8 TTTE MOmSTNG OREGONIAN, WTTOXTTST? AT. NOVEMBER 11, 1914. mm FOBTLAXD, OBEGOK. Entered at Portland, Oregon, Postoiflce a Second-class matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advances im MalLt Dally. Monday Included, one year 5'2S Dally. Sunday Included, six months ..... E-ally, Sunday Included, three months ... tali. Sunday Included, one month ..... Daily, witbout Sunday, one year o-YY Pally, without Sunday, ix montha ..... Dally, without Sunday, three montha ... Dally, without Sunday, one month, ..... Weekly one year ?0 fiiiiwlilv .nH Wulrlo nnAVM&P .......... Dally, Sunday Included, one year ...i'-"r Dallv. 8unilftv Included, one month How to Remit Send PoBtoffice money or der, express order or personal cneck o"0"! .r,H.--. w.v r:i r.o.trfiea address In too. InAhiHIn. n H attttlL ... .m 14 t nuM. 1 cent; 18 to 82 p&gea, 2 cents; 34 to 48 paeea, 3 60 to SO pages. cents; 62 to .74 P,6 cents; 78 to a pages. 0 cents. Foreign post- Kaatrn Rmriniu Orriee Vol 1 ee Conk- Hn, Mew York. Brunswick building. CU c&eo. Stenrer buildlnK. San Francisco Office R. 3. BldweU Co- T42 Market street, . rOBTLaXD, WDXE8DaX. NOV, IX. 191. LET JUKI DECIDE. The people of Oregon, as Indicated ty the vote In the recent election. are nearly eauallv divided on the Question of abolishing capital pun ishment. Only a small majority fa vors retention of the death penalty The Legislature is bound to respect the will of the people, but it could adopt a middle course that -would doubtless gain the approval of many who are opposed to the existing rigid law and stUl not be displeasing to those who voted to retain capital pun ishment. There Is now but one penalty fixed for murder in the first degree. It is death. For the man convicted of the crime there is but one chance to escape the gallows. That is through the leniency of the Governor. The law, therefore, finds considerable op position because of its rigidity. It Is known and understood that occa sionally there are mildly mitigating circumstances that would Justify the lesser penalty of life imprisonment for first-degree murderers. The proper agency to decide be tween the two penalties, it seems to ua, is the trial Jury. In certain other states, If the jury returns a verdict simply declaring the accused guilty of murder in the first degree the penalty automatically becomes, death. If the Jury deems the milder penalty a proper one it so declares. This plan relieves the jury of what to some members would be the distasteful necessity of declaring af firmatively that the accused shall hang. On the other hand. It opens the way for recognition of circum stances which, while they do not de fine the crime as murder in the second degree, seem to make life Imprison ment a sentence nearer in accord with exact Justice. The suggested change In the law is commended to the consideration of the Legislature as an act not only self Justified, but as one that would partly meet the desires of nearly one-half the people of Oregon without violat ing the instructions given by the ma jority. States purchased more than five times as many shingles from British Columbia as it purchased in the cor responding nine months of the preced ing year. In the same later period it purchased nearly seven times as much lumber. These are Government sta tistics. But wherever lower prices in behalf of the consumer now rule the mischief is that our people are less able to pay the lower, prices than they were to pay the higher prices under the Payne-Aldrich tariff, for their earn ings are reduced. Of what benefit in It to a sawmill employe to reduce the price of eggs and butter and at the same time to take away his job? The Tribune flatly contradicts the Democratic platform when it says: "The fact of the matter is the tariff has but little influence on the price of commodities." The platform says: "We charge that excessive prices re sult In a large measure from exces sive tariff laws." The Democrats have repudiated this plank, for they have been boasting that their tariff has not reduaed prices. It has reduced prices on some commodities, but it has been prevented by extraneous causes, such as the wool shortage, from re ducing them on others. Had not the war intervened, prices would possibly have continued to fall and wool would soon have been cheaper. American industry has been saved for the time being from the calamity arising from the Underwood tariff by the much greater calamity which has befallen Europe. We prefer to escape that calamity by wise legislation, not by other nations misdeeds or misfor tunes. seeks the clearest expression ho can And. Conrad fills his elect band of ad mirers with joy by his difficulties. In this respect he is like Browning, who might have beenv among the greatest of poets if he had been able to put his thought Into Intelligible language. The trouble with such men as Brown ing and Conrad is that they do not themselves fully know what they are thinking. They feel that there Is some vague and formless thought in their minds and, without taking the pains to work it out into clarity they daub it down on paper. The result is such books as we all know and shun. now to save ix rcisxjc printing. The glad tidings is sent out from Salem that the saving in state print ing during the past thirteen months will approximate $30,000. That period represents the new regime in the state printing office. The days of "fat rake-offs" to a proft-taking1 public officer are said to bo over. The era of the flat salary and the "lean take" are here. Perhaps. But the announcement of this mighty saving Is accompanied by numerous explanations. Explanations are not wanted, but results. The re sults ought to show in reduced de mands upon the Legislature for print ing appropriations. If the money spent in printing shall be less, the tax burden will be cut down propor tionately. If the Legislature Is required for any reason to Increase the ap propriations, how Is the taxpayer benefited? A real saving in state printing can be made, undoubtedly, if there shall be less printing. There is, and long has been, great waste in the publica tion of numerous documents , not worth attention and in th free use of the state printing facilities by all kinds of public officers. It ought to bo stopped. Then we shall have real economy in the state printing office. TARIFF fTUi HURTS. Request is made by a Sclo reader that The Oregonian reply to the tariff article from the Sclo Tribune printed on this page. Inasmuch as the Tribune possesses a false notion of what The Oregonian will say after election and as its arguments are founded on false premises. The Oregonian Is only too willing to reply. Like the Democrats in Congress the Tribune insists that the Democratic deficit was due to the war, not to Democratic extravagance. ' Facts are against it. The deficit which made emergency . taxes necessary is estimated for the current fiscal year at $100,000,000. The Democrats appropriated for this year $103,000,000 more than was ap propriated by the last Republican Congress. Had they saved that $103, 000,000, there "would have been no deficit and no emergency taxes would have been necessary. It was almost all waste. Our neighbor tells us that the Re publicans should have been pleased by the embargo placed upon European Importations by the war "because it - served the same end as a prohibitory tariff would." If the Republican party stood for a "prohibitory tariff" and was Inclined to justify human slaughter with the realization of its economic policies the Republicans might have been pleased. But the party platform does not declare for a prohibitory tariff. It seeks to pre vent by Imposition of the tariff un equal competition with ' American products by cheaper foreign products and moreover It is not unmindful of customs receipts. The war seems to have been a welcome relief only to the Democrats. It has saved them 1 from the dissatisfaction of those who are ready to accept any excuse for a failure of policy and has offered a convenient pretext for the imposition of a deficiency tax. The Oregonian will not cease to "howl" about Chinese eggs and New Zealand butter now that the election Is over. The price paid the producer for butterfat has been uniformly lower since importations began under the Underwood tariff. The figures are available to every one. If the con sumer is still paying as high a price for butter, then who in the world has been benefited other than the far off dairyman of New Zealand? Cer tainly we have sufferers in our midst. And if Sclo consumers are still paying as high prices for eggs as they ever did they might try the Portland markets. Chinese eggs have been on sale In this city In the past week at 20 cents the dozen. It may be ad mitted that during the slack laying season in Oregon the Chinese impor tations do not materially affect the price paid by the consumer for strictly fresh Oregon eggs. There is demand for all the eggs Oregon pro duces at this period of the year from those who will not buy Chinese or storage eggs at any price when they can get fresh eggs. The real competi tlon occurs In the Spring and Summer, when Oregon eggs are plentiful and are going into storage. The Chinese egg competes primarily with the stor age egg. It bears the price paid the Oregon egg producer by the storage houses and cuts the price of the stor- age eggs to the consumer in the "Winter. It is true that the war has shut off the European market for lumber, but it has not shut off the Eastern and Middle Western markets. Under the Underwood tariff those markets are largely supplied by British Columbia mills, while the Oregon and Wash ington mills are working only to half capacity. During the first nine months of the Underwood tariff the. United THJS BOT FROBLBSL The Reverend Dr. Bryant does not agree with Bernard Shaw and some other great authorities about "the boy problem." In his speech to the Inter national Purity Congress at Kansas City he advised fathers to "go swim ming with their boys, run races with them, play marbles with them i and help them about the chores." This course of strategy, he promised, would smooth away the difficulties with growing boys which beset every household. Booth -Tarklngton has elaborated these difficulties amusingly in his "Penrod." Anybody who does not feel himself an adept In the psychology of urchlndom is earnestly advised to peruse that erudite story with fast ing and. if necessary, with prayer. Bernard Shaw gives advice exactly the opposite of Dr. Bryant's. Accord ing to him boys are the natural foes of their fathers. Friendly advances from the parental quarters are sure to be misinterpreted as insidious ambushes. It is almost as scandalous, he believes for a youth to be on good terms with his father as to be a favorite with his teachers. It is well understood by all red-blooded people that boys who are not in perpetual trouble with their teachers are milksops, mollycod dies and weaklings. Much the same rule applies to their relations with parents. How to reconcile these conflicting views we cannotJ4magine, but it is hardly likely thatb1he constant com panionship of am adult Is best for a growing boy. He needs the society of his equals, partly for discipline, partly for entertainment. There are certain lessons which boys must learn from boys or not at all. Among these Is the Invaluable one of self-control as well as that of "playing fair." A boy who thoroughly learns to "play fair" and live up to the rules in his games is pretty certain to make a decent member of society. Adults have usually forgotten how to teach this and other great moral lessons to their boys. They make a sad mess of It as often as they try, Everyhody knows what a failure so called "moral Instruction" often is in schools. It is apt to be worse still in the family. The best possible environ ment for a growing boy is a group of his own brothers and sisters with plenty of wild young friends. - JOSEPH CONRAD. Literary exquisites are filling the world just now with noise over Joseph Conrad. Have you ever tried to read any of his novels? Those who have tried must understand ex actly why people of superior taste rant and rave about them. They are ponderous, dull and perplexing. No doubt Conrad is a great artist, but he belongs to the school which is never appreciated except by a precious an vociferous few. His art is so esoteric if it exists at all, that a person must be born with a sixth sense to enjoy it This is not the kind of art which the world values permanently. Writ era of the first rank appeal not to an especially illuminated coterie, but to all mankind. Such was Shakespeare and such was Homer. The thin voice which pipes to a chosen few in a chastely darkened parlor may be delightful in Its way, but it is not for eternity. It will soon sink into silence. An author must live in millions of souls to make sure of immorality. No artist is ever too great to be un derstood and loved by the multitude. If he stands aloof from the common mind it is because of littleness, not greatness. The greatest novelists, like the greatest poets, have been direct, simple and intensely human. Balzac . and Dickens were shining examples of these qualities. Perplexities, obscuri ties and riddles creep into the work of pigmies. - The giants feel no need of such helps. When a writer over flows with his subject he has no time to cultivate ponderousness. He AN ENGLISH WAR, MANIAC. An -Englishman named Wyatt, the head of the British Navy League, has a good deal to say In the Nineteenth Century about war as the favorite pastime of the Almighty. Mr. Wyatt's intimacy . with the divine councils is something astonishing. He not only knows exactly how the Lord regards war, but he also understands to the last iota his reasons for encouraging It "Efficiency in war," says Mr. Wyatt, "Is God's test of a nation's soul." It undoubtedly does test a nation's soul, or rather its body, but we are in quisitive to learn how Mr. Wyatt dis covered that- it is the Almighty who applies the test and delights in it- Is he perfectly certain that It Is not his Satanic Majesty? With which potentate is war likely to be more in harmony, the Prince of Peace who romises in his own good time to wipe away all tears from their eyes" and provide a world where there Is no more sorrow, or the monarch of the inferno, who revels in evil? My Wyatt, like all his kind, has much to tell us about the "spiritual qualities" which war enhances. Among these are, if w may believe him. intelligence, purity of public life. chastity, industry," with most of the other Christian virtues. If you really want to make a man tender-hearted, kind and pitiful, Mr. Wyatt advises, set him at the business of wholesale slaughter. It is wonder ful what a refining effect bloodshed will exert upon his baser nature. - We should like to hear the apostles of butchery explain how war does this, and also how it promotes intelligence. "Theirs not to reason why, says Tennyson of the troops, "Theirs not to make reply." The best soldier is one who does not use his mind at all but simply "does and dies." Doing and dying are the soldier's business. ot thinking. His superiors attend to that for him. How can intelligence grow if it Is never used? We know far too well, moreover, how warfare promotes "purity In public life." Every big war recorded in history has been followed by a perfect orgy of public dishonesty. It was so even in Japan, a nation which had become famous for its. honesty be fore lts war with Russia. Our own Civil War preceded the worst out break of domestic corruption we have ever seen. History fails to sustain Mr. Wyatt on any of these points, but that will probably not worry him much. War is the great maker of history and militarists of the fanatic kidney seldom shrink from doing the same on their own account. case of Belgium. Only superior force would avail to ward off aggression. France and Great Britain have been unable to save Belgium from conquest and devastation, though they are its close neighbors, and, combined, have a far more powerful army and navy than the United States has. The Phil ippines are 7000 miles distant from the United States, across a. great ocean. Japan, a great military and naval power, is their close neighbor. If Germany should come out victor ious in the war, she would regain the closely adjacent Caroline Islands and might take such neighboring British colonies as Hongkong, the Malay Pen insula and Borneo. Should the allies win, either Great Britain or Japan would take the Carolines. China may soon develop into a great military power. The Philippines If independ ent would thus be in constnt danger. Such a state would be likely to give frequent offense to its neighbors, whose resentment would combine with cupidity to prompt invasion. It would then be incumbent upon the United States to maintain a suf- flcient naval and military force within striking distance of the Philippines to ward off invasion. A much larger force than we now maintain in the Orient would be necessary. Unless we placed an army on the islands or in close proximity, we should be at Ira mense disadvantage In defending them. They might be overrun and subdued before our army could reach them from the Pacific Coast. The only alternative to a large increase in our Army and Navy would be the frank confession that the treaty guar anteeing Independence was but a "scrap of paper." Belgium's sad ex perience proves that, in the absence of a supporting force superior to that of any nation disposed so to regard it. the treaty would be nothing else. Hence our own Interests as well as those of the Filipinos dictate that we should retain our present full control over the Island until they have made much progress In self-government and until the world has much more regard for the sanctity of treaties. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian. November 10. 18M. Found "not guilty" of tearing down the American flag suspended In front of the McClellan headquarters, Edward Gibson, who says his grandfather served on Washington's bodyguard dur ing the Revolution, was yesterday sent to jail for contempt of court. He was Intoxicated at the time of his trial and used abusive language to the complain ing witness. Death rides on every passing breesa. He larks in every Uower; He pops the Cops from right to left To show his wondrous power. Kentucky's "moonlight schools" con tinue to shed a mild and beneficent radiance. Mrs. Cora Wilson Stewart founded them. Grown men and women attend them along with the children. There are now 2000 of these schools in the Kentucky mountains, with 100,000 pupils, old and young. Mrs. Stewart evidently knows how to break the bread of life for the hungry. Mcdellaiiltee. E. S. McComaa, of La Grande, was In town for a few days last week to se cure press materials for a paper in that city. The excitement Incident to election being over, our city has relapsed into Its usual quietness. Campaign orators have departed and bands of music are heard no more. Despite the stormy weather there was a good crowa at the Willamette The ater last night to see "Peer and the Pedler." The last day or two we have been having a foretaste of coming events in the shape of downpourlng rain. Our streets are very muddy and there are many places where an Inventive mind might suggest Improvements. Olympla, Nov. 9. Information has been received from the Snohomish River to the effect that three white persons and one Indian have been killed in Indian troubles in that vi cinity. The Oregonian has a larger circula tion than any other paper In the states and is the only newspaper which pays the Internal revenue tax required from papers with a circulation greater than 2000 copies. Mrs. Elizabeth C Dodge, wife of John W. Dodge, died suddenly Wednesday morning. Mrs. Dodge was 30 years old. With her husband 8he came here from New York City. V Th counties giving majorities in fa vor of Lincoln loot up 2100 In favor of the Union cause, less the small Democratic majorities in Linn, Ben ton, Jackson, Josephine and Lane counties. COURTS DEVOTED TO BUT ONE EXD Feellniro of Witness Subordinate, to Troth and Justice Toward Accused. PORTLAND. Nov. 10. (To the Ed itor.) If there Is any man who de serves the confidence of this commu nity it is Judge McGinn, always sympa thetic with the unfortunate and op pressed; always fearless to do his duty politically, socially or Judicially. I am a believer In giving a man credit for his life record. Of what value Is char acter If It Is not to count in a moment of excitement. The people have their eyes focused on a little girl witness in a delinquency case. she Is hysterical and it seems to me the public is becoming so. The vital point is overlooked that the courts of justice have only one end in view: Truth and the protection of the inno cent. That is supreme. Witnesses and their feelings are nothing compared to the truth and to giving the accused such a trial as will prevent the convic tion of the innocent. No witness has a right to more than protection from abuse and unlawful questions. I would absolutely and im plicltly trust Judge McGinn to Bee that any witness before him was protected so far as the law permitted in the in lerest of truth, but I repeat, the object of a trial Is not to spare the feelings of witnesses, but to elicit truth and pro tect the accused, who Is presumed to be Innocent until proved guilty. To Twenty-Five Years Ago CONSEQUENCES OP TARIFF CHANGE Contemporary Places) AH Failures at This Is an age of experiment with courts. We have grown familiar with public defenders, juvenile courts and courts of morals. Now comes Cleve land with a "court of concilliation. It is the old-fashioned arbitration process between neighbors reduced to a system, and it is said to save law yers fees and reconcile enemies. Our farmers need no longer fear Australian competition In the food market. That loyal colony now de clines to ship grain, and coal, too, any where outside the British Empire. England owes a heavy debt to her colonies in this war, and the hope of their disloyalty has been a false lure for her foes. WARNING IN BELGIUM'S FATE. Belgium's experience with neutral ity guaranteed by all the powers of Europe has a direct bearing on Demo cratic policy toward the Philippines. It is proposed that we give the Islands self-government under an American Governor, who is to have a veto on the acts of the Legislature, while the President Is to have a second veto This Is little more than the suzerainty under which Great Britain placed the Transvaal and which culminated in the Boer war. But this form of con trol Is admitted to be only a prelude to Independence under a guaranty in which the United States is to ask the European powers to join. The experience of Belgium shows of how little value are such guaranties. Belgium la a highly-civilized, peace- loving country, which had scrupulous ly regarded the obligations imposed on it by the guaranty of its independ ence. When war between France and Germany impended, Belgium called on both powers to renew their pledge. France did so, but Germany did not. Germany's plea of military necessity and her description of the neutrality treaty as a "scrap of paper" prove to be mere afterthoughts of her charges that Belgium was already acting in concert with France and Britain to violate the treaty. In resisting Ger- Men who should be better employed splitting wood, for example are fig uring the increase in the cost of liv ing since the war began. Just for a change, they might estimate "the In crease in cost of dying in Europe since the war began. Vale retains the county seat of Mal heur, and Ontario must get along without whatever advantages accrue to possession of offices and office holders. As a .lively commercial town this should be easy. That Harmony Club of gubernatorial candidates must not dissolve. It can be the nucleus for a grand organiza tion in 1916, when Oregon shall go Republican "from top to bottom." The commander at Beirut, who threatens to kill three Christians for every Mussulman killed in bombard ment will find himself boiling in oil just after the allies get him. Fond parents are admonished against using baby . talk to their tender progeny. When we recover from that habit we'll be admonished against monosyllables. The catch of cod around the Grand Banks this season is about 20 per cent short, but there is enough to let the many. Belgium was only performing brain-forming flshball penetrate to this rir rtntv n a. nentrnl- 1unt A i Swit?.pr- I vOiou land performed hers in 1870 by dis arming Bourbaki's army when it en tered Swiss territory. Judge Peter S. Grosscup's plea that. although Belgium was under no duty to Germany to grant her transit, she was under no duty to England or France to resist it by force" is refuted by the historians and text-writers of Germany. Oppenhelm says the rights and duties of neutralized states in time of war impose "not only the ob ligation not to assist either belligerent. but likewise the obligation to prevent them from making use of the neutral territory for their military purposes." Professor Bluntschll, of Heidelberg, even held that a neutralized state which was powerless to defend Its own neutrality lost by that fact its charac ter as a neutral. Aside from the spe cial treaty of neutrality signed in 1831 and reaffirmed in 1839 and 1870, Bel gium was bound by The Hague treaty of 1907. The fifth article of that treaty reads: A neutral state ' shall not allow on Its territory any of the acts mentioned in arti cles 2 to 1 Article 2 reads: Belligerents are forbidden to send troops or convoys either of munitions of war or of provisions tnrougn ine territory ot a neutral state. , Article 10 Justifies the resistance of Belgium to German invasion, not only by organized troops, but by popular uprising of civilians, for It reads: The act by a neutral state of resisting any violation of Its neutrality, even by force of arms, cannot be regarded as an act of hostility. When the rights of a neutral, so highly civilized, so carefully observant of its obligations, as Belgium are violated by one of the signatories of the neutrality treaty and of The Hague treaty, what assurance should we have that a treaty guaranteeing the independence of the Philippines would be observed whenever the inter est of any power required its violation ? Unlike Belgium, the Philippines would be a semi-barbarous state most of its people uneducated, and would prob ably be careless of international obli gations. Its rulers would be likely to give frequent cause of complaint to other states, and any nation with ag gressive designs against it would have little difficulty in finding far more plausible cause for violation of its neutrality than Germany found In the The supreme agony in Nevada cen ters on the count in which Newlands Is two votes ahead of his Republican opponent and all returns not in. Henry Lane Wilson says a Re- publican administration alone can straighten .Mexico out. But can Mexico survive two years longer? Few signs of war are visible in Berlin. However, the Czar is going to do his best to change the " aspect of things In the Teuton capital. Oregon will continue to hang some of the people who deserve hanging, barring temporary aberration around the executive's office. The Emden did not last. So will it be with the Leipzig and Karlsruhe and others, for the British navy is bulldoggy. Door of European War. Sclo Tribune. In the campaign ot two years ago. all parties demanded a reduction of the tariff. President Wilson owes his election to the fact that the Republi can party, when Mr. Taft was their nominee, had promised a reduction and had failed to make the promise good. Everybody remembers the Payne-Aldrich tariff which, instead of a reduc tion, was an actual increase. When the Democrats came Into power they actually made their prom lses good by reducing the duty on im ports substantially 50 per cent. By the time the reduced tariff was in full operation, the European war was on and which placed an embargo upon the importation of European-made goods. This should have pleased our Republi can friends, because it served the same end as a prohibitory tariff would. It protected the American manufacturer in that he had exclusive control of the American markets. But this is not what the American manufacturer wanted. He wanted the European market open to his wares at the world's established prices and the American markets at the world prices plus the tariff. Wool was placed on the free list, yet owing to the demand the price went up instead of down. Likewise lumber was placed on the free list. But as the war shut off the European market the demand for lumber is limited to domestic consumption. As a conse quence, some of our lumber plants have closed down. The same Is true of Canadian mills. Whenever the Eu ropean market for lumber Is open again our mills will have all they can do. The Oregonian has been howling Its head off because Chinese eggs and New Zealand butter has been sold in our markets. At the same time we people who have to buy butter and eggs are paying as highly as before these commodities were placed upon the free list. The fact of the matter is. the tariff has but little influence in the price of commodities. The law of supply and demand controls prices. With a good demand good prices prevail and vice versa. A high or low tariff makes but little difference. Another of The Oregonian's griev ances is the war tax in time of peace. To get a revenue from the tar iff foreign-made goods must be Im ported. The war. prohibiting the Im portation of these goods, bars all reve nue therefrom. Hence, the money to replace this falling off of Importations must come from some other source. Now that the election is over. If The Oregonian Is honest, it will admit this fact and so state the same in its columns. A tariff may be either too high or too low to be a revenue producer. If too high, no goods will be Imported and no revenue will be produced. If too low, the cost of collecting the rev enue will consume all of the money arising therefrom. Hence a middle ground Is necessary to produce a prof itable revenue. The Oregonian knows this statement is true and will admit its truth when the partisan campaign Is over. President Wilson and a Democratic Congress have endeavored to make their campaign promisee good. They are not to blame because an European war has defeated what, under ordinary conditions. would have resulted in lower prices to the consumer and an abundant revenue for the Government. The foregoing article and the com ment appearing In another column are printed by request. From The Oregonian of November 0. 1SS9. President Harrison has slsrned and issued a proclamation admitting Mon tana to the Union. Governor-elect Joseph A Toole was inaugurated No- vemDer o at Helena. New York Solomon Hirsch. of Port land, Or, United States Minister to Tur key, sails tomorrow on the Etruria for his new post of duty. Among those woo sai-a rarewell in New York, last nleht. was Judge Lachman. whose mother is a sister of the new Minister. A banquet was given to P. T. Barnum last night in London. Among those present were Lord Randolph Churchill, i-ri Charles Beresford, the Roth schilds. Sir John Faller. George Au gustus ala and many others of prom inence. Mr. Gladstone and Lord Aber deen sent letters of regret. Olympia. Wash. Governor Uilea C. Moore has issued a Thankssrivlnz nroc tarnation, it Is the last that will ever te issued by the territorial Governor. O. C. White, Secretary of the Territory. eiccuiea me document Among others who will pontrihnta articles to The Sunday Oregonian next ounuay are Andrew Lang. Bret Harte, Professor Georee Evem Prnf.nr v. this end tho law. th rnnnsol and th I H- House, formerly of the Roval Collesra court are often pitiless and it is right ano. v rank li. carpenter. tbey should be so. Pity for a witness cannot be allowed to prevent justice. This girl was a part of the whole transaction and though she may suffer in a public ex posure it cannot be supposed the truth will De lost because she testifies alone. Surely she can tell the whole facts and that is the whole point of the matter. On the other hand, I can well see that If supported in the courtroom by women in official position, or of Influential po sitlon. the weight of their presence and sympathy would be added to her testi mony before the jury. I can see she might be strongly tempted to justify herself before her guardians and per haps to stick to a garbled version she had once privately told them in at tempting to justify herself to them. These are mere assumptions on my part. I can see If the bars are let down for one it -opens the way for all. My two points, however, are: First, that the law is made for the accused, not for witnesses: second. I trust Henry McGinn implicitly. As to what is a public trial within the meaning of the constitution; as to the wisdom of excluding the public -in order to spare a witness or to preserve the public themselves, I say nothing. To me this case is but as a grain of sand on the ocean beach. There are millions of delinquent girls and boys: millions of wretched homes unfit for girlhood or manhood and without a ray of Joy. These trials and the laws from which they spring deal with ef fects. They do not even touch or hint at the root cause: Poverty enforced. degrading, sunless poverty, impossible to avoid. Abolish poverty, reconstruct society on the lines of economic jus tice; give the boys and girls every where an equal chance In life not the fictitious equal chance which cheap iaisity is prated about by wordy ora tors, but a real economic equal oppor tunity at the earth and all the sources of wealth. In a word, abolish law-made special privilege everywhere. But in ll this hysteria over one poor. little grain-of-sand witness, the millions of cases of degradation and their cause. enforced poverty, are lost sight of: the radical cause of enforced poverty in the masses law-given monopoly of natural opportunities Is not even mentioned The world always acts upon emotion never on reason. C. E. S. WOOD. Bryan's candidate. Villa, will be president yet. That's the only way Mexico will ever get rid of the pest. The Belgian relief commission now has 50,000 sacks of wheat on hand. Enough to feed the chickens. Place It in "Bob" Burdette's epi taph that he did good, in the world in light and serious veins. Great Britain Is ready to fight In definitely. The war bids fair to last that long.' Buena Vista School Not First. EUGENE, Or., Nov. 9. (To the Edi tor.) Under date of November 7 there appears in The Oregonian an article In which the Buena Vista school In Polk County claims to have the first standard school In the state this year. On No vember S Lane County had 12 standard schools that the writer knows of. The first was Wendling- which was standardized on September 17. Instead of being first. Buena Vista would have guessed closer if they said 12th .in the state. Lane not only had the first standard school in the state, but is leading the state in the number of such schools by a wide margin. A. L O'REILLY. British trade Journals predict a great trade revival. Well, we hope so. Be careful, Mexico, or we may have to resume our watchful waiting. Society Note From Boston. - Boston Transcript. "There's only wan thing Ol hov against liquor." "An phwat's that. O'Brien?" "Enure, if -1 dhrink beer Ol get full before O'm dhrunk. an' If Ol dhrink whisky Oi get dhrunk before O'm full." Anyway, the next Legislature Is one of which we need have no fears. The competent person is well along with the Christmas shopping. Vertical Circles Guide Aviators, London Telegraph. Vertical circles of electric lights have been erected at Berlin to guide aviators, who can tell how near they are to the ground by observing the angles of the circles. GREAT RIDDLE NEAR SOLUTION Atomic Chemists at Point of Important Discovery Concerning Life. PORTLAND, Nov. 10. (To the Edl tor.) Relative to your very interest lng article in The Oregonian Sunday entitled "All Is One." nerailt me to sav that it is. a long reach in the scientific world from the hypotheses of Leibnitz. Spinoza, Spencer and Haeckel and the actual scientific demonstrations made possible by the recent discovery of the atom of chemical reaction a particle of matter so lnf initesimally small that 50,000,000 of them can rest comfortably in a one-nan ounce bottle of uncom pressed air. This discovery has opened up a new rieia in tne investigation of cosmical energy which has made it possible for tne, atomic chemist to unravel many phenomena concerning matter that were in the realm of speculation but yesterday. So rapidly are the atomic chemists wresting the secrets from Mother Nature's laboratory it is Impos sible for a layman to keep pace with mem, out tne following facts concern lng the atom of chemical reaction might prove of interest to your readers: It is known that each of these atoms contains one or more corpuscles of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon and electric ity, respectively, and it is hypothecated that traces of all the other elements are Inherent in each of these atoms. Because these atoms of chemical reac tlon are found to be the same in both organic and inorganic matter. It is known that the hydrogen of tnese atoms nas DOtn an acid and a negative reaction, and that the oxygen has both a positive and an alkali re action, and these conditions make pos siDie an tne energy of the cosmos. wnetner that energy be expressed in the lightning's flash, the trolly wire. the steam engine, the ether waves, or tne metaDOiism or organic bodies. This chemical law that each atom possesses a definite capacity for com blning with other atoms is known to chemists as the law of valency, and the atom of chemical reaction that has the combining power with only one atom or nyarogen is termed, "nnlva lent ; if with two atoms of hydrogen It is termed "bivalent"; if with three atoms of hydrogen, "trivalent." and with four atoms of hydrogen, "quadrl vaient. Hydrogen is taken as the bas In the law or valency because of its great ainnity tor ail compounds of the ele ments. I his brings us to your question riow can tne state of consciousness within one atom be transferred to an other?" It Is surely no more of a phe nomenon for the atom of chemical re action to transfer consciousness and all it implies life and intelligence than for it simply to transfer energy. The most advanced students of the atomic theory are now convinced that life is latent in inorganic matter, and Pro fessor Henderson, of Harvard. n nounced in a lecture before a body of scientists, not long since, that he ex pected to furnish absolute proof of this in the near future. The writer has long known this to be true, and has a hypothesis of his own to prove it, but. as Kipling would say. "That's another story." so we win let that pass. But, wum x uo wiBa o empnasize here is that mysticism In all its forms is rapidly being cleared away before the crucible, test-tube and microscope of the scientist, and that the human un- aerstanaing mind, lr you please is infinite in its possibilities, and that it is only limited by its environments In cluding superstitions, fossilized cus toms and asceticism. ALVTN HECKETHOEX, Z11H second street. Al Werlein. secretary of th Owl hi. Issued a call for a special meeting for Sunday afternoon. The President Is awaltlner the arrl-val of Binger Hermann to make a lot of Federal appointments in Oregon. Under the auspices of th Tounz- Men's Christian Association a week of prayer has been inaugurated at the tabernacle. Tenth and Morrison streets. Senator" Morgan yesterday signed articles for a ten-mile race with A. G. Kennedy, a trick bicyclist J- W. Casey has been appointed trav eling passenger agent of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul In the North Pa cific territory with headquarters in Portland. Nellie Blackburn has offered her res ignation as a teacher in the seventh grade. Park School. Sunol, the celebrated Palo Alto three- year-old. trotted a mile In 2:10 V, In San Francisco, yesterday, beating the time of the great AxtelL Axtell's time was 2:12. Christine Nillson will probably make a farewell tour of the United States this Winter. George W. McCoy, the job printer. says hundreds of lots are being sold in Wheatland Addition on Mount Tabor. A meeting of Englishmen was called by Charles Williams last night for the purpose of organizing a lodge of the Sons of St. George. F. Vivian was ap pointed treasurer pro tern. Ray W. Steel, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. David Steel, has been criti cally ill for several days. The transcript of the will of Mrs. Anna Ferry was filed for probate yes terday. The deceased was the first wife of Clinton P. Ferry, the "Duke of Ta- coma." The will was admitted by Judge Catlin and, as the Rev. T. L Eliot, H. W. Corbett and C. P. Ferry, named as executors, had declined to qualify, T. W. Gillette was appointed in their stead. And Just as the world, had forgotten Australia was on the map. The naval trouble Is beginning range into the canal region. to Peaceful Mexico, how tranquil &he Is. , Glass Mirrors of Long Ago. London Chronicle. The discovery in an Austrian ceme tery of glass mirrors dating from the second or third century upsets the theory that the ancients depended on polished metal to see themselves. PARK BLOCKS BELONG TO CITY t'ae as Flayarround While School Yard Is Protected Is Opposed. PORTLAND, Nov. 10. (To the Edi tor.) The plaza block opposite the Ladd school does not belong to that school, but to the city, and citizens who pass through it daily have some right to consideration as well as the school children. It was most gratify ing to see that lately the Park De partment had the ground seeded and protected so that the grass might grow. because during the time it was used unrestrictedly as a play place for the school children its appearance was a disgrace to the city and to the sur rounding property and certainly no credit to the schools, as it was badly kept and used and looKed like a neglected chicken yard. At the same time the grass on the ground sur rounding the school Is in good condi tio", the children evidently not being allowed to run and play on it. Why not let them do so for awhile and give the plaza block a chance to recover? The plaza blocks are under the care of the Park Department, and the re buke administered to "the unsatisned. at the recent recall election, should prove to even the densest mind that the great majority of the people of Portland are wining to allow tne Mayor and Commissioners to run the city, and that they have faith in their ability to do so without the aid or suggestions or oratory from 7-year-olds. The principal ana teacners wno leu. the delegation" to the City Hall might be better employed than in wasting the time of the city officials in this aosura manner. The School Board had a 7Vi- mill tax with which to run the schools last year, and isn t this enough to enable them to furnish breathing places for the children without trying to take the plaza blocks for the purpose? TRANSLATED BY THE WAITER. The Order Is Repeated to the Cook in Sllshtly Different Lananage. The Advance. "Mutton broth In a hurry." says the customer, "baa-oaa in tne rain: juaae him run!" shouts the waiter. "Beefsteak and onions, says tne customer. "John Bull! Mane nim a ginny!" shouts the waiter. "Where s my Daxeo potatoes.' asxs a customer. Airs, wurpny m . skin coat!" shouts the waiter. "Two fried eggs. Don't fry 'em too hard." says the customer. "Adam ana Even In the garden! Leave their eyes open!" shouts the waiter. "Poached eggs on toast, says mo customer. "Bride ana groom on a rati in the middle of the ocean!" shouts tne waiter. "Chicken croquets," says the custom er.- r owl Dan: snouts tne iuiei. "Hash," says the customer, "uentie- man wants to take a chance!" shouts the waiter. "I'll have hash, too, says the next customer. "Another sport!" shouts the waiter. "Glass of milk," says a custonver. 'Let it rain!" shouts the waiter. "Frankfurters and sauerkraut, good and hot," says a customer, "r iao, fanep and a bale of hay, shouts the waiter. 'and let 'em sizzle!" Suffrage in Other States. CAMAS. Wash.. Nov. 9. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly advise me if Colorado is a women 8 suffrage state, and, if so. how long It has been. Also if Idaho women had a right to vote in muni cipal affairs 20 or S3 years ago? RALPH M. SCOTT. Colorado has had woman's suffrags since 1893; Idaho since ISSt, Charm of a Salesman. Washington (D. C.) Star. "Do you find that set of books you bought interesting?" "Not very." con fesssd the man who tries to improve himself. "Do you regret yeur bar gain?" "A little, rd feel better about It if the man wno comes around to collect were as good an entertainer as the one who sold me the books." Rent-Raisins; and War. Puck. Gaspard (the landlord) I've got to raise your rent. Mr. Sullivan. Tenant (sarcastically) I suppose the war is to blame? Gaspard Certainly. Haven't you read of the wholesale destruction of houses in Belgium and the suburbs of Paris? i