0 ISCUSSED BY "SJRIOXJ ooooooooo000 IMPOSSIBILITY OF SOCIALIST PROGRAMME Insuperable Difficulties in the Way Entire Change of Social Structure Is Necessary. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. TORTLAXD. MARCn 17, 1907 tiMnrir UJKKENI 10TPKS ) BY J. I.. JONES. EVERYBODY Is a Socialist. Every kind of government or form of associa tion is a kind of socialism. Socialism properly means the science of association, and includes all varieties. That theory of society which we now call Socialism ought to be called Collectivism. It stands for collective ownership of all means of production and exchange. Some time ago The Oregonian said there was no use to write about Socialism un less some one could show how it could be made practicable. No one can ever prove that chc collectivist's programme is practicable. I am attempting to show that it is impossible. There are many in superable difficulties. 1 will enumerate four for a sample. 1. Kven if the coilectivist theory were correct it would be impossible to convert & majority of the present humanity to it. The common people of Lincoln's time have disappeared and there has arisen a race of degenerates who have forgotten the virtues of their forefathers, lost all conception of the meaning of human brotherhood, and the definitions of hon esty and honor. 2. If a majority wore converted to vote the Socialist ticket, their votes would not be counted. 3. If an unques tionable majority were secured, then the ruling class would not stand for the change any more than the South would submit to negro domination.- We would Immediately have a condition of social war and anarchy similar to that which exists in Russia. 4. If all the people agreed to adopt the collec- NOT THE GOVERNMENT BUT THE PEOPLE ROBBED BY C. B. GARRISON. A GREAT cry is being heard throughout our land that the Gov ernment is being defrauded of its valuable possessions in timber lands, through the enormous graft and crime being perpetrated against it by the rascally homesteader and the timber and stone thieves, and through their aid the timber is being gathered into the fold of the more rascally timber baron. This claim has been so persistently urged, that most people unfamiliar with the law and the real facts in the case, and even our Government officials, have" evidently come to the conclusion, that no honest man would be guilty of attempting to take advantage of those laws so beneficently passed by a heretofore friendly Govern ment, to aid the poor man to secure for himself, a moiety of those lands for the benefit of himself and his family, as the law originally intended he should do. Being ho Imbued with this idea, instead. a the law provides, of leaving the facts of the good or evil intention of the entry man to be decided by the regular Gov ernment officials of the land district in which the particular piece of land may lie, and to his neighbors who should, if any one can. know whether it was taken in good faith and for his own benefit, each witness under oath testifying to the facts as he knows them, the Gov ernment reversing all our preconceived ideas of law and procedure, practically assumes that the entryman is guilty of fraud, places him on the defensive, and IDEAS BY JOHN A. COLDRAIXER. A MONO other utterances In Father O'Hara's sermon, according to The Oregonian, March 4, we find: "The church Is losing its Influence on men; that dogma Is revolting to the masculine mind. A religious dopma is simply an Important religious truth. Hence the church which discards dog matic, teaching may be a success as a social club: as regards religion it is somply bankrupt. To bp without dog ma is to be without religious .convic tion." In theology dogma is understood to signify a doctrine defined by the church and advanced not for discus sion but for belief, .lust as in animal and plant lite we classify accovif in!? to organism or plumage, so religious creeds as known or classified accord DID DANIEL WEBSTER EVER SAY THIS? One View- That His Oft-Quoted Speech Berating the Pacific Coast Has no Basis in Fact. BY C. T. JOHNSON". What cio we want with the vast, worth Icm Hrm. this region of savages and wild beasts, of desert, of shifting sands and whirlwinds of dust, of cactus and prairie doss? To what uae could we ever hope to put these areat deserts, or these endless mountain ranges, impenetrable and covered to their base with eternal snow? What can we ever hope to do with the Western coast, a coast three thousand miles, roekbound, cheerless, ana uninviting, and not a harbor on It? What use can. we ever have for such a country? Mr. President, I will never ote one cent from the public treasury to place the Pacific Coast one inch, nearer to ISoston thun it i now. THK recent death of Dr. Henry M. Field, .of New York, a mem ber of the distinguished Field family and an editor and writer of note, calls again to mind the query whether Imnlcl Webster ever used the language of the above quotation, which appears on page 173 ot Dr. Field's book entitled "Our Western Archipelago." The same quotation is given upon pages 51S-19 of H. H. Ban croft's "Chronicles of the Builders." In both books tho statement is made that a bill was pending before Con gress for the establishment of a post road from the west line of Missouri to the Pacific Ocean and that upon the floor of the Senate Mr. Webster broke our. as above, and Mr. Field gives the year of this speech as 1S44. Interesting information as to how Mr. Field came to use this alleged quo tation is s'ven in some memoranda of Professor William T. Marshall, of Cht ago. from which the writer is privi leged to copy. Mr. Marshall's notes tivist programme, they could not put it in operation. It is as impossible as Darius Green's flying machine. The Socialist colonies proved this Suppose an army were organized on the Socialist plan, so that the privates should elect all tho officers, and sup pose they were divided into hostile fac tions, and that there was the same strife about electing officers for the army that there is about electing state officials, as undoubtedly there would be, how could such an army be ex pected to fight an enemy? It would be all the time fighting itself. Generals and other officers would doubtless be elected by narrow majorities. The de feated candidates and their followers would be more deeply interested in blocking the plans of their superiors than in obeying their orders. Socialist colonies have invariably broken up on account of internal dis sensions about the management or mis management of affairs. Those opposed to the officials in power would not co operate to carry out their plans. There was no liberty nor opportunity to work for themselves. So nothing remained for them but to mutiny and make trouble or withdraw and lose their in terest. Our present system of government is based, on the Socialist principle as far as It goes, but it has not yet gone as far as to deprive all the people of the opportunity to work for themselves. That is the reason it has not broken up yet. There has so far been plenty of free land and ample opportunity for expansion. People could work for themselves and make some sort of liv ing apart from the government or in spite of it. forces him to prove his innocence. Dis trusting its own local officials and all others who would have anything . to do with so vile a creature as he, the Gov ernment sends out its special agents, detectives and sleuths, and at the final proof, after he has sworn it is for his own use and benefit and with his own money he pays for the claim, takes the case out of the hands of the regular officials, places the entryman in the sweat-box and proceeds to grill him. Among the many inquisitorial questions asked, the following are nearly always included: Where did you get the money with which you make this payment? What wages have you received during the past year? How much of it did you save? In what bank did you deposit this money? What wa the size of and when did you draw the check to pay for this entry? Do you know of any persons buying timber lands in this region? And in addition to these stock questions, any others the Ingenuity of the inquisitor may conceive. I personally know of one favorite special agent of the Gov ernment to have kept entrymen in the sweat-box from one to four hours, where the said agent was stenographer, in quisitor, attorney and general court, asking and taking down questions and answers and winding up with charging the poor entryman so much per folio for the imposition. The fact must not be lost sight of that these special agents must, in order to convince the department of their ef ficiency and the necessity for their em ployment, hold some one up now and then or lose their job. .. DO NOT FALL FROM ing to dogmas (fundamental truth). A spiritual truth is one that comes from God and being part of him. thcrefare it must be eternal, universal and not subject to change: otherwise it is not spiritual but the work of man. Among the numerous religious sects, there is not one whose dogmas (funda mental truths) have not changed, and by noting the change we can readily see that they are the work of man and lose their spiritual nature. Jn the primitive Christian church members that had given scandal by gross or open sins were excluded from the Lord's Supper or from the congre- gation altogether, and could be read mitted only if they repented and under went the pennance laid upon them by the church. It was then that the con gregation, tlirough vote, forgave them their sins and took them back in the read: "I have received a letter from Rev. IT. M. Field, who says his only authority is a letter from someone whose name he has forgotteu . . . P. S. A later letter from lr. Field gives one George L- Chase, of Hartford, Corn., as his authority.Vovember lfith, 1806 1 have received a letter from Mr. George Chase, of Hartford, Conn., stating that he sent the quotation to Dr. Field without in any manner indorsing- it (as it seemed to him very unlike Webster's style), but only to get Dr. Field's opinion on its authen ticity, and with no expectation that Dr. Field would publish it." Used Without Authority. The late Rev. Myron Eells, of Twana, Wash., used this same quotation in al most the same words as given herein in his "Reply to Bourne," page S2,- pub lished by Whitman College in 1902, but with this foot note: "The writer can not give the book and page where this is to be found. It is a part of a reply of Mrs. C. S. Pringle to Mrs. F. F. Vic tor's attack on Dr. Whitman, written December 1st. 1SS4, which the writer has in manuscript." Mrs. Pringle is an elderly lady, reported as now living near or' in Spokane, Wash. She is one of the survivors of the Whitman mas sacre. Her authority for the speech is not known even to her, according to Mr. Kells, who knew her well and questioned her about it. In another connection Mr. Chase is reported to have said that he read the article con taining the speech while upon a jour ney to the Pacific Const, and there is a possibility t'nat it is Mr. Prlngle's article that he sent to Dr. Field. It is even possible that Mr. Bancroft took it from Mrs. Pringle. "Chronicles of the Builders" was copyrighted in 1890 and published at San Francisco in 1891, and But the Government has legislated continually in the interest of capital and against labor,' and has fostered the growth of the trusts, till now the op portunity for individual effort Is great ly limited.- More than half the popula tion is already reduced to a condition of servitude mainly involuntary. Suppose Johnnie Jones has a farm left him by his father, but during his minority a relative. Bill Jones, with the assistance of a clever lawyer, steals the original will, .substitutes a forged one, and gets possession of -the farm. Then with unc tuous generosity Bill proposes to take care of Johnnie and furnish him employ ment as a hired man on the farm. Will that settle the right of inheritance? Titles to the greatest part of the world's wealth have been acquired by robbery, murder-and fraud. More than half the people are disinherited,, and the number continually increasing. The alleged own ers desire to settle the matter by giving employment, that is, by making of the disinherited ones servants, flunkeys, slaves, bondmen and bondwomen, hired men andfc servant girls. Will that settle the matter? It does not seem to be ap proaching a settlement, but rather get ting further from It all the time as the struggle for existence intensifies and op portunities for independent employment are cut off. The question of wages is only super ficial. The fundamental problem is one of inheritance .or 1 inherent and original rights. The constant quarrel about wages only serves to obRcure th real issue, which is that people should not be forced to work for wages at all. There should be an alternative as a refuge from the taskmaster. The relation of servant and master must indeed continue in a modi fied and voluntary sense. But when the slave usurps the place of master and the A certain homesteader in the Coeur d'Alene Land District has lived on his claim over the required five years, built himself a good substantial house and out buildings, . cultivated a portion of the land each year and at no time has he been away from the place to exceed four months and that once only during the whole time, still his proof wag rejected over a year ago and he has no idea when, if ever, he may received his title. Numerous similar cases might be cited, but this will answer. Now,-do not understand that I claim there have been no frauds committed, nor lands illegally obtained under these laws, for there have been, but we must not ap ply the Brownsville principle of punish ment to the whole American people. It Is too soon yet. the time may come when it will be tolerated. I claim that the great majority of all the entries made under these laws were legally made for and in the behalf of the entryman himself and those nearest to him. I further claim these laws are the only means whereby a poor man may secure for himself that share of the pub lic domain a once beneficent Government intended he should possess. The attitude of the Government at pres ent is directly opposite to its former po sition on this question,, Originally it simply held the 'public domain in trust for the people and every means was taken to further the securing of the lands in the hands of the individual. Now it looks upon what is left as an asset from which to draw revenue, as far as possible adding to the already enormous forest reserve the moyt desirable of the lands unap propriated, . selling the mature timber which means the timber of log size to the great lumber companies and using fold.' This was practiced until the 3d century. By the 4th century the bishops be gan to absolve, and the public con fession was turned into a private con fession. In . great crimes the priest had to reserve absolution to the bishop or pope. The fourth Saturnal Council, 1215, made auricular confession once a year obligatory. All sins were for-g-iven by God. Before the lath cen tury the words "Christ or God . ab solve thee" were used. After that the words "I absolve thee" were used, thus giving the priect power of absolution. This dogma encountered . fierce opposi tion from the twelfth to the sixteenth century. The greatest intellectuals of the church were divided upon the question. The Council of Trent evaded it. In 1S54 Pope Pius IX finally proclaimed that the dogma of the' Virgin Mary's immaculate "Our Western Archipelago" was pub lished for the first time by Scribners in 189i. It would be Interesting to mention the further use that has been freely made of this quotation in post-prandial efforts, in addresses before college students and Sunday-school scholars. In newspaper discussions and even in books that claim to be histories as illustrating the ignorance and-intolerance, of Eastern statesmen to) the phy sical and political value and character of the Pacific Northwest during the early forties, and - the indifference of Mr. Webster at the time he negotiated the Ashburton treaty and in later years; but such mention ' might be taken in the light of controversy. Suf fice it to say that there seems to be no reason to believe that Mr. Webster ever used such language, and readers of Northwest history have known this for some years. Mr. Webster was a ' member of the Senate from 1828 until February 22, 1841, when he resigned to become Sec retary of State under the Harrison ad ministration. He continued in the same office under President Tyler until May 8. 1843, when he resigned: and again returned to the Senate in March, 1S45, as the successor of Mr. Choate. Speech Cannot Be Found. Mr. Webster was a member of the cabinet of President Tyler and was engaged . in negotiations with I-ord Ashburton in 1842, when Lieutenant Charles Wilkes, of the United States Navy, filed his official report of the ex ploration expedition made under his command, which included a very ex tensive examination of the Puget Sound and Columbia River waters and the countries adjacent thereto and of the coast of California, and of San true King is robbed of his kingdom, then there is going to be a time of trouble. - The coilectivist plan is not to restore to Johnnie Jones his inheritance, but to turn it over to the Government. Then Johnnie instead of being Bill's hired man, will be hired no, I mean employed, by the Government. He cannot work for himself or attend to his own business. He must still work under the orders of a superior. He has no guarantee of any individual rights or liberties only the right to. labor and obey. At the present rate of concentration the whole United States will be owned in a few years by a small number of cap italists. We have the alternative then of becoming servants and hirelings for them or voting for Government owner ship and binding ourselves to be serv ants forever under officials elected by majority vote to govern us. manage our property and direct all our doings. Of two evils, I prefer to choose neither. Is it not evidently impossible for a man to be free and at the sams time depend ent on some one else for employment, the only 'means of living? Can a person be dependent and Independent at the same time? It does not matter whether we call it wges or salary, the man who has to work under a boss is not a free man. The man who selis his time and labor sells the use of his body. A free man ia one who Is not for sale or hire, who owns himself, body and soul, and controls his own actions. The word hireling is properly a term of contempt. It is a common saying among politicians that every man has his price; that he can be bought. The main object of modern education seems to be to fit the recipient for a "position" which means a job as clerk or typewriter, which is supposed to be more honorable than some other job. In slave days the Vcullud" house serv a large portion of the proceeds for the support of the great army of forest rangers made necessary by the act. and thereby depriving the common people of what has- always been -considered an inalienable right an equitable share of the public domain. Every time an entry man is prevented from securing bis little 40, 80 or 160 acres of land it is heralded as another case in which the Govern ment has just escaped being robbed. The result of the changed attitude of the Government towards the entryman and the adoption of its iniquitous forest reserve policy is well illustrated by the conditions in the rich and fertile valley of the Kootenai River, traversing two states, with soil the equal of the best irrigated lands in the West in fertility and suitability for the raising of fruits and grains, with the added advantage that, because of the abundant and sea sonable rainfall, no expensive irrigation is needed to compete with the best in the land. Similar conditions prevail in many other portions of the West, With all these advantages, why is it that the flower of our young men are emigrating to Canada by the thousands to seek those homes, the desire for which the Almighty himself has implanted in every human heart, to settle in a less desirable locality and under a foreign flag? Is it because there is no more laud at home, or that it is inaccessible? No. but because of the great area withdrawn for the forest reserves throughout our country and the added restrictions placed about the homestead applicant in our own country, not by law, but by the ruling of some Government official, has forced them to seek in a foreign land that which is denied them under their own flag. conception bad been revealed by God and therefore must be accepted by all the faithful. The dogma of the infallibility of the Pope was proclaimed as a fundamental spiritual truth in 1871. The argument of the leading prelates. of the church in op position was as follows: Neither the Pope nor his legatee took part in . the First Council of Constanti nople in- SSI. The declaration of Innocent I and Gelasius I concerning the damnation or unbaptized children was anathematized by the Council of Trent. The decree of Celestin III concerning marriage with heretics was annulled by Innocent lit and Its author pronounced a. heretic for issuing It by Hadrian VI. Honorius I was condemned for heresy and his writings publicly burned by the Third Council of Constantinople. The Francisco." Lieutenant "Wilkes reported there to be "one of the finest, if not the very best harbor in the - world." In view of this circumstance alone it Is not probable that Mr. Webster ever said what this quotation reports him as saying.. Mr. Webster was a man of very dignified bearing and speech and the style; of this quotation does not com pare at all with his common form of expression. Further . than that, the speeches of Mr. "Webster upon the floor of the Senate are a matter of record in the Congressional Globe and Debates in Congress, and a careful search has been made for this speech and it has not been found, and scarcely anything by him that 'can be called disparage ment of the Pacific Coast has been found. The first bill to establish post roads from the western line of the State of Missouri to the mouth of the Columbia River originated in the com mittee on postoffices and postroads and was introduced in the Senate on March 2, 1846. and no such speech by Mr. Webster has been found in connection with that bill. Webster and the Ashburton Treaty. Our query is of small importance in Itself, but It has a bearing upon North west history as against the theory that the Oregon country or Columbia River country, as it was originally called, was saved to the United States by any one person or any one event: particu larly, because students of the diplo- matic side of our history are saying more and more that the term "saved Oregon" is an erroneous one. Daniel Webster was a very important factor in the negotiations of the treaties which settled our "Northeastern and Northwestern boundaries with Eng land; more influential than either President Tyler or President Polk in that particular issue. The Ashburton treaty was distinctly "Webster's own, and in 1846 Mr. Webster was in the Senate when President Polk referred the question to that body before he undertook to negotiate finally the ants were so puffed up with a sense of their fancied superiority over the nigger field-hands that they forgot that they also were slaves. Only the person who is not hired at all not under service at all is free. This is so obviously true that it requires no argu ment to prove it. Therefore, it follows that the -more people are deprived of homes and the right to self-employment and reduced to the rank of servants or employes, the more the foundations of lib erty, of true republicanism and true de mocracy are undermined. And the em ploye of a government is no more free than the hireling of a private master. He may be even less free, for to quit the employment of the government may be called desertion and made punishable with death. Inmates of the penitentiary and members of the chain gang are gov ernment employes. When we are all re duced to the rank of servants for the captains of industry or of the govern ment, where will be our liberties? The only way to establish freedom on a sure foundation is to get back, to nat ural principles. Our so-called civilization Is wholly artificial and unnatural. It is not really civilization at all. Free so ciety must be based on free land. The ngnt to the occupancy and use of land without any tribute to any shark, Shy lock or landlord, and without any liabil ity to-be disinherited or defrauded out of It by any law for creation or collection of debt is one of the inalienable rights of man. In fact, this ought to be the first principle in the foundation of all juris prudence. People with this right to fall back on would still be free to work for wages if they wished. This would secure freedom of contract. If a farmer or an Indian goes out to pick hops a few days he sacrifices his interests at home. He is not com Grave as it is, to one who is fully posted, all the foresoing looks paltry and trivial by comparison. Why. put all the fraud and wrong-doing of all the home steaders and timber and stone entrymen since these iaws were first passed on the one side, and the frauds and robberies committed under and in the name of one only of the many great railroad and cor porate grants, on the other, and the for mer would sink into insignificance. Take the Northern Pacific land grant, for in stance. They were first granted the al ternate sections for a distance of 20 miles each side of their line. Was this enough? No. They claimed so much of the land had been alienated prior to the grant that they should be reimbursed for the loss. To make them wholly good they were given an indemnity grant of 20 miles more each side of the original grant, making 40 miles. Were they satis fied? No. Still they claimed a deficiency; so. to make sure, they were granted a second indemnity belt of 20 miles more on each side of the others, making a great sweep of land from 80 to 120 miles from the head of the Great Lakes to the Pacific Ocean. Were they satisfied? No. The great forest reserves were then start ed, the first being the Mount Rainier Forest Reserve, through which runs this mighty belt of granted lands, and this iniquity is in for more rich plunder. They must be indemnified. For other lands lost? No: simply injured this time, be cause the imaginary lines of a timber reserve encompasses them about and they must be indemnified. Did they lose any land? No. but because of these imaginary lines and imaginary damages they were given the right to relinquish the bald mountain tops, the great areas of burnt over lands and barren rock ledges, and HEAVEN Bible of Pope Sixtus V was suppressed by his successors for its numerous errors. In spite of such arguments it was proclaimed a fundamental truth, but when the present Pope called - on the Catholics of Poland not to revolutionize, as the Czar of Russia ruled toy divine right of God. the clergy as well as the laymen lost confidence as to its truth. For over 1700 years it was a dogma that interest was usury. The Council of Vienna, presided over by Pope Clement V. declared the taking of interest a flin and any one favoring it to be punished as a heretic. The greatest men of the church opposed it, such as St. Basil, St. Chrysostom, St. Gregory of Nysia, St. Ambrose and St. Augustine. Pope Leo the Great adjudged it a sin. Its prohibition was enforced 'by the Coun cil of Arlos in 314 and every great as sembly of the church, from the Council Treaty of Washington. Henry Cabot Lodge, a scholar and himself a writer of history, in his biography of Mr. Webster (American Statesmen Series, Vol. 21, pages 257-8) says: "In regard to the Northwestern boundary Mr. Webster agreed with the opinion of Mr. Monroe's cabinet that the Forty-ninth parallel was a fair and proper line." Historians generally agree with him. Some of tie direct relations of Mr. Webster with this question may be mentioned in a subsequent paper. Thomas F. Ryan's Detectives. Everybody's. Thomas F. Ryan probably employs de tectives more extensively In his financial operations than any other man in the Wall Street district He is credited with having developed the use of them to a positive science. All of his lawyers and he has an enormous staff of them are experts in handling detectives and in find ing ways of getting valuable information for their client. Mr. Ryan is wonderfully cautions. It is said that whenever he plans to deal with a man whom he does not already know intimately, he invariably puts de tectives on the heels of that man and finds out everything possible about him. The "shadowing" is begun long before actual negotiations are opened, and be fore the man has any knowledge of Mr. Ryan's plan to deal with him; and it is continued throughout the transaction. The value of information of this kind can easily be imagined. To Mr. Ryan the man with whom he is dealing is an open book. His weak spots, if he has any, Mr. Ryan can calmly point to at the mo ment when the situation demands such disclosure. If necessary, he can probably tell the men his exact cash balance in every bank and trust company in which he has an account; the amount of money he has borrowed on this block of stock and on that bundle ot bonds; the amount of the mortgage on his house; his precise income, and can make a close estimate of his expenditures. Facts of the kind cost money, but they are Immensely val-. uable at times in Wall Street deals. I pelled to go and if things don't suit him he can quit and go home. This is how it conies that hopmen have to treat their pickers with some degree of considera tion or they could not get them at all. But the multitudes who are robbed of their homes are forced into wage slavery without an alternative. There is no free dom of contract. They must work for some master. There is only a choice of masters a choice of evils for a free man can have no master but one, and that is God and his own conscience. To such a one any kind of enforced labor is invol untary servitude, which is- properly for bidden by the Constitution of the United States. The lawyers who drafted that amendment probably did not know what it meant. It will be urged in objection that people who now own land are not free. That Is because they are In danger of losing it. Those who have too much are always scheming to get away from the others the little that remains to them. We would put an end to legalized robbery. Then there would be peace and security and freedom. The robbery that Is carried on contrary to law Is infinitesimal compared with the robberies of the law itself. More than three-fourths of the entire products of legitimate labor are confiscated by le gal processes. It may be alleged that I have not fairly stated the position of Socialism as to private property. The fact is that no pri vate individual can state this authorita tively. The party platform is really the only authority on the subject, and it leaves, us quite in the dark. The old party platform was a purely coilectivist manifesto declaring for the collective ownership of all the means of production and exchange by the entire people. The present platform, written probably by Professor Herron, an Individualist, de In lieu thereof to select from any of the vacant or unoccupied lands lying "in any of the states through or into which the road or its branches might run. This is the now famous Northern Pacific scrip through and by means of which that great fore3t of the finest timber on the continent, extending through the states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Mon tana has been thrown into the hands of the great timber syndicates. When this source was nearly exhausted the great Cascade reserve was formed and the same tactics followed out as In the first case. Still other reserves fol lowed until nearly the whole of Northern Idaho, a large portion of Washington and Montana is also taken an forest reserve. All excepting a few of the most recent reserves have carried the privilege fo re linquish such lands as were worthless, retaining any lands they might consider too valuable to exchange. One other in stance and I am through for this time. The Santa Fe forest reserve and scrip. Here was a case where a great lumber concern purchased that portion of the land grant of the Santa Fe Railroad Com pany that was included in the above re serve. Prior to the forming of this re-, serve they had built mills and cut off a portion of the timber. Before all was. cut, the reserve was formed, with an other chance to rob the Government on so large a scale as to make it respect able. A representative of the lumber com pany made several trips to Washington and finally fixed it up with Secretary Hitchcock, whereby they were to relin quish all their lands to the Government, but. note you, reserving the right to cut and remove the balance of the uncut tim ber, and were given the right to select other lands in lieu thereof, the only re of Elvira in -306 to that ' of Vienna In 1311. In 1179 the third Council of Lateran de creed that impenitent money-lenders should be excluded from the altar and from absolution. ' In the 15th century the council of the church at Salsbury excluded from com munion or burial any who took interest. This was a general rule throughout Ger many. The Jews were excepted, as they were, damned anyhow, and by giving them a monopoly it prevented the Christian from that sin. In the 15th century great exer tions were made to have the church change its position. Pope Benedict in 1745 issued his encyclical, which "declares the doctrine of the church consistent, that ujury is a sin, but there are' occasions when on special grounds the lender may obtain an additional sum. In 1830 the in quisition at Rome, with the approval of An Opera That Involves Too Much Torture Highly Sensitive Woman Protects Against I.ast Act of "M'nie Butterfly. BY CATHARINE IEKNK. ONE phase of the recent notable opera season seems to have escaped the attention pf all who have so ably written concerning: it in the press of Port land. Why is it that no one considered it worth while to comment on the pain a spectator must endure in order to enjoy "M'me Butterfly?" Because all the writ ers dwelt on the excellent performances In their varied aspect, and neglected the intensely human side from the listener's point of view, I am moved to set down a few thoughts that overcame me, trusting that The Oregonian will graciously publish them. Granting that all emotions and passions are proper subjects for the dramatist,. I should like to inquire whether the authors of "Mme. Butterfly" do not overstep rea sonable bounds in the last act of their tragedy. Is there not too much of ex quisite torture? Of course we are sup posed ever to keep in mind when we-are in a theater that we are seeing only "play-actin' "; still, if we refuse to have our heart strings touched, we are only looking at a series of moving pictures. The play that doesn't, for the moment, mane us lose ourselves is a failure. It seems that modern arbiters In the musical world have decreed that the fin est concord of sweet sounds must accom pany a tale of man's perfidy or woman's dishonor, or both. The greatest of grand operas were written around these themes. In "Mme. Butterfly" the plot is so simple that it would be clear to an Eskimo. This Japanese girl and her nameless child speak a universal language, equally In telligent to every hearer. A whole hour with one's heart in his throat is too much of a strain for the strongest nerves. Not in a -Ion? time have I read a finer lay sermon than was preached on the clares for private property, but does not state what property ought to be private and what public, and gives no definition of Individual rights. What is needed is a definite statement as to what property and what rights be long to each of the four departments of society, the Individual, the commune or municipality, the state and the Nation. Socialism does not define this, neither does capitalism. The new dispensation calls for these definitions, because on this foundation must the - polity and jurispru dence of the new order be laid. The cor nerstone of any permanent organization of society must be a definition of Individ ual rights. Without this there can be no social righteousness. The present system Is founded on sev eral fundamental fallacies. Including that of the righteousness of -majority rule and an erroneous idea of equality. The coi lectivist theory Is not . the remedy, but the last stage of the disease. It is im possible to stop the growth of . Socialism because it is the logical conclusion of democracy. But there are factors In the problem that are ignored by the Social ists and by all the capitalist .parties. It is necessary to define what are the fun damental principles of righteousness and to enunciate and Interpret the natural laws of order and harmony in human relationships. The ignorance of these laws and principles is. the trouble with the -present system, and I wish to repeat the statement that Socialism a ordinar ily promulgated Is not the remedy, but the last stage of the disorder. Any at tempt to inaugurate Socialism as now promulgated will inevitably end in an archy. In fact, the probability at present is that capitalist governments will first appeal to anarchy to head off Socialism, for capitalism is only a kind of anarchy anyhow. Corvallis, March 4. The Present Land Policy as Viewed by One of the Plain People Who Is Indignant. striction being that a certain portion should be laid south of the 40th parallel of latitude, and when so laid the balance was unrestricted and could be laid upon any Government land not otherwise ap propriated, and was so certified to by Sec retary Hitchcock. This Is the famoua certified Santa Fe scrip, the placing of some 200,000 acres of which I am person ally familiar with. I know of an in stance where a representative of a rich lumber corporation, with his hands full of the above-named scrip, secured a po sition near the head of a line of appli cants at the opening of a district to sel tlement. stand there selecting piece after piece of the best land, while the poor entrymen, who could at best, under thn law, take no more than 160 acres, stood one and all awaiting the pleasure of the corporate lawyer with his unrestricted graft. I might take up the Southern Pacific land grant, which company is now try ing to prevent the appointment of a Uni ted States District Attorney merely be cause they fear he will compel them to fulfill the plain requirements of their grant and sell their lands to individuals in restricted quantities at $2.50 per acre. Is it any wonder that the people who know feel bitter against this whole tim ber reserve plan and the rulings of the Land Department upon the homestead and the timber and stone entries? It may be legal because it is law, but there was never a plan devised that so effect ually robbed the people, not the Govern ment, as the one so feebly outlined in the above story. It is Rachel weeping for fcer children and refusing to be cemfort ed because they are not. Bonner's Ferry, Idaho. All Religious Dogma Is Man-Made and Every Creed Has Changed Position. Pope Pius VIII, though still declining to commit itself on the doctrine involved, decreed that as to practice confessors should no longer disturb lenders of money at legal interest. Protestants, in fact all churches, held the same view and all recanted. History ehows that every religion, creed or sect has changed, its position, there 'fore fhey are not God-made (spiritual, but man's own work. Ideas do not fail from heaven. When a new idea takes place in society it merely proves that forces have been at work which have changed the position and relation of men to one another. Therefore, the spiritual idea of Christianity and all religious sects as they are in opposition to present econ omic conditions. became a hindrance to the progress of society and therefore must disappear. Portland, March 6. editorial page of last Sunday's Oregonian jon the philosophy of life. "Mme Butter fly" was the text, and The Oregonian laiioht a valtiaKlo locinn tint it rllri nnl touch on the fact that the wronged woman in the tragedy committed suicide. The canon against self-slaughter has nor. been repealed. Would you advise any one who has nothing to live for to destroy his existence by his own hand? And yet in the noted opera under dis cussion this act of self-destruction is far less painful to the beholder than the hero ine's sacrifice of her child. With con summate skill, the dramatist created a situation that would move Satan to tears. It is no small tribute to our power of con trolling our emotions that some of us mothers in the audience did not cry out In agony Or perhaps, swoon. Portland. March 11. . Fido's Whisky Proves Useful. Two tramps came along to a house one day and wanted food. The wom an who answered their summons told them she would give them something to eat if they would work for it. They consented, and she set them to clean ing some picture frames. After a lit tle she came out to see how they were getting along, and , one of the men asked her If she knew that whisky was a fine thing to clean picture frames with. She said she had never heard of it. but would get them some whisky from upstairs. She brought the whisky down, and as soon as her back was turned, they, of course, drank it. When the woman came back 15 minutes later the picture frames were shining. She was greatly pleased. 'And to think," said she, "that I came near throwing that whisky out. It was some we used two or three times to .bathe little Fido in just before he died."1 The Nautilus.