. Malarial fever and tuberculosis have been dimin ished, and there has been less sick ness In the camps on. the Mexican border than in the average post. The greatest triumph of sanitation achieved by the Army has been on the Panama Canal, the neaitn or tne zone having improved from year to year. The death rate among an wnne i,xj-ao, iuwv' - - - uu united States it was only 5.38, against F rtt. klnnlr n m r 1 n o e it WHS 9.39, against 10.47, and for all em- nlovea 8.94. aeainst 10.16. Few cities In the United States can show a death rate nearly as low, and they point to It witn great, pnae. The Army Is much more man a fighting machine. It is an object lesson in the efficiency of organiza tion and discipline in the works of I1VI1 iuvij..w w peace as well as in war. whenever an emergency - arises, it does for the people In general what tne Demon stration farm does for the farmer, by rntnnnH 1 n tr nromntlv and Working swiftly, but noiselessly and effective ly- tn da iwhat Is needed. The Army Is a great National emergency corps. A JOURNEY Ji-OUN I THE WOELD. John Henrv Mean has contributed to the Independent an account of the trip round the world which he made for the New York Evening Sun last July. He completed the trip in the shortest time on record, 35 days, 21 hours and some minutes, but in order to accomplish the feat he availed himself of certain advantages not enjoyed by ordinary travelers. For example, in crossing Siberia the train fell behind time on account of a washout. To make up the lost hours Mr. Mears bribed the "engineer to speed up his train. This no traveler not backed by an influential newspa Der. with plenty of money at his dis posal, could have done. A rain, when he reached Chang Chung he was greeted by a brilliant delegation of Japanese officials, who assured him that "the whole South Manchurlan railway was at his dis nosaJ." Bv means of this sort he man aged to reach Fusan only three hours late and there he found that the steamer for Shimonoseki had been held for him. aa it would not have been for an ordinary traveler. With similar favors awaiting him at many points along his route it is no wonder that iVTr Mears made better speed than any of his predecessors. He uti lized the various transportation tems up to the best they could do un der the stimulus of official orders. bribes and favoritism. Of course this Is. no reproach to Mr. Mears, but it shows that his record seta no pace which other people can hope to follow. It is like a trapeze performance at tne circus, interesting enough once in a way, but not for everyday men and women to think of imitating. Mr. Mears availed himself or an other device for gaining time on his trip. He kept Judiciously near to the North Pole. It Is readily understood that a June bur walking round an ap ple will greatly shorten his Journey if he travels close to tne stem. uur circumnavigator acted upon the same nrlnclnle. New York, wnlcn lies in North latitude 41 degrees, was the southernmost point or nts journey. Had be followed the Eouator he would have been obliged to go a great deal farther. The actual distance which he cov ered was, according to his own story, 21,0(6 miles. The equatorial circum ference of the globe is 25,000 miles, w Mears' mlleas-e includes, of course,' all the zigzags he was obliged to make on account or crooicea rail roads, indirect steamer connections and the like. At the Equator he would have had the same obstacles to overcome, only in a form far more serious. It would be Interesting to see how quickly a skillful and ener getic traveler like Mr. Mears could really make a Journey round the world. It is interesting to slip round the top of the earth as he did, and perhaps one may call such a journey "circling pf the globe" if he likes, but it la, a very different thing from going round at the Equator. In hot haste Mr. Mears saw a good many things along his route. He did London In two or three hours, meet ing apparently most of the British notables and omitting no buildings worthy of attention. Very likely he saw the city as thoroughly as the or dinary sightseer and remembered more of it. Arrived at Paris, he found himself with 35 minutes' leisure in which to inspect the Louvre. The - - -,r , . - Venus of Milo enjoyed an adequate share of his notice. He looked at-the crown Jewels and naturally, as a good American, performed his devotions at I LI1 ml . X Morcran collection . . Then Antlpe. done, he flew about tha r-ltv in an automobile. disDOSlne; thus I of thA TClffal Tower. NaDOleon'a tomb champs Elysees with exem- ceierlty. These disagreeable ..v. mnfront all travelers to forelen .... a of , be I . " - thankful to Mr. Mears for showing I t.n tVii-mie-fe t Vi om of tha lanjxt I uwn m.j qui. fc-- o I n ,(ma cm friiihla XJ i uycuso vi . , I J 1..A..WK Y3Alln Kilt Ihal nant. i mm very ncii. w uui o "' ' about the streets and accumulated a fund of observations to be disclosed later, but in the independent article be mentions nothing more Interesting at the German capital than the Rus sian embassy, where "he obtained his "special passport," another favor not forthcoming for ordinary persons who are in a hurry. Rubles play a conspicuous part in Mr. Mears' Russian experiences. He discovered their efficacy at the fron tier, where the customs official passed his baggage for ten rubles. We have mentioned how convenient he found them on the trans-Siberian railroad. Two more of Mr. Mears' Russian ob servations are instructive. One per tains to. pictures. The authorities would not permit htm to use his cam era. He did not obey their orders very strictly and suffered no unpleasant consequences, but the orders existed and could not be officially disregarded. Ostensibly the autocracy frowns on photographers for military reasons. Every picture-taker is a possible spy. But really there is so much in Rus sia that the Czar and his officials have cause to be ashamed of that they would no doubt prohibit the camera though there were no spies on earth. The other fact concerning the Rus sian Empire which Mr. Mears men tions casually may perhaps set some of his readers thinking. The popula tion of that vast realm, he tells us, is 165,000,000, of whom 85 per cent are utterly illiterate. This means that their minds and bodies are at the ab solute disposal of the government for any purpose they may wish to accom plish. Suppose they should wish some day to undertake a crusade against Germany and Western Eu rope. Holy Russia would pour forth her countless millions. Inspired by the priests and fortified by tralnloads of ikons and it is very interesting to speculate upon what the consequences might be. Perhaps the stories of Tamerlane and Jenghis Khan would appear in a new edition revised to fit the circumstances of the twentieth century. The Oregonlan pointed out years ago, when Porflrlo Diaz' troubles be gan, that the Mexican land question was at the bottom of the disturbance. Most of our contemporaries compla cently overlooked the truth then, but now they are all taking it up as a new and wonderful discovery. Dlsz brought on the revolution by robbing the peas ants of their land, which he lawlessly turned over to great proprietors. After having been assured that the Mexican federal army was completely routed in the whole of Northern Mex ico, we now learn that they are threat ening an attack on Chihuahua, the rebel stronghold. Not even a Phila delphia lawyer could keep track of the tangle. A woman la In jail at Eugene for stealing an umbrella. Distressing as It may seem, the umbrella, like the dog, is property, and one who would get one without paying must needs go to church for it, where detection is difficult. Secretary Bryan is td speak at the annual banquet of the Kansas State Democratic Club and 250 gallons of grapejulce have been ordered for the occasion. Great- self-restraint will be necessary to prevent a disgraceful orgy. ' - President Wilson has' ordered the White House mint bed destroyed. Ap parently he refuses even to eat mint sauce with lamb, because the mint in the Julep has been keeping bad com pany for so many, years. Chicago women having objected to tobacco fumes at the pools, men re taliate by objecting to perfumes. Be tween cabbage fumes and strong per fumes there Is Indeed little choice. TV. si-a tnlri tn n Kaw TJenartment announcement that the price of beef has been forced down, but the humble shopper is unable to confirm this re port at the butcher shop The Carabaos blame it on tho press agent. "Therein they differ from Captain Coghlan, of a dozen years ago, who Hoched der Kaiser and stood up and took his medicine. Our floet has lust proved its effi ciency" by a 9000-mile voyage. How ever, the efficient fleet of today may oe mere junk tomorrow, in these fast moving times. " According to a "noted astronomer, the rworld will die in 15,000,000 more years. So the Democrats will have to move a little faster with that currency bill. New York jrangsters fired fifty shots in an early morning duel. Fortu nately Innocent Bystander was not present, so. of course, no on was hit. A Paris monkey has acquired tha morphine habit. Which proves tnat it- Is nosnihln to render the simian quite as low as the human animal. Then there is the charitable citizen who dreams of helping tho poor this Christmas, but puts it off until De cember 26, when he forgets it. The powers have agreed to let Greece keep nine of the eleven. Islands occupied during the late war. What's the matter with the islands? As to President Wilson's huff over the Army-Navy songs, why doesn't he show a little of that spirit over af fronts from Mexico? Ragging has been barred at Med ford. But who would think of danc ing that old-fashioned dance In these tangoing days? The rush for grill reservations for New Year Is already on. Pew space, however, may be secured at a much later date. As to burlesques on the Administra tion's Philippine policy, we insist that the policy itself Is a burlesque. It Is shown that scientific men live longest. They have less to do with nerve-destroying emotion. Milwaukee doctors have decided to ignore the eugenics law. Ruin their business if they don't. Farmers in Gibson County, Indiana, plow with dynamite, so hard is the soil. It's a hard life. A North Dakota mob differs from the Louisiana article solely in the color scheme. Just a week left In which to buy everything for everybody. The footpad and burglar season Is now In full swing;. ; : DECEMBER 17, 1913- I A LEADER, DESFITIi 1 uminr.3 General Villa Described aa "A Disgust ing; Beast in Unman Form." New York Times.. A correspondent of the Sun who once chanced to travel in a train with Gen eral "Pancho" Villa, his newly wedded bride and some of his rough ana sav age followers, writes an enusiiitiuus description of the man who is just now at least dividing attention witn aa nominal chief. General Carranza, as a possible ruler of distracted Mexico. Of Villa this observer says: "I have never seen a more disgustlnp; beast In human form." To justly this narsn characterization, however, he only adds that the ex-bandlt has "a bullet head. black, shifty and beady eyes, ana a burly person which was clad In rutny graucho costume." Change tne wora "shifty" to "quick," as anotner judge might, and the picture Is about what would be expected of a leader engaged in such a war as this. Villa's critic goes on to admit that the man .showed remarkable ability in controllng his rough Boldlers, many of whom had been made obstreperous by too free Indul gence in aguardiente. He took away and threw out of the car windows the bottles of the noisiest, and they sub mitted without protest to this cruel de privation. That the bride was a' peas ant with her hair hanging down her back hardly counts for as much as does the fact, that Villa treated ner with affectionate respect, and it is not fair to be squeamish about the con dition of a gruerrilla warrior's costume. What the man -will become remains to be seen, but he Is eviuenuy weu ad justed to his present time and place. He has shown caution as well as cour age, and from the hunted criminal with a borrowed revolver, as he was "when he joined the Constitutionalists, he has already gone far. General Carranza, who finds him a useful Instrument, doubtless knows that he is also a dan gerous one, but while the .one defends what the other does, the moral differ ence between them is not great. MENACE OP CROWDED CARS Coat of the Journey Meaaurea Far More Than Dollars and Cente. Journal of the American Medical As sociation. A narrow car; seats filled with per sons attempting to read newspapers while the car swings and jolts along its way; aisles jammed with men and wo men, boys and gins and tiny cniiaren, swaying and rubbing one against the A,v.A. i a n H anAtzins. nushlnir and pressing what a sight for a pro gressive age; wnai a sermon i" . moralist; what a despair for the stu dent of public health and hygiene! Endless problems are presented by this picture, seen daily In nearly every American city. Most important is the n.noa trm haith from the thousands of bacteria, hidden in the throats of diseased men and women, ana sprayea directly into a stagnant air, moist and nnmovine- In the absence of sufficient means of ventilation. Virulent organ isms are Inhaled into the throats ana lungs of tired workers and tiny babies, who form an excellent host for their quick cultivation. The fare for the ride Is small, out tne cost canuui u estimated in terms of dollars and cents. Fathers Were Brief. PORTLAND. Deo. 15. (To the Editor.) t -arltto OAnernl WashlnKton in ine Legislature of Virginia, before the Revolu tion, and. durlnK it. with Doctor FranMIn in Congress. I never heard either of them speaK aoove icn 'iu - , - . , any but the main point, which was to decide tne question. . l ney laia ucn nuiuu.. ,j points, knowing that the little ones would follow of themselves. 11 me iirewm -areas errs In too much talking, how can It , ... , - k.riv tn vhinh the neople De owtcrwiw, , - . J - - - send 150 lawyers, whose trade Is to Question . . ..I.M n)!.ln. mnA tttllc hV tllO hourT That 150 lawyers should do business together ought not to be expected Extract from the writings of Thomas Jefferson. How does the above apply to condi tions 120 years after It was written, and does it afford a possible explana tion of the length of time it takes to get a small amount of business through a legislature or a Congress composed of a large number of lawyers? GEORGE C. HOWARD. Exorbitant Fees Charged. PORTLAND, Dec 13. (To the Edi tor.) Among the alleged reforms in troduced by the Commissioner of Pub lic Works is a charge of 2 for a per mit for laying each lineal 60 feet of sidewalk. Even if any charge should be made, this is exorbitant, for the City Engineer does nothing except set grade stakes and inspect the work when done. This is not worth more than a fraction of the fee charged. Former administrations were so ready to encourage property owners to lay permanent sidewalks that they charged no fee for engineering, but the general policy seems now to be to punish the man who makes improve ments by fining him and exacting fees at every step. If this is progress, it is progress backward a W. F. RYAN. Underwood Bill and Amendments. nfTTC'WRT.T or.. Dec. 13. (To the cAimr m What is the Underwood bill? 2) What is the 16th amendment? (S) What IS tne inn ameiiuuioui. CLYDE LAUGHLIN. (1) The Underwood bill Is the latest tariff loxc imi Is the expression or tne present Administration on the tariff question. tit The 16th amendment gives Con gress the power to lay and collect taxes on Incomes at the source, witnout ap nnrtlonment amoni? the states and without regard to any census or enu meration. (3) The- 17th amendment provides for the election of United States Sena tors by direct vote of the people. Great Contribution to Xlteratnre. PORTLAND, Deo. 1 (To the Edi tor.) It is a matter of gratification that our member of Congress -has writ ten his biography, for it must be con ceded that a man's life may best be written by himself; for he alone, as in this case, is in possession of what he has done. ,,' Besides, that clearness of narrative and elegance in which are embalmed the personal events and achievements of our member from Oregon furnish a biography the like of which not many have seen or heard. Few things are of such intevest as the progress of the mind and fortunes of a great man, and fortunate it Is that we have been given his career before his death, for the srrave is. a famous keeper of secrets. K CITIZEN. Rights in Second Mortgage. PORTLAND, Dec. 13. (To the Edi tor.) Please tell mew what my rights are in a second mortgage, where ths party defaults payment and tenders the Interest due. , J. A. D. The question is not very definite. If default is in payment of principal the holder of the second mortgage may foreclose and assume the first mort gage, but no rights are surrendered If interest Is accepted and the mort gage allowed to run provided 10 years have not elapsed from the date of ma turity of the mortgage. Bar Examinations, ROGUE RIVER, Or., Dec. 12. (To tha Editor.) Please state how and where to address the State Board of Bar Examiners. R- F. CASEBALT. Write to the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Salem, Or, Half a Century Ago From Tho Oregonlan of December IT. 1S83. City Council fetition oi oirons suu others for a lamppost at the corner- of Morrison and Second streets was re ferred. Contract for improving public o xi-o rA.l to W. H. Frush. Ordinance establishing ferry landing and granting root or stars, sircci ui that purpose was read. C...,W a nov olnnSRS in Which We k". . V. v . " ' - " do not hear of some one's dog being destroyed by poison. Yesterday W. B. Mead's splendid Newfoundland was killed in thi3 manner. Captain Holman, of the mail steamer tv, T-T r'iifh wna nhliEred to Stop ml U1IU ' " . , his engines several times on his last trip up to prevent tne flesiructiuu his paddle wheels by driftwood. 1 The collating of the matter for a : 1 n r. itv rHrni't.irv tn n train beinK pushed forward by Mr. Bushwc-ilcr. J. W. J. Pierson, agent for Grover & Baker sewing machines, proposes to put up at raffle two magnificent broad cloth opera cloaks, valued at $50 each. Twenty-five Years Ago Prom The Oregonlan of December 17, 1SSS. North Yakima, Dec. 16. The Board of Trada was reorganized last night with the following officers: President, J. B. Reavis; vice-president, ti. M. Goodwin; secretary, Fred Reed; corre sponding secretary, E. C. Robertson; treasurer, G. W. Rodman; executive committee, R. K. Nickels, Edward Whltcom, A. B. Weed, W. H. Chap man and M. Bartholett. Evangelist Moody delivered three sermons yesterday, the first at the Presbyterian Church and the others at the Tabernacle. Between 200 and 300 people assem bled in Masonic hall last evening to listen to a rationalistic oration from B. F. Underwood, of Boston. "Moody ism on the Cause and Cure of Revivals," was the subject. Considerable excitement was occa sioned yesterday afternoon by the es cape of a steer from the stock pens at the foot of Alder street. Two squads of I Company, O. N. G., will have a competitive drill tonight. Lewis Ashman, who for the past three years has been connected with the Portland house of Tatum & Bowen, left yesterday with his wife for Tacoma. . Philip Rltz. the well-known Wash ington Territory pioneer, living at Walla Walla, Is suffering from heart trouble at the Esmond. WHAT ONE SUPERVISOR IS DOIXG Interest in Ken School Office Found to Be Awakening. BROWNSVILLE, Or., Dec. 13. (To the Editor.) Recently I took with me Professor Harrington, the State Field Industrial Worker, and made a round among some of my schools. I dis cussed the standardization of my schools and he discussed agricultural and Industrial work. The standard ization scheme is having- a great ef fect upon my Bchools.- I am getting many things In the way of improve ments and more efficient work than I had anticipated. Professor- Harring ton aroused great Interest in tho every-day things of life. He says that an education is not alone that which is derived from books, but rather that preparation which fits one for life to be able to do something and do it well. We visited rural schools only. Dur ing the week we visited 20 districts. 40 teachers, 1032 pupils, and had 110 visitors present. We also held one night meeting which will probably re sult in the employing of an extra teacher and the fitting up of an extra room In the Peoria Public School. They also discussed the feasibility of build ing a new, up-to-date school building for the next year. . j I am planning on having an indus trial exhibit In each of my schools some time this Spring and later a number of local fairs in centers sufficiently near each section that every pupil and par ent may attend. I belfeve every pupil will take part If the exhibit be nea enough that he may attend and take his friends to see and discuss ills product. I am also planning to hold local track meets such that each country school, as well as the high schools, may take part. Each school will have Its team which Is to consist of bpth boys and girls. The programme will be simple enough so that every country pupil may participate without much expense. By this scheme. I believe the "play problem" will be practically solved and thus assist very materially In the discipllnine of the school. I have found, so far. no opposition to my supervisory work and believe my district is Decoming strongly in favor of the office, Jr. baiusk, Supervisor District No. 8, Linn County. FISH-TRAPS AS "USELESS RELICS." Kentucky Flskermen Think Seines and Dynamite More Suitable. Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal. The state fish and game commission has ordered a warden to go to Trig, county for the- purpose of destroying some old-time fish traps in Little river. The traps are said to have been In ex istence for nearly nair a century. Last year a warden destroyed one of the contrivances near Cadiz. It had been built so substantially that the warden was compelled to resort to dy namite to dislodge it The fish traps are built at low water seasons and they are constructed of logs and poles. The fish are caught at periods of high water and the trap is so complete that once Inside they cannot get out. When the high tide subsides they are to be had for the catching ana can De easily taken out with a clip net or by other means. The fish and game commission Is de stroying these old traps wherever they are found. It Is not probable that any new ones will be built, for most of those that are being destroyed were constructed 50 or 75 years ago, in most Instances as a sort or neigntornooa enterprise. Those who engage In fish slaughter nowadays employ methods which involve less time and labor. A fish trap of the Little river variety la -a immanent affair, not easily built or concealed, and the modern fisher man of predatory and destructive tend encies finds seines and dynamite more suitable to his purpose. The advantage of the fish traps, from the standpoint of those who built them, was that they not only trapped the fish, but held them in hopeless bondage until such time as they were transferred to the frying pan. The disadvantages were that they made poor fishing for the man who enjoyed a day's sport with the old-fashioned hook and line. Also In times of low water thousands of Im prisoned fish sometimes died In he traps thus polluting the stream and surrounding atmosphere. The old fish traps will soon be a thing of the past, but the predatory fisherman with nets and dynamite, and his utter disregard for law and morals, Is a still more potent force for fish de struction and will continue to tax the energies and the vigilance of the war dens. 1 Yes. CONDON. Or., Dec. 13. (To the Edi tor.) In a small town a Mr. X Is on the Town Council; Mr. X also has a sa loon In this town, and votes In the Council, thereby . helping grant him self a license. Is this lawful? A CITIZEN. , OREGONIAN ANNUAL Big Edition to Be Issued January 1, 1914, a Complete review of State's Progress. All features of the year's de velopment in Oregon will be in cluded in The Oregonian Annual. The number will be complete in every particular. No phase of ad vancement in Portland or in the state will be neglected. For many years the Annual has been pre eminent in its field, and the forth coming issue is fully up to the high, mark established. Its test is con cise, reliable and authoritative and its pictoral pages have not been surpassed. Some of the many in teresting features are here out lined: Preparing for the World's Ships Xever before has the great Co lumbia River Basin, with its area of 250,000 square miles, been so aroused to the necessity of prepar ing for a greater ocean commerce. Just what has been done toward deepening the river, not only to Portland, but to give direct ship ping to Eastern Oregon, Eastern "Washington and Idaho, is related. Men of the different sections write of the particular interest their lo calities have in the Northwest's wonderful waterway. Uncle Sam's millions are making of the Colum bia one of the world's finest har bors; but there is much to accom plish and Oregon will do her share. Effect of the Panama Canal This is a problem in which the Pacific Northwest is vitally inter ested. What advantages will Ore gon End Washington gain in mar keting their lumber, grain, fruit and other products? What is the out look for immigration and what will be the character of the people we must assimilate? These questions will be answered by men who have made a careful study of the situ ation, American Consuls ! Will' Contribute So far as the Pacific Coast is concerned, no more interesting articles have been written than those prepared especially for the Annual by American Consuls abroad. They deal with commerce and emigration to tha Pacific Coast which will follow the completion of the canal, and are written at first hand by men who know conditions in the leading foreign ports. The writers will include Consuls-General at Liverpool, Hamburg, Bordeaux, Havre, Vienna, Copenhagen and Christiania. Portland's Harbor Needs Portland is fully alive lo the necessity of preparing for greater ocean commerce, exemplified by the coming in 1913 of two new Oriental Steamship lines and the present or ganization of an Alaskan service, as well as the promise of many ad ditional carriers when the canal is open. The Annual will have a full page drawing of Portland's present harbor, as well as diagrams of im portant development on tho lower harbor, with explanatory articles. Pictorial Portland Section One entire section of 16 pages will be devoted to Portland pictures. It will contain full-page photo graphs of tho seven largest build ings erected in 1913, and other pages in which the city's principal business blocks will be grouped in new and striking style. There will be a remarkable two-page drawing of tho central business section, which required two months' work by an Oregonian artist. This sec tion will show some of the results of Portland's building expenditure of more than $80,000,000 during the past five years. Oregon Industries Progressing The agricultural and other indus tries of the state at large will not be overlooked. Text and pictures will call attention to gains made along many lines. Such subjects as good roads, including the Pacific Highway and the Columbia River Highway, and important new leg islation will bo covered. Progress of Oregon j Counties Summarized There will be a brief, definite summary of development from each Oregon county. These reviews will give the output of various com modities, price of land, new indus tries established, railroads built and similar information. Pictures of buildings erected in Oregon cities in 1913 will accompany this synopsis. . Results of New City Chatter Mayor Albee and the Commis sioners will tell of results of Port land's new commission charter. All phases of ,the city's material and social advancement will be Reported. Special Staff of Writers More than SO prominent men of Oregon and Washington will write articles for the Annual. Every sub ject will be handled by a con tributor who is particularly - well qualified to write on that topic. The Annual will also contmn the usual reliable and complete statistical re-, view of the year. Order the Amnml Now The Oregonian circulation depart nient is receiving orde'jrs for this special edition. The .price is 3 cents. Postage in the United Staler and possessions, Canada and Mex ico, 5 cents; to all otherl countries, 10 cent. I - V