8 TiTE Mdrtyrxo onEGoyiAy, Thursday, December 10, I9t4. FOBTLUm, OREGON. Entered at Portland, Oregon, Postofflce as aecond-class matter. Eubscrintlon Kates Invariably la Advance: (Bj Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year 8 OO Sally, Sunday Included, six month.. ... -25 Xaily, Sunday Included, three months... . 2.5 Sally, Sunday Included, one month laily, without Sunday, one year.. ....... -0 iJaily, without Sunday, six month. ..... 8-25 Ually, without Sunday, three months...- l. Xally, without Sunday, one month. ..... "Weekly, on year J-SO r-unday, one year 2.5o Sunday and Weekly, one year 8- (By Carrier.) Sally, Sunda- Included, one year 9-S2 Sally, Sunday included, one month. ..... o Hew to Kemlt Send Postofflce money r der. exprea order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address In lull. Including county and state. Postage Bates 12 to IS pages. 1 cent; 18 to 82 pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, 8 cents; CO to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 78 pages, 6 cents; 78 to U2 pages, cents. Foreign cost ace, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree a: Conk. Jin. iiew York, Brunswick building; Chi cago. Stenger building. San Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Com. pany. i2 Market street. FOKIUND, THCB8DAT, DEC. 10, 1914. LEASING OF PUBLIC LAND. Secretary Lane in his annual report takes credit to the Government for having, by the passage of bills for the leasing of public land, "given to the mora remote states greater assurance of its Interest in their welfare than has been given for many years." Con ceding that the Government has shown this interest. The Oregonian questions whether the water power and general leasing bills, as passed by the House, will promote the welfare of the West so much as Mr. Lane predicts. It de nies that these bills are Just to the Western states. These measures, together with the! forestry, Indian and National park laws, exempt from state taxation a large part of the area of the public land states. In Oregon this area is 60 jper cent, in Idaho a much larger pro portion, of the state's area. The leased land will be exempt from the state laws governing real property, but will lie subject to the state's criminal laws. If a. crime is committed on leased land or in a National forest or National park, the state must bear the respon sibility and expense of capturing, try ing, convicting and punishing the of fender. As the land in question is almost invariably the most remote from the centers of population and is mountainous and forested, the diffi culties and expense of apprehending criminals in these areas are abnormal, but what revenue is the state to derive from leased and forest land wherewith to meet this expense? From the National forests the states are given 25 per cent of the gross re-1 ceipts. to be spent on roads and echools, and an additional 10 per cent Is spent by the Government on roada In co-operation with the states. It is proposed that revenue from powersites and mineral land shall be used by the Government in reclaiming arid land, but no provision Is made that it shall be spent in the state from which it ia derived. Oregon excels in water power, development of which might produce large rentals. Idaho has great areas of phosphate land which would yield much revenue. Under the bills as passed by the House, this revenue might be used in reclaiming arid land In other states, as the proceeds of Oregon land sales have been diverted, while the arid land of Oregon and Idaho remained barren. In this re spect the states are worse treated than Alaska, for the Alaska coal land leasing law requires that all revenue from coal land leases shall be used in reimbursing the Government for the cost of Alaska railroads. In other words, all revenue from Alaska coal land is to be' used In Alaska imme diately. 1 The states are to wait until rentals from leases have been returned by set tlers on reclaimed land before they get any revenue from that source. That Implies long years of waiting. When the money is returned it will return only In driblets, as repaid by settlers through a period of twenty years. Then the states are only to get half of the amount, and Congress dictates to what use it shall be applied, namely, roads and schools. The experience of Oregon with the Government's prom ises of co-operation with the state in Irrigation Justifies apprehension lest the state might never get any money from this source. Congress has twice changed the terms of the reclamation law to the disadvantage of the state and the Interior Department has qulrmed out of keeping its promise of co-operation. The Government has more than once "kept the word of promise to the ear and broken it to the hope." There is every ground to tear that it would do so again. The public land states should be sat isfied' with nothing less than payment to them of an annual amount equal to What the taxes on leased land would le if the land were in private owner ship, this payment to begin with the first year when the land begins to yield revenue to the Government. All restrictions as to the use to which the states may put this money should be removed. The Government has no authority to direct the use which states shall make of their revenue. Such dictation savors more of the treatment given by a centralized Gov ernment to its provinces than of the relation which a Federal Union bears to its sovereign, component states. The revenue derived by the Govern ment alone from leased land should be applied to reclamation of arid land In the state whence.it coriles. If tem porarily diverted to some other state. It should ultimately be used in the state which yields it, and strict provi sion should be made to insure that this be done. The leasing laws should be treated as a contract between Con gress and the public land states, sub ject to change only with the consent of the states and not at the will of Congress alone. If Congress should refuse to recog nize fully the rights of the states in some such manner, the states would be Justified in attacking by legal pro cedure the validity of the whole leas ing system. They would have a good case. The. act admitting Oregon to the Union provides that this state "be, and she is hereby, received into the Union on an equal footing with the other states in all respects whatever." The public land in states of the East, Middle West and South has been sold and has thereby become subject to state law and state taxation. With 60 per cent of its area excluded from its civil Jurisdiction and exempt from tax ation, Oregon is not on an equal foot ing with those states. The act of ad mission forbids Oregon to tax land or property of the United States or" to interfere with the primary disposal of the soil within the same by the United States or with any regulations Congress may find' necessary for se curing the title in said soil to bona Udo purchasers thereof." but this very reference to bona fide purchasers proves that the policy of the Govern ment then was to sell, not to lease, land. Thus the state was led to expect that It would in a reasonable time be come full sovereign over its entire area and on this understanding it ac cepted the terms and entered the Union. By changing the conditions under which the state entered into the compact. Congress would release the state from moral obligation to ob serve it. The state could maintain that, in all essentials, leasing- of pub lic land has the same effect as sale. Tax exemption was intended to con tinue only until the land came into use. The only process then consid ered of bringing; it into use was sale, therefore sale alone was mentioned; had lease then been contemplated, the state would surely have contended that lease ' should render public land taxable. IITS XEXT STEP. The New York Sun shines through double leads In the following luminous prophecy as to the future course of the privatest of private citizens: Theodora Roosevelt la not at this time in politics. . . . Our own unsolicited opin ion, a private opinion of the privatest sort, is that Colonel Roosevelt's next reappearance will be in the old familiar act of issue snatching; the victim once more, aa so many times before, being- the unfortunate Mr. W. J. Bryan. We venture the prediction that the next snatched Issue by which Colonel Roosevelt Is to profit politically at the expense of Mr. Bryan will be the enactment of prohi bition In the fundamental law by means of an amendment of the Federal Consti tution. The date on which the Sun gave birth to this great thought was De cember 2, 1914. It would be memor able forever in the annals of Journal istic soothsaying, except for the fact that five days previously to be exact, November 27, 1914 the same mo mentous assessment of Colonel Roose velt's intentions was made by The Oregonian. But no matter. We waive all claim to any monopoly of Ideas about Colo nel Roosevelt. We do not wonder that the same thought occurred to our New York contemporary. As a student of Colonel Roosevelt's mental processes and political methods it is natural enough that the Sun should clearly foresee his next spectacular step. AS TO OCR MILITARY POLICY. If the correspondent .who writes from Walla Walla to give his views on the matter of American military policy were merely an Individual, his effusion, which appears in another column, might be cheerfully consigned to the wastebasket with merely a pass ing flicker of interest. But unfortu nately he is a type and an altogether too prevalent one. It may be said that the very cause of our present help less state of unreadiness for eventual ities rests with the victims of such sophistry who fail to profit by the broader facts of general history and who disregard or fail to see the world as it is. Provincialism has never taken a worse form, nor a more dangerous one, than that found in the argument that the United States Is secure from attack. We enjoy the blessings of peace, yet the horizon is not as clear as some of the peace propagandists would lead us to believe. Possible en tanglements may be seen quite clearly by one whose vision is not shut off by dark goggles of provincialism and ignorance. So far as the ways of cau tion and diplomacy can serve us, we will strive to avoid those entangle ments which find their source in that one great cause of all war the world's food supply. But when diplomacy falls us and. as a great, wealthy Nation, we are con fronted by the necessity of defending our National integrity, thorny will be our path if we are not equipped to meet the situation. Such is our plight at the present moment thanks to Just such insipid beliefs as that dispensed from Walla Walla- Yet there is a hopeful sign. It is that the American people are slowly but surely out growing their provincialism in such matters. LAST TSAR; AND THIS YEAR, Secretary of the Interior Lane's reasons for declining to support his own reclamation service in the Tumalo fiasco have a decidedly ex-post-facto aspect. They appear to have been discovered and formulated long after the specific agregnjjht for co-operation ueuweea tii recia.mo.uon oiiicers ana the state and the general co-operative understanding between Secretary Lane and Governor West. The Secretary's present idea of co operation appears to be to have the state put up two dollars to the Gov ernment's one; his notion last year was that the. state had been sadly mis treated in the apportionment of rec lamation funds, and he would go far to repair the wrong.. The Oregonian is charitable enough to think that the Secretary meant what he said in 1913, and that he did not fully understand the plan of co operation, which he then approved. It would appear now that he is re pudiating the acts of his own reclama tion officers, in refusing the carry out the Tumalo co-operative contract. But we can see no reason whatever why the Secretary should seek to "pass the buck" to Governor West. An Oregonian dispatch from Wash ington, upon information doubtless from the Interior Department, has these statements: After Secretary Lane had agreed .to allot $450,000 and after the state had appro priated $450,000, Governor West ordered the State Engineer to proceed with the construc tion of the first unit of the Tumalo project. He did this without consulting the Wash ington authorities and without submitting to them the plan of the project. The proj ect which the state has built will cost. In round figures. 840 an acre. . . . Esti mates show the second unit will cost no less than S0 an acre, double the cost of the state unit. Secretary Lane not only Is unwilling to expend Government money on the $80 project at Tumalo, but is unwilling to spend any of the Government's $450,000 unless there Is available, to be used with it. an equal amount of state funds. The act of the Legislature authoriz ing the 'appropriation of $450,000 for the Tumalo project, to be built under direction of the Desert Land Board, became a law February 25, 1913. The Governor proceeded in strict accord with its provisions. The co-operative contract between state and Govern ment was signed subsequently May 5, 1913 and the letter of Director Newell, indorsing the Tumalo project, and announcing the approval of Sec retary Lane, was dated June 7, 1913. The personal visit of Secretary Lane to Oregon with his inspection of Cen tral Oregon and other projects was in August, 1913. It is clear that the rec lamation officers understood exactly what the state was doing, and it is dif ficult to see why Secretary Lane did not also understand. But there is another instance where the Secretary is not in accord with his engineers. He says that, while the cost per acre In the state's unit Is $40, the estimate on the second unit is "no less than $80 per acre." John T. Whistler, Government engiy neer, who Investigated the Tumalo project, says the cost per acre for the second (Government) unit' will be $43.44 per acre (Aubrey Falls diver sion) or $41.40 per acre (Laid law di version). It would appear that the estimates have in some unaccountable fashion doubled when laid before the doubting eyes of the Secretary. It is a disappointment that Secre tary Lane, who in the enthusiasm of his new work was willing to do so much for Oregon in 1913, has cooled down so much that in 1914 he will do very Utle. It continues to be a long way to Oregon's reclamation Tipperary. FASHIONABLE GEOGRAPHY. The European War has made geog raphy all the rage. It Is quite the thing now to understand parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude. Self-respecting people long to know where the various straits, cities and islands which they read so much about are located. a Maps are assiduously perused and the globes are almost as fashionable as they were in the Vicar of Wakefield's day. Seven eminent citizens of Spring field, Mass.; as we learn from the- es teemed Republican, lately conceived a scheme to test one another in the newly popular science. Each of the seven submitted five questions which, in his opinion, the other men ought to be able to answer. The total num ber of questions framed was thus thirty-five, but as some of . them were merely local the public is not con cerned with them. The other thirty seem interesting enough to be repub lished in The Oregonian. The reader may puzzle his brain over them by turning to another part of the paper. Upon the whole the questions are pretty well chosen. And yet a person might be able to answer them all with out knowing anything about the real essence of geography. They appeal to the memory only. Reason Is not called into action in the slightest degree. There, is not a solitary "why" in the whole list. Nothing is Bald about pro ductipns and routes of trade. The names-of various big cities are asked for, but there is no thought of the causes that make them big The list is chiefly valuable, perhaps for its demonstration of what - geography study should not be. " AMBROSE BI L'RCE. Ambrose Bierce's long and mordant career has ended, if the reports are true, in the whirlpool of the Mexican troubles. He went there, it seems, in search of adventures. He found the greatest adventure of all. At his age, 72 years, a plunge into the Mexican vortex indicates an unusual hunger for exciting experience, but it was of a piece with his whole life. Ambrose Bierce never knew much inner serenity himself nor permitted much to others when he could help it. His ambition was to rasp, to bite, to inflict pain. His outlook on life was cynical. His interpretation of men's motives was deeply uncharitable. In the world around him he saw little but evil. The inner gloom of his nature was reflected In the character of the tales he wrote. They were usually vis ions of horror. Some say that his short stories were the most gruesome ever, written in the United States. This is anr exaggeration, for Bierce at his worst fell far short of Poe's hideous power in that field, but they were bad enough. Why anybody should want to imagine such stories Is a marvel. After a fashion Bierce was a critic of current events, but his comments lacked value partly because he saw the trivial side of affairs rather than their deep meaning and partly because of his incurable disposition to interpnet everything evilly. If the world were a hundredth part as bad as Bierce pictured it there would be no need of a theological hell. He is greatly ad mired by many for his English style, which was wonderfully clear, simple and effective. If what he said had been as valuable as his way of saying it was excellent he would have ranked wi,th the princes of literature. Though his thought was for the most part shallow, his facility in ex pression gave him a certain power. While he was on the Pacific Coast he won an unenviable reputation as a lampooner. Reputations went down before his. pen like grass before the scythe. But, it comforts one to re member, they quickly revived. It is not in the power of a man like Bierce, who is known for his malig nity, to do much permanent harm. In his column in the San Francisco Ex aminer, headed "A Record of Individ ual Opinion," he enjoyed wide liberty of expression and might have done much to influence public opinion had his outlook on life been a little less clouded. Bierce wrote some good poetry and many fine critical essays. Perhaps he paid too much attention to technical "style." Kipling's English did not exactly please his exacting taste and he found more or less fault with How ells. But both those authors will be remembered and read long after Bierce, with all his verbal niceties, is forgotten. NOT A PARTY QrESTIOJf. In its eagerness to combat the movement for a public inquiry into our National defenses, the Adminis tration, supported by Its newspaper organs. Is endeavoring to convict Rep resentative Gardner and his associates of partisan motives. They are accused of attempting to prove the Democratic party responsible for our unreadiness for war, and the New York World, in making the charge, tries to shift the blame to the Republican party. It cites increased Army and Navy appro priations by the present Congress to prove that the Republicans are more culpable than the Democrats. This attempt to make a party issue out of a question that should and does rise far above party explains the hos tile reception given by the President and Democratic leaders in Congress to the Gardner resolution. They im agine they are attacked by political opponents, and therefore they oppose an inquiry by a non-partisan commis sion and offer instead an inquiry by committees of Congress. At first they opposed a public inquiry, but have yielded so far as to make the com mittee hearings public. Responsibility for our military un readiness rests on both parties, and we are not now concerned with as certaining whether one is more re sponsible than the other. Primarily the people are responsible, for Con gress acts on great problems only in response to public opinion. The people have not been on the alert and have permitted Congress to go its own way. Under such circumstances, abuses creep in, efficiency is relaxed, local Interests override National Interests and much money Is spent with little result. Improvement is possible only by bringing the pressure of public opinion to bear on Congress and by, keeping it awake. Military unpreparedness Is no party question; It is a subject on which an appeal is made to the highestopatriot lsm of every citizen, for it concerns the preservation of the Nation. Any man who would make such an appeal for party advantage is himself lacking in patriotism. The proposal of Mr. Gardner is put in its true light by Senator Lodge In a statement pub lished In another column of The Ore gonian. Our Army and . Navy have been pronounced to be inadequate and inefficient in many particulars. The people should be Informed whether these statements are true; they should know what they are getting for their money. The proposal to have an Inquiry by a special commission rather than by committees of Congress is in harmony with 'this .view. Such a commission, including representatives of the gen eral public as well as of the Senate and House, would be apt to seek and find facts without regarding the effect on individuals or parties.. Committees of Congress which have been charged with drawing up Army and Navy ap propriation bills would be disposed to regard themselves as under investi gation, to bring out. favorable facts and to keep in the background unfavorable facts, as would any man or body of men that was put pn the defensive. The committees would be disposed todefend the acts of them selves and of their parties. It- is not proposed to put any man or commit tee or party on trial, and the inquiry should take such form as to dispel any misapprehension on that point. A non-partisan commission having the single purpose of discovering our shortcomings and of finding a remedy would command public confidence and would gain public attention as could no committee of Congress. It could show us how we could greatly strengthen our defenses without great ly increasing our Army and Navy budget. It could focus attention on those abuses to which frequent refer ence has been made in official reports and in newspapers, but which have been passed over by a people occupied with other things. It could lift the whole subject of National defense above party, above militarism, pa cificism and all other 'isms, and could lay before the Nation the necessity of being amply ready to defend ourselves as a broad .question of public safety. Ellen Terry, sprightly under the gathering years, says she "fears sloth fulness more than anything." When a woman grows fat and slothful she might as well be dead. "It is the e'nd," says Ellen Terry. Life means activity. Too much quietude lures us down into the grave or buries us while we are still alive. The sooner both sides begin general use of dum-dums and buckshot cart ridges, the quicker the war will end: Success comes to the side that kills or disables permanently the other. As the object in war is to kill, why prate of merciful means to attain the end? Deacon Robert Bailey ought to feel satisfied with his labors for Nannie Strickland's soul. The little girl will commit no more sins, thanks to the good deacon's revolver. But his mis sionary methods are a little too vigor ous for general use, we suspect. Britannia still rules the , waves. Nothing could be more gallant than the German fight against heavy odds in the Pacific, but British seamanship has finally prevailed. It takes time to make a nation of sailors. It is unnecessary for the Adminis tration to explain that no drastic ac tion is intended in sending troops to the border. We have not yet forgot ten what was done at Vera Cruz. With the war in Europe and Roose velt preening his war-bonnet, the No bel committee could do little else than postpone giving the peace prize. Japan announces the necessity of cutting expenses. But is careful to provide that the cut shall not be made on the Army or Navy. Anyway, the ' Germans can now claim three converted submarines in the Pacific as a little gift from th Britlsh. Supposing Germany had had our sort of military policy. It would have been a Slav province long ago. In these days of rigid inspection, a fire caused bv defective wirintr is a Joke on the insurance people. Switzerland, like the United States, is at peace with the world and "en Joys" its manifold blessings. Another fearful disappointment for Bryan. The Nobel peace prize is not to be awarded this year. Wilson promises to trive business a rest. A much-neded and hard-earned rest, it might be added. Steel can be made many times more durable by a new process. Hard news, this, for the yeggmen. Ilwaco cranberries are not "made in Oregon," which does not interfere with being Just as good. Army officers say our artillery is effective. Yes, the three or four guns that we have. Now the Japanese officials say they are going to keep Kiau-Chau. We thought so. When Petrograd hints, at Russian reverses they must be something frightful. The Army officer who Is satisfied with our artillery force has missed his calling. We are now feeding 70,000 war vic tims. And can feed 'em all if nec essary. More artillery sent to the Arizona border. Merely a change of station. Britannia is again ruling the waves in the South Atlantic. The survivors of the German fleet are "going some." " Germany appears to have caught her stride again. Poincare has resumed business at the old stand. Sunny Oregon. Stars and Starmakers BY LEOKE CASS BAKU. In Denver Victor Morley. star of "The Quaker Girl." playing; In that city on Thanksgiving day, attached the box of fice, with the result that the manage ment closed the show. see Richard Vivian, once a Baker player, is playing with the James Post dra matic stock in Sacramento, Cal., at the Grand Theater. Beth Taylor Is lead ing woman. Thurlow Bergen and his wife. Elsie Esmond, both of them former Baker onians. are in New York for a rest, after a six months' engagement with a moving picture company. see "Watch Your Step" opens tonight in New York at the Amsterdam Theater, with the Vernon Castles, Frank Tinney, the blackface comedian; Fannie Br ice and Charlie King and Elizabeth Mur ray In the principal roles. v T. P., who writes and does not sign a name, asks for "addresses of pro ducers of vaudeville sketches." Joseph Hart, In the New York Theater build ing. N. Y., and Arthur Hopkins, 1493 Broadway, N. Y., are good producers, e . Al Jolson wants a new chorus for "Sister Susie's Sewing Shirts for Sol diers," and "wants it bad," his press agent says. "Bad" is the way amateurs usually write choruses. But It wouldn't do many of the Pacific Coast chorus writers to compete because the prize Al offers is a box for bis show, "Dancing Around," at the Winter Gar den. Al's present chorus runs thusly: Sister Susie's sewing shirts for soldiers. Such skill at sewing shirts our shy young sister Susie shows. Some soldiers send epistles, say they'd rather sleep In thistles Than wear the saucy soft, short shirts for soldiers sister Susie sews. Mr. Jolson suggests a play on the word knit. e A rattling of the skeleton is heard in the revival production of Charles A. Taylor's play. "Yosemite." last week In New York at Daly's Theater. This is a melodrama of California's early civi lization and many years ago its original version played up and down the Pa cific Coast at ten-twent'-thirt' prices, with Laurette Taylor", then Mrs. Charles A. Taylor, as the heroine. Since those days Laurette has dazzled Broadway and is now trying to make the English stay away from war and attend her play of "Peg 'o My Heart," in London She is married now to the play's au thor. Hartley Manners. ' . Frank Keenan is playing the lead ing masculine role in "Yosemite." Ethel Clifton, who was leading woman In Se attle with one of the Baker companies, has a role in "Yosemite." m o o Henry Miller will . shortly begin a starring tour which brings him to this Coast in "Daddy Long Legs." He will play the title role. see According to the Dramatic Mirror, only quick action on the part of stage hands saved the life of an itinerant tat tooer at the Alhambra Theater, in New York, last week. Some wag at the booking offices sent him up to see Kitty Gordon and propose embellishing her beauteous and eVer-blessed back with the arms of the house of Beresford in India Ink. Now Kitty cares much for her gallant captain, who. as a soldier husband, is distinctly a credit to her and his family, but she balks at tat tooing his armorial bearings indelibly upon her fair person and considered the proposition as an Impertinence warranting violence. e Four members of George Arliss' com pany, now playing In "Disraeli" at the Heilig Theater, have at different times appeared at "Royal Command" per formances at Windsor Castle. The actors who have been thus honored are Charles Harbury. Henry Carvill, Ar thur Eldred and Vincent Sternroyd. Charles Harbury, who plays the pres ident of the Bank of England with Mr. Arliss, was for 10 years a leading mem ber of Sir Henry Irving's company. . Adele Blood is going into vaudeville for a while, before her new play Is ready for her In February. Her man ager's name is Hope, I. W. Hope. The L W. probably stands for I will. - Florence Roberts, the Zaza Florence, and. not the present character actress at the Baker. Is rehearsing a new vaudeville sketch. e Mrs. Leslie Carter contributed a quiet surprise in her work for the screen In Los Angeles. It is declared that the actress not only adapted herself to the situation called for in this partially new work, but "registered" beautifully In all the action given her In "The Heart of Maryland," which is being produced by Herbert Brenon. Other prominent stage geniuses have not ar rived so easily, when plunging into the film game. The End of the Spug By Dean Collins. With Christmas spirit ir the air. And streets aa warm with merry throng, A-shoppjng here and shopping there For foolish gifts the whole day long. It seems there's surely . something wrong. One ancient peat doth not appear. And so I ask in lilting song: "Where are the Spugs of yesteryear?" The Spug put on a righteous air. And talked of thrift unto the throng; The reckless giving here and there He viewed with features stern and long: "Such foolishness," he said, "is wrong. When useful gifts. It doth appear, A man can purchase for a song- " Where are the Spugs of yesteryear? The Yuletide fairly fills the air. With foolish whims that whirl and throng. Why, Christmas time was Just put there To give fool gifts the whole day long. The gloomy Spug is quite in wrong. Who'd make such giving bad appear. He has no place 'mid mirth and song Where are the Spugs of yesteryear? He doth no more his gospel air 'Gainst the glad follow of the throng, That still goes gaily here and there And mocks his counsel wise and long. On Christmas one can do no wrong. So let the foolish streak appear. Stopped are their mouths and hushed their song Where are the Spugs of yesteryear? L'ENVOI. Spug, thou hast done my soul much wrong! Exceed, erump, no more appear! Loud swells the triumph of my song Where are the Spugs of yesteryear? J LET THE PEOPLE! KXOW THE FACTS Senator Lodge Favors Inquiry late Hstlesal Defenses. Senator Lodge has come to the sup port of Representative Gardner's move ment for an Inquiry Into our National defenses, and announces his reasons In the following statement:' "fs, I intend to introduce in the Senate a resolution similar to that of fered by Mr. Gardner in the House, call ing for a commission to Investigate and report upon the condition of our Nation al defenses. "This does not commit us to any expenditures of any kind or to, any policy. It is merely a resolution of Inquiry, which. I think, ought to be adopted by both Houses and approved by the President. It seems to me that the country ought to know Just what the condition of the National defense ia We are at peace with all the nations of the world, and I fully believe we shall remain at peace with them all. Our policy is simply of maintaining a strict and honest neutrality. But the great nations of the earth are at war and we are living in' the midst of an armed and fighting world. Under these circumstances it is well to know what the state of our. own defenses is. "We hear it said that from our regu lar Army and militia combined we could not at this moment get together 1 20,000 men for our defenses. It has been publicly stated that we have not sufficient ammunition even for such troops as we have; that the fortifica tions for our great cities are very in sufficient; that we have few if any guns of greater range than those on battleships; that such troops as we have, instead of being concentrated at the points where they are needed, are scattered through the country in posi tions where there Is no need of troops. "It is said that we have nothing resembling reserves, either of men or ammunition, and that no sufficient ar rangements have been made for pro viding mines to protect our harbors. I should like to know, and I think the American people would like to know, whether there is truth in these state ments. "If we turn to the Navy we can read In the newspapers almost every day statements of a similar character. I know that we are short of scout cruis ers, having only three. A proper num ber of scout cruisers is essential to the efficiency of the fleet. We are insuf ficiently supplied with aeroplanes and hydroplanes, which are so essential in modern warfare. We have a large number of submarines not enough in proportion to our fleet but It is stated that many of those, of early types, are not up to recent standards. It is said that we have only one torpedo to each torpedo tube. I should be glad to know whether this is true or false. "I have seen it stated, although it seems to me hardly credible, that we have had no fleet maneuvers for two years and no divisional drills for one year. We certainly ought to know whether this Is true or false. There i3 a widespread belief that our Navy has lately been declining in efficiency and on this we ought to be informed and the department cleared from such charges if, as 1 hope and believe, they are unjust. " "I merely mention these few points which have been widely circulated through the press to show why I think that we ought to have the inquiry which will be asked for in my resolu tion. I cannot believe that the state ments in the press that the Adminis tration is opposed to this inquiry can possibly be well founded, for there is nobody who baa so earnestly advocated publicity as the President in his inter esting book, "The New Fredom." We ought to have the truth about these things, and then it Is for the American people and nobody else to decide what they intend shall be done. But let the people of the country know the facts. "It is not a party question in any sense, and the National defense ought never to be a party question. We are spending some $250,000,000 a year on our Army and Navy, and we ought to know what we are getting for our money and whether for that money we are securing the highest possible effi ciency of result. It is never well in this country and under our system of Government to have secrets from the people. Let us know the truth." HE WOCI.1) NOT PREPARE FOR WAR Walla Walla Man Thinks That We Are Quite- Secure. WALLA WALLA, Wash.. Dec. 8. (To the Editor) I have just read your editorial comments on what you call President Wilson's "flimsy attempt to avoid a great public duty" in con nection with the Gardner resolutions about war equipment. I feel moved to ask you if there was ever less need of preparing for war than right now? Had you not observed that the na tions of the world were already oc cupied? Has The Oregonian the impression that the German fleet is about to run the blockade of the English fleet and land a half million of their army in New York harbor? Perhaps you thought that the Russians might quit fighting at Warsaw in order to let the Germans detach the East Prussian army for passing through the Panama Canal and coming around and taking Portland. How many chances do you think there are in a billion or trillion for France or England or Russia to de clare war on us? Or are you afraid that the. Belgians might swoop down on us and wipe us off the map? Possibly the fear may be that Canada or Mexico may suddenly penetrate our country to Washington City and com pel us to become annexed to themselves. More likely your expectation is that as soon as the European war is over the participants will turn their arms on us. How much do you think the wretched victims of this war will be in the notion of another right away, and especially with the one country on which they must depend for food arid all the chief necessities to repair their waste places? Also if, as this same number of The Oregonian notes or quotes, the nations of Europe have already lost about two million and a half men, will they be in any condi tion to wage war for some time to come? In Bhort, is not this whole outcry of Gardner and other jingoes a little slopping over of the sheer 'madness, the black mania of militarism which is turning Europe into a charnel house? Does The Oregonian desire our own people and government to become dis torted with the same lunacy? Assuredly If there ever was a time when we absolutely have no need of war equipment, right now is the time. To my mind It is nothing short of criminal for public men to obstruct the noble and far-reaching plans of our Administration to save some hope and some civilization and some Christianity in this suffering" world. W. D. LYMAN. Whitman College. Way He Avoided Him. Kansas City Star. "Look at that foolish Mr. Booker," said one man to another, "out on a rainy iay like this without an umbrel la! Is he crazy?" "I guess so," said his friend, hurried ly. "Let's hurry on. I don't want to meet him." "Why not?" "He may recognize this umbrella. It's his." Who Was First Dentist t Louisville Times. Doctor, you told me that It wouldn't hurt to putt that tooth," he said. "I did," triumphantly acclaimed the doctor. "What have you to say about the matter?" "Well, all I have got to say Is," moaned the patient, "that Ananias must bava been the 2 rat dentist." Twenty-Five Years Ago From The Oregonian December 9, 19S9. Paris Miss Caldwell, the American heiress, whose engagement to Prince Murat has been the subject of much discussion recently, has Issued a state ment, in which she denies that the engagement is broken off. and says the wedding merely has been postponed. The reason for the postponement is the failure of the attorneys for each side to agree on the amount, of Miss Caldwell's income over the sum of which Prince Murat shall have abso lute control. She says: "I never offered Prince Murat one sou condi tionally or unconditionally. I simply referred him to my legal advisers when the question of my estate was broached, and I was much surprised and my feelings awfully crushed when the Prince informed me in a very curt manner that our wedding must be postponed until my counsel could agree with him as to the amount of my in come over that of which he should have absolute control" Tha. Prince's debts are about $500,000 and he candidly announces that half a million from his prospective wife would put him on "easy street." Zanzibar Confirmation of the mas sacre of Dr. Peters Is at hand. The camp was surrounded by 1200 Somalia, and no one escaped. ' The funeral of Samuel B. Ward, a prominent Oddfellow, was held yester day from the undertaking rooms of Horatic Cook. Vancouver, Wash. On Wednesday next, under the auspices of the Ladies' Guild of St. Luke's Church, a church concert, which promises to be of un usual excellence, will be given. Those who will assist are Major and Mrs. Lydecker, Miss Lydecker, Mrs. Ward, Mrs. Kilbourne, Mrs. Anderson, Miss O'Neil, Mrs. Crawford. Mrs. Ellrich. and last, but not least. Professor N. E. Skinner, of Portland. F. Clarno. attorney-at-law. has moved his offices to 28 and 29 Washington building. Officer Joe Day yesterday arrested a flashily dressed young man, who gave the name of A. L. Waterhouse. on a charge of passing fraudulent checks. The man. suspected of being H. A. Royce, represented himself to be a traveling agent of the Chicago Inter Ocean. Among the arrivals at the Hotel St. Charles are United States Commis sioner Fred Page Tustin, of Pendleton: Sheriff A. W. Hamilton, of Union, one of the leading aspirants to the office of United States Marshal: T. A. Mc-' Bride, of Oregon City; Ed. C. Glltner, of Salem, and George Gray, of the Cascade Locks. Rev. H. V. Rominger leaves on his tour around the world today. . The commissioners of the Oregon Immigration Board have issued an ap peal to capitalists, property owners and b. ilders to erect at least 1000 more houses in Portland to house toe new comers, who are unable to f;et suit able places to live. Olympla. Senator Landes wants to get married. He wants Justice Holt to perform the ceremony. Justice Holt, being a Supreme Court Jurist, has not any. authority to tie the knot. Sena tor. Landes wants Justice Holt to tie the knot, whether or no. As a result the Washington Legislature now has before it a bill which Invests In Su preme Justices the power to officiate at marriages. Half a- Century Ago From The Oregonian of December 9. 1884. In reply to stories that President Lincoln had drawn his salary in gold and invested It In foreign securities. General Spinner, United States Treas urer, has issued a statement in which he says that tje President not only has neglected to draw his salary for 11 months at a time, but that when his attention was called to the interest ac cruing, the President turned the Inter est back to the Government, and that at one time the Treasurer was forced to request President Lincoln to draw ' his Salary so the Federal accounts could be brought up to date. Treasure:" Spinner further says that President Lincoln, when he had more than enough money from his salary than he needed for his living, would invest it for his friends in United States) gold stocks, and that he turned the Interest over to the Government. This interest which he has turned back to the Government has in one instance- amounted to $800. Mr. Spinner also calls attention to the fact that the President has allrwed himself to lose, personally, to the Gov ernment's gain, no less than $4000 by not collecting interest on Government stocks or bonds. City Assessor Going has submitted the assessment roll for 1864. The City Council last night accepted it with the supplementary assessments filed there with. City Attorney Dolph has submitted a statement in the cases recently brought against the city by M. B. Morris and John B. Garrison. Judgment was found in both in favor of the city. The Garri son action was for $4800, and it is prob able an appeal to the Supreme Court will be taken. There is a move on foot to give a benefit for Frank Hussey, of the variety troupe. Mr. Hurgen, City Councilman of the Third Ward, has resigned his position in that body, and W. S. Ladd has been selected to till the vacancy. The auctioin rooms of A. B. Richard son are undergoing alterations to pro vide for a greater space for stocks. Corn-Fed PIk. PORTLAND, Dec. 9. (To the Edi tor.) The prizes won by the "College Method." in our excellent fat stock show, this week, remind me of the farmer In Illinois, my native Btate, who wanted a better breed of hogs raised by a neighbor: so, he sent his oldest son with a sack and $5 for a pair of the desired pigs. The neighbor accordingly put the two little grunters in one end of the sack, tying a string around the middle, filling the other end of the sack with corn. Taking the money, he said, "Now when you get home, tell your father the pig are in one end and the breed In the other." C. E. CLJNE. Shopping Minutes Count These Days We will say it again for em phasis "Don't put off your Christmas shopping another minute." Make out your Christmas lists in advance, noting Just about what you want to buy and where you can find it. Shop In the early morning hours if possible the stores are less crowded, the sales people fresh and of the' overcrowded deliv eries and carry small parcels when possible. In making out the Christmas lists you will find the advertising in this newspaper a most valuable help.