ID TTTR rOTtXTXa OREGOXIAy. TTTTDXESDAY, JAlSTTAItT 7, 1914. 1 PORTLAND. OBECOX. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Fostofflca aa eoond-cltw matter. Subscription Rate Invariably la Advance: (BT MAIL,) Pally, Sunday Included, on year $8.00 XallT, Sunday Included, alx months ..... 4.23 Ially, Sunday Included, three month ... 2.5 Xally, Sunday Included, one monUs .'5 X)ally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 JDally, without Sunday, alx months ..... 8. 3 lally, without Sunday, three months ... l.?5 Dally, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year 1.60 Sunday, one year -0 ' fcunday and weekly, one year S. 50 (BT CARRIER) Oafly, Sunday included, one year . .S9.00 XJaily, Sunday Included, one month ..... .73 How to Remit Bend poatoffioe money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank.- Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give poetorflce address in full. Including county and state. Postage Rates 13 to 16 pases, 1 oentl 18 to 82 pages, 2 cents; 64 to 48 pages. 8 cents: CO to 60 pages. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 78 to V2 pages. 6 oents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree Conk , tin. New York, Brunswick building. Chi cago, eteger building. San Francisco Office R. J. Bid well Co-, IT42 Market street. ! aORTLASTD. WEDNESDAY. JAN. 7, 114. LEADING IT TO INTERVENTION. ',' Svents In" Mexico and fhe action of ;h nations are steadily crowding: the !tJnlted States into a road which leads directly to armed Intervention. The republic la torn, by war and Is rav aged by bloodshed and rapine. Neither : Huerta nor Carranaa has an early iprospect of subduing the other. If Carranza should secure control of the capital, the Huerta party, even with i (Huerta eliminated, would probably continue or soon renew the war. With the Mexican nation divide, there Is Sio reason to believe that a constltu i tlonal election could be held or that, ; it one were held, the defeated party would accept the result. As Colonel George Harney says In the North American Review: "We are confronted i!by a condition of anarchy, not by a theory of government, and the position Jias become Intolerable." In this situation, the great powers Slave, at Mr. Wilson's bidding, cleared 'the deck for us to act. Great Britain, by withdrawing the ambassador who criticised our policy, has given prac tical proof of her purpose to throw I no obstacles in our way. So Influen tial a Liendon newspaper as the Spec tator frankly ' urges us to send our forces Into Mexico and pacify the country as we pacified Cuba, It says that the pressure of public opinion in sill the rest of the world will soon force us to intervene. It declares that Mr. Wilson made a mistake In not supporting Huerta as the strongest force with which to bring peace in Jdexlco and continues: Instead, he did what with all respect we fcnust say was the worst thing he could have done. He Intervened and pretended not to be Intervening:; he deprecated bloodshed and Anarchy, and yet he would neither stop It blmself nor let anyone else do so. The only rway left for the United States Is for them selves to restore order in Mexico. The Spectator predicts that we Should easily conquer the country and Ithough revolt would follow we should suppress it. It foretells that we shall annex Northern Mexico and restore Independence to the rest of that coun try, subject to our control of Its for eign relations. It also predicts that jwlthln 60 years one English-speaking nation of 200,000,000 people will ex tend from the Canadian border to the Panama Canal. It says that, if we do the job, we shall do it well and that the English people will.be proud of our successful shouldering of this huge piece of the white man's burden. Just as the Spectator says, Mr. Wil son has intervened. When he sent 'John Lind to demand that Huerta re sign, he intervened. By using moral suasion to Induce Huerta to comply o.nd by putting on the financial screws lie has continued to Intervene. He has called on other nations, to keep out sxnd leave It to him. They have com plied, saying In effect: "All right; it's up to you." And it is; there Is no lodging that fact The longer anarchy In Mexico continues; the longer Mr. Wilson's pacific method of interven tion falls to accomplish anything in the way of restoring order, the more Incumbent It will be upon him to In tervene by armed force and the stronger will be the pressure from the civilized world upon him to do so. By stepping aside and leaving him K clear field, other powers have earned n. moral right to bring this pressure to I) ear. ' ' Colonel Harvey's advice that Mr. ' sWilson now reverse his policy and recognize Huerta comes too late. The revolution has gained such power In the north and the Huerta government lias been so weakened in armed force, finance and prestige that war would continue. The alternative Is now be tween confession that his policy of in tervention by moral suasion has failed and invitation to other powers to step In and complete the task on the one hand and resort to armed force on the other hand." Mr. Wilson's known character forbids belief that he will confess failure, much more that he will hand over the task to Europe. That would be practical abandonment, not only of the Monroe Doctrine but . of the Wilson doctrine; and that is unthinkable and the American Na tion would not tolerate it. It remains to be seen how long he will persist be fore recognizing that the second al ternative of armed intervention is felons open to him, unless by some miracle a strong man arises In Mexico s,nd restores order. ; PSYCHIC ENERGY. rAn anonymous critic takes excep Won. to "what The Oregonian has said about the source of psychic energy. He quotes the expression, "no food no psychic energy," from an editorial and, dissenting vigorously, asks this Question: "Can you say why the adepts of India, the world's great prophets, the Man of Sorrows and all great spir. itual teachers, when desirous of going into an extreme psychio state, invaii ably fasted for a period?" We might answer that such a pro ceeding was due to bad Judgment, but other considerations seem more ap propriate and we will offer them to cur friend for what they are worth. He probably understands by "psychic state" something very different from what we do. According to our view a person's psychic activity is likely to he most powerful and fruitful when his brain and body are both well nourished. When food is cut off there Is no source from which energy can he drawn, hence activity must cease Sooner or later it actually will cease, as everybody must admit, but in the Interval the starving tissues may pass Into abnormal excitement and waste in insane visions the little energy they have left. We do not believe that mania and the excitement brought on by fasting are "extreme psychic states" unless one means by that expression that they are abnormal and symptomatic of approaching death. When the bodily frame is clogged with a surplus of food fasting may clarify the mental powers and even strengthen them, but when a person Is In sound health he can do his best brain work, just as he can his best muscular work, if he eats regularly. The "adepts of India" never have given the world a solitary fact which amounts to a row of pins. The Jew ish prophets, such as, Isaiah and Amos, ate regularly. Sometimes, when other supplies failed the angels fed them. They were able to denounce evil heartily because they dined well. Any person may easily decide for himself where his psychio energy comes from. He need not go to India for enlight enment. All he need do la to stop eating and see how long his brain, will continue at work. SEATTLE'S FKUlTt'UJL EXAMPLE. If it be true that Commissioner Daly has persuaded himself into the notion that a municipally-owned lighting plant Is a good thing for Portland, it is to be hoped that he will first make a study of the situation In Seattle, which has gone into the lighting busi ness in competition with private con cerns. Portland has one established light and power concern, representing a large Investment, and a competitive company has appeared and Is carrying forward operations in Portland with an expenditure of many million dol lars. The outlook for satisfactory service at fair prices appears to be assured. Seattle has issued In honds on ac count of its light and power plant the sum of $3,240,000. It ha3 further au thorized bonds in the sum of $825,000 to be sold, so as to take care of ex tensions and improvements. The total bonded lndebtednss of Se attle now reaches the stupendous to tal of $4,5,254,902.69. The annual in terest charge alone Is $2,036,470. The public debt per acre is $2185.54; per city lot, $218.56. Estimating Seattle's population at 250,000, every citizen there has a share of the public debt to the ex tent of nearly $200. The per capita tax for 191 was $29.34. Bonds for a light and power plant. bonds for a great port, bonds for a city-owned street railway, bonds for improvements of ail kinds, city bonds. county bonds, school bonds, road bonds all have brought the indebted ness of Seattle to & staggering total. Portland should be warned by Se attle's example. WORKERS AND IDLERS. A considerable part of the unem ployed do not want work, but a soup kitchen. They invade restaurants and order porterhouse steaks, oysters and pie, and refuse to pay, having nothing with which to pay. They hold mas meetings and demand that the city, or some other, give them work, and stip ulate for $3 per day and eight hours. When offered work they would make terms; when given food, they quarrel about its quality; when invited to a place of shelter, they complain that the roof leaks. The hungry must be fed, but there is no compulsion upon the public to feed or clothe or house undeserving idlers. Men who seek bounty have no special claim upon anyone's" consid eration; able-bodied men who seek charity and who spurn the municipal rockpile, ought to be left to their own resources. The Oregonian understands quite well that there are worthy men out of work, and that not all of them are able to undertake hard manual labor. These men ought to have sympathy and help and no effort should be spared to make them self-supporting. But there should be discrimination be tween the deserving workless and the others. There should be an attempt to sift out the unemployed who desire work, or who otherwise deserve con sideration," from the unemployed who are taking advantage of the situation to get a living in the easiest possible way and at some other's expense. BAD GRAMMAR. The hot passions of some Eastern "grammar fiends" have - been stirred by Arnold Bennett's use of the fateful word "transpire." The novelist wrote this sentence: "Lastly, Mrs. Moldon, it transpired, had her ways." It may be found in his serial story, "The Price of Love," If the reader cares enough about grammar to look for it. The pedants have objected to this expres sion on the ground that "transpire" means "leak out or come to light," while it does not mean "to happen." Most true. And Arnold Bennett uses the word precisely in the sense of "leaking out." So why find fault with him? We are sorry to be obliged to admit that a professional gram marian is usually a professional fault finder and if he cannot light upon any real mistakes in what he undertakes to dissect it is no trouble at all for him to invent some. . Scores of little quibbles which writers of good English never - bother their heads about are constantly being turned over and whipped about by the grammarians. They fill the back leaves of their text books with collections of these trifles under the heading of "false syntax" for unhappy pupils to correct. The corrections are usually worse than- the blunders, for nothing will satisfy your grammatical pedant which is not so stiff and stilted that it breaks Its own back trying to stand straight. Moreover by correcting page after page of false syntax the average youth acquires a choice assortment of blun ders that he never would have dreamed of had they not been assidu ously driven into his brain by his books and teachers. The only way by which anybody ever learned good English was to use it and hear others use It. Making boys and girls brood over chapters of "errors" is the one sure and certain way to spoil what little adeptness they happen to have acquired elsewhere. Teachers who painfully write out on the blackboard the bad English they hear on the playgrounds Are the best allies slang and vulgarity could desire. The children correct the slips with their tongues, but they remember them all for future use. The correc- tions are too often forgotten as rap idly as possible, while the blunders are cherished as precious linguistic gems and practised at every opportunity. Grammar cranks are so much oc cupied with the machinery of expres sion that they forget to look for any thing to express. The forms of speech hold their attention to the exclusion of substance. The root of their trou bles Is that they never have really mastered the English language. If they had done so they would writaj along smoothly ana glibly, never thinking about their declensions and conjugations and seldom worrying over the meaning- of words. These things become almost automatic to one who knows his language as he ought, English is a great deal more free and flexible than the grammar fiends would have us believe. A given thought can often be expressed in a dozen ways and all will be "correct." It is not wrong to say, "I do not doubt that John Is sick." Neither Is it wrong to say, "I do not doubt but that John Is sick." The writer has his choice between these expressions and there are other good ones which he might use if he liked. THE PRICE OP FOOD AND THE TARIFF. The hopeful visionaries who ex pected tariff reduction to lower the price of food are-already experiencing the pangs of disappointment. Noth ing of the sort has happened or is likely to happen. The tariff may in some instances have helped raise the cost of table supplies, but its effect has been inappreciable and its re moval is void of the desired conse quences. The Agricultural Department's bu reau of, statistics affords no warrant for believing that farmers can lower the selling prices of their products and still make a living. In many sections, we are told, "farmers and their fami lies do not make wages comparable with wages received in other occupa tions requiring equal skill and experi ence and intelllgence.'r Under such conditions it is a, little impertinent to ask them to cut their prices. They certainly will not do so, no matter how much they are asked, if they can help it. Nor is there much prospect of relief by enlarging the production of the farms. If the growers would raise more food and put the increased product at our disposal at the same total cost as the present supply all would be well for the harried con sumer. But who in tnat case would compensate the farmers for their augmented labor and expense? Some theorists rattle on cheerfully without stopping to reflect that if farmers send us more food they will expect at least as much for each pound or barrel as they get now. They are not in business out of pure philan thropy any more than their i fellow men. ' The bureau of statistics points out the obvious truth that any reduction of the cost of food must come through stopping waste if it comes at all. The most glaring current waste exists along the line of middlemen who pass the farmers' products from hand to hand on the way from grower to con sumer. Each middleman exacts his tribute and, of course, enhances the ultimate price. SILAS WEIR MITCHKI.U No doubt In these days of strict spe cialization Silas Weir Mitchell's most interesting trait was his versatility. His career proved that a man may still hope to follow several different lines of work without failing in any of them. It may be said. of him as Johnson said of Goldsmith, "Nihil quod tetiglt non ornavit," though with some reservations. It is certainly true. as of Goldsmith, that whatever he tried to do he did well, but it must be confessed that he did nothing su premely well. As a physician he at tained to respectable renown by his many technical publications and is quoted as an authority on nervous di seases, the venom of snakes and some other subjects, but his word is not of the greatest weight in any. of these matters. Other physicians have cov ered the same ground and covered it better. As a novelist Dr. Mitchell achieved enviable fame, but his works are not counted among the greatest, perhaps not very high among those of ihe second rank. His plots are well constructed, his style admirable, his character values above criticism, but nobody would think of mentioning him beside Tolstoi. W. D. Howells is a much better novel-writer. Like Goldsmith Dr; Mitchell was educated for medicine and he outdid his Irish predecessor by practicing his profession. When Goldsmith took up the trade of letters he deserted drugs forever. . Dr. Mitchell remained faith ful to the art of healing and worked In his literary achievements asmere avocations. Hobbies one might per haps call them, though they were hobbles of a singularly delightful and profitable nature. The resemblance between him and Goldsmith Is not quite so superficial as one might at first think. Besides being both doc tors they were alike extremely versa tile, as we have already noted of Mitchell. Goldsmith wrote prose of the highest quality, poetry surpassed by but few men, novels, histories. natural history and plays. Mitchell has dipped into pretty nearly as many literary fields, besides carrying on his medical studies and practice at the same time. His literary style has a good -deal of Goldsmith's charming suavity, or "amenity," as Henry James calls it in his well-known comment on The "Vicar of Wakefield." Dr. Mitchell's novels grew better as he ad vanced In years. Hugh Wynne, pub lished in 1897, is full of youthful vigor, although, the author was then 67 years old. Since then have ap peared, "The Adventures of Francois," Dr. North and His Friends" and still other books. His last work was pub- lshed but a few months before his death. Such vigorous productivity in old age is one of the characteristics of our time. Men retain their powers longer than of yore, or at any rate they appear to. Dr. Mitchell's poetry did not con tribute a great deal to his fortunes, though it may have helped a little to make him famous The volume which he called "The Comfort of the Hills" was published in 1909. At that time he had already published six other small volumes of verse," the first of them in 1882. He tells us that the edition of each volume was limited to some 300 copies with an average sale of about fifty. The rest he gave away. The Comfort of the Hills" was the first book of poems which he did not publish at his own expense. It con tains two odes which had been already printed In London by the Macmlllans, together with others of Mitchell's verses. We recount the adventures of the book for , the encouragement of young poets. The first year eighteen copies were sold. The "next year none at all, and none from that time up to 1909. The rest of the edition was finally burned up. Such were the fortunes of the poetry of Dr. Mitchell who was a well-known and highly successful author in prose. While his verses were thus harshly treated by the world, his medical books were earning him distinction and his novels were bringing in good profits. The lesson of these facts need not be In sisted upon. And still, lest they should deter any aspiring genius from cultivating the muses, . we hasten . to say that the despised poetry which Dr. Mitchell could not sell when it was first published Is now sought by bib llophlles at absurd prices. .Upon the- whole his poetry; Tared as well as Keats' and better than Shelley's. Not any of the, tatter's verse paid for publication. It is well known that Poe and his wife starved- upon the proceeds of hjs muse and Walt Whitman was obliged In his old age to receive 'more .or less help from his friends. Poetry is not among the re munerative trades In either the United States or "England, though some for tunate bards have made money by it. We cannot say that Dr. Mitchell's verse has any exalted merit. The thought is, of course, manly and the sentiment uniformly sound, but there praise must falter. It is difficult to avoid the confession that his verse is stodgy. There are some inspired lines, no doubt, but they are extremely rare. The pen that skips and smiles happily along when it . is writing prose as sumes a pompous gait In verse and pa rades Instead of tripping gaily. His "Song of the Captured Confederate Battle Flags" is as good as any of his poetry. It ends with the lines: Men heard through the murmur of praying. The voloe of the torn banners saying "Forgive, but ah. never forget." This Js not bad verse, but it Is very far from the vision and glory of the great masters. Dr. Mitchell, like other men,, had-his limitations. If he had not attempted so much he might have risen higher. But'hls work holds re spectable rank In all Its varieties. He is one of our best, as well as one of our most prolific, literary men, while scientific medicine will always set a high value upon his original ' re searches and his popular treatises upon hygiene and the general conduct of life. Evelyn B. Baldwin says that, though he believes Dr. Cook "faked" the ciimb of Mount McKinley, he believes the doctor reached 'latitude 88 degrees 21 minutes on his Journey to the North Pole, or within 100 miles of his goal. But he gives no other ground for his belief but the doctor's own statements. -Jiow poor is this author ity is shown by Mr. Baldwin's disbelief in the Mount McKinley story. The rule, "False in one, false in all," should be regarded and Dr. Cook's story of polar discovery dismissed from consideration. The boys' corn clubs ought to be come as successful in Oregon as they have been in other states. Corn will thrive and ripen In the Willamette Valley if the seed Is selected proper ly. The boys' clubs study seed selec tion, methods of culture and stock feeding. In due time we hope they will also study co-operative banking and marketing. Better crops and bet ter methods of selling them will ul timately redeem rural life from its hardships. . " N There is a good opening for some missionary work on behalf of. the di rect primary by President Wilson in Vice-President Marshall's state of In diana. The Taggart machine, in which Crawford Fairbanks is a partner, has elected all except one of the Demo cratic district chairmen, defeating the insurgents at every turn. Mr. Marshall might deliver some of his $300 lectures in his own state in the endeavor to redeem its benighted people from boss rule. The usual plan of wearing out the prosecution by repeated trials and dis agreeing Juries does not seem" to work in the case of Dr. Hyde for alleged murder of Colonel Swope at Kansas City. His fourth trial is soon to be gin. An Oregon man sent 8 cents to the Government for having used a can celled postage stamp forty years ago. He might just be celebrating his re lease from jail if he had been caught In the trivial transaction. Continued use of the National Guard for trivial purposes emphasizes the urgent need of relieving it from state uses and substituting a state constabulary for use by Governors. Only one-fifth of the unemployed men have availed themselves of an offer to work on 'the Terwilliger bou levard. The others possibly want positions, not work. A New York widow has installed a set of chimes following the death of her millionaire husband. Possibly she intends to "ring out the old, ring in the new." If there is any truth in the report that Sir Lionel Carden has been trans ferred from Mexico, let us hope his new post is somewhere in the interior of Labrador. Another surviving member of Quantrell's raiders has died in Cali fornia, having lived long enough, it Is hoped, to make his peace for here after. A young highwayman having wedded the flighty young thing for which he committed robbery, what will the Harvest bet The man who wants work will take it and the man who does not want to work will find many excuses. That is mil there Is to It, No sooner do we escape from the "shop early" admonition than we are confronted by the urgent request "register now." Prayer services for peace are again being held In Mexico City. But Mex ico Is now beyond praying for. John. Lind Is unable to land in Mex ico because of a gale. How lonesome poor Huerta must feel. The Oregon onion-growers can show the apple-growers how to shove along & good thing. A new peace meeting has been called. No doubt Mexico will play a leading part. Marion County wants $800,000 for good roads. All Oregon Is getting the fever. No one appears to. want to build a Chicago subway. Got to grow a bit yet. Federal sugar omits the usual 1 per cent sweetening this quarter. Colonel Sam White is the first cas ualty in the war on the Snake. Good roads mean a new era of greater prosperity. These rains make the rural carrier an amphibian. Governor Johnson is out for re-election. Banzai! . . - Chanticler Passes. Ey Deu Collin. (Roosters having been declared "a drawback to the egg-producing busi ness," Governor Major, of Missouri, will declare a "swat the rooster day" next Spring, when surplus roosters are to be killed off. News Item.) Hall Chanticler, who are about to diet I do Balute thee, if no other wllL Though "Swat the rooster!" be the general cry, . . I do remain thy firm supporter still. Though in Missouri, death they brew for thee. And though thy foes increase from sea to sea, I will abide until the bitter end Thy staunch supporter and admiring friend. Hail, Chanticler, who ones with ring ing crow Made thy proud boast throughout the country heardl Thy foes . conspire at last to make thee go Into extinction, like the dodo bird. "Tis but a new phase of the catyclysm That sociologists call Feminism, That ranges wide, all eagerly, to whale The stuffing out of anything Xhafs male. Gone are the days of chivalry, when men Went forth with chips upon their shoulder placed; The boast of heraldry that flourished then Finds all its warlike Masonry erased. The crowing, fighting, ruffling, armor clad. Swashbuckling hero 1s today in bad. Where are the romances of yester yearT Gone and thou, too, art fated, Chan ticler. Subdue thy clarion crow and cast thy spurs; Forget the ruffled wing and bristling hackle; This is the feministio age of "hers," " So change thy tune and learn at last to cackle. Type of the goodly, braggart days of old. When war was glorious and when men were bold, , Goodbye yet I desire to say, right here, I liked thy blustering challange, Chan ticler. PLAV FOR. FEEDING IXEMPLOTED. Give Each Man Day's Work In Week and Feed Him. PORTLAND. Jan. 5. (To the Edi tor.) The unemployed are certainly with us In large numbers. A recent visit to the Gipsy Smith auditorium prompts me to say that a pleasant sur prise confronted me. After the perusal of newspaper re ports I expected to see a few hundred dirty, ragged, blear-eyed, blatant toughs,-thoroughly disgusted with life, and ready and eager to live off the community as long as posslbe. The real facts as I Investigated and found them are as follows: There was no ribaldry, no profanity, no loud talk ing, but perfectly good order among the five or six hundred men present. The building, I was told, is patrolled by committees of the League of the Unemployed, who keep, a watch day and night to see that everything Is run In an orderly way. These men are not in this auditorium because they like it, but because they have nowhere else to go. They do not want charity, but they do want work. One of their leaders placed the prob lem thus before me: "There are at least six times ' as many men In town as there are Jobs." The following is a constructive remedial plan proposed by him: "Allow us to run kitchens In this hall; give us a second-hand range, price $15; 100 tin plates and cups, 100 knives, forks and spoons and the necessary cooking utensils. This Initial expense will not exceed $50. With this appara tus we can take care of 480 men, who will be properly registered, and will be given Identification badges, and give them two nourishing meals a day on seven days each week. We ask for employment for 80 of these men (one sixth of the whole number), so that each man may work at least one day each week. Out of his wages, which should be not less than ' $2 a day, we would tax each man $1.50 in order to pay the expenses of the 480 men. We would provide the cooks and dishwash ers and run , things In a thoroughly sanitary way.' We would prefer to have this tax of $120 (80 men at $1.50) a day turned over to some one appointed by the city to attend to and pay for the necessary material and provisions, in order that no suspicion of graft may fall upon the leaders of the unem ployed. "The unit number of 480 was chosen as it Is a multiple of six, ttnd 1000 meals a day is about all that can be attended to on one range. The differ ence between $1.50 and the wages earned would belong to the man em ployed. If a man refuses to work we will force him out of the auditorium. The motto for each of us is to help the other fellow." This plan seems, to me, as well as to many others, a good one, and wholly disinterested on the part of the men who are asking for an opportunity to pay for their own meals. Surely this is better than to exploit their misfortunes and compel them, he cause they are hungry, to confer char ity on their employer and work for less than a living wage. A. C. NEWILL. LET WORKMEN SAVE FOR OLD AGE Years of Service Should Bring- Comne tence?. Says Army Veteran. PORTLAND, Jan. 4. (To the Editor.) During the present controversy re garding the position of Mr. Chamber lain as Janitor in the City Hall, I find it surprising that, so far, I have not seen a single article discussing the other side of this fence. Now it seems to me that if the city has given continuous employment to one man at a good rate of pay, he ought to have saved enough to be able, in addition to a Government pension, to live the rest of his days in comfort. At any rate I think the city ought to give some other worthy man a chance to earn $78.80 per month for a few years as Janitor, even if he has to be a Civil War Veteran, which, According to the papers, seems to be the requisite of a Janitor's position. Now, I hold that the city should re ward its aged servants by making pro vision for a pension, so that a man 72 years of age would not be compelled to clean ouspidora and mop floors. To set all doubts and further Inquiries at rest, I am not looking for any position, and also I served my adopted country for nearly Ave years, received a medal for meritorious services from Congress and do not draw a pension. R. H. S. Realizing: on an Investment. Baltimore American. "Did you ever realize anything on that investment?" , "Oh, yes." "What did you realize on it?" "What a fool I had been." Picking a Lucky Suitor. Houston (Texas) Post. "Let me Introduce you to the most honest young man I have ever known." "But mamma doesn't want me to meet any poor young men." The New Age. ' Of the iron age we often hear And the fabled age of gold. But now the Income tax brings near An age of wealth untold. New Tork . Sun. 5IEANINQ OF WORD "DISCOUNT" Currency Law Seems to TJso It tn Its Broadest Sense. PORTLAND, Jan. 8. (To the Edi tor.) Referring to your several able editorials and explanations of the cur rency bill, will you kindly explain the word "discount" as In connection with ' secured .notes or commercial paper, which is to be handled by the banks? Generally speaking, the' word "dis count" means something taken off. When a bank accepts a note, or commercial discounts with drafts and bills of lading attached, on a foreign point or some , place In the United States, that bank pays' to the drawer of said papers in full the face value, always supposing the bank is satisfied as to the transaction. In- the currency bill, it is stated that certain banks may "discount" certain kinds of commercial paper, and then that they may "discount" this with the re gional banks, which in turn may "re discount" this among the regional banks, as may seem advisable for the protection of the whole. Knowing how the word is used usu ally and quoted, why should the word 'discount be named In such banking transactions? This question has been discussed by some business men, but none or us seemed to reach a proper conclusion. Is it sinmply a banking term or is there some other meaning attached? G. T. The term "discount" was originally applied to the sale of a note which bore no interest. If It were payable after 90 days, the bank would deduct the going rate of Interest on such paper from its face value and pay the maker of the note the balance. The term was next applied to interest bearing notes. For example, a bank which charges 6 per cent Interest would take 1 per cent discount from a 5 per cent note. ' In common usage the term has become extended to all dealings In commercial paper, even where no discount Is deducted, and In that sense It appears to have been used In the new currency law. In this way It might even be applied to a case where a bank paid a premium, as, for example, where It charged the seller of an 8 per cent note only 6 per cent interest, adding 2 pr cent to the prin cipal. Such a transaction is not lit erally discounting In the original sig nificance of the term, but it has come to be called so in common parlance. DUPLICATED SCHOOL . FUNCTIONS University and Agrrtcmltural Collcee Should Not Double on Work. PORTLAND, Jan. 5. (To the Edi tor.) Of what avail are all our efforts at adjustment of functions between our State University and our State Agri cultural College, with a view to econ omy and efficiency, when decisions of the board of higher curricula are seized upon for exploiting plans of duplica tion and extravagance utterly unwar ranted either by the decisions them selves or by the needs of the citizens of Oregon? I had no sooner congratu lated myself upon the success of the board of higher curricula in distin guishing between the educational du ties of our two higher. educational in stitutions" by assigning certain tech nical courses to the college and certain liberal arts courses to the university than I read of President Campbell's elaborate plans for developing "a school of engineering at the university upon the same basis as that of the strongest Eastern universities." What does this mean if not a dupli cation of the engineering plant and of much, at least, of the engineering work at the agricultural college? A "schodl of engineering" such as is de veloped at the University of Wisconsin or Purdue University is certainly not within the scope of the "course in civil engineering," announced by the board of higher ciirricula in its deci sion of December 20. If it Is, we shall have confusion worse confounded. That President Campbell assumes as much, however, is evident from his declara tion (Interview appearing In The Ore gonian for December 27), that "it is the plan to go toward the five-year course, maintaining engineering on the same basis as the professional training In law or medicine. It is evident also in the fact that he declares In the same interview that "additional laboratories, with appro priate testing devices, will be added and the faculty will have to be In creased. Not simply a course in civil eng! neering, notice, but a "school of engl neering," rivaling that of the rich Eastern universities, with additional buildings, machinery and teachers. Does this sound like a simplification of educational machinery in a new state? Does it reduce expenses? Does It insure results. In a labor-loving, wealth - producing, high - minded citi zenship for the State of Oregon? Does It conserve the taxpayers' money? I do not think it does. TAXPAYER. FALLING MISSILE MISSES MISS City Directory and Other Objects Drop From Hitch Buildings. PORTLAND, .Tan. E. (To the Editor.) -r-I noticed In The Sunday Oregonian an account of a piece of steel falling from the Yeon building and almost hitting a passer-by. Thad an experience somewhat similar to this some time ago. I was walking up Oak street when suddenly I heard what I thought was a pistol shot, looked all around, but could see noth ing unusual, and was starting on when a man, who had been walking behind me, said, "Lady, you ought to be aw fully glad that didn't hit you." He pointed at my heels and there lay a large city directory which had tumbled from a window In an upper story and had all but struck me on the head, landing so close to my heels that I had been unable to see it. Had this hit me on the head, what would have been the result? I know of another Instance where a large can of tomatoes fell from the seventh story window of one of our big wholesale houses, but fortunately no one was passing. Why cannot Portland follow the ex ample of many smaller cities and re quire all such windows to be screened across by a netting reaching up a foot Dr so. Something ought to be done before some one Is killed outright. MISS P. P. MILITANCY WILL NOX WIN VOTES Means More Subtle Must Be Followed, Says Mrs. Dunlixay. PORTLAND, Jan. 5. (To the Editor.) All experienced suffragists agree for once with Mrs. Dodge, leader of the "National ; Association Opposed to the Further Extension of the Right of Suf frage to Women," who is right In say ing that "equal suffrage can never be made universal by a conscienceless per secution and misuse of the ballot." To which I wish to add, nor can we ever be able to establish equal rights for women anywhere except by following the lines of least resistance. The reign of peace on earth and rood will to men and women can never be gained by the militancy of unballotted leadership. The honest place for Anna Shaw and her followers Is with the leaders, In her official position, among the militant members of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, which never sails under false colors, but openly avows the militancy of its fight against the liquor traffic ABIGAIL SCOTT DUNIWAY. Twenty-five Years Ago From Ths Oregonian of Jan. 7, 1889. Walla Walla, Jan. 6. At a mass meeting this afternoon, G. W. Hunt said he had not built the O. & W. T. to Bell out; that his system was inde pendent of all other roads, and that he Intended to keep It that way.. The speech was enthusiastically received and $5000 additional bonus was raised and arrangements made to raise $50.- ouu more. Albany, Or., Jan. 7. There are about 180 destitute Chinese laborers in this city, caused by the failure of J. R Myers & Co.. for whom they had been woraing on the Oregon Pacific Gen erous donations of 'flour, provisions, etc, were made by merchants of the city. San Francisco, Jan. 6. The under standing is that the contract of the O. R. & N. Company with the Pacific Coast Steamship Company will not be renewed and that the former will con duct Its steamship business Itself. Last evening the Portland Stenog raphers' Association met in the Ablng- ton Duiiaing, President D. R Youner in the chat. Those who took part in the programme were: Miss Mattie Kelly. Miss Eva Lowengardt, Miss Holmes, Miss Hattle Loeb, Mrs. West lake, Mr. Eddy and Miss Moores. Half a Century Ago rrora The Oregonian of Jan. T. 1804. Last evening the Columbia River was closed by Ice at Willow Bar and navi gation must be suspended until drift ice moves northward or breaks up. About midnight snow oommenoed to fall in earnest and soon covered the ground. Mr. Holland, messenger for Wells Fargo & Co., will start for The Dallea with the express today by the trail. Salem. Jan. 6. The Union State Cen tral Committee met today. The Union State Committee is to meet at Albany on March 80 and to consist of 112 mem bers. It was recommended that county conventions be held on March 12. The eltlsens of Portland have at last made the first important move in the great enterprise of a branch Pacific railroad to Oregon and a railroad from California. It is the Intention of the committee who drafted the memorial to Congress to send printed copies to all the postmasters throughout the state to secure signatures. The com mittee consists of the following gen tlemen: G. H. Williams, E. D. Shat tuck, A. B. Hailock, G. W. Vaughn. A. B. Elfelt, A. Harker. . H. Seymour, G. H. Flanders and Charles M. Carter. Memphis, Dec. 23. In West Ten nessee, Forrest is still conscripting the inhabitants. Many refuse to take up arms, and Forrest's guard-house la filled with men who have been taken from their families. Many good Union men, to escape Forrest'B conscriptions, have taken to the woods and hide In caves. The Union men are hunted dil igently and, if caught, are subjected to the most brutal treatment. Charleston. Dec 26. From 12 o'clock on Sunday night to 4 o'olock the next afternoon, 130 Bhells were thrown into the city. Washington. Dec 29. Chief Justice Taney lies at the point of death. a - At Crystal Lake yesterday hundreds of gentlemen and more than 80 ladies skated. BLUE-BELLS. In morning's cool, on my way to . school, I used to pass a magio spot Where flowers grew of heavenly hue That my soul has not forgot. I was only five, but memories thrive; Ah! over the fence I got And feel the old thrill as my arms I fill With the sweetest flowers that grow. And down the road with my precious load I trudge in childish bliss. Can all the earth, with its hollow mirth Give an hour as sweet as this? O blue-bell days! Life's devious ways Have led through fields of rue. But plenty or lack, my thoughts turn back To the time when I knew you! Now Wordsworth's lay on a Summer's day Of the "meanest flower that blows," And Burns' -song, mid furrows long. Where the mountain daisy grows. Have touched a chord in my heart, dear Lord. That I thought was broken by pain. And memory enraptures me As I roam those fields again. From the wrong I planned I hold my hand And God comes forth tf reign In a heart grown cold and clay grown old Where the bluebell's seed has lain. Oh, give us flowers In childhood's hours. As we loiter through morning's cool: For the pictures that last are the ones we passed As children going to school. MARY H. FORCE. Portland, January 2, 1914. Conduct Above Reproach. Atchison Globe. Tou flb when you say your conduct Is above reproach. Advertising The Advertiser It is an indifferent reader, indeed, who does not take a lively and con stant Interest In the advertising of The Oregonian. This newspaper is proud of the merchants and manufacturers and other business and professional men who use its columns to send fre quent messages to Its readers. Making a sale at a fair profit Is but a part of what they accomplish by their enterprise. They are in a broad sense edu cators, the forerunners of civiliza tion, and The Oregonian heartily commends them and their announce ments to the careful attention of Its readers. They render a distinct service not alone to themselves but also to the public they serve. There Is scarcely a line of human activity that has not received the helpful influence of honest publicity. In advertising its advertisers The Oregonian feels that it Is doing sim ple Justice to the most progressive concerns and individuals In this community and to the most repre sentative manufacturers throughout the country. A dv.