THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, , JAXUARY 17, 190f. PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Postoffloe aa eecoaa-iiaaa flatter. Bub scrip Uaa Bate InTarlablr l (Br ItalL) Dsttjr. Sundar Included, one rear. . . .. .!. I'ally, Sunday Included, six months... 4. IS 1's.lly. Sunday Included, three months. ..S.J5 lsUy, bunday Included, one month.... .75 Ial!v. without Sunday, oree year t.OI Xai:r. without Sunday, alz months 1.25 Iiallv wlthnut Kundiv. three months. 1.7ft I'ally. without Sunday, one month CO Weekly, one year. ................. .... Sunday, one year ... .. S 50 Sunday and Weekly, one year. ...... ... 1.60 I Hv Carrier, k re!1y. Sunday Included, one year t.o XaIIy, Sunday Included, one month.... .7e How to Remit Send poetoftica moaer order, express order or personal chaok on our local bank. Etampa. coin or currency are at the eendera rut Give poatofflce ad dress In full. Including ooonty and state. Poataae Rat re 10 to 14 pares. 1 cent; 1 ao 2k i.n. 2 centa: 10 tu 44 paxes, 1 centa: 44 to 40 pagea, 4 centa. Foreign postal flouble ratca Kaetera Baaineaa Office The 8. C. Berk- with Hpecial Agency New York, rooms 41 10 Tribune building. Chicago, rooma H0-H1 Tribune) building. ; wonder still leas cavil at the fact that In the constantly widening realm of human discovery known as medical science, supply rises to meet demand? The doctors are with us because, speaking; In a general sense, we want them. We want them because. In times of stress, wo need them or. wnat amounts to the same thing-, be cause we think we need them. The supply seems to be ample In this com munity. Indeed, there seems to be no dearth of doctors anywhere. Tet there are hundreds, perhaps thou sands, now in the making;, and before our own State Medical Board there are now fifty-seven applicants for license to practice. In witness that this Is simply supply coming; forward to meet demand. these additions to the ranks of the medical profession in this state and elsewhere will. If found worthy by the powers that be, slip each Into his or her niche and find therein work to do. Let not the croaker croak, therefore, because of the multiplicity of doctors. ainoe this multiplicity Is In direct re sponse to the law of supply and de maul. monarch. His subjects are a re markable body of recluses, comprising; some 600.000 monks who dwell in 3000 or more monasteries. Through these the Lama has been able to pre sent an almost insurmountable bar rier to the Invasion of the tourist, or the researches of the explorer. His humiliation means little to the world except as it Indicates the hand of a powerful ruler upon the helm of state; but to the millions of Buddhists In China It will suggest possibilities of change unheard of In their philoso pby. FORTlAM. SODAf, JAXfART 17. 199. OKLAHOMA AXD OREGON. In Oklahoma there is a primary law similar to that of Oregon, but lacking Statement One. It Is declared by the law of Oklahoma that all parties shall nominate all candidates on a certain day In August, preceding the general election in November; and the law specifically Includes "United States Senators." The same statute requires that after the primary and the can vass of the vote, the election commis sion shall deliver to those who receive the majority or plurality vote of their party for the various offices, certlfi' rates which shall entitle them to have their names printed on the ballots to be used In the ensuing general election. The election commission of the state consists of two Democrats and one Republican. In 'direct violation and defiance of law the Democratic ma jority of the commission refused the application of the Republican candi date for the Senate for entry of his name upon the ballot. D. T. Flynn, who had been Delegate In Congress from the Territory of Oklahoma for eight years, was well known, there fore, was able and very popular, had received the unanimous Republican vote in the primary. But the opposi tion managers were resolved that his name should not go on the ballot. They feared and believed he would carry a majority of the popular vote; and, though they expected the Legis lature to be Democratic, they didn't Intend that It should be "put up" to the Legislature, since it would em barrass them to turn him down. Hence they refused to let the people have a direct vote . on Senator though the law compelling the nomi nation of Senator was of their own making, and stands today on the statute-book of the state. True, It doesn't contain anything that corresponds to Oregon's State ment One; but the managers didn't want and wouldn't have a vote on Senator; so they repudiated their prl mary law, refused to enter Flynn'g name on the ballot, and kept the elec tion of Senator entirely In their own hands. Following is from a state ment recently made by Mr. Flynn During the campaign I atarted a cry that they were dishonest In their platform, and repudiated their primary law by declln ins; to put my name on the ballot to be voted for In November. I asserted that they desired the Republicans of Oregon I don't know what majority the party has on Joint ballot In that state, but I aald that they espeoted the Republicans to elect Cham Denaln to the Senate. I waa laughed at all orer the country and tt was said that I was merely trying to play politics. Now why should a Republican. If he Is trying to play politics, elect a Democrat to the United Ftatea Senate from one state, when th democratic party, which is in full con trol In another state, absolutely refuses. notwithstanding the law. to permit tha name of a Republican candidate, duly nom inated by popular vote, to be even printed on the ballot In olectT I believe In fair play, but I think as far aa the good of tha country le concerned, that there should be no more ralr play at the expense of tha Re publicans In Oregon than there was at tha expense of the Democrats In Oklahoma. Doesn't It make a lot of difference whose ox Is gored? But where will you find such political stupidity as among the Republicans of Oregon, or a class of them? SIX MONTHS SCHOOL THE MINIMUM A bill Is to be Introduced at this ses slon of the Legislature requiring that each school district shall maintain a public school for at least six months In each year. This Is a reasonable re quirement and should be established by law. Most of the districts already maintain school for more than six months, without any legal require raent to do so, but there are some that do not. Six months schooling In a year is little enough for any child. Of course, to Increase the length of the school year will necessitate an In crease in the amount of school funds; but, since there are relatively few dis tricts that will be affected by the re quirement, this increase will not be great, Kvery district!, which does not receive enough money from the county school funds to maintain Its school should levy a special school tax. Just as Portland and all the other large school districts do. Quite likely there are a very few districts which would not have funds enough for a six months' school even with the county school apportionment and a reason able special tax. If there should be any such. It would be no more than right that the county In general should give these few sufficient aid to ena ble them to maintain school for six months. A MVLTlPIJtlTY OF DOCTORS. The once-familiar spectacle of the doctor perhaps grown old In the service of suffering humanity going his rounds on horsoback, his saddle bags behind him, or Jogging along over country roads In his gig, with his medicine chest at his feet well stocked with pills and powders. Is no longer seen In our civilization. Having lived his long. busy, useful and sympathetic day, he has passed on. With him It has sometimes been supposed, has passed the dependence upon medicine as a cure for mortal ills that was characteristic of an earlier and sim pier civilization. That this is a mis taken Idea, however. Is shown by the large graduating classes that yearly receive diplomas from the medical colleges of the country, and by the large number of young doctors who apply, at stated Intervals, to duly con stituted medical boards for license to practice medicine. The truth Is that It Is only when In health that the average Individual feels entirely Independent of the. doc tor. It Is noticeable that Christian Scientists, who find Mrs. Eddy's book an mat xney neeu in tne way of a tonic when In health are usually prompt to summon a doctor when pain, performing the part of a senti nel at the gateway of life, announces the presence of disease and danger. rne same Is practically true of all healers of whatever name. Depend ence upon medicine to cure disease may not be as universal as tt was in the days when "the wise old doctor went his rounds," but. Judged by the law of demand and supply, there does not seem, to be much difference be tween the cry of the sick and suffer ing of the present and the past. The physically afflicted clamored wistfully for relief then; they clamor for It now. They looked to the doctor for help then, they look to the same source now, possibly with not as much confidence In bis ability to save WILLIAM LEE FARE. A news dispatch yesterday told that General Superintendent Park, of the Union Pacific Railway, had been ad vanced to the head of the operative department of all the Harriman lines west of Omaha. It has taken William Lee Park thirty years to reach the top of the ladder years of hard and steady work, during which the pay was good. of course, as railroading goes; yet pay was not the incentive in his case. Railroading of the best kind was his ambition, and always to do more than the contract called for was his motto. He began that way as a boy, and has never forgotten how. Mr. Park Is about BO years old"? He is the son of Colonel J. B. Park, who commanded a New Tork regiment In the Civil War, and after a few years in Michigan moved to North Platte, In Western Nebraska, where youn Park grew to manhood. Colonel Park died In the middle '70s, and the boy became the head of the family mother and sister. Upon quitting school he sought the only opening for work in a division town of the plain In those days and became brakeman on the forward end of a freight train Before he was 21 he was a freight conductor, and when expansion struck that region ho was given a passenger run on the cut-off to Denver. Not many years later there was a vacant division supenntendency, and young Park got it. The years ran on, and one day the news went forth that W, L. Park was called to Omaha to be general superintendent of the Union Pacific. People who knew him were not surprised, and now evince np won der at tne latest news of his progress AH boys cannot become head brake- men of a freight and In thirty years reach a general managership of a sys tem of thousands of miles, for all boys are not built alike, and there are not enough of the systems to go around If they were. Tet all boys can study the story of the upward career of Mr." Park and profit by It. Attention to business, whether It be sweeping out and making fires In a little store or shop or helping the fireman load coal on a freight engine, will land one at the top; but the three simple words at the beginning of the sentence cover a multitude of things that the average boy slight as not worth bothering himself with. - CHINA AND FAR-OFF TIBET. The activities of the Prince Regent of China In those days command the attention of the world. Such atten tion as has hitherto been drawn to that singularly dead, but at times viciously alive, realm has been largely made up of curiosity and contempt. These elements have lately been sup planted by Intelligent Inquiry and some expectation, looking to the pos slble expansion of policy In that long-stagnant nation. Spasms denot ing the awakening of China have been of a commercial, rather than ethical significance; but since the Prince Regent has succeeded to the ancient throne, which Tsi An was so slow to vacate and which her dead-alive puppet so long occupied in name. some things have occurred which are entirely out of the long order of Chinese policy. J? or example, the head of the church and state In Tibet, recognized In this dual capacity for hundreds of years by the Chinese government, was packed off to his Tibetan temple with scant ceremony after the death of the Dowager Empress and the Emperor. He had arrived In Pekin with all the arrogance and pomp of mystical and haughty power, was received with lit tie show of reverence, and was soon escorted to the frontier of his little, barren province by order of the Prince Regent. Practically shorn of his temporal power, the great Dalai life now as then, but with a certainty" Lanxa 'was fflven to understand that that he can, at least, by administering -tioeian Business oi state win here- OUR REAL LEISURE: CLASS. It Is a catchy but somewhat over worked phrase of -the Socialist that Informs us on every pretext that "the rich are growing richer and the poor are growing poorer." This Informa tion is usually vouchsafed for the pur pose of fostering discontent and to strengthen an argument that there should be no difference whatever In the financial rating of people who are now rich and people who are poor. The true socialistic theory is that we should take away from the rich the money which they have accumulated by hard work, thrift and good man agement, and divide It with the im provident, lazy and profligate, as well as the Industrious but unfortunate poor. One hears less of this division of property in the country than in the city. The farms of the United States turned off $8,000,000,000 worth of products last year, and the men who got the money worked hard for It and at times were unable, even with the lure of high wages, to attract the at tention of some of the "poor who are growing poorer," but who will not work in the country. . There are more rich people In the world today than ever, and there are also more poor people than ever, but the same relative proportion of the haves" and the "have nots" has not changed much since Don Quixote was charging the windmills. Fortunately for civilization and society, an socialistic scheme for division wealth has never struck a popular chord in this country. There are several million energetic rustlers wh have nothing today, but who expect to have something a few years hence. They are willing to work, and, after reaping the benefits of their labor and thrift, do not care to be placed in a position where they must divide with the idle Jawsmiths whose sole occu pation is berating our economic sys tem and endeavoring to stir up class hatred With this class of workers we are quite familiar, for they are sufficiently numerous in every community and every locality in the United States to offset the pernicious teachings of the socialistic idlers who seek to despoil them of the fruits of their Industry There is another class, seldom men tloned, however, that is an even more potent factor In holding In check the policies advocated by the idlers These people are termed by a writer In the Saturday Evening Post "The Real Leisure Class." The writer found 20.000 of them sojourning at a Florida Winter resort. This class, says the writer, "Is essentially and peculiarly a product of our native conditions. It is composed of quiet people, who have made enough to live on in their small Northern towns and in the in numerable Southern corners, where the sun lies warm in January." They are not people who figure in the so clety columns of the newspapers, and some of them actually get along with out servants. The Post writer dis cusses these people at only one of hundreds of Southern resorts, extend ing from California to Florida, and even including Cuba, Hawaii and the West Indies, and exclainis Twenty thousand leisurely people living on their Incomes. Think of what hot In vectlve might be directed against them If they were all muItl-mllllonalres and lived Jew Tork. Think how ralnbow-hued would be spilled on tha pages of the aged to get off without much delay. She placed herself In a large butter bowl which they had Just bought, hitched her stalwart husband to it with come green ribbon she had pro cured to trim her hat with, and when she had touched him up a little with a rope end he cantered down the street at a merry pace and they were soon out of the city. The spectacle this loving couple made as they progressed toward the suburbs was much enjoyed by our blase citizens. It will proba bly be many years before Oregonlans are blessed with another season ' of real sleighing and typical little inci dents like the above which will em-, balm the character of the past week or two for the perusal and Informa tion of posterity ought to be carefully noted down by those who saw them and transmitted to the Historical So ciety for safekeeping. Future gener ations will value them. lng public generally good reason for rejoicing at difficulties and discom forts overcome. in Ink yellow journals In an efTort to picture their fantastic pleasures. Think how Socialists might attack them for living upon the unjust Interest of their capital. But here by the blue waters they live unnoticed. They are, In a singularly characteristic American way. a sollder and pleaaanter proof of the real prosperity of the country than all the millionaires of Pittsburg and New York combined. With this "Real Leisure Class" lies the great bulk of the wealth of the country, and rare indeed are the cases In which their wealth was secured by questionable methods. Their success, well earned by labor and thrift. Is a constant example for the tollers who do not believe In the equality of man, but who are confident that they like wise can, after a few years of toll, spend their declining years in leisure. "Back In the North," continues the Post writer, "they fade to less promi nence In the general picture of com mercial activity, and the fact that one must go to the lands where Winter Is Summer really to see them Is perhaps significant of the class' own half unconsclous recognition of the fact that no part of their duty is to pro test against labor, vaunt their own superiority, or even by the contrast of their presence, to make any worker discontented with his lot. They are themselves pre-eminently of the class who believe America's role in the world has been, and still Is, to perfect Industrialism. So long as the United States Is peopled by such large numbers of this "Real Leisure' Class" and the In dustrious workers who keep their ranks well filled, socialism will never make much headway in this country. COCK-A DOODLE-DO ! The poultry show lately In progress In this city was the greatest ever. We say this advisedly upon the assurance of experts In poultry culture who may be presumed to know what they are talking about. "Classiness" was the chief feature, of this show, and It ex tended to pens, coops, pairs and indi vidual specimens high-steppers one and all with glossy, well-preened plumage and distinct markings and "points" that appeal to the admiration of all beholders. Fine, plump birds were these, each well worthy of a premium. If Judged by" outward ap pearances, the only standard of Judg ment set up for a chicken show. In a dairy stock show it is different. The Jersey or Holstem or Alderney cow that takes the highest premium is the one that makes the finest show ing In gallons of milk and pounds of hotter produced In a day or week "Daisy" may not have as sleek a coat as "Clover"; her horns may not be adjusted at so graceful an angle and her color may not be as rer-tful to the eye; but if she gives the milk -of standard richness and produces the butter, why then "Daisy" Is the cow who bears away the blue ribbon. But such tests of usefulness are not required of stately Mrs. Wyandotte, snowy Madame Leghorn-or beautiful Mrs. Plymouth Rock. Notwithstand ing the old proverb, "Fine feathers make fine birds," and premiums are awarded accordingly. But where are the hens, modest, singing, cackling hens, that are recog nized as egg-producers, and awarded premiums for industry in this henly vocation? Let us have the record of some of these as layer's, that we may know what feathered dames we may turn to for relief when eggs are 60 cents a dozen and scarce at that. Shall we turn In this emergency to the lowly sisters of the barred Plymouth Rock dames of poultrydom? Of the Rhode Island Reds and White Leg horns and snowy Wyandottes that were thought not fit to appear In fowl aristocracy? And, turning to any one of these, or all of them, shall we find them so well fed and housed and cared for that they can and do pro duce eggs? A little light on this sub ject Is needed by a multitude of anx ious housewives who In the old-fashioned way associate hens with eggs and would fain hear of hens, if there be any, that are not too highly bred to be egg producers, and the patient, industrious mothers of chicks, hatch ing them, brooding them, scratching for them and bringing them up to the grand estate of egg producers in their turn. When you want to kill a man, the State of New Tork is probably the best place In which to do it, if you care to escape the law that Is, such law as goes by the name in these emo tional days; Private vengeance, erst while the sacred right of the Mafia and the redskin, no longer has a dis tinction of color. A Jury spent tweh-ty-two hours In determining that Thornton Halhs was not guilty of the murder of Annis. His brother, of course, was the actual "killer." As he will, no doubt, be acquitted, too, on the ground of insanity, it would be unwise to call him a murderer; yet most people in the West, where kill ing Is common, but where the killers occasionally pay a penalty, saw from the evidence that Thornton Hains was accessory to the death of Annls and are surprised at the verdict. "Private vengeance" can be construed as help ing to put out of the way any usurper infringing on your right to break the commandment which bglns: "Thou shalt not covet." That seems to be the only grievance an accessory to murder in the great State of New York need have in these clays of" trir angular adultery in the higher walks of life. v CLEOPATRA AXD HORACE. The Masks Stripped Prom Historical Fares of Two Pretenders. Kansas City Journal. A course of lectures on ancient history is not usually a particularly -Inspiring feature of university life. But Professor Ferrero, the distinguished Italian. historian who Is edifying the students of Columbia University and some others not matricu lated Is at least making work for the scullery maids, or whatever other attaches pick up the fragments and remove the debris when a bull runs amuck in the historical china closet SILHOUETTES BI ARTHUR A. GREENE. Now that the pay-as-you-enter streetcar has demonstrated Its feasi bility, I expect to hear some of our most respectable citizens advocating a pay-as-you-enter heaven. The death of Miss Helen L. Spalding at her home in this city on January 14 closed a life of more than common sweetness, dignity and usefulness. Miss Spalding was for many years teacher of English literature In the Portland High School, and In this capacity she came in close and sym pathetic touch with the educational life of that time and in her work was honored and beloved. On account of falling health she was compelled to relinquish this work some years ago. Her strength returning after a period of rest, she becamo active In philan thropic and church work. The de mands upon her In these lines were heavy and the duties incident thereto were met in an intelligent, sympa thetic, conscientious spirit. She will In these spheres of action be greatly missed, while In the closer relations and friendships of life her loss will be deeply felt. As an agency for the dissemination of knowledge among tho people of rural districts, the Grange is a very valuable and influential Institution. Its members are, with very few ex ceptions, earnest, thoughtful and con scientious men and women. The opinions and desires of tho organiza tion carry great weight with legisla tors, and for that reason It i3 impor tant that, before taking action upon any public question, careful and thorough consideration ' of every phase of the matter should be had. Faddists and designing persons are always anxious to have their schemes Indorsed by Influential organizations, and unless care be taken projects of doubtful merit will sometimes bo ap proved because they appear to have merit. Admitting that consistency Is a Jewel, the fact remains that few of us Tvr- - .i.. . - I "" lu juuuiBo our isst, Ior . J.-CWCIV ia ucuverms " jewelry course of the most strenuous lectures on e e e ancient history that ever scandalized . "Uncle Jlmmie" Canflelds well ordered I Tno man wh0 loafs on the street and decorous tomes. Already Cleopatra ; corner for the chariot of Opportunity is torn froin tho pages of romance and I to come along and pick him up usually inserted In the renl esfnfA ctinn. An- ' tony, the Imperial lover who. history says, threw away a kingdom for a kiss, stands or lies, unmasked as a mere adventurer of the most mercenary type. a.craftv Cor- tez clawing for the gold that lay buried in the fructifying mud of tho Nile. No mora may we with any faith in our fancv nio- ture "royal Egypt" draining a priceless j stage. in a. tup ti.i u pieuge or ner love ana no more may we plausibly paint Antony dissolving the pearl of Roman honor In the chalice of her lips. This Is the lan guage of poetic history, and Professor Ferrero declares that Cleopatra was not the resistless siren who was sent to Caesar In a bale of silk, to capture the heart of one who could not withstand tha beauty of the high gods stamped on mor tal face. The professor declares that Cle opatra was hook-nosed and had the face of one of Hoyt's caricatures of a suf fragette in "A Contented Woman." The professor does not quote the late delight ful farceur, but ho means the same thing and he declares that Antony and Cleopat ra made a prosy and mercenary alliance of expediency. Eur we might spare Antony and Cleo patra If only Ferrero had not laid Impious and iconoclastic hands on Horace our rubicund, rotund and jocund Quintus Flac cus, who deserves a better fate than this ruiniessiy nippant exhumation at the hands of a renegade historical Zueblin. If any spark of patriotism flickered fitfullv in the bosom of Ferrero he would have spared his countryman. Yet to him Hor ace Is only a "wine agent with a gift for verse." A "gift for verse!" our Quintus! We can't believe even the fifth that Fer rero says of him. Perpol! What is the world coming to when even Horace can't rest secure after these 2000 years, but must be tossed with a callous Jibe upon a pile of dirt by this "first grave digger." Let us play the kindly role of Hamlet and eay of this Roman Yorlck: "Alas, poor Horace! We. knew him, Fer rero: a fellow of infinite jest and most excellent fancy. He hath borne us on his fancy's bark a thousand times. We have metaphorically embraced him we know not how oft. When; be your gibes now, your gambols, your songs, your flashes nf merriment, that were wont to set the classes at least in a titter? Ferrero says you were only a 'wine at'ent with a gift iur verse. As good Americans we must stand up for Horace, for it was he. if memory does not trick, that wrote a recipe for a salad or something of the sort and gave us our -,Liion:ii motto, "E plunbus unum." Fer rero is only one of many yellow people In uia'i siuces. an anesthetic, give relief from pain. But for this demand of Buffering hu manity the supply of doctors would diminish, whereas It seems to Increase Instead. And who Is there among us, having experienced the alleviation of Intense pain, or having witnessed the serene passing In death of what, if the suffer ing of a racked body had not been re lieved by medical science, would have" been a struggle of mortal agony, r " after be conducted by an agent of the Chinese government, and "only through this accredited envoy will any com munication be received by the Prince Regent. The logical inference from this Incident Is that the present ruler of China Is something of a philoso pher, certainly more a Confucian 1st than a Buddhist. From time imme morial the person of the Dalai Lama has been held sacred. He has been the most exclusive and mysterious of A CONTRIBUTION TO HISTORY. Partial Nature, who does so much for her beloved Oregonlans, has sur prised them this Winter with almost two weeks of sleighing. The blessing was so unexpected, indeed, that not everybody was properly equipped to njoy it. Eager as all were to go sleighridlng, not everybody had a sleigh. Few tried the expedient which the native of Northern Michigan said would do as well, that is, to sit in a cold hall with no clothes on and soak the feet in a tub of Ice water. What we desired was the real thing, and most 'Oregonlans would be satis fled with nothing else. The Inventions which they made to gratify their pas sion for sleighing were sometimes curious. One dear old grandmother, noted far and wide among the neigh bors for her charities, hired six little boys from the slums to draw her up and down the street In an old-fash ioned rocking-chair. With her knit ting work In her diligent hands and her kindly eyes beaming behind their frosty spectacles, she presented a spec tacle of mellow enjoyment which those whb saw it will not soon forget. A farmer and his wife who were caught In' town by the tie-up of the river steamers thought at first that they must stay at an expensive hotel for several days, but through the in genuity of the good woman they man- DEATH TENALTY IX FRANCE. The guillotine which has lain idle France for several years has been restored. A dispatch from Paris an nounces that It will be used this month on twenty-two convicted mur derers now under death sentence. There has been a revulsion of senti ment throughout the French republic on the question of capital punishment. France's experiment with the( virtual abandonment of capital punishment Is worth careful attention by sentiment alists In our own land who demand abolition of the death penalty. While capital punishment was not abolished in France by law, it fell Into disuse through the importunities of tender hearted persons who Influenced the President Into commuting death sen tences. During that period experts in criminology urged reintroduction of the guillotine. Violent crimes In creased. Paris was roused to remon strance. Reaction in favor of the death penalty was rapid. Parliament adopted a resolution favoring its re tention; the cabinet decided to adhere to It. While most of the states of the Union retain the death penalty, they are reluctant to enforce it. The same sentiment that prompted citizens to Influence the President of France ac-. tually Influences Jurors in this coun try. They shrink from their duty; mercy overturns justice. No observ ant man will deny that murders In crease wherever the death penalty is seldom enforced for murder In the first degree. We have the statutes and the Individual Instinct of self preservation, but society as a mass leans too hard toward the criminal. This snow storm in Portland has revealed an evil and nuisance that ought not to be permitted again. It is the evil and nuisance of throwing snow from the roofs of buildings into the street. Buildings should be so constructed as to take care of all the snow that falls on them; or, if it must be removed, it should not be thrown into tho street. Most of the heavy piles of snow in the streets come from this source. And to see people forced to run, in order to escape the snow thrown from roofs, Is not an amuse ment suited to a city. La Follette's Weekly has appeared. It will not save the Wisconsin Senator. His finish is In sigUt. There's many a freak, and each and every freak has its day. Wisconsin tires of La Follette. Really great men never are "played out." Little men, essaying great things. Invariably are, soon or late; in most cases soon. Of course there is a crying need for Senator Kellaher's nine-foot sheet law, and that able-bodied statesman ought to be supported in his great reform. Only the five-inch politicians who could sleep under a postage stamp will discourag-e him. They who feel an Interest In the Emmanuel Movement will find it worth while to read an article by Rev. William G. Eliot. Jr.. published in the magazine section of this issue. He. discusses very ably Its limitations, perils and positive values. The South Is being made perfectly happy because President-elect Tuft proposes to treat the Southern States "not aa aliens but as members of the American Union." Perhaps, then, the South will some day quit voting us aliens, t Based on an epitome of reports of disaster to the Chinese pheasant In the storm of the past week, the sug gestion is made that it might be well to establish a closed season for a year or two, to give the survivors a chance. ONE MUD ROAD SCrPLANTED. The January bulletin of Pacific Uni versity Is at hand, brimming with good will and appreciation of the ef forts of its friends in Its behalf,' and full of promise for extension of the old and honored institution that it represents. The establishment of quick transit and frequent service be tween the college town and this city Is noted as marking an important epoch in the history of the univer sity. Those who covered this dis tance in the olden time, when the mail coach was the only means of public transit, can bring to the "rapid transit and frequent service" Just In augurated on this line a fervor of ap preciation that those who enjoy the present means of travel wot not of. The road between Portland and Hillsboro In the old days would have been Impassable for three months in the year, except for the sturdy deter mination In those days that was set against all obstacles in the way of do ing what was necessary to be done. The roads over which the mail coach lurched and thumped, at times half burled In the mud, with Its passen gers bracing themselves as well as they could against the sides of the ve hicle, and in stress holding on to each other in common discomfort, are but little better than they were In the old days; the gospel of "good roads" has not yet been applied to them, but the completion of the electric railway has deprived the mudholes and stretches of corduroy of the old road of their terror for the traveler and given not only Paclflo University but the travel- Telegrams from Washington say that "McIIarg doesn't represent the Administration, nor Taft nor Roose velt." Has he ever made claim that he did? The Oregonian thinks Mr. McIIarg a very harmless person. Down at Rainier they think the new train service on the Ocean Spray line is making the town a suburb of Port land. So it Is, to some extent, yet Rainier will always have an individ uality of its own. rOI.ITIC.4L REMARKS. Polk County Observer. In the beginning of his message to the legislature Governor Chamberlain savs: "The provisions of the direct primary nominating i.'i'.v, with respect to the elec u-m or a United States Senator, should be carrl.-d out in letter and in spirit," and expands upon that statement through sev- erai paragraphs. Why rub it in so hard, George? Ix-'banon Criterion. The Republicans who favored Statement Xo. 1 and those who have pledged them selves to its support did so ns a rule in gond faith, and were committed to It with a purpose of correcting what they h. lieved to he political evils and to reform political abuso in this state. The demo cratic leaders did not undertake it for any such purpose, but, on the other hand, they attempted and did usa it -to further political ends and corruption, and by the ubuso of primary election suffrage to de feat and pervert the objects of the law and secure for themselves political of fice. With these facta before us, it is no wond.-r many honest people have parted company with Statement Xo. 1. and that kind of corruption and the evils 'it le.ads to. Hugcne Journal. Ai a taxpayer, we earnestly protest against the expense of setting up a new s-t of county officers and erecting a new set of county buildings. We object to having land owned by many people. In cluding tile editor of this paper, only live miles south of Kugene, Included in a new county, the north line of which Is pro posed to run east and west north of Creswell. This would make Lane County a iittlo narrow strip, only a few miles wirl", with Rugeno about eight miles from the north lino at C'oburg, and about five miles from the south lino a little south of Spencer Butte There is no necessity for any such county division at this time. About 45 years ago. during tho excitement caus-d by the Civil War and hostility to General Joseph Lane, for whom this county was named and who sympathized with the s-outh, there was a great clamor raised to change the name of this county Irum Lane to Union. We. opposed the scheme earnestly then on the ground that the, name had become well known tlnoughout tho state and abroad, was in honor of a pioneer, and should not be changed for personal reasons to satisfy prejudice or local excitement, which would make uncertain all names, for If one could be changed for such reasons all could. The name was not' changed, al though it was considered In the Legislature. enila tila vIoH! n.lti. n 1 . - . i ..0.. .iu ,iuo in iiia FKllVl wagon. Now Thornton Halns Is going to write a novel. This opens up another field of endeavor for our acquitted murderers, besides the elevation of the Now we are threatened with another visitation of Francis J. Heney and De tective Burns, who are said to be after those unspeakable monsters, John B. Coffey and S. C Beach. Truly, "whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth." "Beat It, Beautiful !" O you snow, you beautiful snowl Be on your way; take your clothes and go. You're In the right church, but the wrong pew, You're no friend of ours and it seams that you Should know you're de trop, you beau tiful snow. e e People who don't know right from wrong never make the mistake of go ing right. see We are all Argonauts searching for the Eldorado of Happiness. It Is the common lot of treasure-seekers to fail and of the infinite many who set out upon the quest only the ten thousandth finds where the mother lode lies. The long, serried ranks of tha Failed, strug gling, staggering, panting along ths way as the heart panteth after tha water-brooks, follow the heart's yearn ing through heavy aeons only to find at the ultimate last a mirage. Sly one objection to the commemora tion of the centenary of Edgar Allen Poe is that amateur elocutionists will take It as an encouragement to recite "Tha Raven." Ex-Senator "Billy" Mason has broken his cerements and risen, from his po litical grave long enough to receive a complimentary vote for United States Senator from Illinois. Shades of "Bill" Chandler and J. K. Burton please take notice. If you will observe the ushers at ths theater you will observe that frequent ly a round of applause isn't on the square. Woman Hypochondriac Do you know that I'm dying by slow degrees? Mr. Kidder I fear you are right, I've noticed the change In your hair. There Is always room at the bottom. The life of an ambitions man is a comic opera without a plot. Between the ever-present possibility of a divorce case and her husband's funeral many a married woman Is kept In continual statu of exquisite antici pation. see If we were able to make a little money go as far as wo do a little truth, everybody would be prosperous. It seems to me that those who play bridge should Insist on occasionally opening a draw. Nine-tenths of the men who get Into trouble may charge It to women. All women who get Into trouble may charge it to men. On the day Roosevelt becomes ex- President, Unelo Sam will probably say to the Goddess of Liberty, "After that fitful fever maybe we can get a little rest." Still another objection may be raised against human beings: Too many of them think the comic supplements are funny. One of the chief delights of getting Into society Is the pleasure derived from keeping other people out. Undoubtedly Mr. Thornton Hains. unhung murderer, will have a lot of Interesting things to say in his great work: "Unwritten Law." A better topic would be "Violated and Non enforced Law." What's the use of anybody worry ing about what Is to happen at Salem Tuesday? Was not Chamberlain "elected" last June? Ninety thousand people were killed by the earthquake In Messina alone. The San Francisco earthquake was a small affair. . The Dalles Optimist. It would be useless to give a resume of the facts leading up to the present po litical conditions of our state, and futile for us to say that the history of the country does not present a parallel case. a case where there ever was the slightest chance of a party with a majority of five sixths electing a man from the minority. . . In speaking a few days since to one of the men who was coerced Into voting for Bourne -two years ago, this man (a member of the upper house) said to us: "If I had that vote to cast over again, I would see Jonathan Bourne in hell before I would vote for him." Every Republican who votes for Chamberlain will rue it all the days of his life; and his constituents will see that he never holds another elective office. Let every Republican member of the Legislature ponder on that remark, and ponder hard. The wages of trombone should bo on a sliding scale. players Hot mince pio Is sausage is raging. a mocker and pork The eyes are the windows aoul; particularly glass eyes. of tho The new Mayor of Freewater, Or., wants an artesian well put down at once. A town of that name should have it. Let no one think this state Is un grateful for return of Winter weather that made Oregon famous. Has anybody hinted that Jupiter Pluvius' water pipes have thawed and are leaking? Jopaneae Taxes. Chicago Journal, ft Is held by the Toyo Kelza, a Toklo newspaper, that the Japanese are today the most heavily taxed people In the world. The estimated expenditure for the current year Is J30S.000.000, which meais an average annual burden on the head of every family amounting to one-fifth of his income. A comparison of 20 per cent In Japan Is made with England, 8.9: France, 12.2; Germany, 7.9; America, 3.2; and in these other countries it- Is shown that the earning capacity of each family head is from three to five times greater. Paucity of Vocabulary. Boston Herald. Life offers handsome prizes for the best answers to the question, "What Is the Worst Novel of the Year, and Why?" But why allow the answers to contain as many as C00 words? There aren't that number of swear words In the vocabulary. "renroaesy Ivan lu.'" Hartford Couiant. It was named Pennsylvania In hon est Friend William's day. and his statue still looks down from tho hugost monument of graft In tho state's chief city the "corrupt and contented" city. Penrosesylvania seems to bo the de scriptive and appropriate name now, as Quaysylvanla was a few years ago In the timo of Holes Penrose's po litical creator and tutor. The now Gen eral Assembly at Harrisburg is doing the United States the Ill-service of re olcctiiT Mr. Penrose to tho Senate. Tie's a Harvard man, clever, convivial, qual to the making of a bright speech on occasion; in his political methods and morals he's a diligent understudy of the master (now dead) who trained him. and who on his good side was much the more likeable, as he was much the more able, man of tho two. Hie ninek Sheep. Chicago Tribune. "What," asked the man who had re turned to his native town after an ab sence of many years, "became of Ed Fer guson ?" "Ed? Oh, he's doin' fine. Got the beet livery stable anywheres around here and runs tho depot hack." "Let's see, he had a younger brother, hadn't he?" "Yes; Lem. He never amounted to much. Wrote poetry and painted pictures. I guess the family kind of disowned him. At least, he went away several years ago, and I dunno whatever became of him." Where Credit la Due. Chicago Inter Ocean. Few women give their husbands credit for their willingness to be henpecked. Oh! The Stupid Cingre. l'hilmlell.hti lt.-uord. the yeaia we waate aiul the traia we And the work of our heal and hand Belons; to the Congress that did not know (And sow we know that It never could know) Axil did not understand