TIIE MORNING- OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1915. PORTLAXO, OREGON'. Entered at Portland, Oreson. Postofflce aa second-class matter. Eubscrlptloa Rauea Invariably lit advance. By Mall.). Pally. Sunday Included, one year Taily, Sunday included, six months Zjal.y. Sunday included, three month... Daily, Sunday Included, one month...... .5 Daily, without Sunday, one year ! Tnllv. without Kundav. aix months a.-? Dai iy. without Sunday, three months 1- UaJJy. without Sunday, one monu. VVeeklyA one year. Sunday, one year................. Sunday and Weekly, on year (By Carrier.) Pally, Sunday Included, one year. . Irally. Sunday Included, one month BO . 1.00 . 2. to . 3.50 .S9.00 How to Remit Send Postofflca money or der, expresa order or personal caeca on local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are t sender's risk. Give postofflce address in lull, including county and state. Posiaa-e Rate 12 to 19 paces. 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, S cents; 60 to 6o cases, 4 cents: 62 to 1 pages. 6 tents; 78 to VI pages, o cents. Foreign post sge. double rates. Eastern Business Officer Veree Cnk lin, New Tork. Brunswick building; Cnlcaso. Slenger building. ban rnutrim Office R. J. BidweU Com pany. 742 Market street, rORIXAJTO. 6ATITIDAT. FEB. !7. 110- TIIE FCBLIO AND THE RAILROADS. President Sproule, of the Southern Pacific Company, doubtless has abun dant ground for his statement that business depression la due to "a long continued clamor against all sorts of public businesses." Honest public opinion has neglected to discriminate between honest and dishonest busi ness, between those corporations which respect the law and which seek to Influence legislation by legitimate means and those which are openi lawless and which secretly or by .cor- runt means oddosc legislation affect ing them. Uninformed public opin ion that which finds expression In wholesale, demagogic condemnation of the good with the bad for political ends likewise falls to discriminate. Tt also ignores changes for the better An the conduct of business and Often TroDoses remedies for existing evils .Avhieh are worse than the disease. I The cause of this condition of pub lic opinion is to bo found In such transactions as are recorded in the same issue of The Oregonlan in whicH '.Mr. Sproule's speech appears. On ihe admission of one of the principals pn the transaction, men holding about one-third of the stock of the Kock island Kallroad so manipulated the iffairs of that lino that on iTl.OOO, '00 of stock thero have been piled Stock and bonds of two holding com panies to the amount of 1191.000,000. J'the only source of dividends on this Jsiim being the earnings of. the oper ating companies." There is no dif ference between such transactions -:ind those of "Get-Rich-Quick Wal Singford." The result is that one of the best-paying railroad properties in ho country has been reduced to bankruptcy. The same edition of The Oregonian Irontains a report of the Interstate Vomnierce Commission charging the luouisvillc & Nashville Railroad "with Jicquiring competing lines and with a Trying on- for years at a cost of mil lions of dollars on elaborate political Jmd publicity campaign to eliminate competition and influence public i'Pinion." This road has made politi Val contributions "which run up into the millions." and has paid money "to Mate officials and legislators of Ten nessee, municipal officers of Kash Jvillo. politicians, lobbyists and attor neys," and to newspapers "to mold jiublic opinion." , We are ready to concede, in the Jibsence of evidence to the contrary, 4 hat the great majority of railroads pre honoftly and lawfully manageu, liut their presidents and directors are liot often heard in condemnation of J hose which are dishonestly and law lessly managed. Much less do honest Railroad men actively aid the law in Exposing and punishing the crimes of dhe dishonest. Under these circum stances the public infers that "all are arred with the same brush." It is as jnuch due to the apathy of honest Railroad men, who fail to set theme-elves apart from the dishonest by iriving aid to the law in bringing the Offenders to justice, as to the crimes f the dishonest and the clamor of J he demagogues that the public conr founds the good with' the bad and is Ileluded into hostility to its own pros perity. . AVe find at one extreme dishonest ail road men, at the other extreme demagogues who blame all railroad Snen for the sins of the few. Between JJio two are honest public men and the great mass of the people who STEsh to punish only the guilty and to fcive the innocent a clean record. But eve find honest raliroad men making J-'ommon cause with the dishonest, renouncing clamor against railroads, Jaut saying not a word against the vrlmea which have marred the re lent management of the New'Haven, ihe Rock Island and the Louisville & Nashville. I A change for the better in the pub )lc attitude towards the . railroads has set in. It Is due to loyal acceptance by many railroads of public regula tion by nation and state. It became tipparent in the support given by inany independent newspapers and inany public bodies to the railroads' ietition for an advance in rates. It 'as borne fruit in the grant of such Jin advance to the Eastern roads. The public realizes that the prosperity of ihe railroads is bound up with that lf the country in general. It wishes the railroads to-earn fair dividends oil their actually invested, capital un der honest and capable management, -Uh a reasonable margin for Im provements. Let men like Mr. Sproule come over and help us to tick out and brand the black sheep Jn the raliroad flock, and they will find the public with them in putting ihe demagogues to the right-about Mid in bringing deserved prosperity to the railroads and with them to the jvhole country. The only cause of )ublic hesitation to take this course is fear that, in supporting the legiti mate demands of the railroads, the iublic may find itself promoting the rosperlty of the railroad, Walllng fords. K-i A TRIBUTE TO MOSES. It is interesting to read in the Gal axy that the poet Heine repented be fore he died of the slight esteem in which he once held Moses. In his youth Heine tells us he "was not par ticularly fond of Moses." the reason for his dislike being that anti-Hellenic spirit which moved the great lawgiver to forbid the Jews to make graven images. In fact, he exhibited, as Heino remarks, an all-round hostility to art, in consequence of which the Jfiwa were for centuries an uncultured People, though they have more than retrieved the failing in modern times, Heine himself was no mean exam ple or the inborn Jewish gift for the nrts and there came a time In his life when he began to appreciate the greatness of Moses. "A clearer light dawned upon him." He won. his new insight by reading the Bible and came to understand that while Moses op posed works of art fashioned "with bricks and. granite," he did something better. "He took a poor tribe of shepherds and transformed them' into a people destined to outlive centuries he created Israel. The Greeks were merely comely youths, but the' Jews were always men, powerful, inflexible men, not only formerly, but down to this day, in spite of eighteen centuries of persecution and misery." Heine's later judgment is extremely valuable, but some will think that he undervalued the Greeks as much in his riper years as he did the Jews in his youth. TWIN EVIDENCES OF BARBARISM. The fundamental attitude of the United States on the subject of neu trality may be defined as follows: This Nation will not consent to any measures which aim to starve a whole nation into surrender to its enemies. This Nation will not countenance the sinking of merchant ships, bellig erent or neutral, without opportunity to the crew to save their lives, nor the sinking of neutral ships without even a search to determine whether they carry contraband. These are two outbreaks of bar barism in the war which are con demned by Americans without regard to their leanings as between tne combatants. JlS. TAFT ' AND THE SCHOOLS. If Mr. Taft keeps on in his present wavs he will earn the encomium which Johnson bestowed upon Gold smith. It will be said of him, and truly said, that he touches everything and leaves everything he touches bet ter than he found it. The other day he talked with inimitable wisdom about our painstaking neutrality. Now he appears before the superin tendents' division of the National Ed ucationel Association and discourses upon the public schools with Judg ment and common sense. Mr. Taft discerns a danger in the very affection- of the people for the common schools. Their love is so great that he fears it may blind them to defects. "The common schools. he says, "are not so much scrutin ized as thev should be," and he adds. what we all know to be true, that "It difficult for apy community to learn how thoroughly the children are disciplined and taught. Nor is there any sufficient way for the people to learn with what economy or waste the public schdol funds are disbursed. The evil results of this lack of infor mation are not perhaps so manifest now as they may become later on. Mr. Taft's remedy for these possible defects in the economy of our schools Is original. He thinks a National university somewhat after Washing ton's plan might prove extremely use ful. In his opinion tho present fed eral Bureau df Education might eas ily be extended to become a supervis ing and examining university under whose care the efficiency or tne puo Hc schools would be greatly en hanced. The examinations would nat urally lead to degrees. If strictly guarded as they should be, the de grees would be held in the highest esteem and any school whose pupils could not obtain them would be sub jected to severe criticism by local pa trons. This would naturally lead to investigation of conditions and the remedy of defects. There is much in Mr. Tarts plan which merits careful consideration. We think everybody will agree that it would be better for our schools to be supervised by public authority than by a private body like the Car negie board. SOME PLEDGES AND OTHERS. The lofty pose of impeccable 'non partisanship assumed by the Port land Evening Journal is not impres sive, in view of its partisan support of every partisan act of a partisan National Administration and its par tisan opposition to every measure de signed to release the hold of the' late "non-partisan" Governor upon the present state administration. It . is natural that Governor Withycombe should desire to be at the head of his own official family, and no mere gubernatorial stepfather. The whimpering insincerity of the Portland Democratic newspaper's daily uproar about spoils-mongering through the Mosc-r act Is obvious from the fact that it has had no word of criticism of President Wilson or Secretary Bryan for the acts of a National Administration more parti san than any other in forty years. The President has filled Federal jobs with Democrats and no others; Sec retary Bryan has made spoils-hunting for "deserving Democrats" a prime occupation, and a Democratic Con gress has sought to make of the civil service a tattered farce." If there has been one single performance based on bona fide non-partisanship by any Democrat in Jhe National Adminis tration, from President Wilson down to Milt Miller, The Oregonian would be glad to be informed by its tearful neighbor what it was. But the outstanding offense of Gov ernor Withycombe in signing the Moser bill, it seems, is his acceptance of the emergency clause. It has not been the practice of any Legislature to limit its powers over the emer gency clause to a narrow interpreta tion of the Constitution. The Legis lature is absolutely the sole judge of Its rightful use. and ever- Governor since the initiative and referendum was adopted has followed the prac tice on occasion of signing bills in tended to go Into effect immediately. Governor Chamberlain set the exam ple by signing at least five bills creat ing new judgeships, and these bills had emergency clauses. Governor West did not depart from the -ways of his illustrious preceptor and pre decessor, except that he occasionally adopted the expedient of filing the bills without, signing. But he did not veto them. Now Governor Withy combe, confronted with the alterna tive of affixing his signature or his veto to a bill he distinctly approves, has refused to be dragooned Into dis approval because it was to become ef fective immediately and because also he had declared himself during the campaign against indiscriminate use of the emergency clause. The cer tainty that the referendum would be invoked on the bill, not for. the peo ple, but for the benefit of the West appointees, if the bill had been left open to attack, doubtless weighed with the Governor In reaching his decision. The Democratic spoilsmen have been in control of the state for twelve years. The first most- conspicuous act of Governor Chamberlain was a daring exercise or his power to put a fellow Democrat In office, Mr, Cham berlain wag District Attorney when elected Governor, and he held on to that job until he took the oath as Governor, and then he appointed his own successor as District Attorney, a Democrat. Democrats and Cham berlain or West Republicans have been or guard -ever since. The violation of campaign pledges is a fruitful topic indeed, we invite our neighbor, the Journal, to make a somewhat broader elucidation of tne subject, beginning with the National Democratic platform of 1912, and the attitude of President and Congress toward its various planks, and ending with the famous coup of Governor West and his allies in 1913 when they engineered a $170,000 appropriation bill through the Legislature to com plete the State Library building, and fastened an emergency clause thereon so that the people might not have an opportunity to express themselves on the open violation of the law of 1911; which provided that the building and grounds should cost J150.000 and no more. JOHX MINTO. John Minto had been a resident of Oregon for more than seventy years, and in all that time had been active (and potent. The beginnings of his Oregon career were In the McLough- lin period, and he was one or tne rew survivors among the Oregon pio neers who saw and knew that great man at the height of his power. He arrived - in the remote territory of Oregon before Portland " was an en tity, and passed its site, then a part of the virgin wilderness, in a canoe on his way to his future home in the Willamette Valley. Few men have lived to see a great city start from nothing and become a thriving me tropolis of 250,000 people; and few also have had to do through seventy long years with the creation of a state and its growth into a strong unit in the National commonwealth. Mr. Minto was a true pioneer, for he had run the gamut of all the early settler's emotions, experiences and hardships, and the honored citizen's rewards' and comforts. He touched life in Oregon at every angle. Mr. Minto was a man of sturdy character, who practiced honesty in all his dealings. He was a leadec in many movements ' for the benefit of the state, and he was a patriot' in times that tried men's souls. He had the love of a numerous family and the. rcsDCct of a very large acquaint ance. He leaves a gooa name &uu an untainted memory. A good and useful man- is gone. . . ACTORS AND WNGERS. F. C. - Whitney's plans for a Na tional Theater in New York may fail but if they do it will not be for lack of exnerience and observation. He has been a manager and producer of plays for thirty-two years and the wisdom thus gained ho has enlarged and ripened by a study of the best nlavhouses in Europe. From all tni3 we may safely expect Mr. Whitney to unite in his new enterprise whatever is best in all parts of the world. The National Theater is to De ODencd next October with a company (r nlavers whose contracts run for periods varying from one year to five. Wo gather that Mr. Whitney would gladly begin at once with the French method of protecting veteran players with a perpetual contract and pen sioning them when incapacitated, but circumstances do not - permit. iso doubt he will cherish this as a con summation to be looked to in the future. The company must be large and expensive because no play is to run for more than a week in the Na tional Theater. Hence roles will be numerous and a great diversity of gifts demanded of the actors. Mr. Whitney intends to select nis plays wherever he can find them, though naturaly those in foreign tongues will be translated into Eng lish." Let us hope that they will not at the same time be too much "nrianied." It seems a pity that Americans should not enjoy the op portunity to see German, French and Italian plays as the authors wrote them. The privilege of enjoying any play whatever as It left the author's hand is comparatively rare in this country. Our dollar-hunting pro ducers" think they know so much more about the drama than the men who write that they must always tinker a new play. This is one among many reasons why our "National drama" continues to languish. New plays will not be excluded from Mr. Whitney's National Theater, but none will . be chosen because they exploit sex ,' or depict "gilded vice." The management will seek first and al ways good plays without much regard to any particular theories of dramatic art or any whims of popular fancy. It is scarcely to be expected that an undertaking so novel and, in a way, so un-American, should be self-supporting from the outset. To meet the inevitable deficit Mr. Whitney has arranged to sell stock at J60 a share. He says he already has applications for shares from people of all social ranks in New York, which shows that the new enterprise makes a wide ap peal. There must be many thou sands of Intelligent and fairly com fortable New Yorkers who want to see a good theater established. A share of stock entitles the holder to one seat each week throughout the season of thirty weeks. Attached to the National Theater will be a school of acting open with out fees to all students who can pass the breliminary examination for en trance. This will naturally form the permanent source from which the theater will recruit its company of actors, but for the present they must be obtained wherever they can be found. We do not gather that Mr. Whitney will make any extraordinary effort to accumulate "stars." He says he wants an all-American com pany, but very likely he will feel sat isfied with a certain moderate level of uniform merit. A good play is more pleasing to an intelligent audi ence such as Mr. Whitney's theater will attract when it is evenly acted by a moderately good company than when one solitary star shines with iim satellites around him. It is a great artistic blunder to subordinate i - ctrtftlv tn nriA rlnmi- .tL fi.re. Great Plays are not tt -o.it, anv such purpose in mind. In most of Shakespeare's pieces, for instance, there is an op portunity for half a dozen actors to exhibit brilliant powers if they pos sess them. Tho case is different with grand opera. There the hero and heroine designedly shine in lonely splendor, while the rest of the per formers matter comparatively little. The' Improper following of this grand operatic ideals in presenting plays has done much to wreck the theater In the United States. And even in muscal performances the lone star arrangement may be carried so far a to make trouble. Emilie Frances Bauer gave an Interesting account of such an occurrence in. The Oregonian last Sunday. Godowskl, the pianist, was billed to appear with Caruso at a certain recital, but he was billed in letters so small as to be scarcely visible, while the all-absorbing tenor appeared in mammoth capitals. Godowskl per emptorily declined to stand any such belittlement. He broke his engage ment and all his fellow-Instrumentalists congratulated iim for his pluck. To the popular imagination great singers embody all that is highest and best in music, but artists themselves are of a very different opinion. It is hardly open to question that a really great instrumentalist stands nearer to the heart of music than a singer does. The most musical music is not writ ten to be sung, but to be played, per haps on stringed instruments. we can conceive of nothing nearer to the fine ideal of pure music than, the sound of a lone violin in the hands of a master. The supreme composers have of necessity been instrumental ists of more or less skill but seldom singers. A pianist interpreting Beethoven or Cherubini loses his personality in his art, while a tenor like Caruso forces himself to tne front, leaving the genius of the com- Doser in the background. When the Ninth Symphony is played Beethoven gets the glory, no. matter who plays it, but when Caruso sings wagner is for the moment forgotten, while the Dersonality of the ephemeral per former disports itself on the stage. It is a tenable proposition that a singer of Ivrle.q like David Bispham has more pure musical value than a bril liant operatic performer like Caruso The woman who left her husband twelve hours after marriage, alleging he was a hunchback, got her decree in a local court, although he proved he was not as alleged and a pretty good man, too. Perhaps, after awhile, people contemplating matrimony and having doubts will heed the advice of Dr. Brougher, very well known here, to bathe in the surf as a preliminary test. Dartmouth has taken steps to join fortunes with the New Hampshire public schools, thus forsaking the policy of haughty isolation which the New England colleges have pursued for a centilry. Followed to the logical outcome Dartmouth's new policy will make it a true state university, some thing quite novel in that part of the, country. No doubt those Piute bucks havo a grievance; all Indians who "uprise' have. In this instance tho white man must "settle and settle good," before the Federal Government intervenes, else there will not bo a settlement. In that region the "deadest" is the "good est." Other communities will watch for results in the plan of Philomath mer chants to sell for cash only. This is tho season when money is not plenty on the farm and -what there is on hand must be saved for the tax collector. To not many orators is allowed the grand climax attained1 by the Italian Deputy who pitched forward dead as he reached the topmost burst tn his address for intervention by fighting. If you desire a good job and have not applied to Governor Withycombe, you are not in the swim. . The Gov ernor has a talented man on purpose to explain. The mastiffs in the Dutch army will strike more terror than the guns they draw. A soldier would prefer being riddled with balls than chewed by a brute. - It develops that a man taken in custody at Salem for loss of memory is. wanted for embezzlement of $3000. No wonder he lost his memory. Americans marooned in Paris, os tensibly by the war, but many were stranded there in years past for other reasons. Berlin announces readiness to make concessions. But have the Berlin diplomats got their fingers crossed? Desertions from the Navy are re ported to have ceased during the present Winter. There is a reason. Should Great Britain, be in Jovial mood and let tho Dacia go to Rotter dam, on- whom would be the joke? The Mongolian prefers to sink in American waters, where she will have better company and more room. The price of wheat is said to be wabbling. A few of us will not weep if it does more than wabble. , German submarine activity can be expected in the Mediterranean with opening of the Dardanelles. Two more Teuton armies are marching on Warsaw. But it's a long, long way to Warsaw. These are anxious days for some state employes now that each must stand on his merit. What the world is looking for is a battle between submarines. Surface action is too slow. Many a boy is the mainstay of tho family just now and the experience is good for him. . With all the legislative ' bill3 now disposed of the Legislatuce fades into history. The neighboring forests already show the first touch of Spring. Uneasy rests the head of the job holder who can't make good. We may all have to fight yet in or der to keep out of the fight. How can Portland exist without an annual school meeting? - ' Paying taxes in installments light- ens the burden The ball season is dismally slow getting here. Many jitneys will be regulated out of business. Mexico Good! City is cut off by wire. Sell your grain and get out from under. The submarines are right on the job. Where is the motorcycle Jitney? Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of February 27, 1800. Washington. By a strict party vote the House committee today decided to report favorably the bill admitting Idaho as a state. The Democrats and Mormons seemed powerless to forbid. Vancouver, Wash. Lieutenant E. H. Clarke, of Company H of the National Guard of Washington, met almost in stant death yesterday at Lucia Mills when he fell across a revolving cir cular saw. Baltimore. The negroes of Balti more have gone wild over Peter Jack son, who is the idol of the day on ac count of his rrize-rinc success. On the other hand, the big black has been mobbed by some white rowdies. By phonograph a deceased clergy man. Rev. Thomas Allen Home, preached his own funeral sermon yes terday at New York, according to dis patches. Prior to his death he had made detailed arrangements for his funeral. One of the particular details was the sermon which he talked Into a phonograph. The record, which was a good one and reproduced the sperch and weeping of the clergyman when he broke down during the sermon, nd vised the hearers that he was at that moment beyond the borderland of igno rance, and, after reciting his virtues, expressed the wish that he would be enthroned among the elect in heaven. New York. The death of John Jacob Astor and the placement of his vast fortunes largely with his son, vvimam Waldorf Astor, places Mrs. ' William Waldorf Astor In a higher social po sition than Mrs. William Astor. who up to this time has always been held the arbiter in the 400 circle. J. B. Bangs, of Seattle, and Mrs. S. B. Judkins, of Portland, were mar ried yesterday at the Revere House by Rev. Mr. Gordon. Shortly after fire had been kindled in the range at the boarding-house of Mrs. B. Bauer yesterday morning the boiler exploded, shattering tho range and doing a large amount of minor damage to the place, which is at Fifth and Stark streets. A. J. Coffey, city electrician, who went East to examine into the mod ern police call systems, will also ex amine Into the latest method of string ing electric light wires. John Boyle O'Reilly, the famous poet, editor and orator, will bo a Port land visitor March 18 and will give a lecture on the "Illustrious Irishmen of the Century." Miss Kilsay has accepted a position of teacher in the schools of East Tort land. Charles E. Warner, youngest son of J. G. Warner, who is on his way home after a two years" sojourn at Cornell University, telegraphs that he is snow bound at Soda Springs. Idaho, about 700 miles east of Portland. Cold weather has Interfered with navigation and the Columbia River Is frozen, Vancouver being for the time isolated. BRYAN'S TALK CONJIRES VISIONS Railroad Man InuiKlnrs Mutln In 101K If "Commoner" Hulew. EUGENE. Or., Feb. it. (To the Ed itor. 1 I greatly enjoyed reading in an Associated Press dispatch recently an account of an address by William J. Bryan, Secretary ot Mate, at a nan quet of the Transportation Club of In dianapolis on February 5, in which Mr. Bryan took occasion to criticise the railroads, their officers, manner of do ing business, etc., and told them how properly to.io their business. 1 was so impressed by the article that mv imagination wandered to per haps the year 1920 or 1925, when all railroads will be owned ana cperaieu by tho Government, and I could see the following news Items featured in the Associated Press: r-.tmArnl Manacer W. W. Aitinp. of the United Slates Air Line, which line is. as the public Is aware, havins trouble with floodn. strikes, etc., also subject to ht-avy traffic at this season of tho year, requiring excep tionally faat time, has decided to go to Tau rus City where be will deliver his well knnwn lecture. "How to Uet It." to an audience composed entirely of Secretaries of State. The board or directors or iuo ' i.-,.r .-.t.io that, he can bo spared, as they can get along better without him than while he is on duty. Here's another: Conductor P. Iffle. in charge of Wash ington special on tne iniiea niaitrs Line, found it necexsary to leave his train in charge of the peanut butcher while he ac cepted an invitation to lecture to a large circle of friends and acquaintances on "Coco t-ola, Welch's or Armour's" (at 1.00 per cubic yard, meter measurement, payable In advance or the gas will be turned off).- The passengers on bis train have sent a vote of thanks to the management, as lie left them at a point where large vineyards on both nldes of the track are in full bearing, from which they gathered the delicious nuts and tapped the vines tor juice. ic is muif that this well-known conductor ut nr..mntH to suiterin tenden t. Superintendent T-. Kclcss, of the mountain rfiv-i.t nf the ITnited Slates Air Line, who hu." reentlv been appointed, has made a clean sweep ot an tne experiencou ii" of his division. jnis mciuaea oisi.ic.ii.. operators, englnemen. trainmen and section n Ki, nniiev being that a new broom sweeps clean, and that he can fill all these positions to much better advantage by em ploying personal acquaintances of his who would not be hampered by experience of any kind, and who could conduct tho business f the road to the best personal aavaniago of the superintendent. Wo look for best results from this policy. To a railroad man the above items would create the utmost astonishment, but thev are no more than the Identical things which the Secretary of State has done in his own department. Truly It makes a great difference whose ox is gored. A KAIL.KUAU m aim. Rons In CrlbbaRC. BANKS. Or.. Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) Will you kindly answer the fol lowing questions in crlbbage? A leads 3, B 5, A 1. B 4. A 2. A leads 8, B 7, A 9. Is there a run in either hand? CHAS. T. POWERS. According to Hoyle. neither hand would count a run, for cards must be in sequence to count a run. Other au thorities allow a run when no other cards intervene among the cards con stituting the run, whether the latter are played in sequence or not. It all depends on how strict the players wish to make the rules. Old Soldiers CrlU-baare Dlapntc. SLDIERS HOME. Roseburg. Or., Feb. 25. (To the Editor.) I wish you would settle a dispute. How much does a 4 and 3 aces with 9-spot turned up count in a game of cribbage? A says 12 and B says 10. HARVEY HYDE. ROSEBURG. OrFeb. 25. To the Editor.) Will you decide how much 3 aces and a 4 with a 9 turn-up will count in a game of cribbage? OLD SOLDIER. ' The hand counts 12. There are three possible combinations of 15 with the 9, the 4 and two of the aces, while the three aces count 6. Addresses, of Xa4orliaa. AURORA, Or., Fob. 26. (To tiie Edi tor.) will you please give me the ad dress o C. F. Hodge, naturalist of Clark University, and of T. G. Pear son, general secretary ot the National Audubon Societies? .. A. B. DENTAL. C. F. Hodge, 103 May sireet, Worces ter. Mass. T. Ci. Pearson, 1974 Broadway, New Tork. THE Tl'MALO IRRIGATION PROJECT. Reader of The Orea-oa-laa .ho la ter cet in Development Plan. Many readers having asked The Ore gonian for information about the so called Tumalo irrigation project, a few facts are herewith given relating to the lands called by that name, which have lately been Irrigated, or placed In a condition to irrigate, by the state, O. Laurgaard having been the engineer who successfully carried the work through. The lands in this project formerly embraced what waa called the Colum bia Southern irrigation project and were segregated under the Carey act by the Three listers Irrigation Com pany. The segregation was made and work begun in the year 1H02, the first price for water being fixed at 110 an acre, it being the Idea of the first pro moters to water the lands by a simple diversion system from Tumalo Creek. The tract is situated In the west central part of Crook County, lying be tween the Deschutes River and extend ing back towards the Cascade Moun tains, the western extremity of the tract being near the town of Plstera. the town of Laldlaw being on the river In its eaatern portion. The railroads are across the river from the tract, the station nearest Laidlaw. where there is a bridge across the Deschutes, being the town of Deschutes, about three miles to the east. This ia a Joint sta tion for both the Harrlman and Hill lines. When the first company found itself In financial difficulties, owing to bad management and other cause, it got entangled with the Land Board and finally its contract was canceled after about 2000 acres had received water. Trouble for the settlers, litigation all aorts of difficulties were encountered and the settlers blamed the state or the land Board, no doubt with a show of cause. At the session of the Legislature In 1913 the matter was brought up and finally an appropriation of 145.0O0 was made to take the matter over and com plete the irrigation system and dispose of the lands, tho price of water being fixed at J40 an acre, payutte on the same terms as prevail on Government projects. The tract embraced 22.10 acres, but many of the land owners had already paid for their water. But It was thought morn than cnourh would be tiold at the new price to reimburse, the state with Interest. O. Iiurgaard was selected as the chief engineer, and he wont ahead anfl did the work in far better shape than the plans called for, and did It within the specified time and below the speci fied price, thus accomplishing practi cally the impossible in Irrigation feais. The .work was all done and the report in full published Jut prior to the meet ing of tho Legislature last month. (The reader can secure a copy by writing the Desert iJind Board, Salem.) The tract is divided, practically. Into 40-acre units, although it ia permitted In certain cases for one person to pur chase more than one unit. The price of the land Is nothing, the price of the water HO an acre, but title to the land does not pass until t he water ia paid for in full. Neither the land nor water can be contracted for save by persona who are citizens of the United States, or have declared their intention to be come citizens. Title cannot be until the holder has actually resided 9" davs on the land. The payments for the water mav be made on various terms running over a period of 1" years, but not less than $4 an acre must he, paid when application is made for the land. Then the purchaser ran take a two-vcar layoff without payment, pay ing $4 each year for the last seven years: hut interest at o .. i-. annum must be paid on all deferred payments. There were on Ihe first day or thl month 20 contracts in force or paid out on. and about 400 more available for land seekers. In other words, al though the lands have been open to settlement now for several months. only about 7000 acres have peen "". which includes all of ino original rat tlers who have remained, and there re main between 1R.000 and 1S.0OO acres unoccupied, which nobody teems to W Perhaps that Is putting it ft trifle strong, but 1t Is sure the land beekers are not falling over each other In ef forts to make their entries. Just what the difficulty is nobody aeems to know: one thing is certain the land is geod and the water system first class. e rkvision of otn smrriMi laws What Congreaa la Doing nnn w nsl Portland Chainher rronoars. rrriTr.ANTD. Feb. 23. (To the Edi tor ) In the present session does Con gress expect to do anything to remedy our obsolete shipping laws? '' not, why not? Has the Chamber of com- erce taken tne, matter u- c.-... this sanio question or tne journal, uui it failed to answer ana i nm ituij ious to know. ..,,,,.,, A iM'.W ! t3t- IW Of"- The seamen's bill abolishing Im- . . . j A rnvittte- prisonineni tor urariu - relating to safety at aea Is in con- ference end is likely to paas at this session. The ship-purchase bill la a pretended effort to remedy defects in the law, but is not likely to pass. Noth ing else has been done or Is likely to be done at this session. The Portland Chamber of Commerce has recommended that ft commission be. appointed to Investigate the whole subject of navigation laws and to make recommendations to the next Congress, and that. In the meantime, no action be taken on tho seamen's bill or on any like measure. The Chamber haa also recommended that Congress give the President authority to suspend from year to year the law forbidding for-elen-built ships to engage in coast wise trade, so far as traffic between Atlantic and raciric ports through the Panama Canal is concerned. "J. T. D." IDBNTITY BKINti TRACKD J. B. Courtney Flnda J. T. Dillon Irish man With Loyalty o Britain. PORTLAND. Feb. 24. (To the Edi tor.) I hope J. T. V. does not plead for Messrs. Murphy and Shanahan lt his letter appearing in The Oregonian. reb ruarv 24. On inquiry I Ilnd that a J. T. Dillon Is. and has been tor some tittin an active member or tne tirmsn Benevolent Society, but always tmder- tood that he waa an t.ngnsnman aim did not suspect for an instant that ne allied himself with any Ot me irisn societies whose aims are, as I under stand it, more or less revolutionary and anti-Knglish. However. I congratulate air. union as the only memQer ot an mon ru- clety wth sufficient loyalty to i-.ngiana tn follow hv word and deed the ex ample of the great Irish leader John 13. Redmond; in tact i mtsni mm mm he la the only Irishman in Portland to belong to a purely British organiza tion. J. B. COURTNEY. lulled State Did Not Sinn. PORTLAND, Feb. 2. (To the Edi tor.) (1) Did the United ftiates sign the treaty guaranteeing neutrality to Belgium? (!) How far Is It between St. I Paul and Minneapolis, .ninn. : up imo the contractors pay the cost of redeck inir the Union avenue and Grand ave nue bridges? v. A. S. 1. No. 2. The city Itmita of St. Paul and Minneapolis join: from the Center of Minneapolis to the center of St. Paul it Is about 10 milea. 3. The city and th street railway companlea pay the cost In these cae. There is no maintenance clause In the original contract In effect on thase bridges at this limn.. I Half Century Ago From The Oregonian February 27. 1 '. From Europe we learn that Uarls Rut-sell and Derby are pitted afiainsl each other In the House of Ixrd, lh first our friend and tho Ullcr our enemy. Perhaps the most amiitln thin we have to tell Is that Napoleon - concluded to end no Minister to Un united Mates until Mexico Is rr.ca nixed by tie with Maximilian as Its l.ni peror. If Ilia Majesty of France con siders such ft reroKnltlotl worth wail ing for he need not hurry hlnmelf ab-vit chooslnir a successor for Mr. Merrier, none will be needed fcr many a day. A grand concert will be given Tim t day evening March 3 at Ttni Vcrein Hall, under tho direction of I'mrcst-"--Yoet. The Ueriiiaii tilee Cul will sing "Come Where; My Love l-le ltreamlng." and other contributors H1 be Mrs. HlEpIn, Mr. Maguirot M'. bturm and Professor Setlla--. The bai kentine VV. R l anloit .rounded yesterday on the old hulk cf tho French vessel which In charge of Captain Travalliot wa sunk at the foot of V street In this city In .Tunc. Jii0. We understand thru is till In the hulk of the did vessel a fine as sortment of br.mdie an. I Honor. lib should tie some inducement to tlver men to elevate her and dear the chan nel. We are advleed that SJts. I". 1'. Vl tot, of this city, Is rnaaced In writ Ins book on Oregon, Mis. Victor will visit the different parts of the state lo gather the neeessarv data on groKraph. history, tonography and various re source. The task is In hlshly compe tent and worthy hands. "The French Spy" or "The Fall "f Algiere" will he the bill at l!ie W il- lamette Theater tl.u evening. Adventures of Pen rod THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Booth TurkinKton's popular ju venile hero t'onlinurs to hcwililrr his companions, mystify liis cldcrt nd delight his admirers. The lat ter class consists largely of I lie readers of The Orcj;onian, who will be treated to another installment of the Penrod stories next Sunday. The next story is entitled "Brothers of AnKclcs." As Penrod is one of the most true-to-life hoy charac tera yet created, this is Iho mot typical Penrod Mory yet presented. OTHF.R KE ATI' II ICS or THE IH; SUNDAY IWI'LK. Egyptian Sarcophagi for Modern. In this article Dean Collins trives an interesting; description of novel work recently performed I ty the student of the class in design at the Portland Art Museum. They applied the rules of Iho ancient. Egyptians lo modern Mihjrctn mid produce some very comical as well as instructive results. A ItCHuliful sarcophagus lias been designed for Trffodore Roosevelt anil some of the striking events in liis life nrc presented in the fashion that Ihe ancient Egyptians would huxc fol lowed. Prisoners of W ttr. What becomes tf (lie Idicrs who are raptured by (lie enemy ami taken prisoner? Here is one phase of the war that heretofore has not been given much explanation. In this article Richard G. Conovcr tells of the daily duties of the thousands of soldiers who arc re quired to work for their captors. Tunnel Under English Channel. The possibility of connecting England and France by means of a tunnel beneath the Channel has been the Kubject of hrrioiis con sideration for year. Now (hat the war has emphasized the advant ages of such a subaqueous pass ageway engineers arc giving it further attention. How to I)o the Castle V alk. A half page is devoted to an explanation of how Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle dance the lame duck, the Castle walk and other modern movements of the feet and hotly. Ants That Thrie on Warfare. Man is not tho only animal that makes war in organized force against others of his spenies. In South America there arc regular armies of ants some of them number millions that arc organ ized into regular armies for the sole purpose of exterminating oth ers of their kind. It is an interest ing article ably handled. Opening of the Panama Fair. Photographers were busy the first day of the Panama-Pacific Exposition, when the grcatcxt crowd ever assembled in the West attended. A 14-columii panorama will show a section of this vast throng, and other pictures will give glimpses of activities on the Ex position grounds. Exploit of Elaine. Those who havo been following this thrilling detective story will await with interest tomorrow's in stallment, which brings new and unexpected complications. Rose Festival Poster. The first page of the magazine section will be a reproduction In colors of the poster that has been adopted for the next Rose. Festival. Paris Wants to Remain Style Center. Parisian artists are preparing to combat the threatened invasion by their American rivals of the field of fashion in which they heretofore have enjoyed exclusive reign. The story is well illustrated in colors and they are bringing the fight to America. Other Features. Scores of other entertaining stories and special features will serve to make the Sunday Orego nian ono of unusual interest. The ;rmic section will present Doc Yak. Polly and the other popular charac ters in new fields of adventure. A full page of children's stories, col umns of humor, whole pages of war pictures and an abundance of timely stories on local subjects will mnke the paper complete.