8 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, ' WF.TXF.lT AT. DECEMBER 23, 1914. ft FORT LAXD, OREGON. Bntered at Portland. Oregon. Postotflce as second-class matter. Subscription Batea Invariably In -Advance: (By Mail.) Dally. Sunday Included, ona year $8.00 Dally, Sunday Included, six month . .... Daily, Sunday Included, three months ... 2.a5 Dally, Sunday Included, one month -Jo Dally, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six month a-JJ Dally, without Sunday, three month Dally, without aun day, on month ...... 'Weekly, on year J-00. Sunday, on year ........-... eu Cunday and Weekly, one year .40 (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, on year .....00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month ...... How to Remit Send Postotflce money or. eer, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ar at sender's risk. Give postoffice address In lull. Including county and state. Postage Kate 12 to 16 page. 1 cent; 18 to pages, J cents; 84 to 48 page. 8 cents; CO to 8u pages, cents; 82 to 78 pages, a tents; 78 to U2 pages, 8 cents. Foreign post age, double rate. Eastern Business Office Verree A Conk lin, Kew York. Brunswick building; Chi cago. Stenger building. San i'ranrlftro Office R. J. Bldwell Com pany, 742 Market street. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23. 1914. LAW MUST BE REVISED. In adopting1 a compensation law, Oregon departed in a number of im portant particulars from the provisions recognized by other states and by thorough students of the subject as es sential to complete success of the en terprise. It may occur to mind that compensation law is practically new legislation in this country and there iwas a chance to gain efficiency by experimenting. But Oregon has expe rimented and it now appears that the working of the law for the brief period It has been ia existence is not wholly favorable. The most important phase of the situation Is the prospective failure of the insurance premiums to keep up the benefits. It is asserted that at present the fund is solvent, but that a continuance under the existing sys tem would mean a deficit in a year or two, which would have to be met by direct appropriation and at the ex pense of the general taxpayers. In one particular the law attempts that which actuaries assert is impossi ble. It seeks to provide an adequate fund for payment of compensation to injured persons by establishing a com paratively low yet practically flat rate governing all employments. Proper consideration is not given to the extra hazardous character of certain indus tries. As the law "was originally framed and if industrial conditions did not fluctuate because of depressed business conditions, the principle adopted might have been successful. But the rates of compensation established by the commission that framed the act were Increased materially by the Legisla ture and no attempt was made to en large the prospective income. Since then a severe business depression has occurred, particularly in lumber man ufacturing, which Is the largest of Ore gon's industries and the one most will ing to embrace the compensation prin ciple. Moreover, the benefits under the act are not based on the average wage of the injured workman, as is the rule in most of the twenty-six states hav ing compensation laws, while the in come to the insurance fund Is gov erned by the payrolls. There has been a decrease in wages, but no de crease in benefits allowed. It is imperative that the law be changed In the particulars that have contributed to the financial danger that confronts the state insurance fund. One of the latest reports of qualified investigators of compensation for industrial accidents is. that of the special committee appointed by the Conference of Commissioners on Uni form State Laws. This committee has prepared a draft for a uniform state compensation law. This draft provides for classification of employments and a flexibility in insurance rates im posed on each class, under the direc tion of a state insurance manager. Separate accounts are kept for each fund, but for the payment of com pensation the state insurance fund is deemed one and indivisible. At the end of a year dividends may be de clared for the benefit of contributors to any fund, or the rates increased or special assessments made, as condi tions warrant. Compensation is paid on a. percentage of wage, with a fixed maximum and fixed minimum. The plan has virtually unanswerable arguments in its favor. If properly administered. It will prevent the less hazardous industries from earning a part of the insurance of the extra-hazardous employments. Moreover,' the common-fund provision will avoid in solvency, such as occurred in one of the separate funds in the State of Washington. The flexibility in rate of premiums would prevent a recur rence of the present condition, where the Industrial Accident Commission must go to the Legislature for an amendment to avoid financial disaster. The Oregon law differs from most other compensation statutes in other particulars. Here, so far as the com pensation treatment of industrial ac cidents is concerned, the state main tains a monopoly. Almost universally elsewhere compensation insurance is permitted In stock companies, or mu tuale, or the employer may carry his own Insurance, all subject to state supervision and regulation. This does not mean, as is occasionally said In Oreeon, that the injured workman in employ of one who has taken, out compensation insurance in a stock company is compelled to go to law to obtain compensation for injuries in. the manner that prevails where the liability laws are in force. In the draft of the proposed uniform state law heretofore mentioned the schedule of compensation is the same as that prescribed for alternative state insurance. A permanent state com mission passes on questions of fact In reported injuries. There is appeal from the decisions of this commission to an arbitration board, consisting ef one member of the state commission and one person appointed by the em ployer and one appointed by the in jured employe. The findings of this board as to facts are final and the fees and expenses are paid by the state. It is notable that in this bill the Industrial Accident Board, created to make awards and perform other func tions, has not supervision over the state insurance fund. That fund and . the regulation of premium rates there in Is left to the management of one man, who is wholly independent of the board, the idea being that the board is largely a judicial body, which may decide claims against the state fund, and should not act both as a party defendant and the court which decides the case. It has been said that the only true function of state Industrial accident Insurance is to prevent private monopoly- In Insurance. With that opinion we are in accord. If a stock company or a mutual company can successfully compete with state insurance and is so regulated that the injured work men are not defrauded or burdened with litigation, we can conceive of no logical reason for denying it the priv ilege. It has been said that monop oly in state Insurance keeps the money paid for premiums at home. Yet in surance laws require the maintenance of large reserves and the insurance companies invest largely where they get their business. As the Oregon law now stands the state is paying heavily for the retention of industrial acci dent insurance money at home. Its contribution to the industrial accident fund and the cost of maintaining the Industrial Accident Commission result in the state paying about 25 per cent interest on the money thus kept in Oregon. When the Oregon law was adopted it was acknowledged not to be per fect. Amendment was anticipated and, as it turns out, revision in some particulars is imperative. There is now better material available than ever before for guidance in putting the act on a permanently practicable basis. A thorough consideration of the law and broad reformation should not be discouraged. LATTER-DAY STATE RIGHTS. The outstanding fact about the Hob son amendment is that it is a proposed Federal constitutional amendment to be adopted or rejected by the states. It will take a three-fourths vote of all the states to make it the funda mental law of the Nation. Yet here we have the panic-stricken Demo cratic majority crying out that it is a "question for the states," and that it ought to be "left to the states." If submission by Congress to the states of an amendment to the Con stitution is not a grant of opportunity for a direct exercise of the modern (not the ancient) Democratic princi ple of "states rights," what Is it? The measure is left to the states. They may accept it, or not, as they please. But if thirty-six out of the forty eight states act favorably, we shall have prohibition in the United .States. Surely the Democracy does not now stand for nullification by one state against forty-seven others. Surely the Civil War settled that question. Yet should not a three-fourths ma jority of all the states prevail over the remainder? Are we going forward or backward? WARM HEARTS AND OPEN HANDS. The weather is cold, but hearts are warm. The genuine Christmas spirit is abroad in more than common power. Perhaps the knowledge of Belgium's suffering has awakened us all to the fact of suffering at home. Pockets unlock more readily , than usual this holiday season. Hands are open, hearts beat with kindliness. The beggar is relieved without too close inquiry into his worthiness. He may be a fraud. Heaven forgive him if he is, but in any case his plea is piti ful and he receives his dole. If he misuses it that is his fault, not the fault of the person who gives. The prophecy is common among men today that we stand at the be ginning of a new world. We are in the dawn, some say, of a better civ ilization and the European war Is ttffe last convulsion of an age that is pars ing away. The war is the dying throe of militarism. This may be true, or it may not, but in any case it Is cheer ing to believe that the world is grow ing better in spite of appearances to the contrary. Those who really want it to grow better can help realize their desire by bettering the lot of Rome unfortunate. The more happiness there is on earth the nearer we are to the millennium, and there is nobody so poor that he cannot add a little hap piness to somebody's lot. REAL DANGER OF WATER-POWER BILL. That ultra-conservationist newspa per, the Chicago Tribune, expresses alarm kest the Senate committee which is considering the water-power bill should, heed the demands of water power interests which oppose public control. The danger from this source is not that the power interests will succeed in obtaining freedom from public control. Representatives of these Interests made plain at the hear ing by the Waterways Commission several years .ago that they favored such controLigrhe real danger is that they may induce the committee to in crease the 'Jfieasure of Federal con trol to the exclusion of control by the states. As passed by the House, the bill provides for state control of intra state rates where states have regula tive bodies and for Federal control of interstate rates and of lntra-state rates where the states have made no provision for regulation. The corpor ations would rather be under single control and generally prefer that of the states. They particularly object to having to deal "with one or two departments of the Federal Govern ment and one or more states, and with some reason. Gifford Pinchot and others of his type attribute the power companies' preference for state control to its Inefficiency, and they regard the provision made for state control as only temporary, to continue until the Government takes full con trol. Their objection is sufficiently met by the provision of Federal control of intra-state rates where the state has no regulative commission. Their reflection on state commissions is not justified by the experience of Ore gon, Washington, Wisconsin and sev eral other states with such bodies, and is born of an unjustified belief that the states are more susceptible to corporation influence than the Federal Government. Even ' if their belief were Justified, it furnishes no ground for Federal Invasion of state jurisdic tion. The power interests have good cause to criticise those provisions of the bill which vest wide discretion in the Secretary of the Interior as to the terms of leases and as to all relations between lessee and the Government. Those provisions make the lessee a creature of the changing views of suc cessive Secretaries of the Interior. A company having a fifty-year lease would have to deal with at least a dozen consecutive Secretaries, and men may well hesitate to risk their capital on the fairness and sound Judgment of so, many unknown men. The purpose of the bill is to get water power developed. Its accom plishment requires that the terms of the bill be such. that men will Invest money under them. If the bill be merely ideal from the conservation standpoint, but Induces few. If any, men to develop water power, nothing will be gained by it. A contemporary sorrowfully asks why modern bachelors shun matri mony. Jt suggests v variety of an swers, but misses the true one, which Is the cost of living. If we ever find a way to enable people to satisfy their reasonable wants without excessive ex ertion, matrimony will become as pop ular as it was in the Golden Age. When Uncle Sam was able to give every man a farm, the demand for wives exceeded the supply.- TRANS PLAN TING FOLK-SCHOOLS. H. W. Foght. of the Federal Bureau of Education, believes that the Danish folk-schools can be transplanted to the United States. Why not? We have transplanted the Dutch free pub lic schools and the German university. Why should we not be capable of as similating the Danish folk-schools? These are schools for adult pupils. They are in session at those times of the year when country people are least busy on their, farms and their studies are adapted to rural needs, though it is important to add, the cultural stu dies are by no means overlooked. To make such schools mere arid .grinds of work and trade would be an unpar donable blunder. We need these schools in our rural districts worse than Denmark did be fore they were founded there, but it seems fairly likely that the village high schools may be made to supply the want. They are emancipating themselves from the idiotic routine of Latin and mathematics and taking hold of current needs, at least in some quarters. No doubt the change will spread. Mr. Foght thinks the Allegheny Mountain region would be a good place to make a beginning with the Danish folk-schools. There is small doubt that they would be popular wherever they were started. The "moonlight" schools recently begun in the Tenne see mountains by an inspired woman show how the people would take to them. If more proof of their sure popularity is wanted we have only to look at the Chautauqua, which Is, in a way, modeled upon the Danish folk school, though its work is, of course, far less systematic and thorough. But it does attract adult students and re kindle the sacred fire of intellectual ambition at a time of life when, by all the dismal old standards of pro priety, it ought to be extinct forever. There ought to be a folk-school In every school-house in the United States. Grown-ups need education as badly as the children. If they had more of it we should see and hear less of the unintelligent opposition in the rural districts to co-operation and col lective marketing. We should also hear less of the migration of whole families from the country to the city. THOMAS AND HOOD. The battle near Nashville in which General Thomas defeated Hood and destroyed the last vestiges of the Con federate power in the western border states was fought December 15, 1864. The. news of it was slow to percolate through the country and only on De cember 21 did it reach The Oregonian. The Oregonian of that date contained a dispatch which said that Hood had been defeated near Nashville by the army under Thomas. The same num ber of The Oregonian contained the news that Sherman had carried Fort McAllister by storm and iwas besieg ing Atlanta. When Sherman set out on his march through Georgia he sent Thomas back to look out for the safety of Tennes see, making the task rather difficult by depriving him of almost all his troops. It was thus Incumbent on Thomas to build up a new army out of raw material and this he immediately began to do. Much depended upon his celerity and effectiveness because Hood had abandoned the vain pursuit of Sherman and returned toward Ten nessee, evidently to make trouble in the Union rear. On November 30 he was repulsed at Franklin, as The Ore gonian recounted the other -day, but this by no means disposed of him. Hood continued to advance on Nashville and the country watched his progress in a fever 6t anxiety. Thom as, who had the only force anywhere near Hood, delayed to strike. To the excited American people his inaction seemed criminal. It was commonly said that he was repeating the dila tory tactics which had made McClel lan's fine army so useless. There was even talk' of recalling him. His im mense services at Chickamauga were for the' moment forgotten. An order for his removal was actually signed by Stanton, but it was happily cancelled before it had done any mischief 'except to mar the satisfaction that Thomas felt in his victory when he had won It. At last when he believed his prep arations complete Thomas attacked Hood and beat him unmercifully, driving him back eight miles the first day and harrying him out of Tennes see soon afterward. This ended the power of the Confederacy in the Ten nessee country. Thomas received a belated commis sion as Major-General for his brilliant piece of work, but ho believed that It had ' been given unwillingly by the Washington authorities. ''I earned this at Chickamauga,'" he said with par donable bitterness when the commis sion came. "I never received a pro motion that they dared to withhold." Neither . Grant . nor Stanton liked Thomas. They were only too ready to listen to his backbiters and readily persuaded themselves that his merits were inferior. What he won he won nobly.- To' favoritism and backstairs influence he owed nothing. MR. BRYAN'S MILLION MEN. The sort of stuff with which the demand for adequate National defense Is met can be conceived from this sam ple, the product of our peaceful Sec retary of State: The President knows that If this country need l.OOO.OOO men, and needed them in a day, the call would go out at sunrise and the sun would go down on 1.000,000 men In arms. In his enthusiasm Mr. Bryan has overlooked a few minor details. Before this country can have 1,000,000 men In arms it would need to provide the arms and before the arms would be of any uBe it would need to provide ammunition. Before our 1,000,000 men would be. anywhere near a match for an equal number that might be put in the field by a military nation, they would need instruction in the use of arms. They would, above all, ' need training in the art of working in large masses as a unit, in discipline, in obe dience to orders. They would need td become imbued "with that martial spirit which Mr. Bryan so greatly abhors but which inspires men to count their own fate as nothing, the cause for which they fight as every thing. These essential qualities could be developed In the 1,000,000 men only by officers who must have had several years' training in the (In Mr. Bryan's eyes) execrable art of transforming men- into soldiers, for a man does not become a soldier Immediately upon being armed. About four years are needed to produce a competent officer, and after he has learned the theory in college, he must acquire practice in commanding larger and larger bodies of men, until an army has some men qualified by experience to com mand a million or more men. If Mr. Wilson were to call 1,000,000 men to arms this morning, he would find the supply of officers necessary to train them non-existent. . After he had trained or Improvised officers, Mr. Wilson would find it necessary to wait from six months to a year before his army could be put in the field with any chance of success. Lord KitcTi ener began recruiting the new British army at the beginning of August and he has crowded training at an unprece dented pace, requiring the men to de vote ten or twelve hours a day to it, but the new army is not expected to go to the front until Spring. While the infantry were being trained, it would be necessary to pro vide artillery in a certain ratio to in fantry and cavalry and to train men in its use; to provide cavalry horses and equipment, and to train men and horses; to provide uniforms and equip ment for the whole army, to say noth ing of commissary supplies, tents, land and sea transport, medical and hos pital service and supplies. The time which would elapse be tween the call for 1,000,000 men and their entrance into the field would be more nearly a year than a day, and it would be an extremely busy year. If the country had no other means of defense than the newly-enrolled mil lion, an enemy could overrun it dur ing that year and break up the train ing camps. Before' Mr. Bryan delivers himself of any more oracular utterances on Na tional defense, he should consult his colleague, Mr. Garrison. He might get a few hints which would save him from making himself ridiculous. There is a move on foot to reform the "expert witness." The hope is to make-him more truthful than he has been for a long time. The' Illinois Law Review gives an account of a plan for this laudable purpose. Ws wish it success, but we cannot help remembering that the expert heart ia desperately wicked, particularly when there is a fee in sight. We think we can tell Superintend ent Seymour, of Monmouth, how to "interest parents in the schools." Let Jthe schools begin to teach matters that are of importance in life and conduct. As soon as their work be comes vitally interesting, parents and all others as well will be interested in it. Elmer H. Curtlss projects another over-ocean aeroplane. Its wings will spread 100 feet and the other dinjen sions will be in proportion. The mon ster Is to be built at Buffalo and when it is done Mr. Curtiss will fly across the deep and dark blue ocean in it perhaps. Japan will be missed in the parade of warships In the Canal celebration. As the sea is clear of Germans, she has nothing to fear, and must have in view something great pretty soon. Los Angeles will not participate of ficially in opening the San Diego fair because a San Diego editor had a few Jesting remarks to make about' Los Angeles. Come, come, children. . The boys in the manual training schools want to work during the holi days and do not want a vacation. Those are the foremen and superin tendents of the years to come. Tsing-Tau's quick fall Is attributed tq shortage of shell. And yet the shortage was not so great as that at most of our fortified positions. The two hundred young men and women learning Spanish in the city night schools will be the advance guard of business ere long. Paris reports that the British have made 500-yard gains. Think of It! In about seventy-five years they will get to Berlin at that rate. Austria says she will not pay debts due enemies; that is, not just jet. When the war is over she may be glad of the opportunity. The Kaiser is now hurrying to the western battle zone. It keeps the Kaiser on the jump visiting all the spots of stress. Effort to kill Carranza with a wild locomotive was futile. The weapon was unhandy. Only the meat-ax will do the Job. . Wouldn't old General Mortality laugh with glee if a fairly durable coating of ice should tempt skaters to the river? Senator Farrell would c"ut the pay of state and county officials twenty per cent. Why stop at such a modest figure?" The eleventh-hour shopper will awaken with a sudden start in the course of another forty-eight hours. These are the days when the deliv ery boy gets his first taste of sales manship on temporary promotion. Time for the oldest settler to tell how they used to drive ox-carts across the Willamette on the Ice. Last call to do something for some one and avoid the dullness and regret of a selfish Christmas. Max Cohen's time will expire be fore the lawyers exhaust the mess of technicalities. How'd you like to be lying in the trenches this weather? Millions are doing it- Father will blossom forth in a new multi-colored necktie very shortly. Drunken automobilists sent to Jail need the "kangaroo" degree. Old Mr. Stork is picking his winners for the day after tomorrow. Now they're attacking old Demon Rum right in his capital. The Democrats are squabbling again over division of the pie. Juvenile circles are now agog with excitement. It will be Judge Gantenbeln, Mr. West. Twenty-Five Years Ago From The Oregonian December 22, IS 88. Washington Among the Senate con firmations yesterday was that of Or viUe T. Porter as Marshal of Alaska Mr. Porter is from Oregon. . - Archbishop Gross has returned from abroad, where he visited with the Pope. Archbishop Gross said the Pope enter tained the highest opinions of the peo ple of the United States as a people and as a Nation. Ex-Emperor Dom Pedro and all his kin have been banished from Brazil in a proclamation which decrees a spe cial election next September 10. ' B. H. Day, who" founded the New York Sun and printed its first copy in 1,833, died yesterday, aged 80. Russell & Macleod, brokers, yester day negotiated, the sale of the Hoyt property on Third street opposite the Merchants' Hotel. The consideration is said to have tjeen $50,000. A week ago the same firm negotiated the sale of the Breck property at Fifth and Morrison streets for JS0.000. T. J. Goodenough, of the firm of Leinenwebor & Goodenough, of Astoria, real estate brokers, is visiting in the city. County Judge Catlin will not occupy his seat in his new courtroom until the steam heaters have been installed. The Caledonian Club elected officers Tuesday evening as follows: I. A. Tay lor, cnier; J. Turnbull. A. Muirhead. J. Newlands and J. Menzles, chieftains; Dr. 11. Hicks, physician; William P. Finley, standard bearer, and A. Don aldson, Dr. William McLean and.K. A. J. McKezie, trustees. Miss Fannie C. Grottyan, the artist, has arrived safely in Paris. Wilton Lackaye will support J. M. Hill's new star. Miss Cora Edsall, In Henry Guy Carleton's new play, "The Australian." Miss Pauline Hall is said to be the richest comic opera star in the world. Miss' Sarah Lowengart has gone to Baker City to visit friends. W. D. Washburn, Jr., of Minneapolis, who is to wed one of Portland's fairest belles soon, is in the city. Henry S. Stockford and Miss Helen Dillenback were married at the home of the bride's parents, 326 Clay street, recently. Rev. Alfred Ktimmer offi ciated. Henry T. Wolfe, who for nine years past has held a responsible position with S. Lipman & Co., and who is well and favorably known to Portland ladies, has purchased the entire busi ness of S. L. Stone's, opposite The Ore gonian., DERIVATION OF NAMES OK OREGON ' i Early Pioneer Ia Authority for State ment That Orisin la Irian. PORTLAND, Dec. 22. (To the. Edl tor.) In reading your editorial on Ed win Markbam's book I noticed the deri vatlon given for the name of our state as having probably come from "Aragon." Inasmuch as the origin of our state's name is still a matter of doubt, permit me to give a version given by the late Captain William Bratten, of Rldgefield. Wash., in the early '80s of the last century. Captain Bratten was one of the earli est pioneers of the Pacific Coast, hav ing been brought here by Dr. John McLoughlin from England to erect the first flouring mill that ever turned a wheel on the Pacific Slope. It came about in this way: Colonel James Nes mith, Tom Monteith, of Albany; Cap tain Bratten and the writer were tak ing lunch at Joe Boyd's cafe on First street, when, in the course of conver sation, the meaning of the word Ore gon was discussed. We . all tried to solve the perplexing subject, when Mr. Bratten, who had been listening very attentively to the various deriva tions, said: "Gentlemen, you are all wrong. It was an Irishman who gave the name to this state and the great river that flows so near our door. It came about when' Jonathan Carver's party, in de scending the Snake River, struck that splendid body of water we now call the Columbia River. In Carver's party there was an Irishman by the name of Harrigan, and as he was a very lively fellow, he was dubbed by Carver as 'the O'Regan,' in honor of one of the chiefs of a clan in Ireland of that name. As Harrigan had been the first one to decry the union of the Snake with the Columbia, the great father of waters of the West was named 'the O'Regon,' which in the process of evolution or corruption became the Oregon of .Bry ant, and hence the name our state." We all accepted Captain Bratten's version as a very reasonable explana tion. In passing permit me to remark that corruption of names is often going on unnoticed. At the present time there are three Generals at the eastern bat tle line in Europe. The Prussian Gen eral, Mackensen. is a descendant of a Scotchman who found shelter with the Karl Marschel of Scotland, after the af fair of 1745. in Prussia. The Macken zies came from Stornaway. The other two are the Generals Odoutcheff and Obrutcheff, in the Russian army. Their names before their ancestors left Ire land were, respectively, "O'Bryan" and "O'Donnell." GEO. POPE. MIGHTY PROUD O' JIM. Thought the world o' little Jim When he come; the likes o' him In the baby line we thought Hard to beat, an" done a lot Of exalted braggin", jest Preachin' that he was the best Bunch o' baby to be found In the neighborhood around. In the school the teacher said When he wasn't at the head Of his class 'twas when he tuk Down with measles, but he struck His ol' gait as soon as he Got the measly spots off. Gee! How he swallered l'arnln" till Teacher said he had his fill. Growed to manhood on the farm. Big o' body, strong o' arm. An' when he detarmined to Git out in the world an' hew Out the destiny that he Said was waitin'. ma an' me Both believed we'd see his name Scribbled on the scroll o' fame. An' he got there. When we see His name in the papers, me An his mother feel so. proud Come near shoutin' right out loud. As a pitcher he's the scream Of the Tigers' baseball team. With some kinks no batter yit Has devised a way to hit. " v One newspaper said 'at he Was a comer; wouldn't be Hidin' in the bushes long. 'Less his pitchin' wing went wrong. Jim he says he'll bet, the day Isn't very fur away ' When that same amazln' arm "LI pitch the mortgage off the farm JAMES BARTON ADAMS. Game Fish In Washington. GOLDENDALE. Wash., Dec. 22. (To the Editor.) Kindly give the address of some one who Is an authority on the game fishes of the State of-Wash-lngton. . SUBSCRIBER. Write to L. H. Darwin, State Fish and Gam Commissioner, Seattle, Wash. BELLIGERENT RIGHTS IN CANAL. What the United Statea Mar Do Under Hay-Panncefote Treaty. NORTH YAKIMA, Wash.. Dec. 21. (To the Editor.) (1) May a nation at war with the United States have a war vessel taken through the Panama Canal by paying toll? (2) May any nation at war with an other nation, other than the United States, have a war vessel taken through the Panama Canal by payment of toll? (S) Do the same port or navigation laws obtain in the Canal Zone aa in other United States ports, and, if not, kindly show difference. FRED SHARP. (1) Under a strict construction of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty, as Interpreted by those who supported the Canal tolls bill at the last session of Congress, the United States Is as fully bound as any other nation by all the rules govern ing its operation. Rule 1 says: "The Canal shall be free and open to the vessels of commerce and of war of all nations observing these rules, on terms of entire equality." Rule 2 says: "The Canal shall never be blockaded nor shall any right of war be exercised nor any act of hostility be committed with in it." Taking these two rules to gether, the United States would be un der a moral obligation, under the inter pretation mentioned, to pass the ships of our own enemies through the Canal on payment of tolls, and would be for bidden to blockade the Canal. If at war we should be forbidden to take stores on our war vessels in the canal, to embark or disembark troops or war munitions there, and our war vessels would not be permitted to remain in canal waters more than 24 hours. The canal tolls bill was amended however, by inserting a proviso that- it should not be construed as abandoning any rights the United States might have under the treaty. That proviso leaves the way open for the United States to adopt the contention of op ponents of the bill that the rules gov. ernlng the canal were adopted by the United Statea, as owner, in dealing with its customers who use the canal. and that the United States is not bound to enforce these rules against vessels of Its own flag. This would conform to the statement of the British For eign Minister who negotiated the treaty, that, in case the United States was at war we Bhould be free to take care of ourselves. That term may be understood to mean that we could ex elude our enemy's ships and use the canal as we pleased for our own ships (2) Yes, but no belligerent ship may remain longer than 24 hours in canal waters, and a vessel of one belligerent may not depart within 24 hours of a vessel of the other belligerent. (3) We have no Information. Write to the Panama Canal Commission at Panama. PLEA IS MADE FOR MODERATION Mr. Topken Believes Americans Should Obey President's Admonition. PORTLAND, Dec. 22. (To the Edi tor.) I sincerely appreciate the Impar tiality of The Oregonian. generally speaking, in its editorial comments upon the happenings of the day. As it faithfully observes the appeal of Presi dent Wilson for neutrality in print, so it becomes the duty of every American citizen faithfully to follow the Presi dent's prayer for moderation in state ment and speech. It also becomes us to extend the hand of welcome to great and learned men from foreign lands, who come to us. to tell us their side of the story. May this be now Professor Kuehneman, at a later date a Lloyd George or Clemenceau, all should be equally esteemed, equally honored as representative citizens of their respec tive countries, and to their message we should extend a respectful hearing. That their statements are often ex treme is to be regretted, but we should not forget that, as patriots, to be im partial, while naturally partial, is an accomplishment which even a great mind seldom attains. On the other hand, if an American citizen, who should take an absolute impartial view, indulges publicly In ex treme criticisms of such men and accu sations of one country or the other, he commits a breach of etiquette to say the least, especially so when his knowl edge is derived from reports only and not from actual experience and obser vation. He offends the dignity of an American citizen and disregards the prayer of President Wilson. Every one has the indisputable right to his opin ion, but we should not forget that, while we have an American republic, we are still in the process of formation aa a nation. We, therefore, are often confronted with delicate situations, but we must meet them as gentlemen. Is" there a single correspondent who has not modi fied his views? Did not Irwin state that he had expected to find Louvain totally destroyed, but after all there was hard ly 20 per cent? For this reason I believe Mr. Chap man will change his opinion. At pres ent I most emphatically disagree with him and with me are millions in this country that his opinion is American opinion. Let ua hope that this war ia to end war. FRED TOPKEN. Valne of Coin. HERMISTON, Or., Dec. 21. (To the Editor.) Kindly inform me as to the value of a $10 gold piece made in 1853 that has not "In God We Trust" on It; also if it is worth more than the face value, where could I send It to receive the difference? MERL M. PHELPS. The coin is not in demand by collect ors and will bring only face value. Message) From New York. Judge. Ezra My son has just sent me a message from New York, but I can't make out whether it says "No funds" or "No fun." Eben What's the dif ference? The Kayrldge Cornet Band. Heed Calvin. In Collier's. Yer from the city. Ain't thet so? Wal, city life Is nice; I know the city fellers, though! I've been to New York twice. But this here town of ourn's the place! We ain't so got durned grand. But. I tell you, we're In the race Ild y'ever hear our band? Wal. yuh shouldn't leave the place Tell yuh do. (My yam plays bass, An' by gum there hain't a better in the land.) Hear 'em once, an' yuh kin say To yer great-grandson some day That yuh heard the Hayrldge Sliver Cornet - Band. "We've got a org'nization there Thet hain't surpassed by none. It's ekal to the best there air. (Fust trombun's Rube, my son.) Them city bands thct's bragged up so. We'll match 'em any day. I gol. yuh oughtta hear 'em, though, Play "Hail columbl-a.'' No str-ee! Don't leave the town Tell yuh hear 'em play "John Brown." Folks kum frum miles around to hear em play. Clean from OrchardviHe they kum. (My boy William plays the drum. An' the solo-cornet is my oldest, Ray.) They play next Friday to a dance. (My John Dlays clarinet.) Jest hear 'em while youh've got the chance Maybe the last yun u get. (My Tom, my second old: st boy. Flays berrytone, an' Luke Is second clarinet, an' Roy. My youngest, he plays flute.) Jest drop in befur, yuh go An we'll play yuh "Old Black Joe." I played cornet once. I've lost my teeth now, though. So I set time when they play Sort o' leader, yuh might say, Wal, good-by. It's too durned bad yuh nave to go. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian, December 22, 1804. Thomas' victory over Hood Is not only confirmed, but the world is given details of as brilliant a battle as any of the war, hardly excepting Sher man's last victory over Early. Tho Union lost some 3000, but took at least 9000 prisoners. The Corvallis Gazette cornea to ua, a sprightly weekly. It is edited by W. K. Boyakin. Sealed bids will be received at the County Clerk's office for the construc tion of a new county Courthouse. Clerk H. C. Coulson has issued and published the notice required by law. John Selwood has advertised for sale a cottage and lot with good well, located on .fifth street, between Alder and Morrison. C. N. Humiston has purchased the entire interest of Wilson and Stephens in the firm of Humiston. Wilson & Company. The company of volunteers being or ganized by Captala Powell has over run the minimum and application was made to Colonel English yesterday to muster the company into service. The Governor has commissioned the following officers in the Washington and Yamhill company: Ephriam Palm er, Captain: Mr. Walker. First Lieu tenant, and John W. Cullen, Second Lieutenant. Mr. Palmer is a brother of General Palmer and served In the Mexican War. Mr. Walker is a son of Rev. Walker, of Washington County. Mr. Cullen is a "typo" and recently commanded an independent company of cavalry. Professor Sinsheim has fixed up a music store on Front street, adjoining the postoffice and is displaying a fino lot of holiday goods. Santa Claus has arrived in town and established headquarters at McCor mick's bookstore, 105 Front street (op posite Mount Hood). The Paris correspondent of the New York Times intimates that Napoleon is coveting tho mining resources of Mexi co and there would be little or no sur prise if the French government "squat ted" on some of the valuable claims down there. LOYALTY TO OREGON' PRODUCTS Builders Exi-bange Re-plies to Crltl ciama of Letter Uiacussing Labor. PORTLAND. Dec. 22. (To the Editor.) The writer was very much surprised to notice In The Oregonian that the president of the Manufacturers' Asso ciation "criticised the Builders' Ex change for opposing the efforts of other local bodies in support of the local ma terials." Tlie writer is in position to know that there is .no organization in th state more loyal to, Oregon and her products than the Builders' Exchange, and there was nothing in the article of December 17, which Colonel Dunn is criticising, to the contrary unless by inference, and the inference, if any", was entirely unintentional and is glad ly withdrawn. At the time the article in question (material for The Dalles Federal build ing) was written, the bids Indicated that a California contractor was low man on "local stone" as against Georga Isackson, a local man, on "outside stone," and our only point was that It was a better Oregon policy to em ploy an Oregon contractor who would use all Oregon labor than an outside man who would doubtless bring his skilled labor, at least, with him to the state. And the point is pertinent when consideration is given to the large number of contracts that are let out of the state. . Our only plea was for the Oregon contractor as against the "foreign man," and if there is no danger of the job going out of the state, then there exists no desire whatever to call in question any and all attempts to de velop local enterprise. All the con servative Oregon contractor will re quire will be that the Government ac cept the stone, and that the stone peo ple deliver the goods. The interests of the Manufacturers' Association and the Builders' Exchange are too closely allied for any misun derstanding to be allowed to exist, and we are quite sure that the president of the Association will, on a second, or probably a first, reading of the article in question, discover that his criticism is entirely unfounded. BUILDERS' EXCHANGE. J. S. Seed, Pres. O. G. Ilughson, Bec'y. J lint n Little Too Mneh. Palmer (Mass.) Register. Conductor Pave Daley Is willing tho ladles shall get off a moving cur back ward if they prefer, and they can go aa far as they like with the Blit skirt. Rather than have a long argument he will give up 45 cents in change when they hand him a quarter and claim it wus a half. He is also willing they shall vote If they will support the good old Democratic ticket. What he objects to ia blaming the conductor because tho steps are too high for the present stylo of apparel. ... Anto Put Bull's Light Out. PORTLAND, Dec. 22. (To the Edi tor.) I seen the bull what was killed by the auto when ho should not a been hurt. It had two lamps. You could see the light in his lamps till the auto put his light out. His wal in front. He had no wheels and didn't need rear ones. There's too much beefing about tho facts. You got tho wrong steer. Some one's bulling you. JOHN BULL'S SON. Mont or tbe Wir Caanaltlew. London Punch. Husband It seems to me that shrap nel has been the cause of most of tha war casualties. Wife But, George, isn't he a war correspondent; not a General? When Middle Age Is Reached. Exchange. By the time he reaches middle age a man is apt to arrive at the conclusion that nothing matters much. When a Woman Is Bosa. Atchison Globe. And as far as woman ia concerned, frequently the softer her voice tho big ger a boss is she. Inside Facts "T am convinced that the daily newspaper offers to a general ad vertiser of an article of home con sumption the best medium and the one of the greatest known value. It affords the beet moans to ac complish the most essential thing in advertising, which is the establish ment of a permanent mental im pression in the minds of a large number of individuals. "The newspaper is the best and surest medium for making this kind of an Impression, because it per mits the most frequent repetition of the merits or claims the advertiser wishes to advance. Day after day he can bring his facts to the minds of readers who are consumers, never permitting them to forget." This statement is made by the advertising manager of one of our most successful food products. a a