10 PORTLAND, OBJEGOH. Entered at Portland. Onin, Postottlc a Btyunu-ciaai matter. Subscription Ratei Invartablr Advance: (BY MAIL.) rally. Sunday included, on year .......S0 Ially, Sunday Included, six month ..... 4.23 lally. Sunday Included, ihrna maiithi ... pally. Sunday included, on moot ...... .1i jjany. without Sunuij. one year ........ 0.00 ijauv. without Sunday, mix months ..... S.zS XallV. without Sunday, three months ... 1.75 J-Ja 1 1 V wlrhnilF KtmHaw .m a n. W Sll Weekly, one year ...................... l.&O Cunday, one year 2.40 auaaay and weekly, oaa year S-30 (BT CARRIER) raly. Sunday included, on yew ..... ..t9).OQ fally. Sunday included, one month ..... .79 How to Rvmlt-fUaH MalnfflM wioiim tf. express order or personal checlc en yxrar local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give poatoftica addreas Id full. Including county and state. I'oataae Bates 13 to IS aaseav 1 cent: la 1. aa PaKea, 2 cents; 84 to 4H pavaes. a coats; SO to 60 pages. 4 cents; 62 to pases. eents; 78 to U2 pases, e cents. Foreign post age, double rat oa. Eastern Business Offices Verrea Cank lln. New York. Hrunswlclc So tiding. Chi cago. 8teger building. -n-lro Office R. j. Bidwell Co, 2 Market street. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JAN. II, 1914. A MESSAGE OF GOOD CHKJER. President "Wilson's message on the trusts Is a message of good cheer to business. It expresses Joy over the ralm which has succeeded the hot con tention of the last few years between ig business and the law. It wel- tead of Ms buslne3a to submit to the decree of public opinion mac monopoly must not ex 1st. It' declares the term to wiiieh Mg business must submit, but it does no not in the tone "of the conqueror, but in that of the kind but firm par ent. Though the Appomattox of the trusts has come, the cosqueror is as considerate as waa Grant when he handed back Lee's sword. This is as it should be. for the mhole Nation, the trusts included, is eager to complete the work of busi ness reconstruction which Mr. Wilson lias begun. All perceive facts to which they were blind when heated by pas sion that when business men are in conflict with the law, their activities re restricted, if not paralyzed, and that, until the way is cleared for them to comply with the law, the people will suffer with them, for the paraly sis which strikes the mightiest, fi nancially and Industrially, will extend downward to the humblest. "With the leaders of big business ready to" submit and asking for terms, Sir. Wilson lays down conditions which do not abate one jot of that which the" people have demanded with great er insistence as each year has passed. The interests in finance, industry and transportation which have unhealthi ly growr together are to be separated completely, but they are not to be roughly and hastily rent apart. With ekill and care and without haste they are to be severed by the legal and Administrative surgeon's knife, until each is a distinct, healthy body, un marred by scars inflicted in the proc ess. Yet the severance is to be thor ough. Bankers are no longer to form Jinks which bind together in one in terest finance, manufacture and transportation of a given industry. Kot only are Interlocking directorates to cease,, but interlocking ownership Is not to control management of two or more corporations. This done, business is to be set on its way with full knowledge of what the law forbids and what it per mits. The decisions rendered under the Sherman law afford the basis of this definition. The Supreme Court's reading of the word "unreasonable" Into the law's prohibition of -restraints of trade is not to" be renealert sneeif- Jcally, but certain practices are to be declared reasonable and certain oth ers unreasonable. A commission is to be created which shall at the outset Inform a man or a corporation wheth er his plans are legal and which shall accessible for Information as it may be needed. This body is to ini tiate prosecutions and Is to carry out flecrees of the courts dissolving Itruats. This latter work is to be done, is it should be, by i. business body deciding business questions, not by a court deciding between two groups cf wrangring lawyers. Having laid out the path in which business shall walk. Mr. Wilson would Increase the certainty that the penalties- of departure therefrom will be Smposect and will fall on the real of fender. We are to have no more fines of corporations to be collected finally frorrr their unwilling or un conscious customers. Guilt is to be personal. If a corporation offends, the official who committed or Insti gated the act is to be fined or Im prisoned. Individuals injured by un lawful acts of combinations may make conviction in a Government suit the basis for personal suits for damages Thus while guilt is to be personal, fi nancial responsibility for Its conse quences ls to be corporate. Corporations- are thus te have a powerful In centive for keeping their officials in the path of legality and not for tempting them to leave it and, when caught, for shifting the blame to them personally. Mr. Wilson conveys the impression that, while releasing railroads from control of bankers and trust mag nates and subjecting their financial operations to Government regulation, he would enable them to raise "the money they need for their proper de velopment to meet the rapidly grow ing "requirements of the country for Increased and improved facilities of transportation" by raising freight rates. He sees that the need is ur gent, in the interest of both the rail roads and the people, for he says: We cannot postpone action in this matter without leaving the railroads exposed to niany sei-loua handicaps and hazards- and the prosperity ot the railroads and the'pros pcrlty of the country are Inseparably connected. Mr. Wilson's message is indeed a pledge of "the peace that is honor end freedom and prosperity." This peace is honor, for it insures that our leaders in business will be changed from outlaws to honorable citizens. It insures freedom, for competition will revive and "new men, new ener gies, a new spirit of initiative and Jiew blood" will come into the man agement of business. It insures pros perity, for it will drive away the clouds of fear and doubt which have Ihung over the land. The Progress Edition of the Morn ing Enterprise, of Oregon City, ap peared Sunday and follows the lines Editor Brodie established a year ago. There are fifty-six pages within a neat cover. The halftone views of places rd people of Clackamas County fchow well on calendered paper and the text is well written. The story of !the resources and opportunities of Oregon City and the county Is an old one to .Oregonlans, but In the Bast it will excite lively Interest In people looking this way. LAW NOT FACTS. The decision of Judge Anderson in the Copperfleld case may be con densed into a few words. In sub stance it is as follows: The Governor of Oregon has the power to declare martial law. Abuse of that power cannot be restrained by injunction. If the power is abused, however, the Governor Is civilly or criminally li able. There is nothing in the decision that Justifies the spectacular acts of Governor West. Judge Anderson dis tinctly disclaims any effort to pass on that issue. If the Governor had de clared martial law in order to settle the controversy in ' the Methodist Church in Portland and had pro claimed his intention to set fire to the Taylor-Street edifice he could not have been restrained by civil authori ty. But he could be punished by civil authority after the affair was over. It ought .to be clear to everybody that bat one point In the Issue has been passed upon. The need for sen sationalism at Copperfleld when an adequate power was possessed by the governor to proceed In a calm and or. aeny manner and accomplish the same result has not been established. THE ANTI-BRYAN PLOT. Defenders of Secretary Brvan- ner- sihi in tne absurd cham that nanclal Interests are active in making mat bject f the ch-ged: is to drive the Secretary out of the nryan appear ridiculous. The ulti t-apinet. in the newspaper discovery of the plot against Bryan the follow ing is round: . , ""r " "i jot the Bryan presence In nis Cabinet, as a sort of guarantee to Demo crats that the " Administration Is keeping faith, Mr. "Wilson would go to the extreme . uuirienaiineag toward the business and iiwn-iai interests wmcn nae Incurred popu la disfavor. v illuminating. .Bryan Is a man of words rather than, of nctinn The idea that he acts as a safety valve on tne active Wilson Administration during the brief intervals between Chautauqua tours that he gives to Cabinet duties is the acme of ab surdity, Equally ridiculous is the idea that money interests, no matter how pow er m, coujq successfully conduct campaign in the public press for the purpose of making a prominent of ficial appear absurd. If Bryan has been made to appear ridiculous it Is oecause he has richly merited It. The spectacle of a great Cabinet official pursuing the golden eagle frantically aoout. tne country while business lays neglected on his desk is not calculated to inspire paens of praise of such con duct, NEEDS OF THE COLUMBIA URGENT. The meeting of business men at the t-onmercial Club Monday rightly as sumed that the improvement of tho channel at the mouth of the Columbia itiver concerns not clone Portland and that section of the valley which is navigable by sea-going shins: it con cerns the whole Columbia River ba sin, comprising three-'ourths of Ore gon, three-fourths of Washington, the wnoie or . Idaho, parts of Wyoming nu Nevada, western Montana and a iarge part of British Columbia. It concerns even more territory, for the fanama Canal will render the. ports of the Columbia strong competitors with Eastern ports for the irnnsnnr. tatlon to foreign markets of all the products of Montana. Wvomine- North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The distance from Wlnninee- tr. Portland Is 1529 miles; from Winni peg to Montreal 1414 miles. The slight handicap in distance Is over come by the fact that Portland Is an ice-rree port, while Montreal is not. St. John is ice-free, but the rail dis tance from Winnipeg is 368 miles greater than to Portland. The dis tance by water from Montreal to Liv erpool is 2750 miles, against 8370 miles from Portland through the ca nal, but this difference In distance is offset In Winter by the freezing up of the St, Lawrence. Rather than pay storage charges and Interest on grain until that river opens, shippers would pay the slight e-.tra freight via Portland. - Fargo and Grand Forks, the wheat cities of the Red River "Valley, are about equl-distant from Portland and New York, the distance from Grand Forks to Portland over the Great Northern being 1635 miles and over the Northern Pacific 1729 miles while to New Tork it is 1707 miles by the former and 1613 miles bv the lat ter route. Omaha is 30 miles nearer to New Tork than to Portland by the Billings route, 350 miles nearer than by the Union Pacific route. The line of equal distance would therefore be as many miles west of Omaha. Portland thus is the natural port of the Columbia basin, with a popu lation, of 2,250,000, a grain production of 187,931,000 bushels and 750 000 -000,000 feet of standing timber. It will be a strong competitor in the open sea son and the most economical port in the closed season for the 577 9'2 square miles of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, with a population of 1,281,000 and with a grain production of -4C3.049.000 bushels. It will also be a competitor for the traffic of North and South Dakota, Nebraska and Wyoming, having an area of 323, 88$ square miles, a population of 2 -4 99,000 and a grain production of 518,775,000 bushels. Portland has the advantages over other North Pacific Coast ports in bid ding for this traffic, because It is down grade all the way from any point west of the Rockies and because the passes t-rossea oy railroad from the Canadian wheat belt to Portland are lower than those on the roads leading to other ports; also in the distance a vessel would steam between the canal and Portland Is less than . that between the canal and the ports to the north. In going from the Canadian wheat belt to Vancouver a train would cross v the Rockies at an altitude of 5321 feet and the Selklrks at an alti tude of 4310 feet, while in coming to Portland it would cross only the Rockies at an altitude of 4 410 feet, and a steamer from Panama would make a trip 600 miles longer to Van couver than to Portland. 'In going to Seattle a train would climb 2784 feet over the Stampede Pass or 3373 feet over the Cascade Pass and a steamer would make t extra round trip of 600 miles. The extra round trip by sea to Prince Rupert would be 15 00 miles. Portland thus has the advantage in distance and in grades over her rivals on the Pacific and in freedom from ice over her rivals on the Atlantic. She needs only to clear the way for the largest vessels to enter the Co lumbia River freely and safely at any stage of the tide In order that this business may come here. The inter TnE MOItXIXG OREGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY, est of the whole territory above de scribed demands that It come here. The obstructions must be removed in time for the entrance of the largest vessels as soon as they are ready to enter the river. We cannot wait till the north jetty Is completed and has deepened the channel through the gradual action of currents and tides; the channel must be dredged. We cannot wait until a dredge is built to aid the Chinook; one must be pro cured to begin work next Spring. In asking Congress to pass as an emergency measure the Lane bill for construction of a dredge of the Le viathan measure and, while it is be ing built, to provide another dredge, the Portland business men make no unreasonable request. They speak not for Portland alone, but for the whole region which will benefit by the de velopment of the most economical route of traffic. . They speak for a section or the country which has re ceived little at the hands of this Ad ministration except as It benefits with the country at large, and it has suf fered much by discrimination in tariff revision. It has contributed suffi ciently to the membership of the ma jority party in both Senate and House to obtain a hearing for its claims and favorable action upon them. ' By speaking with united voice it can compel a hearing. Where one deter mined man has killed a bill, a dozen or a score equally determined can compel action on a bill of such in herent merit. I'TTSCHISa DECREASE. J-.yncnings have decreased, the number having been 51 in the year 1913, as compared with 64 in 1912 This decrease is attributed by the Bos ton Transcript mainly to the efforts of Southern executives to prevent lynchlngs. It says that, while Sena tor Swanson was Governor there" was not a lynching In Virginia, because negro suspects were guarded bv the militia, whose officers the Governor held responsible for the safety of their prisoners. That is doubtless one of the main contributing causes of the decline of lynching, but there Is another the gradual Improvement in the charac ter of negroes, due mainly to the work of Booker Washington's Tuske gee Institute and similar institutions. A leaven of educated, self-supporting. self-respecting and law-abiding peo ple has gone out from Tuskegee among the negro population and has had Its Influence. Such .people inspire respect which cannot be felt for the ignorant, brutal, lazy blacks who have usually been the prey of lynch ers. They also Invite imitation among ineir race. The negroes are gradually being lifted from barbarism and, as this process goes on, there is less dis position to treat them as wild beasts. Parallel with a growth among- the whites of respect for the law has gone a growth among the negroes, of title to respect. The two facts act and re act each upon the other. As the negro rises above barbarism, he will be treated more as a human being, and the more he is thus treated, the more quickly will he rise. A CENTURY OF PEACE. Next Christmas eve will round out a century of unbroken peace between the United States and Great Britain. The treaty which closed the War of 1812 was signed at Ghent on the night of December 24, 1814. There were five American Commissioners, Adams, Bayard, Clay, Gallatin and Russell. The British were represented by three Commissioners, Gambier, Dr. Adams and Gouldburn. Not long after the treaty was ratified peace societies were formed both in England and America with the avowed purpose of preventing .future wars between the two. countries. Partly owing to the efforts of these societies, no doubt, the two nations presently agreed to keep the Canadian frontier clear of forti fications and ships of war were for bidden upon the waters of the Great Lakes. The boundary line between the American and British dominions on this continent has been from then till now a mere dellmination between peaceful neighbors. The very absence of fortifications and warlike arma ments seems to have prevented the necessity of any. During the century that has elapsed since the Treaty of Ghent was con cluded there have been plentiful oc casions for war between England and the united States. Boundary troubles have been numerous and sometimes bitter. Perhaps the worst of them was the "Oregon Question," which once brought us to the very verge of war. One President was elected on the cry, "Fifty-four-forty or fiht " which expressed the feelings of our wiiaer spirits toward England in the excitement of the moment. But mild er and wiser counsels finallv rrevaied The ferocious slogan having served its real purpose by Eafely landing a set of office-holders, was promptly rele gated to oblivion and the difficulty was aeinea Dy cairn negotiators in their comfortable offices. No more justi fiable cause for war was ever given by one country to another than Great Britain gave us during the Great Re bellion. Her sympathies with the se cessionists were ardent and openly ex pressed, not only by irresponsible men and newspapers, but by members of the government. England allowed the Confederates to fit out privateers in her ports, which wreaked havoc upon the commerce of the Northern states. At one time, in the thrilling episode of the Trent Affair, had not President Lin conl yielded to her haughty demands var would actually have been de clared. Looking back over the century that has passed since 1814 and con sidering the fateful incitements to war through which we have safely passed vne iiaturany gains an assurance of continued peace. If such occasions of III feeling have yielded to reason and conciliation what can ever arise to drive us into bloodshed? The diffi culties of the Civil War included money matters, National honor, deep seated prejudices and old-time inter national hatred and yet they were set tled peaceably. Does this not argue that all future difficulties with Eng land can and will be settled in -the same way? It is satisfactory to remember also that the amicable disposal of each new misunderstanding between England and the United States has told for good feeling. Wars leave perdurable bitterness behind them, thus propa gating new wars in endless succession. England and France never hated each other so malignantly as during the Hundred Years' War, when each was doing all possible injury to the other. The negotiations conducted by the late King Edward, which cemented an alliance between the two countries, were Immediately followed by a great outburst of kindly feeling. It was the same with the arbitration that closed the miserable tale of the Alabama Claims. As soon as England had dem onstrated her inclination to do the fair thing by us hatred quieted down In stantaneously. Even the Venezuela trouble which occurred In Cleveland's Administration couM not revive the old International illfeeling. When Cleveland brought us Into a blind al ley by his rash ultimatum public opin ion almost unanimously agreed that he had gone too far and the whole country showed through the press that It preferred a peaceful settlement to war even over a matter as Important as the Monroe Doctrine. The experience of the United States and England might well become the experience of all the nations of the world. Let them once begin to ter minate their troubles by peaceful ne gotiations and each conquest over the war spirit will make the next moral victory still easier. Fighting is a habit. Hatred Is simply an evil turn of the mind. It would be Just as easy to- form the habit of peace if we would only think so and international kindli ness may be cultivated quite as thrifti ly as hatred. The committee formed to celebrate the conclusion of a full century of peace between the United States and England are making elab orate preparations for the event. They have enlisted the co-operation of thousands of significant people in this country and England and have not forgotten to interest Frenchmen, Ger mans and other foreigners. They in tend to make the lesson of our long friendship with the mother country tell as impressively as possible upon the Imagination of the whole world. It is high time that something should excite the imagination, of the civilized world in favor of peace and disarm ament. The combined war debt of the nations is now about $38,000,000, 000, with an annual interest charge of more than a billion, and it Is Increas ing at a fearful rate. France and Germany have each made the pile higher within the last few months. Even our peace-loving United States now spends for military purposes 65 cents out of every dollar it receives In taxes. Our little war debt of two bil lions is a mere trifle compared with the monstrous burdens of France and Germany, but it would not take much of a war to bring It up to the fashion able level. Whatever tends to strengthen the peace sentiment of the world builds up the bulwarks of hu man happiness. Few housewives use waste paper as thriftily as they might. In olden tims it was artfully rolled up into firelighters, but matches did away with that- . Now Its principal use Is fot- kindling. It might serve a hun dred other purposes. Nothing cleans a spider of grease so well as an old newspaper. Laid over one's knees it keeps out the wind on a drive better than any blanket. Paper quilts are warmer than down. And yet we burn this precious material. Texas is . making heroic prepara tions to double Its corn crop next year We, in Oregon, might easily. Increase ours tenfold. All we need is good seed and cultivation. It has been proved that corn will mature here and it ought to be planted extensively on every farm. What is a big city like Portland for if not to market the products of the surrounding country? H. B Miller says Portland has failed to do its plain duty in this particular and he calls for a change of policy. Such a change should come speedily. Port land needs it and the state needs it. Fortunately somebody held Con gressman. Johnson before he could get his gun. Johnson hardly can be a true Kentuckian, Inasmuch as he was not toting the weapon and, fur ther, in announcing he was going after it. ie has the yellows. A plan is on foot in Belgium to have all the peace societies wire Huerta and Carranza to quit fighting. iney shouldn t overlook the several hundred other leaders and patriots, including Villa, who have a voice In the matter. The man who eats heartily of smelt just now clears the system after a sluggish meat diet all Winter and accumulates brains for the Spring ac tivities. The early run of the little fish is designed for a purpose. Wisconsin's eugenic law has been declared unlawful. This Is a great victory for the unfit and gives assur ance that the supply of congenital de tectives will not run short. Another professor Is wasting some body's money in attempts to produce artificial life. Any result will have little value. The world is full of mis fits now. Militants demand an audience with the English King -and hint at dire consequences if they are refused. Will they never learn to catch flies with honey? Board of Equalization statistics show that in Clatsop country dogs are held at a very low figure. Current cost of curs curtailed, as it were. A tiny Tacoma woman carried her bulky husband out of their burning home. Truly the old order of things changeth. France Is overwhelmed by a terri ble blizzard. Possibly it is a curse following on the heels of the tango. The lazy husbands act should be broadened to apply to the husband who doesn't split the kindling. The McNamaras cannot be paroled for at least seven years more. That's something to be thankful for. Women are registering in great numbers. Which leaves even the most astute male politicians at sea. Seven feet of snow strikes a Cali fornia town. The. Arctic circle Is rap idly losing its reputation. Slipping a piece of money to a man employed in a public utility is another kind of profit-sharing. The agitation contingent at the Au ditorium shelter ran a gocc! thing into ths. ground. . The Wisconsin eugenics law de manded too much in these days of hit or miss. Butter prices having fallen, we may now spread it on a little thicker. David Lamar succeeds Colonel Mul hall in the hall of fame. Roses are still blooming In Portland. JANUARY 21, 1914. LABOR COLOSIES FOR FXEMPLOTED Haw Enropeiui Countries Handle FTrofc Iena S( Confronting Ua. PORTLAND, Jan. 19. (To the Edi tor.) Under the present industrial sys tem, the unemployed problem, like Ban quo's ghost," will not down, and while it Is Imperative that measures be taken to meet present emergencies. It Is also wnperative mat every state, and large cities especially, shall investigate meth ods used in other countries In solving the problem. Several years ago two of the largest women's organizations tn Portland called attention to the need of a mu nicipal lodging house and farm col ony plan only to be met with marked indifference on the part of the chief executive of Portland at the time. Mr. Burns, the English labor leader, sug gests a completely equipped "labor bu reau" in every town for what he calls "genuine unemployed." They are to register and so establish communica tion between tne men that want to work and the men seeking: workers, this labor bureau to be connected with a central labor exchange. This plan is worthy a thought, and If systematically carried out would be of inestimable value to those unemployed who were anxious to work, but would not solve the hobo or vagabond prob lem. There are three classes of unem ployed. First, those who desire work and cannot find it; second, those who are willing to work but are unable to do so on account of physical weakness or accident; third, those who are able to work but are unwilling to. The last swell the army of vagrants, and are a menace to the community; they are non-producers, hence liabilities eco nomically. In treating of the unem ployed problem it is necessary to dis tinguish between the blameless and the not blameless, the able-bodied and the non-able-bodied. I have watched the "Labor Colony" movement in other countries with much Interest. In Holland, where the colony movement originated, while little is done, so far as investigation shows, to ward reformation of the vagabond, yet the Holland system, according to re ports, has rid the highway of tramps and the cost has not been large. In two respects the Holland system falls short. The colonies are not self sup porting and they have rjractirall v abandoned the effort of reforming the vagabond altogether. In Belgium, where there Is a labor colony system, it has also been demon strated that at a small cost vagrancy can be abolished. The Swiss seem to have the most far reaching all-round work for the elimi nation of the tramp and the unem ployed problem. They have a "travelers' relief book" which sets forth the fact that the bearer ia a "genuine unemployed." Two grades of labor colonies are estab lished, one a "forced colony" to which are committed the culpable vagrants, and a free colony whose doors are open to ail indigent persons wJio are not culpable. .These two colonies enable the officials to assign the tramps and vagrants to one of these, and the un fortunate to a home where they can work if able to do so. The colony movement is so self evi dently a wise system as not- to need comment. It seems the only way o meeting the condition that the large centers, and often the smaller ones, are always "up against" as Winter months approach. It would do away with a large share of the undiscriminating character of charity, and aid materially in abolishing "soup kitchens" .and "bread lines." Furthermore, it would reduce the column of liabilities (non producers) and Increase the assets in community life. In one of the forced colonies In Switzerland we find it not only self supporting, but by simple methods it seeks to reform all those capable of reformation and promote them to the free colony. To all those who have not given this movement any special thought I rec ommend to them the small book of Ed mund Kelly. "The Elimination of the Tramp," and the "Last Waif," by Hor ace Fletcher, where lie treats of social quarantine. Edmund Kelly studied this problem in many countries and his findings are worthy our most earnest thought and action. L. H. A. IiAST OP MOtALLAS IS IX PRISON Correspondent Believes Indian Is Un justly Incarcerated for' Murder. PORTLAND, Jan. IS. (To the Ed itor.) Having read so much about the "last of the Molallas," and wishing to ascertain the exact truth, I wrote to Professor Leo J. Frachtenberg, of thr Bureau of Ethnology. Smithsonian In stitution.' Washington. D. C. who, 1 happened to know, had made an Inves tigation along this line. He writes me that Henry Telkus, who was killed a few months ago. had a nephew, Stephen Savage, quite an old man at present, who lives at St. Helens. The last male survivor of the Molalla tribe, which was once very large, is Stephen Savage's son. Louis Savage. Tracing up this Louis Savage. I find he is now incarcerated in the United States Penitentiary for life at Leaven worth, Kan. On investigating the crime I obtain from affidavits and statements of eyewitnesses that he Is wrongfully con-icted of the charge oi murder, in that, while in a fight h. shot off into the darkness to scare bis opponent. Another man was struck by the shot and died. While promiscu ous shooting is to bo deplored and punished, yet an accident should not be the cause of a man's incarceration for lire. On communicating with the offl cers of the penitentiary they give him an unqualified indorsement, stating he is tne nest man in the nemtentiarv. As this man is practically the sole survivor of the once larse tribe of Molallas. is confined throusrh error for a crime he did not commit, is of such a character as to show he is not menace to th community. Is nlniner and growing despondent under ten years of strict confinement, can not something De aone to "-nin his freedom? I should think the town of Molalla would be in terested In this case. JAMES WATSON. Under the statement of facts given in the foregoing letter there is -not necessarily error in the conviction. The general rule is that a person whose negligence causes the death of another is responsible. Degree of murder in such cases is fixed by the character of the act which the person who com mitted homicide was performing at the time. If felonious, the offense ia mur der; if the act leading to the homicide was legal the offense is manslaughter. it is possible, however, that in this case the penalty inflicted was more se vere than the circumstances warranted. Wills In Waahlngton. BELLING HAM. Wash.. Jan. 17 (Tn the Editor.) My mother Is living, also one sister, married. Following my death, I want my only brother, unmar ried, like myself, to succeed at once and absolutely without interference, legal or otherwise, to my property. Is validity of will denendent imnn legal or authoritative attest? JOHN LEHMAN. (1) The will should specifically men tion the intent of the testator not to bequeath the mother and sister any portion of the property, otherwise it may be held that the maker of the will died intestate. Probating of the will cannot be avoided. (2) Tes, unless it is olographic: that is. in the State of Washington a will is valid if written entirely in the hand writing of the testator and signed by htm without witnesses. If not olo graphic the will must be attested bv two witnesses, who sign In the presence of the testator and of each other. GOING AHEAD ON COMPENSATION Merit System of Ratlmar Can Be Applied In Compensation Lam. PORTLAND. Jan. 19. (To the Edi tor.) Your editorial Sunday, "Progress in Compensation," suggested certain features in connection with this sub ject that have not heretofore been discussed. I refer particularly to the different methods of insurance desig nated and pointed out by the opera tion of the new laws in New York and California , and that the underlying motive for providing wide latitude as to the method of insurance is to give free play to the merit system of rat ing each compensation risk as it ex ists in the various classifications of all lines of Industry and at the same time conserve and make certain the pay ment of compensation as provided for In the laws. The benefits of the merit system or schedule rating, as it is more com monly called, have been rtrnonid and accepted by the Insuring nubile against fire losses am aiipntifiii and economically correct. The Indi vidual or corporation who represents miso lire nsKs rully appreciates that In the reduction of fire risk to the minimum he is assured or the lowest rates as result of his Drecautlons. Th same rule of reason has evidently per suaded most of the states east of the Mississippi River, with the exception of Ohio, to designate methods of In surance which will induce the applica tion of a similar rule in rating hazards under compensation laws In the hopes that the employer who . reduce he- safeguards, careful selection of em ployes and their instruction tn num ber of accidents to a minimum that a proportionately low rate will apply to iii Kompensauon burden. If employers, as well as emnlovea. are sincere In advocating legislation ior compensation that will operate di rectly to prevent accidents as to the first importance, and the payment of compensation as secondary, the above method should appeal stronerlv to both parties, as it will surelv nenalie th careless employer In the most direct manner and confer an Incentive to the careful employer who is constantly exercising every preventive to safe guard his employes ac-ainst- Bcoirtante That the above me'thod nf mtin no longer an exDerlment. hut ha hom demonstrated a success beyond any question. Is easily ascertained h-o- in vestigation of the operation of the compensation laws In Michigan. New Jersey and more recently in Illinois and Minnesota, where the merit sys- uciu ui rating is being applied to all hazards in the same general manner as generally follows the application of fire schedules. Nobody objects to the state enter ing the fire insurance of compensa tion business, at least I don't, as long as competitive conditions are conserved to the public. In the matter of com pensation protection, as well as in all other lines of insurance in which the State of Oregon may feel it necessary to experiment, I -shall treat them with the same consideration as anr other competitor by providing and selling a policy covering the same scale of com pensation benefits as the Industrial Commission, but In a more attractive form to the employer and employes. If the United States Supreme Court upholds the Washington compulsory compensation law. there can h nr. further intelligent obiectlon to it adoption in the State of Oregon or elsewhere, so far as the question of compulsion is concerned. In this event, it does not follow, however, -that compulsory state insurance as provid ed by the law is either logical or eco nomically sound. In fact, the figures tor tne tirst two years of operation have demonstrated what has always iec preaictea oy underwriters, namely, that the number of accidents will steadily increase in proportion to the total, number of emnlovos an.) that me expense or state insurance will show an annual increase for several years to come. Independent of any amendments which may be made to it Increasing the benefits. Out of a total of S2.500.UOO paid the State of Wash ington by employers for the first two years, on the industries which con tributed $1,750,000 of this sum, the fig ures indicate that the classes which make up the latter amount paid 33 1-3 per cent more on the basic rate for the second- year as compared with the first year. In fact, the difference between com pulsory compensation and compulsory state insurance is extremely wide anil significant and will be more easily demonstrated as time goes along. The merit system of rating applied to in dividual risks in all classes is abso lutely sound and will tend, if anything, to reduce accidents to a minimum and reduce the cost of the burden of com pensation loss to each employer to its true basis in as practical a manner as any system that has yet been devised. PAUL C. BATES. AVIiat Mother' Tried to Make. Someone with imagination but no char acter at stake Has been telling of the good things that his mother used to make; How he dined on foods ambrosial in the dim and distant past. When the good old soda biscuit held the fort from first to last. You may call us superstitious, a mon strosity or freak. Yet we think prevarication is a refuge of the weak. Had he been the least familiar with the mother that we had, He'd confine his oratory to assertions true but sad. And if impelled to mention that most antique angel cake. He would say. with tears regretful, "Its what mother tried to make." We are sure we know about it, for we lived there at the time. And we smelled those loaves and bis cuits which had soured -in their prime; Likewise the spoiled plum butter and the Juice that wouldn't "jell," The preserves burnt on the kettle and the cake that always "fell," While the cheese was able-bodied and the bacon full of life. And had Corbett met the butter he'd have given up the strife. Sure, our mother was persistent, with a mighty fund of pluck. It the sausage wasn't flavored It was simply blamed to luck. Yes, we have a recollection that a panic couldn't break. All of strange conglomerations that our mother tried to make. There was steak that even Ajax couldn't pierce with heavy lance. There was hash that seemed to fill us when we took a second glance. It is said that men resemble, more or less, the food they eat. If its true, our neighbor's diet is of lobsters and pig's feet. Some there are who live on oysters, and still others favor crabs You can tell it by their methods in their great financial grabs. Now, we know we've been a failure ever since we -first begun. And are beaten each election by the man who couldn't run; Some have told us that our cranium never got but half a bake. But we blame -it all to dumplings that our mother tried to make. J, S. KNAUSS. 203 Tlatt Building. Thorough. (Washington Star.) "What did you talK about reading circle?" at your "Cleopatra," replied younjr Mrs Tor- Kins. "I suppose the discussion brought sri-eat knowledge into evidence." "I should say o. By the way they tore her character up, you mictil have thought she was one of our own neiah. bora." Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of Jan. SI. 18S9. Washington, Jan. 20. Representa tive Hermann, In speaking on the omnibus statehood bill, protested against the exclusion of Washington Territory. Spokane Falls. Jan. 20. No casket in the city was large enough to hold the remains of Robert S. Turner and one had to be made. He was the biggest man In the territory, weighing 360 pounds. The hearse was not large enough to hold the coffin and a spring wagon bad to be used instead. Seattle, Jan. 20. Governor Semple has written a letter to General Hill, censuring him for calling out the militia at the ttrn of the Nswcastla riots. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Pittlnger and Mrs. Captain "Vinnjgerholz will leave today for Southern California. W. G. Kent, well known in Alblna and formerly purser on the steamer Alaj-m, has been appointed mail clerk on the narrow gauge road between Portland and Coburg in place of W. E. BlodgetL The old landmarks are disappearing one by one. The old county road alon the gulch is being rapidly filled from the grading of G. B. Montgomery's lots on Russell to Gaines street. Quite a number of carpenters are finishing up the central division of the exposition building. The funeral of John Maliff. the well known contractor, took place yester day. Mr. Maliff was a prominent mem ber of the order of Free Masons. Knights of Pythias and Ancient Order of United Workmen. John Jack & Co. will start on a dra matic tour in a few days. Catholic residents assembled yester. day in the basement of St. Mary's Cathedral and decided to erect an orphanage. A tract of some 500 acres about 15 miles south of town has been tendered by Archbishop Gross. Lee Moorhouse. of Pendleton, Is in the city. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of Jan. 21, ISM. Headquarters, Department of West Virginia. Jan. 16. Major Cole. In com mand of a battalion of Maryland cav alry, encamped in Loudon County, was attacked yesterday by Mosby, the guerrilla, with 400 men. After a gal lant fight for an hour Mosby was re pulsed, leaving his killed and wounded on the field. Washington. Jan, 16. The Demo cratic and Conservative members of Congress met yesterday and con demned President Lincoln's emancipa tion proclamation as revolutionary am! unconstitutional. As a wagon loaded with wood and drawn by two horses was crossing the upper foot plank on Madison street, along First,- yesterday it broke down and made the passersby take to the mud. The merchants and business men generally on North Front street have arranged to close at 7 P. M. The Washington Guards, Captain Mills, were out drilling on Front street last evening and attracted much at tention and approbation. Doggone Rich I'll Be By Dean Collinn. (The average valuation set by the Assessor on dogs In Union County is $50.83. while in Clatsop County it is only $2. News Item.) I have a noble plan in mind. And if it works without a hitch. My friends will very shortly find That I have grown immensely rich. My wealth shall mount to millions up. And p'ortune 'whelm me with her bounty I'll buy the Clatsop County pr And sell the same in Union County. Observe the valuation set By Union County's wise Assessors. And note the different system met By Clatsop County's dog possessors. Full fifty bones and more, 'tis said. They rate the Union mongrels at. While dogs In Clatsop County bred. Average a scant two shekels flat. Then forty-eight round silver medals Shall be the pront one shall hog From Union every time he peddles A nice two-dollar Clatsop dog. So 1 shall roll a million up And Fortune shall dispense me bounty I'll buy the humble Clatsop pup. And sell the same in Union County. (truan literature. CORVALLIS. Or.. Jan. IS (To the Editor.) Can you BiTe-raewiy sugges tions or inform me where I may be able to find material relative to the fol lowing topic: "Trace the Influence of Christiantt y through all agencies, movetnc; and organization on German literatures -from the beginning until the Middle Ages." SUBSCRIBER. Read "Germany in the Middle Ages." It is obtainable at the Portland Public Library but The Oregonian is not in formed as to whether it is available at Corvallls. Magaaine for Young Folks. SALEM. Or., Jan. 18 (To the Ed itor.) Please tell me (1) If there Is still published a weekly magazine for young people called "Golden Days," and (2) where one can subscribe for it. CLIFF DIPSON. (1) "Golden Pays" is published by James Elverson Co., Ninth and Spruce streets, Philadelphia, Pa., at a subscrip tion price of $3 per year. "Golden Days" has been published since the year 1S80. (2) Write . direct to publishers, or through your local newsdealer. Tango Togs Have you learned the new dances? Have you the proper raiment In which to dance them? This is the season for all kinds of social festivities and dancing is so much a part of the evening's programme that if you are not properly prepared you will find yourself very much a wall-flower. The new dances have brought in new styles in evening dresses, eve ning slippers and hosiery and even hair ornaments have been changed to he in harmony with the new effect. You can't afford to be behind in these matters. Look over the ad vertisements in The Oregonian and other good newspapers and you will see ttiat the reliable merchants are ready to provide you with what ever you require. Never were dances nnd dancers so critically watched as now. Make sure of the success or your eve ning's outings by reading' The Ore FTonian's advertising columns and profit by their suggestions in buy ing what you need. Adv.