THE 3IORVTXG OREGOXIAN. arOXPAY. JANUARY 4, 1915. Mt return FORTI OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Fotofflo a ecuca-cia matter. uLKrrlptlon Rats Invariably to advance 1X3 Wail k Daily. Sunday Included, ona year -? Imilr. Cicdijr included. .x montha ..... Iai:y. Sunday Included, tnree montha ... Dai:y. Sunday Included, one monta , Dally, without Sunday, ona year J- lajly. without Sunday, aiz montha ... J-a Xial.y. without Sunday, three montha .... pally, without bunaay. ona uouus ...... Weekly, on year XvL f unday. on year Sunday and Weekly on year ""v (By Carrier.) Ial!y. Sunday Included, ona yar .....- " Xially. Sunday Included, ona month How t Remit Send PoatorZlc money or der, express order or peraonaj check on your loea! bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at aender risk. Oiv potolc audreaa In lull. Including county and atata. lotag Kate 13 to 1 page. 1 cent: Is to ii pace. 3 cent: S4 to as pages. 3 cental 1.0 to do pace. cams; 62 to 76 paea i cent: 7S to - pasea. cents. Foreim poat- s doubl ratea. Eastern Boainea Office Verr aV Conk Iin. New Tork. Brunswick building; Chicago, hunger building. Mo t'raacHrw OffVr R. J. BldweU Com pany. W. Market street. rOBTLAM). MOXMV. JASVABX 4, WIS. HOW TO AID TITB INEMPLOVED. Although resumption of activity in various manufacturing Industries and In railroad shops is now reducing the number of unemployed and although Industrial activity promises to Increase throughout the year in such measure t . . 1. 1 n 1 1 1 1 In a tniril- ' toil tills uuuiun . .w- .ki.m mum oy next inter, mo ' the unemployed present t. v"-"cur- ring. For the time being it grows leas pressing, yet it Is still with us. It ia necessarv that means be devised to solve it, not only for the present but for any time when It demands at- t.ntlon. As the evil Is countrywide. these means must be country we. Each state and city should organlie to deal with it own peculiar phases of the difficulty, but all should work together on a common plan. Unemployment can be mucn re- duced by improvlns the means ot cis- X": Oct ,n the machinery for trans- Xerring them to . the place I" are neeaeu. j'nia nuLiujiri 3 . .. ... i ..i. K.,., I me enrra. . Jt consist main jr oi ment agents, who exact exorbitant fare Is advanced, a man has no sooner earned that amount ana tne cost, oi i M hoard than he is discharged to . t-or thPr This svstem make room for another. TWs sjstem to built up on aar ru. hAi u'fin n B acifiii auu i un- i ro.-trr or fnrrmui. It is summed up In the statement of a contractor that he always has three gangs one coming, one going and one on the Job. Pmwr distribution of labor re quires that public employment offices be created In every large city aim hat thev work in clone co-operation It requires that private agencies be licensed, that fees be limited and that exaction of excessive fees, misrepre sentation and division of fees with employers or their foremen cause for feiture, of license and criminal prosecution. Any system which gives he .mnlnver a. necuniary Interest 1" disc ha ruin a- a good workman la vicious In the extreme. A nlan liiLs been proposed for plac , Ing private employment agencies ' under the aunervision of the United States Department of Labor and for -co-operation between the employment branch of that department and state .. and municipal oirices. mat wouiu t .nrk wall nrovlded it does not un duly cramp local freedom of action. ! The same machinery, in co-operation with the Immigration Bureau, could lring about a better distribution of Immigrant labor. It la a reproach to our Government that thousands of . experienced farmworkers from abroad " in rrnudinc Into our cities and be- .nniin niial lahnrpm while the ' farming districts are clamoring for i labor. The farmers can co mucn'io . h.in thamaoivoa iii this regard by giving permanent employment to a , larger number or men msteau w uis- charging their hands when the rush season is over. ' After all possible has been done to bring -about better distribution of - labor, there will remain in the large r centers of population a" residuum of unemployed during periods of de ' presslon like that through which we hava Just passed. This residuum i. preaents an even more difficult J arnblem. Theunemployed Include " many who w ill grasp at any oppor " tunity to live without work or with a mere show of work. These are - either paupers already or are destined f to become so at the first pressure of distress. Others have such scorn of " charity that they reject offers of help and even go hungry rather than make I their destitution known. The solution Is simple, but not easy. It is to tind : work for both classes, not work that Is invented as a mere transparent v cloak for charity but work that is neuded and is worth the price that ' will be paid for it. Then offer it to the actual or would-be seekers ofter charity with the warning: "He that will not work, neither lot him eat'; and to the proud and in dependent with the greeting: -Here Is work at which you can earn enough to tide you over." Xnis in suostance is me iiu lanaF' i o plan which was worked out with great success in the Winter of 1S93-4. ii. . . . ., - This In substance is the Indianapolis TliruUfn tne wommerviai iuu mittee was appointed which took the i . n . i. I proDiems in nana. x mo rwia v i the Charity Organization Society the community naa oeen gcunaij tuu- cated out of the practice of haphazard glving by individuals. The society relieved thna who were unable to i. i r n i nnr.u.-mnnt fnp the i , t i V avilU "Uiiu .v. 1 well. But the need had outgrow-n tne means of this society and the field which it occupiea. inousanus were In need who refused to go to the ... . i 1. . .. . ..on fmm neiirhhnr- but I 1 'l I""" " .-.- i . 1 simply asked aia in ootaimng em-1 ployment. The society ordinarily re-1 . . 111. . . km then I XUSeU IDOQ 1 ( n LI iiuc lll, muw I - .n..l I he turner Bvv fnr there was not work for the Idle. The Commercial Club committee therefore took In hand the whole task of relief, removing the objections of the Independent by relieving It of the appearance of charity. It reg istered the unemployed and opened an agency for securing employment. Individual citlxens provided temporary -work for about on fifth of the whole Tiumber. The committee headed off I emotional movements for bestowing I promiscuous charity. It opened a I lood market or store, where rooa i Aiilt ho ' niirrhaaed on credit standard Quantities proportionate thp Hij-A of the family and could be Daid for with labor. The Charity OnraniMtlnn SocietV Stopped uting food and referred all applicants to this store. Each applicant was re auired to sign a contract to perform labor at 12 cents an hour in ment of his account, or to pay money on demand, and was given a book which his account was kept- He v riven a card directing him to report to the Street Commissioner for w which, when done, would entitle in HAvlnv credit for the quired work, he was given an order for a week s rations lor tne numoer Der in his family. A standard ration n irir wna adonted. consisting Of food lowest In cost but most nutrl Hons. It was sold at cost, which was half the ordinary retail price, and a family of four the price was the eauivalent of one day's work. for ?1 Th fttv Tinvinfir no money to pay for renairinr and cleaning streets. the committee furnished the labor for this purpose without cost to the city, allowed no shirking and closed It the accounts of one-fourth of the men this rround. It thus provided re on relief fnr Mhont B000 persons for th hree month and for 1000 to 8000 for two months at a cost of less than 120. Tnwarn tha end of Winter many i 1.000, men asked to have their accounts closed All were advised to seek other em ployment and the number of patrons ranirllv diminished until the market wtt closed. The objects of relief nnt hArtma nAimers. for none apxi for charity after the committee ceased operations; in fact, the Char ' ' - - Itv Organization Society had . . u, U.iunnuin on its books during tn succeeding three month, than at an: Jn hlstory Th(J Indianapolis plan thus show n offering work In exchange fo: food and fuel the unemployed can bi carried through a Winter at moder fte . former de- pendents out of pauperism I - THE OPINION" OF MEX WHO KNOW. No two men In the United States ln,,d on the Philip - - - ex-President Taft or wit, more P-PO ' TcU "7:; which will fit them for self man av government. Both these men say t . th(. Flllr,r,ol, at th pVtlme the practically complete p v proposed ..rarB f lhB Kilioinos. - o. These men express this op nlon hot because of any doubt as to tne prm ..., .eif-a-overnment. no w"" f .nv desire to hold the - iriiiiiinnia In Deroetual subjection or ininisini Thev know throuch what struggles the Anglo-Saxon race has arrived at its present aegree oi jhilliv fo govern Itself and because they know from long, personal contact with the Filipinos now iar snort those people fall of having attained that point in training ror successiut v Thev wish to continue the training until it has equipped the Filipinos to conduct democratic in attttitlnna with SUCreSS. The sound common sense or tne Nation will declare that Mr. Taft and Mr. Worcester are right. If their advice shall be ignored, those men who now boast that they are the Fill nlniw' best friends will be proved by events to be their worst enemies. PAY FOR TUB WHOLE FAMILY. Th House has attempted to settle the perennial mileage question d uoiini thut the actual traveling ex penses of members and of the depend ent members of their lanuliea ne paiu i... . )... nnvrnniiint. but the Senate will certainly disagree and the House will agree to what the Senate aaopis, ..n lima utn wnJlted. Kav.rthiilMt tVlA HOUSA OrOVlSiOn seems most rational. A man and his family should not be penalized by long separation or heavy expense Decause he la elected to Conirress. It is better both for the Congressman and his rami lv and In the long run lor me nation, that they live together during as well as between sessions. Tha hoine ronffided. a flat mileage id he trd much for a bachelor on. inn littletVor a man like Repre sentative Fitzgerald, who has seven children. It would De a premium on race suicide and a penalty on large families. Then let the whole happy Congressional family, large or small, peregrinate to Washington ana Das iw.fr, nnd after each session of Con gress at the expense of the nation. The people do not wish to be penu rimia n.r do thev -wish to be wasteful. If they pay the actual expense, they will be neither. TAKE A LESSON FROM THE WEST. A meeting was held a few nights go "to discuss methods of ridding the city of gangsters ana gunmen rho have become a menace to the lib-t-tie. and lives of citixens." This mentinir was not held in any raw com munity in a half-settled Western state; it was held in New York, tne largest n.i the richest citv in the Union, the !..- n-Hir.h nrnfpKipti that culture and nllghtenmcnt radiate irom it inruuun- .,. the continent- It recalls to minu the ii nf the vicilante In California. Montana and Idaho, when peaceable citizens united to exterminate the "bad men." dt . h.in 1 1 a ha.lr tn turruiii iw"ih primitive conditions. Where they pre- Vail, there is a return from civilisation . ti rt Dirf.r.nift In il savusrij. iuo J essence between the bad men of New , . n . V. ha A m an nt the tors in awx .t,u vi West in the middle decades of the runeireiiLii vcdlui.. proved that the West met the situa- uon far better than does New York, in most Western communities there - Icml machinery tn Drotect life ii ci a ii vj - " j - I and liberty, so tne people creneu il, oi and Its prompt effectiveness was a terror to tne uuun-a. sheriff Plummer. the official defender . i . 1 .. Tn XT nnta no hnHv knew he was a murderer and llll rooDer. so wimuui ksji . rose up and hanged him and his gang. IThi n.i irn a a IrrAffllllir hilt thelfltai me llirt.cuiii . a - o ..nlliil Bnrl aentenoe were lust. EverT- body in New York knew Becker to be a, murderer ana graner, nut ne nua been given two trials and he has taken a second appeal. Nobody yet knows whetner ne win ever mi. m mw cict.uim chair. We are not recommending New York to adopt- lynch law, but we are sug- it-1 that the surest means of ret ting rid of the gangsters and gunmen js to impart to the city s methods some of the stern promptness ana certainty which characterized vigilante Justice. I if there are any servants oi tne taw be to gin with them as Montana began ith I Plummer. THE WAY OF THE JOB 8EEKEK. Tt rln.a tint -lear the skirts Of Mr lr. Eaton from the stain of logrolling assert, as he does in his letter today that Mr Sellintr voted for the refer ended nnlversitv hills of the 1911 sion of the Legislature. The main factor that carried the aDPropriati in their entirety through the Legisla lure of 1913 was the knowledge that the referendum would be invoked d. A material rjart of their SUDPOIt came from members who saw in that fact I an esr-ann from Eatonism. The pros n.tiv. rcfarAnnitm inrltled them to vntu fnr the bills in order that the other business mieht- be cleared of hla nernifimie. influence TTnr that matter The Oregonian suDDorted the bills when they were before the voters, it aia mis wnne nrntAfltlne against the lotrrolling meth ods by which they secured legislative sanction. The referendum had been Dermeated with gross fraud and the leaders in the movement were irrecon citable enemies of the University. The Oregonian chose what seemea to n the lesser of two evils, but the people der-lared em n h n.t lea 11 v that appropria tions obtained by the Eaton method should not stand. Moreover, they re fected the mil lac tax bill, the initia inn tit whirih according to Mr. Eaton, Induced the friends of tne university to let the appropriation bills go "by riefault M Tt la xharacteristic of Eaton that he la rirbue heratine the men who subse nuentlv trained for the University the Imm-ovements that he had long aniichr hut failed to obtain. The see cial election bill of 1913 was designea specifically to prevent a two years hnMtin hv referendum of essential ap propriations for the University and the Pnnnmii.Plliilfln ExDOSition. It n o. ennrived In Multnomah County it was prepared and introaucea oy Senator I. N. Day and was adopted laro-elv thrnnirh his efforts. After the University appropriations nf 191S had been referended it was Sena tor T NT. Dav who acted as I finance committee of one for the Uni versity Alumni Association. It was by his unaided solicitations confined almost whnllv to nromineift Portiana citizens that practically all the funds to carry on the Alumni Association b oiiereKRfiil camrjaifim in behalf of the a nnrnnrintlnnfi were obtained. The University or uregon is a state institution hut it is dearer to Eugene than n n V other, citv in Oregon. It is not only the pride of that community hut one nf its business assets. A Eus-ena man. in view of what has been done for the University by Sena tor Day, ought to be tne last man in Oregon to offer him gratuitous insult of dlrert manufactured suspicion against his motives concerning forth nomine legislation. Vet Allen Eaton, of Eucene. has done Just that in a public attack upon t Tr nnr nnd has aone it wiliiuui. a. scintilla of evidence that Mr. Day is actuated bv unworthy motives in pro mntinir an ecnnomv programme for the T-etrLslature- The neonle of Multnomah uouniy by their votes have at least once saved the State University rrom sen ous hurt if not from outright ruin, at temnted throueh the refere'ndum When the maintenance bill lor tne University, passed by the Legislature nf i oo7 am sent to the referendum in 190S the ''country" which Eaton nnnr ooU-e to excite atrainst Portland defeated the measure, but Multnomah County gave a favorable majority. Ar.ame the adverse state' vote ana the nav for the University. In 1913, too, Muitnoman uouniy o-ave the nnlversitv one-nan tne eu- tire majority received in the state for the referended bills. Yet I)aton, the merlal reDresentative ana champion r the state TTniversitv. lias tne au dacity and the Ingratitude to raise the faie issue nf "countrv" against "city," and to denounce the Multnomah dele- aatinn as a "Portland" ring, it was leeted hv the larirest popular major ity ever given any delegation in the histnrv nf the county. Jklr. Selling, who is put rorwara oy Miiitnnmnii in a candidate for cneaWer led the entire Doll with 48 322 votes, while the highest marks) given any unsuccessful candidate was 1 us vntcw. It Is neither Decoming nnr wise nor true for Eugene to talk about a "Portland ring." The man who, solely in tne interest it personal aggrandizement, betrays his own constituents in the manner that Eaton has done, is a snake in the grass. He ought to D6 scoicneu uy his townsmen. . LITERACY TEST FOR IMMIGRANTS. Adoption of the literary test for immigrants in the Senate by tho over- helming majority of 50 to 7 after the House had passed it by 241 to l m, has placed Congress squarely in op position to President Wiison on one of ib most . important measures oi nis Administration. The President has voiced his objection to the literacy test so openly and so often that he not approve the bill without stultifying himself. Congress cannot ept a veto without equal stuitinca i, and its temper is now such that tion. there is no probability that it win ieit to the President. Onlv a slight hange would be necessary to pass in e Dill 1-tiruuBll mo xawuoc i veto. while an enormous change be needed in the Senate to uphold a veto. The trend is away from. not toward, the president, we expect Congress to overrule a may veto. .V. C.t on this 1 II e acuuu vl i 11 " - bill marks the turning point in tne history of the Wilson Administration. During the past two years the Gov- nent has been Woodrow vviison. He has chosen the subjects for leg islation, and Congress has acted on those subjects in preference to all others. He has outlined the main points of bills and Congress has obeyed his will,-The legislative branch . i 1. ,1 ahri rnlori Its tUS uuiciuilicik aiau I .a .n ii avannnua 1 1 nas nun I resumed them. Through the rest of is the e Wilson term, the Government will nsir. of executive, legislative and Judicial branches, as it normally does conformity witn tne consuiuuuu. is is the result of the people's re fusal to respond to the election cry: Stand by the President." The peo- pie dld not stand by the President; therefore Congress will not. a jnHiii nf the litprai-v test is a response to the demand, which has I - . grown louder yearly, that indis criminate admission of immigrants shall cease. Formerly the sentiment was that the country needed people. and they were admitted any kind of peb pie. Now the sentiment is that enuntrv nend.1 onlv the rieht kind tne on fro people the pick of the overflow overcrowded countries, w e have gradually adding restrictions by been in I who have arone over to the enemy. .inina the imhecile. the diseased, the nenniless. tha anarchist. Still the fionn has continued and its quality has steadily deteriorated. It Is not composed of the same elements as oriirinaiiv settled the country and as - , . tr of . i came in auriiig itie mai. j TO I . . T. , .-A malnlll inaepenueiice. la uuiiiusiiti -j . i . . .1 . 1 ; 1 ir da- oi elements wnicn uu . t .. similate and with which the existing population U not willing tcassi A new test hename npresaaTT. TV ltb- .. . , - out on its lace etni&iiia; i j v ticular nationality, it furnishes a rougn and ready means of excluding those I Here's a health to the Misunder whom we deem undesirable. It hap- stood4 .Unt th. nnnnl., n-hom We deem I desirable come from countries where the ratio of illiteracy is low, wnne thoee mrhom we deem undesirable come from countries where it is very high. As immigrants from the lat ter countries are generally drawn ter countries are generally uio.wu from the ' less educated classes, the ratio of illiteracy among them is doubtless higher than in their nations as a whole. Here then was the rough and renflv means of drawing tne line between the desirable and the unde strahle. Bv aDDlving that test we should exclude the vast majority of the undesirable and should admit tne vast maloritv of the desirable. We should thus announce that Only picked men and women are eligible for American citizenship. It is inevitable that in applying this test many will be adrtuttea wnom w. When dead there is time to pro would fain exclude and many wi 1 be hjm 8ublime excluded whom we would fain admit, hnl that 4a an unfortunate incident in applying any general rule. Those who dwell on such cases have tneir minus bo concentrated on the particular in stance that thev overlook the good general result They ignore tne tact that in denying admission to an other wise desirable but illiterate immi grant, we deny no man any right that he possesses; we deny him only a privilege which Js ours to wnnnoiu. If we thereby do ourselves a smaii ininrv do it knowlnely in order to make a greater gain in the gen eral efficiency of our immigration laws Since the next great flood of im migration which will follow tne Close of the war will certainly flow in large volume to the Pacific Coast, tnis sec tion is deeply interested in the im migration question. We desire the material develoDment Of the Pacific Coast, but not at the expense of Its civic, social and moral standards, lor these reasons we desire selected ira migrants. Tf the annointment of Senator Neu nor tn he Prosecuting Attorney of Douglas County is illegal because he was a member or tne legislature ii- Vi i c Vi crea ted the office, the right of Mr. Lawrence to qualify for the new nnsition of State Printer can be ques tionori on the same trround. Mr. Law renco renresented Muitnoman Loumj in the session two years ago, auu n a-as then that the state rrimers oi- fice was created in its present form. The irenera.1 order" for the first Christmas was "Peace on earth, good will among men." That for the last Christmas was: "Artillery prelimina ries for a ireneral infantry attack will heirin at noon: infantry attack begins at 2 o'clock." Yet we tell each other the world has made progress in the interval. The House has added an omnibus private pension bill to the other omni hn hills hv which advocates of vari ous schemers pool their votes in favor of all. This way of doing it is prop ahitr no wnrsR than the passage of a separate bill for each pensioner. Wationo which are sacrificing lives by the tens of thousands on land can not worry about the safety oi tne tew thousands which may be lost at Bea, hence tha failure of the safety-at-sea convention. War lowers estimates of the value of human life, i Mrs. Vautrhn. an expert, says now is the time to have in mind the duty of cleaning house and housewives must agree with her. The progressive woman will put her dutiful husband at work in the basemenon his day of rest. T?esTimntion nf work at the South ern Pacific Railroad shops all along ... r. a a 1 . . .J ; TJ 1 .. ,1 tne Jracinc uoast, njuiuuiug ruitwiiu, . . t : ' .1 t.nffid I 13 a sign or increasing ia.ni unu as well as a promise of more activity wen e-s a v in the communities airecuyconcer.ieu. The fig-ures of a contract just let to , imorimn concern bv Russia give - . , -t jofotic I little idea OI tne expense prosecuting war. a aew concern is to make a million dollars orth of calks for horseshoes. - Since Governor Blease has emptied the South Carolina penitentiary Dy granting pardons and paroles, every n and woman in that state must going armed to protect themselves be id their property. If the allies accept the aid of Jap lese troops in Europe, they will give Jap ian the right to a voice In tne con cert of Europe whenever the musi s can be induced to play in con- cert again. ; Having sent George Otten to make a forNeVsey." Oregon may lend John Yeon to some other state show it how to make a good road hen he finishes in Muitnoman County. , The German warning to soldiers against wearing armor conveys a hint or tne consequem-ca. a a.a.B..v drive a piece of the armor before I. into a man's body and aggravate his . wouna. , . .at that TorVev The Russian statement that Turkey has lost her independence to uermany may will be taken as a hint that Kussia feel free to take large slices of Turkey if victorious- in war. If householders are stealing, water, is time for a service test. The thing not unknown. While rival compa- nies were in business on the East Side the scheme was easy. It Is more than likela that many ancestors of Senators and Representa tives could not pass the literacy test, but conditions, were different In the days. old The man who lives in a "dry" town Salem and can see two Mount Hoods the day after New Tear's is possessed of remarkable vision. The kind of weather is part of the scheme of Nature. The umbrella man must live. The Kaiser's headauarters are in parts unknown," where they do not advertise. A Toast to the Misunderstood By Rex Lampmaa. With the toasts of the New Year yet - i men,,, .. The toasts to the lovely and brave, , xne toasts 10 tne love U. . v. i .1 V. . . AO tun ww w I tha 1.iia vt To the sage or the fool or the kna, Vg gooa, Tve one toast yet to drink nil the o-lass tn the hrinlc - They are laughed at wherever men places and times on the earth. Doubtless some of the crew are a nuisance to you. With their schemes of Teform and re unm, Some will tell you the world needs birth; . ",,,, Jmn( ,,,,, t n:J. They are cracked tney cranks, but I the race owea them thanks Here's a health to the Misunder stood! Always, always, .they face the world's scorning, They are crucified, exiled or spurned; 'This their portion to die before, bold on the sky Their perishless message is burned; So here's to the crank and the misfit, Whom perhaps we don't treat as we should Here's a health to the Misunderstood: NOT WHOLLY FOUNDED OX FAITH Original Sin as Root of Social Evil la Deaaonatrable as Geometry. PORTLAND. Jan. 3. (To the Editor.) Mr. Heckethorn rejects my explana tion of the persistence . of the social evil through the centuries by denying original sin. 1 rear ne is not. nimu orthodox in his theology. Unfortu- nutul,r his disuiTilinir nninlnn cets him out "of no difficulty whatever. His re jection of my explanation leaves mm helplessly stranded with no. explana tion or even attenrnted explanation of the mighty problem of evil. Thus he declares It is time ior tne hlame to he mit on the men as bein g i.ln for the social evil And thll to take the Jlrst step toward a solution. His suggestion does not go to tne root of tne trouDie. granting mi aigu mant's anlra that men fllflllA are reSDOtl sible. how would Mr. Heckethorn ex- plain-this wickedness in the nearis or man ..tanalnn' thmilErh thrt TOrtUrieS nno he not aee that he ia driven by sheer necessity into accepting tne rem ity of original sin, wnicn ait manitun inherits because of the transgressioi Af mm Ural naranllt- I have explained In detail all the theories of evil formulated by other re- .igions and by ethical Philosophies, and I do not hesitate to say mat tne tnri- Uan doctrine of original sin is the only one that nts the actual iacis oi me. The doctrine is true, of course, because i l -n.. i i. -..1. trachea it Rut in this case no act of faith is required to accept it. The dogma nas tne same aemnnauauu ity as a proposition in geometry. c.,iir H. Tf eclcethnrn is mistaken if he thinks that mere social blame which is entirely distinct irom uoa .........inir iiHf-ment-.haH not hereto fore held the male sex accountable ior - . nnwt "f the social evil. For many centuries thousands, aye, millions. of human beings nave Deen expreutsmi, tha same aenttment as Mr. Heckethorn, i. e., the male sex must be held respon sible. This conviction , nas ueeii an nounced with eloquence, with- bitter- naoa with SCOm with all the shades of feeling the human heart is capable of originating, let sucn expressions, al though repeated innumerable times. have not abolished prostitution, jno reasonable man can escape the infer ence' that it cannot be abolished that way. The inborn evil of the human i I. the itev that unlocks the mys tery of the persistence of this as well as other forms of evil in our wona ui temptation and sorrow. One other error Dy Mr. necnemorn I may venture to touch upon. Under God's scheme of things we are all, both men and women, tree agents, iiim uc- tr.ia tort's illStiCA holdS CSCh 0116 of us, male or female, responsible for every voluntary act. It cannot be pleaded in extenuation that an evil act often reneated. until the soul becomes black with sin. thereby somehow ceases to be evil. God noias us iccounuuw every time we commit a sin anew, M.un,hAH aire he llli'll or W O Til 1 II . He could not have the quality of infinite justice ana ao less. t Hence the rrequent Discrepant- be tween human judgment, operating Lhrough fallible human agents, ana ai- ne judgment, wnicn cannui en. -. very term "social evil" is In a way a lllldH"ii'1 - uwv. . . - - ' dividual sins at the time they are com- : nA trnows end 11lll Cl'H 111 " dividual sina at me muo mj .w... ...1. ... l. ,, tha sinners he male or miucu, tvncmc. ..w female. He pays little attention. I dare fine-snun "social theories rn---hiidren in dealing out r.'a-.i nt,a-i Btiirnni liiKiinHi Meanwhile, let us .thank God that throutrh Jesus Christ and His Church th -nrov trt j-nlvntinn is oDen f or all Z.Tu th nath that "leadeth .- - - a PENITENT Mn. EATOJT STANDS FROM UNDER Repudiation by people of Hla Bills Sol Criticism of Him, ne saya. PORTLAND. Jan. 3. (To the Ed itor.) Your editorial concerning me and my candidacy ior tne peaneisiiir contains teneral observations and in- linuations which, not being specific, i do not feel called on to answer, l a i if " . . . .-vn-v aarlth vnrl THAI no that no Droner in favors, or log-roller in legislation, or solicitor of patronage is ent t.eu tu confidence or autnority in any laesm ice or authority In any IB" lature. Your inference that I fill that description is not supporieu o.w fact in the editorial. Jou propose to state a few plain facts, but the editorial favor of 'an appropriation for the State ' i niverBitv. wintii wm w - feated by the people on a referendum. The defeat of the bill, however. Dy tne people does nut jusluj jvu, bvUi..Ua.uu that t involved ZiTurTentTy without any support from the . d . tne university, Decause n was mutually understood and agreed that mstead of the appropriation maae la... .u.. hill there WOllld he! Substituted . i ..., a nf the nnnrnomt on maae iuy ". " mlllage bill, wfiicn was aone. But if your criticism concerning my am ii yw . .,,.u i,t - ' ' selling, for, as President of Senate he gave his support to and hla vote for that very identical mil in .hat resnect therefore, at least Mr Selling is not, as you say, "the an tithesis of Eaton." but his synonym. I recognize your right to refuse to print an article reflecting upn The Oregonian, and in order that this article may not be subject to any objection on your part I am carefully refraining from using therein a word that would wound your sensibilities. ALLEN EATON. Pay for Insane. PORTLAND, Jan. 3. (To the Edi tor.) Do the state institutions, such as the insane asylum, require payment for their services of people who are able to pay, or are all the expenses paid by the state? SUBSCRIBER. The state provides maintenance for alt its wards. Section 4440, Lords Oregon Laws, provided that insane per. sons who were able should pay to the state $10 a month for their mainte nance. Evasions, however, made the law virtually a nugatory one. Chapter 542, Session Laws, 1913, repealed'it. CAUSE OF FARM LABOR DEARTH Fair Em ploy era. 'Whe Provide Cleaa Qnai-trra, Have N Trouble. GOBLE, Or., Jan.2. (To" the Editor.) I humbly beg permission to say a few words in regard to Mr. Teat Pull er's beautiful bunch of sour grapes. In the first place, I would like to state a few positive facts about the employ ment agencies that he seems to de fend. I am neither hobo nor bum. but have, traveled from coast to coast and from the Gulf to Canada, and nearly always on transportation furnished by some corporation through an employ ment agency. So you see I should have picked some information. Ttie system generally in vogue is for the employment agent to collect the fee and split with the "walker" on the job. I have been on a number of Jobs where they would not hire you unless you had an employment ticket, so it was quite an item to the employer and the "walker" In so far as there was one crew coming, one crew working and one on the way to town, the com pany collecting $1 from each man for hospital and generally $1 each for bunk rent, that is, the privilege of sleeping on rough boards, and the "walker" getting the rakeoft from the agent. I think, if we could arrange some system through the postoffices, as has been suggested, charging the laborer 5 cents and the employer the same or lii.f aaa,ic-h to III V exTncnRC t II tllO Government, it would have quite a ten dency to alleviate tne numoer oi un employed and also tend to keep the despised floater from floating. 8ome people do not seem to understand why the largest cities are so badly congest ed with unemployed, and It is as sim ple as falling down. We ail know it takes tens of thou sands of men to man the many branches of Industry that are carried on apart from the populated districts during the Summer months, and here is where the floater comes in. He stays out all Sum mer and consequently when he gets back to town in the Fall he goes hog- ..-11.1 ananncr the mnnv iideil BalOOnS and the painted ladies that the virtu ous home folk put before him. l ne first thing he knows he is broke and has not the price to ship again, even if there is a job to go to. "Voiir correanon dent tnlks about not being able to get competent help and that the Americans would rather live in town on nothing than go to the country for fair wages. I don't know what he calls fair wages, but will say I do not blame any free-born American citizen for passing up the average dairy . . knowledBB a8 t throuch the mill. Mv mother died when I was very young, and being next to the oldest, had to get out and hustle. I worked for one year, all but two days, for a dairyman. I received the munificent sum of $6 a month and board. My duties were to milk from seven to Hi ","' ,ho cows , ht mo rnl ng clean th . sta- . th- cows and c, the horse s alls ;,r .-! school and making an average of 91 in I oil mv studies. The only pleasant remembrance 1 have of that place is three good meals each day and a clean bed, which Is more tnan tne average uregon larm iianu u dairy hand has. The Western laborer Is supposed t have his blanket on his back whenevc 1.a ...... 1 ;. ... tV . arnrlr and when nia?h comes he is led to the barn or 10m shanty stucK among tne nogpens iu the chickenhouses. Seemingly he 1 aa iinl as the avcraain fnrmci They don't care where he sleeps, Jus so ne is on nana ior wuia. in me uiui n ing. I have seen bunkhouses not fa . Dn.ll.na that uniilqUio inilri filth to the square Inch than the stock yards In Chicago, and they were Jus a,a 11UUI J i. . m i , . . ...... k.. Amarlnnn miiaf hnVe cleanliness to entice Dim to linger it one piaoe any lengtn or time. srim that you may be able to do with tht Immigrant as you wish that is for a time. But he soon gets wised up anc then you can get another greenhorn You may be able to feed him dried shoe-laces and Oreiron Drtines and per- ...Ja 1.1m to alapn Xl-ilh the Cnltle fill J15 per montn ror a wnne, out tie iuou gets Wise. 1 speaK or tne avera.se. T ctl..a In ana, travels nver the polin try that Boipe dairymen seem to have some very Intelligent and clean-look- lng American help, ana tney seem to be contented witn ineir iul, uu. me. ia hrmiThl ahotit hv the dairvmen mak ing an effort to meet the men half way with good food and quarters and treat ing them as humans, not as work anl- finma neonle never ran keeD helD and others can't get rid of it. Why is itT U. 1-.. 1UU11U. ORDER PERFORMS NOBLES SERVICE Oddfellows Are Carrying On Pledge la Practical manner. ALBANY, Or., Jan. 2. (To the Edi tor.) Under the headline "Muts Per forming Noble Work." Vicar Rice a few days ago in The Oregonian paid a splendid tribute to the good work of the Muts. ' This reminds me that there Is an other organization which has erected great -buildings in Portland and is en paired in the works of righteousness mentioned by the vicar. I refer now to the great Oddfellows' iiome in jrort- 1 a 1 lit. la aarnhan Children are lailll, IVUCID aiaaaa, ' . being provided for and educated, and where old Oddfellows and aged lic- bekahs are given all tne comioria ui home. , . a . , cimii.a homea are now maintained in every state, there being now 63 Odd- ellows' homes in tne various maica. .nmniaa of nririfrllnwehiD now encircle the globe, extending even to tEe Beks. The great man , commands of the order, "to vlsi ... the distressed, to " rtH , .ducate the orDhan - t th wtd0T" has been so h(auTly performed that the lnstitu- oddfellowship now outnumbers tVVKl-t -rce. for good in all the world, not only in Its ministrations for the relief of humanity a.... i the elevation of human charac ter, and it wars against vice in all its forms. - This is stated Dy me as grano pam rch of the Oddfellows in Oregon, not ther ereat institutions, but as a email tribute to the righteousness of Oddfel- , ah nh is mAn iMtea or tn . : v, I ,.u ta manifested bv till lowsmf " .in.. 1 - . magnilicent Oddfellows' Home main tained in the Dcautitui uny oi ronmm for the good of humanity Dy tne love J.i,f. ,i lovaitv nf the Oddfel- ,ow8 of Oregon. GEORGE WILLIAM WRIGHT. Carrying Supposition Farther. PORTLAND, Jan. (To the Edi tor.) Referring to the editorial, "Sup pose," in The Oregonian December IU let us carry the suppositions one fur ther. Suppose the situation to be re versed that Germany had control of the sea and Britain's ships were. bot tled up. In the light of Germany's actions in this war, with her standard of "might is right," Irrespective of laws, rules or treaties and her ex pressed contempt for our ability to defend ourselves, do you think this difficulty would be as amenable to ad justment as it will be with England, whose people and statesmen of today are reasonable and friendly? England, in self-defense, must retain what is one of her most officient means of bringing this war not of her seek ing to a successful Issue. Germany's ships being off the sea, the whole burden of this thing falls upon England, making her difficulties enormous. Let our shippers put peace before profit and not add to tho diffi culties of both nations. C. B. P. Twenty-Five Years AfO Frjm Th Orreontan. January 2, lvio. Washington, Jan. 1. Tha "Happy New Year" reception at the v luta Hours tonight was a brilliant affair. Si thousand people thronged the te-ception-roonia and President Harrison shook hand Willi every on of them. This was an absolutely "dry" affair, and although the t'ablnot officer kept open house, no win was wlllilu sight. Brussels, Jan. 1. The Royal Palace took fire this afternoon and at 10 o'clock was a roaring furnace. Two firemen were Injured while flchllnir the volcanic burnt of flame and tine was killed. The Queen'a aparlim-nt was demolished and the King I very anx ious over the statuary In the rotunda, all of which Is believed to b destroyed. Union, Or., Jan. 1. Charles Connar ty, resident near here, shot and Instantly killed by Kdward Smith while the former waa reciting to th latter details of a row he had had with a neighbor. Smith after the rrlm gava himself up at the county Jail. Seattle, Wash., Jan. 1. Three chil dren were drowned near Port Ludlow Tuesday afternoon when tho Ice over Johnson's Lake, on which Ihoy were skating, opened under them. They were Edward Oliver. 9; Francis Johnson, , and George Johnson, 11. New Tork, Jan. 1. The free trade and protection discussion between Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Blaine fills between 40 and 60 pages of the North American Review. Columbus. O., Jan. 1. The great Ital ian tragedian, tfalvlnl. Is auftertnf from a severe and dangerous attack of grippe. Electric cars were running on Sec ond street yesterday and were exten sively patronized. A dwelling belonging to la. Zimmer man, near Fulton l'ark, on the macad amized road, waa destroyed by fir ear ly yesterday. S. C. Beckwlth, writing from New Tork, says: "Charles 8. Shank, of your city, but at present a student of the Yale College, dropped In today." Mayor De Lashmutt returned from the Coeur d'Alene mining district yes terday. A pljnsant watrh-nlaht psrty was given ISew Year's eve at tho residency oC Mr. and Mrs. Dove, on Eleventh anil V streets. East Portland. GOOU NAMIS MORE THA DOl.l.AH Public la Morally Bound I Pay Fal Rental for Steel Brldsje. . PORTLAND. Jan. 3 (To the Editor.) I wish to commend your editorial on the Steel bridge. It ha been popular now for many years to bait th cor porations, simply becaune they are cor porations, and some of our pinhuad poli ticians and Journalists have yet to learn to treat corporations is they would individuals. It is, therefore, thu more refreshing to find a newspapir with the couraga to demand a squnio deal for the railroad company. As to the issue there is no argument. Nobody but a maniac would seek to close this line bridge to the public, and assuredly the public will not tolerate a toll bridge. The Kteel brhlire Is Hie least expensive of ell our bridge, ami a comparison with the Broadway lirlditc leads one to wish t.iat all the briditea had been built by railroads and lra d to th city on the same terms as the railroad company Is now oAeriug tho Steel bridge. The annual chariri-a lo the Hty for the Broadway bridge are more than double the same chart: ea fur the Steel bridge. During the past year marly twice as many passengers and vehicles crossed the Steel bridge as did Hie Broadway bridge. Attain, the Steel bridge was closed to the public on ac count of river trafllo only about half the number of hours that tha Troailway bridge was. These are fact which at verified by the. illy survey, and. in faro of these facts and In face of the fur ther fact that the railroad cumpnny Is asking less than 6 per cent on Ita ad mitted Investment, we ar asked lo believe that the public do nut want or do not need the brldue and that the railroad company Is trying to hold up the city. Comment Is useless. However, 1 am of opinion that even If the bridge were not iiacd by a single person, the cltlsena of Portland are morally, perhaps leRiilly. bound to lease this bridge from tho railroad company. It Is a matter of record that ih cum nsnv did not want to build the super structure, and It Is a matter of record that the Tort of Portland Commission forced the additional Investment on llin company. Between individual mere would be no question of the binding na ture of this contract, and It is mere quibbling to pretend that because It was the Tort Commission, and not the County Commission nor the City Coun cil that made the bargain, that the bar gain can, therefore, lie broken. 1 sub mit the Fort or 1'ortiano t. ommis-mn was acting ror tne ptionc in mm maun and that It was the properly consti tuted body to take action. Recent elections witness tho V.H Side franchises and the water front grab bill are a clear indication that the ne.-uile. once they are put in pos session of the facts, are fair-minded. 1 am satisfied the people of Portland want to live up to tneir oohusuoiu-. i im County Commissioners will ootintiesa make the best deal for the taxpayers, but I am voicing the opinion of ninny when I say It Is more Important to pre serve tha good nam of the city by Itv nc up to lta contract tnan 10 sat a, tew dollars In taxes. La Ga Kiai.-VUr.lt. Every Day Is Smile-Day. Atchison Globe. Smiling- brings sunshine Into th home, and washing the helps some. windows Heroes of e B'K War. Exchange. Amontr the other heroes are those who fearlessly attempt to pronounce the war names. Oestiaatlon of a Tram. Exchange. ( i-nnsTderlna: where h la going, a tramp Ms altogether too anxious to get there. "Model" Storekeeper " The dictionary define a model as "a small Imitation of the real thing." Storekeepers who continually offer "something Just as good" are certainly "model storekeep ers." Substitution Is one of th meanest of trade practices. It I never Indulged in by honor able merchants. It is a practice that is vir tually theft of another man's good will. When you ask for an article you saw advertise In this pa per "GET WHAT , YOU ASK FOR" Shun the storekeeper who habitually mitmlitulcs.