THE MORXTNG OREGOXIAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1914. tt i 1 : PORTLAND. OREGON. I Entered at Portland, Oregon, Fostofflco as ' - second-class matter. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance .- (BY MAIL) Daily, Sunday Included, one year. .... .$8.00 . uaiiy, bunaay incluaea. six monui., r pally. Sunday Included, three montba.. .v iaiiy. huoaa; incluaea. one montn. 3 .Pally, without Sunday, one year , Pally. without Sunday, six months. . 5 -Daily, without Sunday, three montba 74 e.uo 1.75 .60 -uaiiy. wltnout Sunday, one montn X Weekly, one year. 1-5U Sunday, one year 2ol Sunday and weekly, one year. S.du ; r (BY CARRIER) ; ;Dally, Sunday included, one year $ 00 lJally, Sunday Included, one month 75 tr '. How to Kemit Send postof f Ice money or der, express order or personal check on your r -local bank. Stamps, coin or currency, are at t sender's risk. Give postofflce address In lull. including county and state. r- I Postage Kates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; IS Z ito 82 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents, ; ;60 to 60 p.-.jes. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 6 -cents- 78 to 92 pages, 6 centa Foreign poit . jase. double rates. V, j Eastern Bunlness Offices Verree gc Conk- .ln. ew York, Brunswick building, cm fiago, Steger building. Pan Francisco Office R.' J. Bidwell Co. -7412 Markec rtreeu -PORTLAND, TUESDAY. MABCH 81, 1814, i WILSON'S TROUBLESOME PLANKS. H Mr. Wilson's citation of the anti ubsidy plank of the Baltimore plat form against the toll exemption plank shows the beautiful inconsistency of that famous instrument. Either the convention did not consider exemp tion a subsidy or It tried with one .plank to catch the votes of those who opposed subsidies, while with :the other plank It tried to catch those Who favored them. But Mr. Wilson's excuse for pro posing repeal of exemption does not agree with the circumstances under which Congress voted exemption. In Sthe House twenty more Democrats ?voted against exemption than voted tfor it, but in the Senate twenty-one Jvoted for it and none against it. The 'only Senators who voted against it "were stand-pat Republicans, wno have always shown a weakness for ;subsidies. In his desire to do away with what he now considers a sub sidy, ho turns for help to those who ;have an Insatiable appetite for that Ispecies of Governmental favor and 'turns away from those who, like : Speaker Clark and Representative Underwood, have always denounced :such favors as iniquitous. In choosing which planks of his platform he will stand on -the President displays much mental agil ;ity. - In his campaign speeches he fstood squarely on the exemption 5 plank, but after he became involved Tin the Mexican troubles he stepped :nimbly to the anti-subsidy plank. He ;has very carefully avoided the single iterm plank and has paid no attention to the civil service reform plank. When the woman suffragists ap 'pealed to him he scrutinized the plat Jform and Informed them that he .could not find a suffrage plank to iSstand on. Now he stands firmly on ;the anti-subsidy plank and regards ithe exemption plank with abhor 'rence. Tho President will need to walk "circumspectly, lest he inadvertently -step on the wrong plank. VALUATION OF RAILROADS. The Interstate Commerce Com mission has just entered upon one of ithe greatest tasks ever undertaken "by the Government the valuation of "all the railroads in the United States, '?-a total of about a quarter of a mil lion miles, with all their terminal ' property and buildings. In an arti cle in the World's Work C. A.-Prouty, who directs the work for the Com '. mission, estimates that it will occupy four to six years from July 1, 1914, fand will cost $12,000,000. This seems "a large sum, but Mr. Prouty shows rthat, by comparison with the value -oC the railroads it Is a mere trifle, rlf it should vary the amount paid tin rates by only 5 per cent on the '$20,000,000,000 of railroad capitaliza . tion, the annual saving to the public "would be $1,000,000,000, which, in vested at 6 per cent, would return "annually In interest five times the entire cost of the valuation. This cost "would be only from one-tenth to 'one-twentieth of the value of the roads. The Commission is to ascertain the t': cost of reproducing every railroad, ' less depreciation. It has already T..' called upon every railroad to furnish maps and inventory of its property. It has now set to work to verify the inventory by dividing the country into five districts and by sending out engineers to determine the amount of construction of every kind and its Tcost and the amount of depreciation. One railroad in each district has been selected for a preliminary survey, which will occupy several months. This done, the work will proceed rap " Idly and accounting In Washington will keep pretty close pace with the engineers. According to the estimate the report should be completed any time between July 1, 1918, and July 1, 1920. Some difficult questions have al ready arisen, as Mr. Prouty shows. For example, should the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake. Road be credited with the cost of the two lines through Nevada which were de stroyed by floods before it finally constructed one which would "stay put"? Should the Northern Pacific ,be credited with the $5,000,000 en hancement in value of its right of way through Spokane, which cost nothing, that enhancement being due , : to the growth of the city, which In " " turn was largely, If not mainly, due to the presence of the road? The valuation Is not to be a mere physical -1 valuation, for the Commission is to ' x determine the value of each property after having ascertained the amount of money invested and the sources from which it was derived and after having taken note of the earnings. Although the valuation was for .; years opposed by the railroad com panies, they now recognize that it will be of great benefit to them. It '" will dispose once for all of the much bruited charges of over-capitalization, by showing which roads are worth more, and which are worth less than their aggregate stock and bond issues. It will give the investor a safe meas ure of value by informing him which ing a fair return on their actual value, and what the securities of oth er roads are really worth. It will thereby attract capital to railroad in vestments and put the roads in a r-position where they can render -ef- ficlent service. t Though the valuation will be of great service in adjusting railroad j rates. It will be by no means an ab solute guide, for other factors must be considered. Competitive conditions : not only between railroads but be--.' tween shipping points enter into the '. calculation. Rates between compet- ing lines to the same point must be the same, but a rato which .would yield a fair return on the weakest line would yield an excessive return on the strongest. On the other hand a rata which would yield only a fair return on the strongest line might yield nothing on the weakest. Those roads which are over - capitalized would not be permitted to earn prof its on water, while a road like the Pennsylvania, which in the last ten years has reinvested about $200,000, 000 of earnings In its property, would be permitted to earn income on that sum. By valuation the railroads will be set right with the people and a sound basis for future relations will be es tablished. An end should then be put to the period of agitation, decla mation ad exaggeration on the one side, and to the period of high fi- J nance, stock-watering and complaints of inadequate earnings on the other side. HAPPY PRODUCERS. Over In Tillamook County, where they produce timber, butter and cheese, they are diligent and Inter ested students of the tariff. The Tilla mook Headlight, which is not alto gether happy over the current era of Democratic good times, addresses a few pertinent inquiries to a Democratic contemporary, and The Oregonlan re produces them to show the style and quality of thought now possessing some Oregon minds: Wasn't the tariff altered for the express purpose of lowering the price of everything raised on the farm, and allow, food stuffs from Australia, China. Canada, Siberia and other countries to come in free and under sell American farmersT If the value of farmers' products Is reduced one half, won't It reduce the value of their land as well? One hears a great deal about "knockers," but we are glad we are not one of those who advocate free trade to knock the bot tom out of the farmers' products and at the same time knock the value out of his land, for the value of a farm Is estimated by the amount of money that can be made off it. . Doubtless it has been noted In Tillamook that, under the new tariff, statistics given out at Washington show that there has been a gain of 20 per cent in food-stuff imports The Oregon producers of food products are no doubt greatly delight ed with a decline in prices brought about through the beneficent results of a tariff that invites and procures foreign competition. Hail, prosperity in Oregon under a Democratic tariff! THE SHORT CUT AGAIN. Judge Bennett seems to take the view the Governor acted illegally at copperfield. There is no basis for that view. The Cir cuit Court of Baker County has ruled that the Governor was within the law in what he did and an Injunction against the Gov ernor was refused. East Oregonlan. The Pendleton newspaper should read the decision in the Copperfield Injunction case.. The court did not de cide that the acts of the Governor and the militia were within the law. It held merely that the Governor had power to declare martial law and that judicial restraint could not be in voked against an abuse of discretion ary power. It also held that if ille gallties had been committed by the Governor and the militia the remedy of the injured was to institute civil or criminal proceedings. There is more talk In the Pendleton journal concerning roundabout civil procedure and superiority of a short and direct course to remedy an abominable situation. Yet there is but a roundabout course available to those who may be Injured by the proceedings of an emotional execu tive. There Is no direct or speedy remedy for them. They must await the tedious process of the courts. It is against the attitude of a Gov ernor willing to constitute himself a long-distance judge of local condl tions, take snap judgment and make himself the lord high executioner of the laws as he thinks they ought to be, that Judge Bennett and other fair- minded citizens protest. If martial law was a proper course in vicious little Copperfield merely because the available legal method of enforcing the law was more tedious, martial law is the proper law anywhere and everywhere that the law is violated. The machinery of the courts op erates slowly everywhere. We might as well, if we uphold the Copperfield incident, abolish the whole fabric of civil and criminal procedure and con stitute the Governor a military dic tator in fact. ASQUITH MEETS THE EMERGENCY. Premier Asquith's decision to add the war portfolio to his other duties brings to a head the crisis arising from the mutinous action of the army officers who were ordered to Ulster. It has evidently reunited his followers behind him after Colonel Seely's paltering with the mutineers had started loud mutterings of dis content among the Radicals and La borites. It shows that the Premier is ready to stand to his guns in de fense of Irish home rule and in op position to attempts at military dic tation to the government. . Ancient custom requiring that when a member of the House of Commons accepts a position of profit he shall resign his seat and return to his con stituents for a renewed expression of their confidence, Mr. Asquith's resig nation is the prelude to an electoral campaign. Formerly when a mem ber sought re-election under such cir cumstances, his opponents would out of courtesy refrain from contesting the election, but as political contro versy has become more bitter, this custom has been more frequently set aside. Occasionally the minister thus seeking re-election has been defeated and some devoted follower whose seat was safe has resigned to make way for him. Mr. Asquith's majority at the last election in East Fife was so large that little short of a political revolution can defeat him. Mr. Asquith has evidently taken a firm stand against army dic tation, though he tries to mollify Generals French and Ewart. When orders are given to the army, no conditions laid down by the officers are to be considered. Reluctant as he is to lose the services of Colonel Seely and of two of England's best generals, he will not retain them at the cost of subordinating the civil to the military arm of government. 'British aristocracy has thus blun dered once more, as privileged classes, In their arrogance, are in the habit of blundering. Their hope of defeating home rule rested In divid ing its supporters. Their own action has bound those supporters together more firmly than ever and has fur nished a slogan which will probably rally tho British masses to the Lib eral standard. It has pushed the Liberals farther along the road to Radicalism and has added fuel to the flames of Radicalism. The army mutineers have fur nished Lloyd George and his follow ers with a strong argument ror a ivstem of reorganization which will thoroughly democratize the army and will realize Napoleon's ideal of put ting a Marshal's baton in every knap sack. Indignation against the army will be apt to add violence to the at tacks on the aristocracy, and political lines of demarcation may be sharply drawn between the classes. The Unionists will doubtless do their ut most to withstand the tide with ap peals to religious bigotry in defense of the covenanters and the army, but plebeian John Bull Is coming to care less for these things every year and to care more for things which con cern abstract justice and his bread and butter. V TAKING TOKREOX. Upon the final outcome of the bat tle at Torreon must depend the future progress of the revolution in Northern Mexico. Without Torreon Villa can make no further advance against his ultimate goal, Mexico City. With Torreon in the hands of the rebels the Huerta forces would find them selves on the eve of a final desperate struggle for their existence. Thus the desperate fighting about Torreon Is readily understood. Torreon is the key to the situation. Until they have taken it the rebels can never go farther. If the federals hold Torreon they have nothing very much to fear at least from the northern rebels. Torreon is wanted by Villa as a base In the next stage of his advance on Victoria and San Luis Potosi. To press forward on these points he must control the railroad lines and have Torreon to fall back on for supplies and water. Otherwise he could not hope to penetrate the 200 miles of hopeless desert where water is un known and even chaparral doesn't thrive. Taking Victoria and San Luis Po tosi he then has a much easier prob lem, for he has entered the fertile plateau country, where water and subsistence for his troops can be pro vided readily. He would also control a direct line to Tampico and be In a position to knock boldly at the gates of Mexico City. Should Villa capture Torreon, then Victoria, then San Luis Potosi the overthrow of Mexico City and the Huerta government would come within the range of Im mediate probabilities. FROM A PIG'S EYE. Melancholy reflections must arise in the brain of the anti-vlvisectionist as he peruses the account of a recent surgical operation in Baltimore. A child's eye, which had been badly in jured by disease, has been restored to sight. The cornea had become opaque. The useless part has been cut away and a perfectly clear piece put in its place. No doubt the child and its parents are happy. The little boy, who seemed condemned to go through life with only one eye, now has two. But pause a moment. It is all very well for the boy and the boy's relations, but what of the j)oor pig whose life was ruthlessly sacrificed in order that Its eye might be utilized in this operation? Has not a pig its rights? Shall a lovely porker lux uriously waddling through its poetic career be doomed to death every time a human infant happens to need an eye? Think, too, of the pig's rela tions. Doubtless it had a mother. Perhaps it had an aunt. We dare say their tears over the dreadful fate of their relative will outnumber the smiles of the little boy's friends. If the-antl-vivisectlonlsts are con sistent this is the view they will take of the operation by which a boy's eye was restored to sight. Their com ment upon the event will be that if human beings cannot cure their dis eases except by sacrificing anlrmils it is better for them to go uncured. To give some semblance of sanity to their contention they take the ground that vivisection never does any good. It does not advance knowledge.. It does not help perfect the practice of surgery. Experiments upon germs are worse than useless, because the germ theory of disease is false from beginning to end. The anti-vivisectionists are certain ly thoroughgoing in their denials. hey even deny facts with heroic firmness. Such stories as that of the little boy's eye being cured by graft ing from a pig's eye they stubbornly refuse to believe. And they do well. If they did believe them what would become of their own theories? It Is but a washed-out antl-vivlsectionist who does not value his theories far above human welfare. Let the babies go blind. Let them perish if they must. But spare the pigs and cats. USE FOR WHAT WE WASTE. It has been said that a Chinese family could live on what an Ameri can family wastes. That saying is brought forcibly to mind by an ad dress made by ex-Governor Curtis' Guild at a recent convention of the National Association of Waste Ma terial Dealers. Many have been accustomed to think and speak disparagingly of the junkman, but the members of this association are simply junkmen on a large scale and there are among their numbers men who have done a business of a mil lion dollars a year and whose credit is AA. They deal In scrap metal of various kinds, scrap iron in particu lar, paper stock, woolen and cotton rags, scrap rubber and many other odds and ends. They bring home' to us the truth underlying the conserva tion theory, that there Is use for everything. Mr. Guild reminded his hearers that they are simply doing what oth ers have been doing In a larger way. He described the savings bank as the use of waste capital, which was for merly concealed in a sugar bowl, a wooden shoe or hidden under a loose stone in the hearth, but which has now added $7,000,000,000 to the amount available for American in dustry. In like manner the farms of New England were abandoned as worn out by Americans and became waste land, but are now made to yield abundant crops by Poles, Portu guese, Italians and Irish, until the agricultural products of Massachu setts last year were , valued at over $60,000,000. Cotton seed was regarded as use less until a use was found for Its oil and the husks were ' pressed into cakes for cattle feed. Now Its product In the United States alone is Valued at more than $58,000,000 a year. We export sisal strings to Europe to be made into cheap tooth brushes for the peasants. Worn-out painters' brushes are cleansed of white lead and oil, and the bristles are made Into scrubbing brushes within reach of the tenement dweller's purse. The worn stockings, which the American woman scorns to darn, are exported to Germany and unraveled, .and the thread used as packing for grapho- phones and electrical machinery. Old stockings which, the thrifty Euro- peans darn and patch are imported to this country for paper stock Waste material Is cleansed and sort ed and made into the sanitary paper drinking cups which are now used Waste rubber becomes cheap water proof shoes and clothing for the poor, and cheap wool stock makes warm blankets. To what dimensions this business has grown Mr. Guild showed l,by cit ing five classes of material, our ex ports of which in 1913 totalled $7, 100,000, and six materials our im ports of which totalled $15,500,000. When bewailing the high cost of living we may well take a lesson from the humble junkman and find a use for that which we have been accus tomed to destroy or throw away, and thank him for what he does to pre vent the cost of living from going higher. Growth of a business of such magnitude from what we discard should-impress on us the wisdom of seeking to make the dollar go farther, not only by Increasing the aggregate production, but by using all that we now produce. Apply that lesson and our stump lands will become sources of wealth instead of remaining un sightly wastes, and the refuse of the city will become a source of public revenue, as in Paris and other cities. The Hillsboro Argus was twenty years old last week, which fact serves as a text for a few remarks. The Argus is a typical country newspaper, issued weekly on a schedule that calls for going to press by the clock. In that way its subscribers get their pa pers always on time. Published with in twenty miles of Portland, in a field of prosperous people well supplied by the daily papers, it does not attempt to cover the general news; it aims to be a local paper and it succeeds, for there is no happening in all of Wash ington County that it fails to record Its specialty lies in its personal men tion of people of the county and a vis itor to the county seat must indeed be nimble to escape the Argus eye of the editor. Unlike many of the Oregon papers, the Argus has a reek ing air of prosperity, and this is due to individual effort and endeavor. Mr. Long has been called the Warwick of Washington County. That may be true; but' as editor of one of the best papers n the state he finds more honor. In being the exemplar , of coun try journalism. Dr. Lyman Abbott's Outlook Rem- iniscences have got as far as his col lege days, which he describes with entertaining garrulity. His alma "ma ter was New York University. At that time, about 1840, it had no li brary. no regular courses In modern languages and no laboratories. Still it was just about as good as any of the colleges. Harvard was perhaps a year ahead of it. The change In externals from that day to this has been astounding. Has the internal improvement in education kept pace with the outside? For the coming season the Harvard baseball nine will be maneuvered by its captain, who is a student. The professional coaches will efface them selves, at least while the games are playing. The pestiferous alumni coaches will also be condemned to an Impossible silence. What is an alum nus at a college game without his mouth? It is prophesied that these new rules will help clean up inter collegiate athletics. The prediction is bold considering the magnitude of the task, but there may be something in it - There should be no trifling with the Bull Run reservation. The inroad just now made is slight, but it may form a dangerous precedent. The wa ter supply of a great city is more im portant than the Interests of a few homesteaders. This is a matter con cerning which Portland must exer cise that eternal vigilance which is the price of good water as well as liberty. In these days, when the state of our trade with South America gives so much concern, trifles grow important. Experts say that much may be lost or gained by a letterhead. The South Americans despise flaring braggadocio and like clean-cut, businesslike pre cision. A wise merchant, who courts their trade will therefore make his stationery neat, accurate and modest. The Oregon onion is a meek and lowly member of the vegetable king dom, but there is nothing meek and lowly about the man who grew it last -year, with the article selling at four . or five times the price of he apple. A paper at Mexico City has been suppressed for failing to report a fed eral victory at Torreon. It's now up to Villa to hang a corresponderit or two or not reporting a rebel victory. That old health officer in Spokane who suggests rubbing cheeks as a substitute for the world-old method of osculation must have a stand-in with the safety razor people. Eighty thousand railroad hands In Italy are agitating a strike. Who would have suspected there were that many Italian railroad hands outside the United States? The Frenchwoman who has gone to Rome to induce the Vatican to rescind the recent order for decency In woman's dress will have her trouble for her pains. Grandma Todd, 104, has been ad vised to quit smoking for her health's sake. Her habits seem to' have served her pretty well so far. As medical science progresses very likely we shall be able to buy new eyes with the ease that we now ac quire glasses. The federals at Torreon are re ported by Villa to be withdrawing. To celebrate a victory, perhaps. Rains are coming, announces the general weather bureau, i That's not a prophecy; it's history now. There is a little space left in that part of the ticket allotted to candi dates for Coroner. Bill Hanley will acquire the title of Senator by brevet, anyway. Tomorrow is the day of baseball, fishing and April fools. The fly campaign is on and all needed is a few flies. ' ' , Of course, we'll have to take the first game. - What's the score; WHERE MOST BILLS COME FROM TaieatlnK Officialdom Impoaes on Members of Legislature. SALEM, Or., March 29. (To the Edi tor.) Your editorial naming some fit persons for places on the Legislative ticket in Multnomah County is very much appreciated by thinklag people. If more newspapers had the courage to name some fit persons in each county it would be easier for the people to get their minds fixed on at least part of a ticket that might not be entirely unfit. But our politics has become so permeated with cowardice that It is too much to hope for. The men who are In office have such an advantage that only the most nervy seeker for a profitable job will announce himself. Speaking for those who have their all invested in Oregon real estate, and are easy marks for the taxgatherer, I wish to call attention to the bad break in our governmental system. We are supposed to elect men to the General Assembly once in two years to appro priate money to carry on the state government and make new laws for county and state government. These alleged representatives go up to the General Assembly supposedly to repre sent the people who elected them. Mostly they go there with no bills of their own to introduce, and their con stituents have asked them to introduce no bills, or if they have said anything about it have protested against more laws and have even begged for the re peal of many existing laws. Now what takes place? The Legisla tor who has no bills, who is not asked to create any new laws, and generally has not the brains to get up a law, in some mysterious way grinds out in the last session 640 pages of general laws, and In the coming session of 1915 in due proportion we may look for 1000 pages of new legislation, who gets them up for him? He has them not under his hat nor in his coat pocket The people do not contrive them. His stenographer or committee clerk is in nocent in this matter. Whence comes the flood of legislation? Is it not fact that nearly all the new legislation originates In the desires of public or ficials and boards and commissions at the seat of government or at Portland? It appeared in the late city election at Portland that the 23 measures initiated for the people to vote upon. and which were all rejected by some ma:onty, were all the handiwork of the members of the City Commission, or other city officials. In the last gen eral state election nearly all the bills submitted to the people were from the various state departments or boarus or commissions, and they, too, were nearly all rejected. In the same way that officialism has loaded down the bal lot and which the people have sys tematically learned to distrust and re ject the officials, boards and commis sions descend upon the untrained and unsophisticated members of the Legis lature and lobby through the 640 pages of legislation creatine offices and car rying appropriations and new grants or powers. On top of this pernicious influence come those who desire new places cre ated for themselves and their depend ents. In 1903 Oregon had 13 boards and commissions costing $67,600 in ap propriations. In round numbers as the result of the session of the 1913 Legls lature ana intervening sessions we have 55 commissions, boards and agents having total appropriations of $1,178,- oai.su. .Reliable figures show followin increase in appropriations for state of ficials since 1903: Office 1903. IMS Governor S11.000 $J5,70O 68.000 35,530 20.600 13,000 Secretary of State.. 24..SOO Treasurer 10,600 Attorney-General 7,200 Board of Horticulture 1),000 Labor Commissioner 2,600 Library Commission 2,000 S.OOO 6.000 These are only samples to show that the Influence comes not from the much abused Legislature, but from Dreda- tory officialism, that serves not the people but itself, and we need men in the Legislature who will stand off the horde that has forced our state taxes to a point where Investments in proo- erty or industries or tranSDortation lines or even banks become almost im possible. lour services to the rjeoole of the state in bringing out a better class of men for the Legislature should be fol lowed by a general movement of the business men and women of the state to secure a man for Governor who his not been a part of the system that has neaped up present and almost intoler able burdens. If the people are foolish enough ta take up men who have prov en burdensome taskmasters then they must not complain if new burdens are laid on their shoulders. Handine out campaign promises is assuming that ma peupie are easy marks, ana as a rule they are. But when the taxes on a bank amount to 6 per cent of its capi tal stock, when the rent on a home amounts to no more than the taxes, it is time to demand more than promises. uregon needs a dignified man for Governor, who has not been a partici pant in the looting of the taxpayer. Give us a candidate for Governor who has been on the firing line with the taxpayers, and not a leader of the tax eaters. Such a Governor would be able to assist the Legislature in withstand ing the raids of the organized graft now misnamed our state government The determination of the people to elect such a man Governor, who is not on any board or commission, and who has not lobbied measures throuch the Leg islature in the interest of his own de- la, viiicim itum vuuiu lur Buiiteiiiiiig and infuse courage and resistance into the backbone of the Legislature. E. IIOFER. Author of Poem. KNOB, Wash., March 29 (To the Editor.) Please publish the name of the author of the poem "Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" A. B. KINGSBURY, The line is from the poem 'Mortal- ity," by William Knox. Worthy. "He has some sins," St. Peter said "but cover them with chalk; He's often listened for two hours to other people talk." Dallas News. The Fly Campaign B7 Dean Collins. Wake me early mother. With loud and lusty cry; For I and little brother Go forth to swat the fly; And for a season, gaily With all our might and main. We'll do our duty daily In this wild fly campaign. No quarter for the fly; Never come to terms: Swat surely; he must die. Lodging-house for germs. On the wall or on the chair, Zizzing swiftly through the air. Perched on papa's dome, Crawling over baby's eyes. We will always swat the flies Everywhere they ream. Big 'flies, little files, ( Flies both old and young, Lean files, mean flies, 'Neath our blows are flungf Wejhave beaten, all alone, Samson with the big jawbone, And we'll always try Daily to add to our store. More and more and more and more As we swat the fly. Flee flies, flee away From the zone of strife; For we are out today Bound to get your life. Anywhere or everywhere. There is not a spot Where the fly to rest may dare, On the earth or In the air, While the children swat SOCIALISTS NO REPRESENTATION t Mr. Barsee Thinks They Have a Vse- less Franchise.. PORTLAND. March SO. (To the Ed itor.) As a citizen of a minority party, with unimpeached citizen's rights, 1 ask space for this letter. Demand for proportional representa tion? Yes; disputed but unrefuted. So cialist party demand? Yes; also the probable demand of other minority par ties after their convention meeting. Franchises and representation are the fundamentals of any republic. We have franchise but not representation. Fair representation should meet with favor from any fair-minded citizen who believes in a representative form of government Why give state recognition to a po lltical party if its constituents be de nied equal rights with other citizens? Why not repudiate such citizenship and disallow any such party rec ognition? ' Has the writer of the editorial any better, cleaner or more useful citizen's qualifications, aside from his natural ability and opportu nity. than the writer of this letter, be cause the latter belongs to the Socialist party? These questions are pertinent but not Impertinent Has the Republican party not access to the initiative as well as the Socialist party? If Socialists are to be denied representation of their party demands where laws are discussed and made, why not the Republican party also? wny not aooiisn the Legislature alto gether and allow all parties an equal opportunity at lawmaking in propor tion to their citizenship, if they be qualified citizens? C. W. BARZEE. There is no actual political represen tation in the Oregon Legislature. Every candidate provides his own issues and his own pledges. Neither of the three dominant parties has or will have a state party platform. The men they elect to the Assembly will have party membership but no party obligation on any issue. Mr. Barzee Is not denied the right to vote for any candidate under the present system. The writer of this statement has the same right and nothing more. Propor tional representation is a plan to give the Socialist and other minority parties or groups the power to combine state wide numbers and secure the election of party or group members in the Leg islature without reference to legisla tive districts. It is a plan to make party membership more important than actual representation of any locality. Proportional representation would mean that some districts would go un represented. The knowledge of state needs that can be had in a Legislature only by electing Representatives by the district method is a far greater essential than a distribution of Jobs on a party basis. BUGLE! CALL OF PEACE! SOUNDED Undignified to Throw Stones at Eng land, Asserts Correspondent. SPRINGFIELD, Or., March 29. (To the Editor.) In this period of progress when nations are striving for ascend ency in that which makes for peace commensurate with the moral status we trust to have attained, it is beneath the dignity of our political representa tives to throw stones at England over the heads of our Government. The American people know that Eng land Is not "hostile to America" as has been asserted. It ie time for men of good political standing to cease such utterances; to use the strength of their united efforts in speaking words of peacefulness that will be to all people a dignified expression of their worth iness to represent the people, large numbers of whom are making tireless efforts in the direction of a true brotherhood which our forefathers gave their lives to establish, not knowing a better way than was chosen at that time. When a brother wins a political race there should be no root of bitterness to spoil the vines of earnest deeire to serve humanity. 'Jitiere will be service for all willing workers and the render ing of this service may be the office of every man and woman in their vari ous pursuits among men. Our work then in home, church and state will be a power in bringing forth the supremacy of justice tempered with mercy, of wisdom, truth and love. It shall not be said that the labor of great men and women has been vain in the past or present Ye who are striving for the establishment of peace are the first fruits of their labor, being channels also for the inflow of righteousness. the executors of lightness for human ity. The turbulence of many differing opinions restrained by the compassion ate touch of love for humanity will quell the strife engendered by many factions which in their attempts to do good often add fuel to a flame kindled by ignorance. The bugle call to peace has sounded: let us answer the call with brave hearts and be on the positive side, the side of successful peace-making. MRS. S. ELIZABETH HILL. DEAR. OLD-FASHIONED MOTHERS They Bore Many Children, Lost Many and Died of Overwork. New York Times. Cor. You report that Mrs. John Jerome Rooney has administered a scolding to "advanced" women gathered at the Church of the Messiah. I wonder how many of the men and women who ap plauded Mrs. Rooney stopped to 'think Just what "the old-fashioned home" was, and the "old-fashioned mother." I should like to tell of mine, and I dare say the description fits thousands of others. I was born more than 40 years ago in an old-fashioned home." My mother had 10 children. She made carpets, bedquilts, soap and butter; knit our stockings and mittens, and made all our clothes. Poor mother, what of her? Just an endless round of drudgery and suffering that made her irritable and peevish. She could not give proper care and attention to so many chil dren. Whooping cough, croup and diphtheria carried off six in early child hood. Consumption carried off the seventh early in manhood. At 40 years my poor mother was a widow, white haired, bent and toothless. What thoughtful, intelligent person could wish for a return or continuance of such a condition for woman? Those who cry for it should give up their and tiled baths and go back to the woods. . Fly Farmlnc Impossible. PORTLAND, March 30. (To the Edi tor.) I note in The Oregonian Satur day a letter describing the business en terprise shown by tha children of Texas in breeding flies for prizes in fly cam paigns similar to the one now proposed for Portland. The period of incubation, the larva and pupa states and the emergencies of the mature fly requires from eight to ten days. It there were in the City of Portland children of sufficient scien tific training to successfully breed flies within the ten days' limit set for our campaign they would deserve any prize they might secure, because they would have accomplished something that the scientists of the Biological Department of Washington have not been able to do under the most favorable condi tions. LOIS P. MYERS. Chairman of the Executive Committee, Anti-Fly Campaign, Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonlan of March 31, 1SS9. Washington, March 30. The Senate today rejected the nomination of Murat Halstead for Minister to Germany by a vote of 25 to 19. His paper, the Cincin nati Commercial Gazette, says he was rejected because he honestly criticised the methods by which men were elect ed to the Senate. The origin of tho matter was the election of Henry B. Payne. The medical department of the Uni versity of Oregon last night graduated J. D. Fenton, C. M. Cornelius, J. W. Haines, J. p. Tamiesie and H. A. Watt Albany, March 30. Captain Robinson and the three men from the schooner George H. Chance were found in a per ilous situation near Nestucca Bay, about 30 miles north of Yaquina, where they had drifted in a small boat Their boat was filled wUh water and they were nearly perismed. They had been out two days without food. Tacoma. March 30. The Northern Pacific will begin running two trains a day on April 7 between Tacoma and St Paul and will reduce the time 1-' hours. One of the trains will be ves tibuled. Patsy Cardiff left for San Francisco yesterday to go into training for his fight with Peter Jackson. Building has commenced in Feurer's addition, but carpenters are scarce. The funeral yesterday of William Doran was largely attended. In 1857 William Doran was employed as fire man on the old steamship Columbia between this city and San Francisco. In -1861 he went on the middle Colum bia In the employ of Captain J. C. Ains worth and Colonel Ruckles and he has been chief engineer on that route ever since. His hand held the throttle of the R. R. Thompson as well as nearly all the boats brought over the Cas cades. The free bath fund is growing and over $500 is subscribed. Among the latest contributors are Simon Harris, Gerald Robinson, Harry Boyd and Rev. T. L. Eliot. The contract for building the cable railway engine-house was yesterday let to J. E. Bennett. A pleasant social was given Friday night at the residence of S. Stott on Columbia Slough. H. Burnett, an old resident of East Portland, has returned from Denver. Douglas and Frank Keenan have re turned from -Southern California. J. C. McGrew and wife will leave for the East on April 8. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonlan of March St. 1S64. Arkansas is the first of the slave states to abolish slavery and return to the Union. Albany, March 30. The Union state convention elected Wilson Bowlby. president and W. C. Whitson and W. J. Allen, secretaries. A resolution re questing the establishment of a branch mint at Portland cerated considerable discussion betweeh the delegation from The Dalles, headed by Ivewell, and delegates from other sections of the state. Finally it was voted to strike out the word "Portland," leaving the location unnamed, but intimating that the Legislature had already settled that question. Five ballots were taken on nomination for a candidate for Con gress, the fifth resulting: J. H. Hender son, of Lane County, 60; Joel Palmer, of Yamhill, 31; Orange Jacobs, of Jack son. 21. Judge Shattuck closed the March term of Circuit Court at Oregon City yester day. William Stricklin was acquitted on his second trial for the murder of Lebbeus Moran. W. W. Page, of this city, conducted the prosecution and the prisoner was defended- by A. E. Wait and J. K. Kelly. The control of the Overland Press at Olympia has reverted to J. G. Ab bott & Co. and it will still stand up for the Union. Mrs. Edwards was convicted of mur der in the first degree in the United States District Court at Vancouver on Tuesday evening. The case was argued by Messrs. Lawrence and Potter for the defense and 11. G. Struve and J. Catlln for the prosecution. Judge Wyche delivered an able address. The bark Samuel Merritt Is loading piles at tho mouth of Lewis River for San Francisco. This bark, has beaten every vessel in the lino between here and San Francisco. J. L. Parrish proposes to erect a sub stantial brick edifice on his lot at the corner of Front and Washington streets. It will be three stories high. The Portland Stock , Board meets every Tuesday evening. Subjoined is tho list of rates bid and askel: Bid. Asked. Oregon Steam Navigation Co.... 0' lo0o P. & M. macadamized road o')',m John Day Mining Co., per share Union Mining to., banpam uisu . per share ... . . . '. .V.-.V.. .$50 ' 75 Santlam Mlnlne Co., Santiam Dlst.. tier share Bannock, Boisa Dlst., per share. 5 Crane & Drlgg (Jwyuee uisi., ier share 1 Morning Star, Owyhee Dlst.. per share 1 Owyee, Owyee Dlst., per share. . 5 W Shoshone, Owyhee Dlst., per share o Fine German silver instruments for the Mechanics' Brass Band have arrived at the music store of H. Sinsheimer, 105 First street The steamer Wilson G. Hunt took 3'i tons of stone from this city yesterday ' to be used for door and window sills in a new building at The Dalles. The stone was taken from a quarry across the river opposite Portland. E. W. Hodgkinson was nominated by acclamation by the Union state conven tion for Prosecuting Attorney of this district. National Advertisers Need Newspapers Not so very long ago it was said that National advertisers needed newspapers. By National advertisers 13 meant all manufacturers, producers, or dis tributers that have anything to sell to the people of this country. It doesn't matter what It is they wish to sell merchandise or service if they tackle National advertis ing in a fair-minded spirit shorn of all sentiment they bring up sooner or later with this fact: The biggest advertising successes In the history of the profession have been brought about by the use of good and reliable newspapers. Ask any enterprising retailer who understands advertising and the con ditions in the community which he serves, and he will tell you that far and away the best assistance he can get from the makers of his merchan dise is newspaper advertising. The retailer knows from experi ence and observation that the best way to make any brand of honest goods known to all the people in 'his community is to tell them about t in plain and unn'ilterated Eng lish in the best newspapers.