THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAX, THURSDAY, JAXUABY S7, 1916. 10 PORTLAND. OREGON. . (Pntrred at Portland (Oregon) Poatofflca as J second-class matter. . , Subscription Kates Invariably in advlnce: ! (BT K1L . Xaily. Sunday Included, one year r J? ' lily. Sunday Included. ix months..... s J 'ally. Sunday Included, three months. . Z- 3-ally. Sunday Included, one month. . I'allr. wltl.cut Sunday, one year ;. Pally, without Sunday, six months J-o ; T-'ally, without Sunday, three months... J.' . X'ill. wlt'.out Sunday, one months ?Y , Weekly, one j.ar J -j , Funday. one year f-! i Sunday and Weekly, one year (By carrier.) ; Vally. Cunitir Included, one year , Jjaiiy. Sunday included, one month 10 ' How to Remit Bend ooetof flee money or ; err, express order or personal check on your Wat bsnk. Stamps, coin or currency are at ! sender's rick. Give postorflee addresses in I including county -and state. I Postage Rates 13 to Id pares, 1 cent: IS 1 to 33 pages. -1 cents: Si to 4S pages. 3 cents. 1 M to ta pares. cents; 62 to 78 pages, o r-nts: 7 to f2 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post , age. double rates. -atera Business Office Verree ac Carlt I iln. Brunswick building. New Tqrk: Verree 1 Cwikltn. Steger building, Chicago: 8sn ; J-'ranclsco representative. R. J. Bldwell, -: Market street. ' 10RTLAD. THIBSDAT. JAN. 87, 191. JNO KEBTB1CTIOXS OX IN'COMK TAX. By its decision upholding the in " come tax law the United States Su ; preme Court has swept away prac- tically all restrictions on the discre- tion of Congress in levying such a tax. The Government has always had pow- 1 er to levy an Income tax as an excise ! tax without apportioning; it among the .states according to population, but ' could not levy it In such a manner as : to become a direct tax on the prop ' ertv whence the Income was derived unless it were so apportioned. It can now levy such a tax without consld e ration of the source. In fact, all re strictions imposed by the Constitution have been removed. At its inception in Great Britain, m here it originated, and in this coun try also the income tax was a war tax. Jt was first imposed in Britain in 3798 to meet the expenses of the war with France, and was repealed in .1815. when that war ended. The first 'income tax in the United States was imposed in 1862 to meet the expen ses of the Civil War. It was increased in 1865 and was repealed in 1871. The constitutionality of that tax was sus tained in 1880 by the Supreme Court, which held that it was not a direct tax, but an excise tax, and that Con gress had a right to impose it so long as it was made uniform throughout the United States. The largest an xiual revenue it yielded was $72,982, 160, in 1866. Productiveness and comparative case of collection at the source, a de vice adopted by William Pitt, father of the impost, soon caused resort to the income tax for revenue in other emergencies than war. Peel first re .viving it in peace time in order to 'effect British financial reform in 1842. It has finally been adopted as a per manent and lucrative source of reve nue by nearry every civilized nation. Growth of great fortunes caused a de mand for its adoption in the United States, both as a means of compelling the rich to contribute a Just share to public expenses and as a means of checking the aggregation of wealth in few hands. This demand bore fruit in the income tax provisions of the Wilson tariff law of 1894, but these provisions were held unconstitutional Ijy a five-to-four decision of the Su preme Court. The ground of this de cision was. as now explained by Chief Justice White, that the effect of the tax on income from real estate was the same as if a direct tax had been levied on the real estate, hence must be regarded as a direct tax, which could not be levied without regard to the source. President Taft devised the corpora tion income tax of 1909 as an excise tax. which the decision of 1895 had held to be constitutional. An excise tax is defined by Webster as "an in land duty or impost levied upon the manufacture, sale or consumption of commodities within the country," also as "a tax upon the pursuit or follow ing of certain sports, trades or occu pations, usually taking in this case the form of exactions for licenses." The corporation income tax was up held by the Supreme Court as coming within the latter definition of excise. At Mr. Taffs suggestion Congress at the same session adopted an amend ment to the Constitution authorizing the imposition of a direct tax on in comes "from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states and without regard to any census or enumeration." The Su preme Court held the corporation tax to be valid as an excise tax. The amendment was ratified by three fourths of the states and it was de clared in force February 25, 1913. Congress then passed the present revenue law, known as the .Under wood tariff law, though also imposing an income tax. This tax is graduated in proportion to the amount of in comes, rising from a minimum of 1 per cent to a maximum of 6 per cent. Incomes below $4000 for married men, below $3000 for the unmarried, are exempt; also that proportion of larger incomes. The exemption and progres sive features of the tax are the points attacked in the recent litigation, and the Supreme Court unanimously up holds the power of Congress to ex empt certain Incomes and to impose a graduated tax. The income tax is just, for it taxes the people for maintenance of the Government in proportion both to their ability to pay and to that which, they have at stake. Tariff and in ternal taxes fall on the people in proportion to that which they con sume and, as regards necessaries, they take a larger . proportion of smaller than of larger incomes, for every family, poor or rich, must use a cer tain minimum quantity of these neces saries in order to sustain life. An in come tax fulling more heavily on the rich is necessary to balance the scale. If it were possible to ascertain what sum for tariff and internal taxes is included in the price of commodities consumed by each person and then to calculate what proportion of his in come each person pays in taxes, it would probably be found that the mil lionaire of whose income 6 per cent is taken as direct tax actually pays no higher percentage in taxes of all kinds than the tl-a-day laborer. Direct taxes are also wise from the standpoint of public policy. It has long been revognfied that indirect taxes are a fruitful source of govern mental extravagance. Such taxes are included in the price of goods, and a man therefore pays them without knowing it. and Is Indifferent to the manner In which public money is spent. The income tax takes a certain sum directly out of his pocket, he knows that it is a tax and that in re turn for it he receives only the bene fits of government. He Is apt. then, to inquire more diligently how the money is spent and to call upon his representatives In Congress to vote no money for which equal value is not returned to the people. Economy planks in political platforms will then have more force than New Year's res olutions and the pork barrel may be demolished. PORTLAND'S POSITION. The Portland Chamber of Commerce h" shown a perverse attitude that amounts al most to open opposition to the Astoria rate contention). The effect of that attitude la to announce to the people of Astoria that Fhe people of Portland favor the commercial and Industrial aggrandisement of Pugel Sound rather than that which Oregon en terprise seeks to realise at the mouth of the Columbia. The Telegram does not believe that such Is the businens sentiment of Port land; and we think further that sooner or later the Chamber of Commerce will be con vinced of that fact. Evening Telegram. Now here Is a definite assertion that the Portland Chamber of Com merce has failed in its duty to Port land, and Oregon, with a plain intima tion that outside opinion will be that Portland prefers the "commercial and industrial aggrandizement of Puget Sound" to the welfare of the Columbia River. It is an untrue and injurious as sumption, hut it is a familiar phase of the ceaseless agitation carried on for months by the Telegram to per suade the Chamber of Commerce to assume a position which it ought not to take, and which it-could not take, if the prior obligation of the Cham ber to Portland is to be considered. It appears to be forgotten in some quarters that it is the Portland Cham ber of Commerce. The Chamber, through its directors, has gone on record unanimously in favor of equal rates between Puget Sound and the mouth of the Columbia River, with a distinct reservation for lower proportionate rates for Port land. Is there a voice in Portland which dares assert that Portland is not entitled to all the advantages of Its geographical position? Now, again the transportation bu reau defines the position of Portland, and is supported by its united mem bership. Undoubtedly it-expresses the conviction of the entire body. The Astoria rate question is before the Interstate Commerce Commission, and will be decided on its merits. Portland has not intervened and has by its non-action given Astoria full and fair opportunity to present its case. It is astonishing that more is asked or expected of Portland. Is it not about time that the noise makers cease their clamor? What ef fect is it to be supposed they will have upon the Interstate Commerce Com mission? ACADEMIC FREEDOM. Protection of academic freedom is a problem the solution of which has been undertaken by the American As sociation of University Professors and with an answer that appears to be both practicable and profitable. They have decided that the ethics or the profession shall be placed in the cus tody of the professors rather than left in the full keeping of governing boards. Of course, the consent of the governing boards concerned must first be sought, since the powers or the professors at the present time are con fined to the province of making sug gestions. It is proposed by the professors that they shall have a voice in fixing their rights and limitations. The right of a governing body to discharge an in structor of professional rank is modi fied so that the faculty must first be consulted. If charges are preferred the professor shall be entitled to trial by a jury of his peers, whose decision shall prevail. If a member or mem bers of the governing body feel that a professor has been advancing dan gerous social or political ideas they must augment their own views, the views of laymen, by a consultation with a committee of the professors. The proposal is one deserving of commendation in the interest of free dom of thought and of intellectual progress. Professorial abuse of rec ognized standards is certain to occur in the classrooms. Instructors fre quently permit some new fad or fancy to run away with them. But no species of intellectual hysteria is calculated to disturb the mental equilibrium of the entire faculty. And who is better qualified than the professors them selves to decide whether the conduct of a professor is dangerous and revo lutionary or progressive and bene ficial? EATING TO DEE. Cancer of the stomach is Increasing materially in relation to the total number of deaths from all causes. It is increasing more rapidly than any other disease Vind the increase is greatest in the most prosperous na tions, among the most prosperous classes, and is making its attack at the highest productive period of the individual. The warning is plain. In stead of eating to live, many of us are eating to die. These are some of the comments made by Dr. George F. Koehler, of Portland, before the business men's physical department classes at the Y. M. C. A. a few weeks ago. It was a paper delivered as part of the anti cancer propaganda, now Nation-wide. Dr. Koehler's paper is interesting to read. He tells us that the badge of civilization is the frying pan, and talks in understandable terms of food val ue!. Rice becomes a welcome diet for kings as well as coolies after he has explained its properties, and a pound of cheese becomes highly illuminated. Dr. Koehler goes into the, history of cheese-eating nations, and, strangely enough, these nations are famed for their palatable, but eco nomic, dishes. Cheese contains in concentrated form every essential to human sustenance. What an oppor tunity for Oregon, whose cheese fac tories are second to none! Along with the values of food, which were given principally to illus trate the dangers of stomachal can cer. Dr. Koehler explained a little of the value of fun as a preventative of cancer. Now that cocktails are in convenient, if not altogether inac cessible appetizers, a substitute far better and not entirely unknown has been offered. Cheerful surroundings are the open sesame to a hearty meal and good feeling afterwards. Worry should be put aside at all times but most of all just before eating. Worry itself is sufficient to tie the stomach in a knot and in 10 or 20 years after the worry has vanished, the ill effect may become evident in a cancer, start ed with that worry knot so long ago. As for pursuits after the meal, the best employment, we are told, is frivo lous conversation. Thus is defended at the hands of science the after dinner story. It is welcome news that we as a Nation do not drink enough water. Perhaps that evil .will be remedied in Oregon and a few other states in due time. The thing to look out for is that we do not wash our food down with water. We are told water with our meals Is all right; perhaps the more the merrier, but cancer lurks in the glass which sluices un masticated food to an already overtaxed stomach. Food too hot' or too cold also is not only robbed of its tastefulness, but it is absolutely to be feared as a cause of cancer. Cancer of the stomach in a great many cases, too. has been traced to that common practice of ""bolting the food." There is nothing so con ducive to cancer as this vicious and vulgar habit, we are told. It is in this educational work that the doctors now fighting cancer in a humanitarian as well as a scientific way hope to accomplish a vast amount of good. To prevent as well as to euro is their watchword, whereas a few years ago the attitude was to cure only if possible, and too often to lay the task aside as impossible. Remembering that cancer develops late in life, or at least not in early life, those of us who eat too fast even for immediate comfort should come to a full stop and consider the years to come. UNWILLING MOTHERS NOT WANTED, There is one convincing argument in avor of birth control, but it was overlooked by Councllwoman Lindsey in her speech at Los Angeles. It is that a woman who is unwilling to be come a mother is unfit to be a mother and that any child born of such- a woman is to be pitied. Not only has "every woman the right to avoid un welcome motherhood," but every child has the right to a welcome from her who brings it into the world. The women who object to becoming mothers have a very ready means of avoiding Jt; let them abstain from be coming wives. The original purpose of marriage was to perpetuate the race; a woman who does not desire to carry out that purpose should not marry, for the man she marries has a right to assume that she desires chil. dren, and he is cruelly undeceived when she advances her birth control theory. A woman is presumed to have a high enough opinion of herself to desire that her like be reproduced. If she think so poorly of herself as not to have that desire, by all means let her remain childless. Undoubtedly a woman "has i right to choose the father of her chll dren" and "to refuse to bear children to an inebriate or a defective." She makes the choice when she chooses a husband, and she can make that re fusal by rejecting proposals of mar riage from an inebriate or a defective. No fault will be found with the members of the Birth Control League for refusing to bear children. It is not desirable that women who have so poor an opinion of the human race as to decline a share in perpetuating it should propagate their like. ' RAD CATION DATS. The midwinter graduation season is at hand. In Portland the diplomas will be given out today. Modest cere monies will mark the going forth of several hundred high-school students tonight. For many it is a serious sea son. College looms ahead of some; the workaday world, in a not too pros perous era, faces many more. At best, for those who will enjoy the benefits of college days, the time in which they can look on life as a pur poseless existence is short. Tomorrow morning life will, or it should, assume a serious aspect for them all. Book examinations are over with, but now the real test comes. Graduation days have been long and justly known as .the commencement season. Perhaps the students will not realize the full meaning of commence ment for a few years yet. It is one of those things which dawns in retro spect rather than in prospect. No doubt visions of substantial careers have been enjoyed by them all. -These visions are necessary, but also must come the calm realization of the prob lems of life. How best to counteract some accident, misfortune or circum stance which turns them from a vi sionary ambition will be a problem to work on, far more interesting than any ever encountered in algebra or trigonometry. And If it isn't solved the result will be all the more dis tressing. ' Portland high-school students, as has been shown by the toll taken by the principals, generally have intended to apply their education. It is to be hoped they will be able to carry out those intentions. Their ambitions, ex pressed and demonstrated In some in stances, are laudable. But they must realize now more than ever that their high-school education has been but a means to an end. Commencement days are here. Life as it is is just be ginning. A few years at college for some will hold off the test for a time, and may alter the conditions, but the test comes sooner or later. If the principals and teachers have been suc cessful in bringing the graduates to a realization of this one fact, their high school education will have accom plished a great deal. It won't matter so much if, one graduate, on her re cent examination paper, wrote tHat Daniel Webster's principal contribu tion to American progress was the dic tionary. That was a grave error, but it also was a minor one, if she has learned the bigger thing. sKEX WHOM HISTORY FAILS TO TEACH. A speech made by General Isaac R. Sherwood, Representative from the Toledo district of Ohio, has been pub lished with great display by W. J. Bryan in the Commoner , under the headlines, "The threatening danger of a military autocracy; opposition to the organized military cabal to bankrupt the National treasury." General Sher wood said this country had had several eras of military hysteria. One was Captain Hobson's Japanese war alarm, of which the General said: Of course, the armor plate trust and the powder trust and the steel trust and their allies, through the big newspapers they own and the leading magazines they control, worked up a powerful sentiment in Congress and the country for a bigger Xavy and a more formidable Army to resist the imag inary warlike attitude of Japan. Another military hysteria, in his view, was the war with Spain, which "cost us the lives of over 16,000 stal wart young soldiers, with a pension list to date aggregating over $40,000, 000." He told of a leading citizen of Toledo who "recently received instruc tions from Pine street. New York, emanating, of course, from that gi gantic organization of trusts that seek to dominate the legislation of Con gress" to organize Toledo for a big Army and Navy. So he went down the list and told of the millions spent for armorplate and "for coast defenses, and of the fleet's voyage around the world. He proclaimed that "we are now at peace with all the world, with no threatening dangers anywhere." He recalled a speech he delivered de scribing the battlefield of Franklin and closing with the words: "From that day to this I have hated war." He quoted denunciations of war and panegyrics on peace from men great and small, but denied he was for peace at any price, saying: "I am for peace until an emergency arises." General Sherwood. who thus charges advocates of preparedness with sordid motives or with military hysteria, is the man who proposed the" service pension bill to Congress and who procured its passage. By that law every man who served in the Civil War, though he never went into action, and the dependents of such a man are paid pensions. Had the United States been prepared for war in 1861, the first battle of Bull Run might have ended that war. The lives we lost and the' money we expended in that war and the billions we have since expended in pensions are the price we have paid for unprepared ness. Fewer than one-fourth the 16, 000 American lives lost in the Spanish war were lost in battle'; the rest were lost through disease in camp and that disease was the fruit of unprepared ness. The horror with which he was inspired by the spectacle of the Franklin battlefield should have taught him the folly of unreadiness, for had the Nation been ready in 1861, that battle need never have been fought- Men who advocate prepared ness yield nothing to him in hatred of war; they disagree with him only as to the means of averting those hor rors. They recall the prolongation of the Revolutionary war by reliance on untrained levies of militia, also the losses and humiliation of the war of 1812, and they resolve 'that the best irueans to prevent war or, when it comes, to shorten it, to limit its hor rors and to insure victory for our arms is the training and equipment rf our citizens to defend the country. General Sherwood says he- is for peace until an emergency arises. Then he would begin to arm. That is pre cisely what we have done in former emergencies waited tilf the danger was upon us and then begun to arm. Having seen the disastrous conse quence of that policy with his own eyes in the Civil War, he should know that the best security of peace and the -best means of limiting the evils of war is to be ready for an emer gency before it comes. THE OLD SOUTH SPEAKS. Opposition to preparedness is the same kind of a winning issue for Mr. Bryan as free silver proved. in 1896 and anti-imperialism in 1900 it en. ables the other fellow to win. The recent contest for the Democratic nomination for Representative in the Fifth Mississippi District was fought on the preparedness issue, and W. W. Venable, a pronounced advocate? of National defense, won by a plurality of 5832, a landslide for him. Mr. Bryan has relied on the South for support in his fight on prepared ness, because it "knows something of the horrors of war." He forgets that the South is nevertheless not . "too proud to fight" when honor is in volved. As it did not flinch from the horrors of war in 1861-65, -when it fought for states' rights, neither would it now grudge a man or a dollar for defense of the Nation's honor and se curity. The South, like the North, fears the horrors of impotence and dishonor more than it fears the hor rors of war. Those Senators and Representatives who have been hypnotized by Mr. Bryan's talk of peace at any price would do well to heed the voice of Mississippi and wake up. By the time the anniversary of the Lusitanla massacre arrives. Secretary Lansing and Ambassador von Bern storff may have discovered a form of words by which Germany will admit that she did wrong in sinking the ship without admitting it. In the opinion of the Administration, though not of the American people, American honor Is safe in the hands .of languageex perts. Russia will put up the same cry as did the Confederacy during the Civil War, that it cannot give its Ger man prisoners better treatment be cause it cannot afford to do so. When that becomes known in the Teutonic lines, look for intense fighting, for the German would rather die with the colors than starve to death in Siberia. In a collision of the crack Milwau kee trains in Eastern Washington early yesterday the huge locomotives were demolished, while the steel coaches protected the passengers. The railway that spends money for the safety of travelers makes good invest ment, and all' are doing it now. Representative Mann rightly urges non-partisan support of preparedness. It is the duty, of every patriotic citi zen, but Mr. Bryan claims to have eighty-five Democrats in the House lined up against it. As a general thing, the man who goes to trial in the Federal Court might better plead guilty, for the Gov ernment seldom begins action until it has convincing proof. If the records show that excess of snow and rain in the Winter months mean pleasant days during the ball season, well and good. ,Let 'er snow and rain. Judg Stevenson is establishing precedents in his closing days In Mu nicipal Court. A fine, of $250 for violating the "dry" law is a good one. An officer of the Humane Society cannot take a tagless dog from an irate woman. He cannot put up a front like the poundman. It's no use to worry, with ground hog day due within a week, but this alternate sunshine and snowfall is a bit distressing. The housewife who buys meat from a peddler runs the risk of buying something that died before it could be killed. School tasks are over for several hundred high-school . boys and girls tonight. Now for the school of hard knocks. When Greek meets Greek la a duel, one of them gets hurt. That is where Greek duels differ from -some other duels. Mr. Ford's peace delegates did not accomplish anything, but they had a good time. That is why many of them went When a woman sues for breach of promise, the world sympathizes; when a man sues, the world laughs. The Army post graft having been discredited, every burg now wants a military , or naval academy. Hunger blots out racial lines. Give freely today. Stars and Starmakera By lew Case Baer. AT the end of E. H. Sothem's pres ent tour he and Mrs. Sothern Julia Marlowe) will move to England to take up their permanent residence. e e ' Word comes from San Francisco that the Masor of that city has appointed Kitty Reed, widow of Charles Reed, the minstrel, to be matron of the county Jail. Reed was at one time associated with William Collier and was celebrated as a comedian. About a year ago his widow was reported to be in unfortu nate circumstances on the Pacific Coast. Winifred Bryson. over at the Baker, took her first skating lesson this week. And she says it's just her luck that the fad didn't come in until the bustle fad had gone out, e e Adele Blood, accompanied by 40 manuscripts of as many prospective plays, has gone to her old home in Pasadena. Cal., and intends to stay there until she has found a piece suit able for heralding her reappearance on Broadway. Miss Blood's fruitless quest of a new play has been enduring in print for several months now. e . e Franklyn Ardell has a new vaude ville sketch, "The Wife Saver," and has sent out Joe Kane in the old Ardell playlet. "His Honor the Mayor." Kane used to be a husband of Blossom See ley, who is now wedded to Rube Mar- quard. - Old Subscriber writes in to say that she has ridded herself of rheumatism and stomach woes by not going to bed for six months. Which now explains to me the solid ivory stomachs and active feet of actors and actresses. Reports from Cincinnati are that Rose Stahl has registered a genuine hit in her new play, "Moonlight Mary, written for her by George V. Hobart. Miss Stahl's character is that of a novelist who seeks to experience the adventures of the thieving heroine of a story she has written. She is said to be especially happy in her new role. Sadie Martinet, once hailed as the loveliest woman of the American stage, is now in the Brunswick Home at Amityville, Long Island. For several weeks past she has been in the psy chopathic ward at Bellevue Hospital for observation. One day last week three young women, who refused their names but who said they were from the Actors' Fund, removed Miss Martinet to the Amityville Home in a large tour ing car. She is the wife of Louis Nethersole, who is a brother to the emotional English actress, Olga Neth ersole. Just now he is in England managing the tour of Davis Keane in "Romance." Caliste Conant, "tuneful tale teller, at the Orpheum, is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, a National musical soror ity which includes Madame Schuman Heink, Geraldine Farrar, Louise Homer and many other notables in its honor ary list. Miss Conant's home Is in Los Angeles, where she will be featured in an Orpheum show three weeks hence. She Is a graduate of the 'Chicago Mu sical College, where she joined the Mu Phi Epsilon, and where she attained such prominence she was elected su preme secretary of the sorority. In every city on her Orpheum tour Miss Conant has been honored by members of the Mu Phi Epsilon, and in her en gagement at Seattle she was enter tained at the University of Washing ton. Miss Conant's Portland sorority sisters gave a theater party at the Or pheum last night in her honor. e At last A. H. Woods and Willard Mack have agreed upon a title for the latter's new play. After matching coins, consulting an astrologer and talking with the Librarian of Congress by long-distance telephone, they decid ed to label the piece "Jane O'Day From Broadway." Jane O'Day Is the character to be acted by Blanche Ring, the star of the production. Originally the comedy was called "Broadway and ' Buttermilk," which was Mr. Mack's idea of the thing, but Mr. Woods protested on the grounds that it would drive away the liquor element. Rehearsals of the play are in progress daily, although the cast is not yet com pleted. . . , A former Philadelphia girl is sole heir to the estate of Joe Murphy, the Irish comedian, who died last week in New York leaving an estate said to be worth several millions. She is his young widow. Until her marriage, in 1909, she was Mary Frymier, known on the stage as May Firmier. Mrs. Murphy was born in Philadel phia and was educated In Dresden, Sax ony. Her father served in- the Civil War. After he had failed in business and his health gave way, his daughter went on the stage. She was first a member of James J. Corbett's company. Then she joined Murphy's company, appearing in such familiar old plays as "Kerry Gow" and "Shaun Rhue." In 1909, while she was on tour with Grace George in "A Woman's Way," the 25-year-old actress was married to the 70-year-old comedian at San An tonio, Tex. She declared at the time it was a love match, as she had found in Murphy the gentlest and Vweetest character she had ever known. Her friends say this was proven true by their after life, which was ideaL They spent most of their time between a mansion at Rich mond Hill, Long Island, and New York City. The widow is now living in her Long Island home. Nonette Lyle, who visited Portland a month ago over the Orpheum circuit as Nonette. the Gypsy violinist, has made public the details of her ap proaching marriage to Hillis L Mor rison, former Superior Judge, now an attorney in Los Angeles. She will be married next March in Brooklyn, N. Y". her home. Xonette says: "There is no truth in the rumor that we intended to be secretly married. I expect to be married but once, and I think the wedding should be an af fair of some importance. I couldn't think of being married without an ap propriate ceremony, and I would never consent to wed away. from home. So the ceremony will have to wait until I have closed my bookings." That expect-to-be-married-but-once line causes me to think Konette surely Isn't a regular actress after all. s Laura Adams, with the "Bird of Paradise" company at the Heillg, will be remembered for her excellent char acter work when she was a member of the Catherine Countiss Stock Com pany at the Heillg four years ago. OX OVUR-INSt'RANCB PROBLEM Practice Act linUel Evil, Says K. Habersham, Analysing Exposures. PORTLAND, Jan. 25. (To the Edi tor.) Our fire marshal has made the rather sweeping statement that exces sive loss from fire in this city is due to arson, and tnat through lax meth ods insurance agents arc responsible for this condition. In the recent at tempt to prove these contentions it was thought sufficient to show that lax methods prevail, but left to the imagi nation to conclude what proportion of honest people is made criminal thereby, and what excess ratio is added to hon est losses by that proportion. Without any intention of criticising the well meant effort to reduce the loss waste, it can be stated that nothing has been revealed except that responsible ap pearing persons can obtain insurance on their property without previous in spection thereof by agents. As this reprehensible .practice is common over the United States, and many cities operating (or ' being operated upon) thereunder may enjoy a much less loss waste than Portland, the conclusion is forced that the practice complained of produces one result here and. the opposite elsewhere, or that the hon esty of our own citizens is below par. The first conclusion is directly op posed to reason and not subject to proof, while the second, though pos sibly subject to proof, is to a large extent unreasonable. Over-insurance is not per se the unmixed evil some think, as its tendency is to equalize the loss of premium Income from under insurance, but if it can be reasonably demonstrated that it produces crim inals it should be done away with, re gardless of whether or not a new law to that effect would cost more in its operation vthan is now lost through this cause. As we already have ample laws for the punishment (prevention) of arson on the part of the insured, any new one must necessarily be aimed at the agent, but it seems safe to say that if there was any virtue In such proposed law the companies would have beaten the fire marshal to its discov ery. If any such law is enacted, the agent would be obliged to assume guilty intention on the part of an ap plicant for insurance which, in the absence of suspicious circumstances, is- a position somewhat-higher than our courts - occupy. As for the pro posed revocation of licenses, without any law defining insurance without in spection as even a misdemeanor, it is to be hoped that other authority of the insurance commissioner does not ex tend that far. E. HABERSHAM. WHAT OF KEEDY WOMEN OF CITYt Correspondent IS tea Most of Relief Measures Are for IJnenfployel Men. PORTLAND. Jan. 26. (To the Ed itor.) Anent these idlers who use reams of good paper to express ideas on evolution and similar nothings. If, instead of ponderously ruminating over the mysteries of evolution, these giants of theory would try to remedy a few, public evils and leave evolution to evolve by itself, the world in which they live would be a better place. I have observed one in particular, and I marvel that, with its awful re sults, it has not been looked into. When a man is hungry and down and out he can beg a nickel and go to the Workingmen's Club or the Scadding House, but when a women is in a like condition, what then? Were you ever approached by a -hungry woman who begged a dime from you? No. the woman must give value for value! Look at that sentence! Doesn't it make you ashamed? Yet what else can she do? Handicapped to a far greater ex tent than the man, the down-and-out woman has no recourse. I have perused the columns of the paper year in and year out; have observed lengthy plaints on the subject of the unem ployed man, but nary a word apropos the woman. There must be hungry women. What do they do? D. H. STRIKING AT OUR FUTURE NEEDS Embareo Now Might Vitally Embar rass United States Sometime. ILWACO, Wash., Jan. 25. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonlan January 23 appears a letter from P. S. whit comb captioned "Munition Embargo Is Favored." It does seem incredible that so many usually well-informed people cannot grasp the fact if the Govern ment of the United States would de clare an embargo on material and food for use in war it would be striking at a need on which the very life of this Nation might depend at some future time. Because then we could not buy if ever the need should arise. It -is no greater moral wrong to sell to the needing in time of war their needs than it is in time or peace to sell supplies which were going into material for use in war or to supply food to a nation to give it future strength to fight. It would be a great moral wrong to deny the needing the right to purchase their needs, espec ially since, as a specific example, Ger many has In time of peace purchased the material to be turned into means of war against the nations which had not in time of peace turned all their resources towards creating smews or war. WALTER SEABERG. Cost of Army. ASHLAND, Or. Jan. 23. (To the Ed itor.) Please publish the cost per year of maintaining the Regular Army of the United States at the present time; also the cost of the National Guard. ERNEST ABBOTT. The United States Army appropria tions for the years 1914 and 1915 amounted to $94,229,047, which would make the annual appropriation S47,- 114.523.60. This does not include the cost of fortifications and maintainingi the military academy. The annual Government appropria tion for militia amounts to approxi mately $4,850,000. In addition the dif ferent states make appropriations. Books for Prospective Mothers. PORTLAND, Jan. 25. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly publish the name of the Government department which can fur nish me with books for a prospective mother's reading. MRS. C. M. A. You may get the publications you mention by writing to the Superinten dent of Documents, Washington, D. C, and asking for the publications issued by the Children's Bureau. Grazing Homestead Act. INDEPENDENCE, Or., Jan. 23. (To the Editor.) Can you tell me where I can get a copy of the grazing home stead act, now before Congress? READER. Write to Forest Supervisor, Beck building, Portland, Or. Duties of a Soldier. Puck. "In the old days the main element of a soldier was to .know how to act under fire." "And nowadays, in addi tion, he is supposed to know how to act under water, in the earth, and with out air." Irvin S. Colib Not Dead. SALEM. Or., Jan. 22. (To the Edi tor.) I was told the other day that Irvin S. Cobb is dead. I do not recall ever reading an account of his death and would like to know if it is true. I will appreciate it if you will answer through The Oregonlan. W. C. J. New York. PORTLAND, Jan. 25. (To the Ed itor.) What city is tho largest in the world as present? INQUIRER. In Other Days. Twcnty-nve Tears Age. From The Oregonlan of January 2T, 18:il. Zanesville, O., Jan. 26. Thomas J. Newman, for 22 years editor and owner of the controlling Interest in the Daily Courier, this city, died at his residenoe this afternoon at 1 o'clock. He was 69 years old. Attorney H. B. Nicholas is confined to his home through illness brought on by overwork. e will not be on duty for several days. The annual meeting of tho board of directors of the Portland Library Asso ciation will be held on Saturday. Feb ruary 7, Judge Deady presiding. The grading for the foundation for the addition to the National Guard ar mory is about completed and the con crete subfoundation for the Ninth street side is nearly finished. John M. Gearin. formerly of this city, has moved to Seattle and formed a partnership with Messrs. Tustin and Crews, under the firm name of Tustin, Gearin & Crews. Mr. Barnes, who lives out on the slope back of the Canyon Gardens, has a number of cherry trees in his yard on which are many blossoms, and he has strawberries on his vines as big as marrowfat peas. He expects to havs ripe strawberries in February and ripe cherries in March, "if nothing hap pens." Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonlan of January -7. IStJo. Captain Pately hag died at Caniford, England. He was a midshipman on board the Mars at the battle of Trafal gar. The Mars lost 300 out of 500 men on board of her at the time of the fa mous battle. John Alrd, one of the most enterpris ing citizens of Vancouver, died Thurs day at his residence at that place very suddenly. J. C. Leonard has Just completed a pen-and-ink sketch of General Grant which is attracting considerable atten tion in this city. He labored on tho portrait for 22 days and proposes to dispose of it by raffle for $100. The mallcarrier, Mr. Reed, who sup plies the region of Hillsboro, Lafayette and Forest Grove, has been unable to get through regularly with the malls since the hesrvy storms set in, which will account for our subscribers in that section not getting their papers this week. From William Skinner, telegraph op erator at Oregon City, we have the fol lowing, under date of January 25: "This afternoon about 3 o'clock three men engaged in clearing drift lodged in the basin by the recent high water were capsized, and one of them, Granville Dailey, was drowned. The ratification of the constitutional amendment abojishins Blavery was made final by the action of the Stata of Alabama. Slavery, then, has finally been abolished in Montgomery, the for mer capital of the slaveholders' Con federacy. ' Stamp Tax and Juries. PORTLAND. Jan. 25. (To the Ed itor.) (1) Why do the telegraph and express companies compel their patrons to pay the stamp tax Imposed by tho Government as an "income tax" and what remedy, if any, exists to force these companies to pay their share of the tax? (2) What is the system of drawing jurors in vogue in this coun ty? Myself and others, who have been in this city, county and state over 25 years, never even received a summons, and, while we are freeholders, the question arose, why the discrimination? Are the so-called professional Jurors given the preference in our court. JUST1CIA. (1) Your premises are wrong. The stamp tax or emergency tax is paid as such and not as an Income tax. The telegraph and express companies do pay a Beperate income and corporation tax and if they do any business requir ing stamp tax they pay it through the prescribed channels as individuals do. This is as provided by -the law. de signed in the first place to apportion the emergency tax on all alike, as nearly as possible. (2) The County Commissioners an nually compile a list of 2500 names from the tax roll. These are turned over to the County Clerk, who draws the petty Jury for each term from the list of 2500. This is done as a lottery. There is not a juror on the 1915 or 1916 list who has served on a jury tho year previous to the time ho was drawn. This is made certain in the original selection of names. As for profes sional Jurymen, the special venires for the entire year 1915 were but 24, in the Circuit Court, In the District Court 300 names are selected from the directory or telephone book. The Juries are drawn by lot. Twelve men are selected for a Jury and the lawyers must challenge six, leaving six to serve. If these six can not be found within three days, "by standers" are selected to fill in. Here is where the professional Juror comes In, when the list is of unavailable mon. A new, revised list has just been drawn for 1916. Cashier Company's Stork. GARDINER, Or., Jan. 25. (To the Editor.) I am a stockholder of the defunct United States Cashier Com pany. Will you please inform me if the stockholders will be able to re cover anything? C G. The assets of the United States Cash ier Company have been taken over by the International Money Machine Com pany, of Terro Haute, lnd., which was organized with a capital stock of J2.000.000. The United States Cashier Company, after transferring its assets. received $750,000 worth of stock in the International Money Machine Company. The work of the International company Is still In a stage largely experimental and the value of the stock, necessarily, is not accepted as definite yet. Widow's Claim to Pension. BUHL, Idaho, Jan. 25. (To the Edi tor.) Please let me know through The Oregonian if the widow of an old soldier is entitled to all of his pension, and if not what part of It she may claim. CLAUDE FREYES. -Write to the Commissioner of Pen sions, Washington, D. C giving data when she married the soldier. Merchandising; Merchandising is divided into two parts merchandise and servlto. Merchandise Is inanimate. Service Is animate, personal. Service deals with the. human factor. .advertising letting the public know what you have, is part of service. And swinging merchandise dis plays in time with public desire i3 another service. Such a service is performed wsen the storekeeper stocks up the man ufaeturer's newspaper advertising of his brands when he showsthe goods in his windows and on his counters at the time the advertising is running.