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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1909)
the STiypAY OREGomy, portlaxd. march 21, 1909. TOKTLAXU. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce ai Second-Class Matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall.) Daily. Sunday Included, one year 18.00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months 4 25 t i ""n0" Included, three months. . 2.23 I t .. mciuaea, one month 75 K y' w'thout Sunday, one year 6 OO Da y. without Sunday, six months 8 25 Daly, without Sunday, three months. 1.75 gaily without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year 1.50 Sunday, one year . 250 Sunday and weekly, one year 3.00 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 ially, Sunday Included, one month... .75 How to Remit Send postofflce money oraer, express order or personal check oa your local bank. stamps, coin or currency J'" t,tn sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dress in full. Including county and state. ,I"ta Rates 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 18 IS 2.pt?e 2 3 to 4 pages. 3 cents; doub? "rate.""' "" Forein PO-tage -Ffi11 ,na1,larm Office The s. C. Beck En Sv.lPai. -fLBency New York, rooms 48-Trlhurne'"b'l!'dUlng!'"- Cbi- W PORTLAND, SUNDAY. MARCH Zl. 1909. ITALIAN POLITICS. The Italian voters have shown their satisfaction with Premier Giolittl's ad ministration by giving him a large ma jority in the new Parliament which has just been elected. His govern ment has been in power since .1904. when he was supported by a coalition of radicals and moderates and par tially broke with the socialists. The moderates included a certain number of Catholic voters who were permitted by the Pope to take part in Italian politics for the first time since 1870, when King Victor Emmanuel united the states of the church to the king dom of Italy and made Rome the cap ital of the nation. Pius IX declared that this was outright robbery of the patrimony of St. Peter. Although the government allowed him a large pen sion and established entire freedom of religion for Catholics and others, nev ertheless the Pope declared himself a prisoner, shut himself up In the Vati can in resolute protest against what , had been done, and forbade the faith ful to participate in the elections of the united kingdom. Some Catholics obeyed his mandate. Others did not. The Italians as a people are disposed to reverence the spiritual authority of the church while they reject its guid ance In matters political. In' this they resemble the French. The abstention of the more rigorous Catholics from politics naturally in creased the power of the radical par ties. In particular It worked to the advantage of the socialists, who made a great showing in the elections of . 1900. When this fact was brought home to the Pope, he somewhat re laxed his prohibition against voting. It was not formally repealed, but inti mation went abroad in Italy that it might be disregarded without offense. The result was that In the election of 1904 a new conservative element made Its appearance In politics. In Italy as elsewhere, the church Is the irreconcil able foe of socialism, and most of the Catholics who had abstained from politics in obedience to the Pope were men ,who agreed with its policy on this point. For the elections of 1909 the papal restriction was still further relaxed. Catholics were formally per mitted to vote in seventy-two constitu encies, three of them in Rome Itself. Whatever one may think of socialism, therefore. It deserves the credit of breaking down the isolation of the Vatican and opening the way for even the most devoted Catholics to exercise their full citizenship In Italy. , For many years it has been apparent that nothing could come of the sullen refusal of the Vatican to accept the accomplished fact of Italian unity. The church has rather lost than gained influence on the Continent of Europe In the interval, while Italy has marched steadily forward. The real or fancied necessity of keeping up a great military establishment has made taxes onerous for the people, but agri culture has been- promoted, the state has built numerous lines of railroad which are operated by the government at a good profit, and a great deal of humanitarian, legislation has been en acted. Old-age insurance for work Ingmen has been instituted by the gov ernment, the hours of labor for women and children have been reduced, and the penal code has been reformed. The school system has also been made Incomparably better than it was. In 1870, when Italy became a united na tion, only 5.000,000 people out of the 22.000,000 it contained could read and write. This universal ignorance ac counts in a large degree for the almost hopeless poverty of the country, while the conviction that the old regime was responsible for it has emibttered the Inhabitants against the political domi nation of the church. The reappearance of a clerical party In Italian politics has caused the vari ous radical factions to coalesce against it. These factions when they act to gether, control a heavy majority of the votes, both in Parliament and outside . of it, so that there is no hope of a ministry devoted to the interest of the Vatican. The most the church can ex pect is by deft management to gain the balance of power. We know from Germany how much can be accom plished by a clerical minority which acts with resolute determination against every interest but its own. The art of log-rolling, as it is called In this country, has been carried to a perfec tion in the fatherland which would surprise our most facile politicians, and there is probably no good reason why it should not succeed quite as well In Italy. We may infer possibly from recent events that the politicians of the church are planning to play off the radical factions one against the other and thus accomplish purposes of their - own. . Such a policy is likely enough to be successful In the long run. It is un deniably wiser than the alternative of remaining In seclusion and doing noth ing, but Its Immediate consequence has been the union of all the radicals, in cluding the socialists, to oppose the clericals. The struggle between the Catholic Church and the socialists is In a certain sense world-wide.- Just why it should have arisen is not en tirely evident to one not in the secret of ecclesiastical policy, since the social ists in many particulars simply reiter ate the doctrines of the founder of the church, but the fact is known to everybody. It is also curious to an American observer to see the epithets "Freemason" and socialist" linked together, as they almost always are In the fulmlnations of the clericals. In this country. If there is any sympathy between the socialist party and the Masonic lodges, it is not discernible to the public, but in France -the two or rUaaUons were closely allied in the recent struggle against the church, and in Italy the Freemasons are classed with the most active elements of radi calism. Some persons profess to s.ee in this a survival of the ancient strug gle between Manichaeism and Chris tianity. It is academic and useless to speculate whether this inveterate Eu ropean contest will ever extend to the United States. THE 11" T NAM I.I BEL CASE. Mr. Reames is probably mistaken in his opinion of the importance of tne Putnam libel case. He says in his letter, which is printed in another part of the paper today, that it is a case of small importance. The Ore gonian does not believe -that anything which seriously concerns the freedom of the press can be deemed trivial. Mr. Reames has a good deal to say which is of more or less interest, but, upon the whole, he does not Impart any new information or advance any adequate reasons for altering one's previous views of the subject. The truth is an issue in every libel case. It is virtually the only issue there is under our statutes, because, if the Jury is convinced that the truth has been told, it will almost certainly de cide that the motive was justifiable. Every circumstance in any way con nected with the affair was part of the truth. In order to make up their minds intelligently about .what hap pened, the Jury had to know all the facts. Judge Hanna held that, no matter what the facts were, they would not show that the officers were corrupt. That was his opinion, no doubt an entirely honest one. Still to the jury those very facts might have proved that Putnam told the truth when he said the officers were corrupt and the accused had a right to take his chance upon it. There can be no doubt whatever in the mind of an un prejudiced person that the Supreme Court decided properly when it or dered a new trial for Putnam on the ground that the whole truth of the af fair should have gone to the jury. What the effect of that truth will e it is hardly safe for anybody to pre dict. Mr. Reames thinks it will do Putnam no good. Perhaps it will not, but, however much of a cheap scrub he may be, and however reprehensible his methods may have been, still he is entitled to his opportunity under the statute, and the Supreme Court has done "well to shield him from wrong. MAKING THE DESERT BLOSSOM. Of the thirty-one irrigation projects undertaken by the Reclamation Serv ice, nine were completed by the first of the year. The expenditure at that date was $42,091,000 for all projects, with a balance of over $47,000,000 yet to be spent on work in progress. It may be of interest-to know that , the most expensive is the Okanogan proj ect in Washington, where 9000 acres are to be reclaimed, at an estimated cost of $585,000, about $67.50 per acre, and on which about 80 per cent of the work is done. The least expen sive, as estimated, is the Minidoka pumping project in Idaho, to reclaim 49,900 acres at J12 an acre. This, however, Is in connection with the Minidoka gravity project, which is complete at a cost of a trifle above $21 for each of its 84,200- acres, which is a factor in lessening the cost of the sister project. Other expensive canals are the Tleton, in Washington, for 30,000 acres at $60 an acre, and the Umatilla project of 20,446 acres at a dollar less. These two are about 80 per cent complete. One of the largest projects is the South Side division of the Payette-Boise, about half done, to cost $36 per acre for water to reclaim 132,000 acres. The greatest acreage is in the Klamath project, in Oregon and California, 165,000, the estimated cost of which Is $36 an acre. All of the projects are located in regions where the soil is very fertile, and just as soon as water is put on the land its value rises to a minimum of $200 an acre. Such will be' the case with the Malheur project, in East ern Oregon, latest reports from .which state the. owners of the road grants have signed up. Reclamation of the land in that part of the state will add millions to its taxable value, a bless ing much to be desired, to say naught of the addition to the producing ele ment of the population of the state. DISCOVERIES OF OIJ GREEK PAINTING At last samples of ancient Greek painting have been unearthed, show ing that the Greeks probably were the world's champion painters, as well as the most artistic sculptors and build ers. Discoveries of painted grave stones or stelae, at Pagasae, in north ern Greece, twenty-four hours' sail from Athens, at the northern head of the Gulf of Volo, off the Aegean Sea, have stirred the enthusiasm of archae ologists. The painted figures, some 6t them In their original colors unfaded, bridge mankind across the intervening gap of twenty-two hundred years, to reveal an art that civilization has been striving to see through many centu ries. Pagasae was the home of Jason, whose mythical voyage for the golden fleece has Inspired the literature of all Aryan peoples. From Jason's ship Argo has come the word argonaut, and many a ship has borne that name since. Jason was reared by the cen taur Chiron, in hiding from his half brother Pellas, who had deposed from the throne of Iolcus his father Aeson. On reaching manhood Jason demand ed the. kingdom, which Pelias prom ised to give him should Jason bring the golden fleece from the king of Col chis, now Kutais. in Russia, on the east end of the Black Sea. This was a stupendous voyage, for those days, and Pelias thought he would see Jason never again, since the golden fleece was guarded by a dragon. Jason suc ceeded through the black arts of the enchantress Medea. It was customary for the old Gre cians to erect gravestones to their dead, as modern people do. The Grecian slabs, or stelae, as they" were called, were carved or painted. They stood three or four feet high, and were one or two feet braad. Some of the choicest carvings of antiquity have come down on these tablets, but the paintings have not withstood the rav ages of time. Those recently discov ered lay for more than two thousand years as the filling between two parts of a wall that was built around Pa gasae for defensive purposes. While none of the paintings are by eminent masters, they are extremely valuable. In the absence of any master paintings, they indicate a highly developed art! The slabs represent some episode in the life of the departed. One portrays the pathos of death in childbirth the mother lifeless, the husband grief stricken, the infant in itie care of a nurse all with a fidelity and beauty that make modern people believe that Greek . painting rivaled the excellence? The discoveries are described in a brief article in the Independent, by Professor Edward B. Clapp, of the University of California. "Perhaps some one may be inclined. to ask," says the writer, "how we know that the admired works of the painters of the fourth century B. C. were mas terpieces. The answer is easy. We know it from the testimony of the ancients themselves. And among these ancients there are not a few whom we have learned to respect as unerring" critics of art. The paintings of Apelles, for example, were held in quite as high esteem by his contempo raries, as the statues of Praxiteles, and this in a generation whose critical taste was instructed and refined by the daily study "and enjoyment of works of. art of all kinds, which the iworld still regards as of supreme excellence. Incredible as it may seem, it is not unlikely that if we possessed, unin jured, the Aphrodite Anadyomene of Apelles, we should rank it even'above the Dresden Madonna, just as we are forced to admit a grandeur in Phidas, which even Michael Angelo could not attain." All this suggests anew the unques tioned antiquity of an art far antedat ing the Greeks, upon which Greek art was bullded. One thousand years be fore the time of Pagasae stelae, the Egyptians were doing surpassing work in sculpture and architecture. The products of the Egyptians of course did not equal the skill of the Greeks, yet occasionally were remarkably life like. "The modeling ' of the human figure at this time," says Breasted, in his history of Egypt, speaking of the reign of Ikhnaton, Pharaoh of 1375-58 B. C, "was so plastic that at first glance one Is sometimes in doubt whether he had before him a product of the Greek age." Eight hudnred years later, or two hundred years be fore Alexander's conquest, the Egyp tians attained results in sculpture which the same author says "can only be compared with the portraits . of the Greek sculptors at the height of their skill, and they do not suffer by the comparison' Egyptologists are also making im portant discoveries. Recently it -was announced that the coffin of Ikhnaton's mother had been discovered. But no discoveries in any part of the Mediter ranean will surpass in interest those of the sepulchral paintings in Pagasae. BEST-SELLING BOOKS. In the little play of "Pygmalion and Galatea," In -which Mary Anderson used to shine with a radiace so mild and lovely, an old Roman plutocrat, having bought a statue of Pygmalion, desires to pay him for it by the pound. The sculptor rejects the offer with scorn, holding that there is no quanti tative standard for estimating the worth of works of art. Their value is a matter of feeling which can neither be weighed nor measured, and any payment which is made for a picture or statue must be merely in the na ture of a suggestion or symbol of its real worth. The money standard, how ever, fights for existence with terrible tenacity. We are prone - to measure the amount of genius in a statue, by the price it brings in the market, and to compute the literary excellence of a book by the number of copies sold. Nor is this method so bad as some people think, or pretend to think, it is. The only way to test it is by observing how it works in practice. Are more copies sold of good books than of bad ones? If more copies of good books are sold, then clearly the sales record is a fair indicator of literary value. Few will undertake to deny that the best book in the world is the Bible. If our rule for estimating literary ex cellence is correct, it ought to sell faster than any other work, and as a matter of fact It does. Except a crank here and there, the man who has not a Bible in his house feels deeply dis graced. It is -a necessary article of furniture, and many people will go without a carpet on the floor to have a Bible on the center table. , Certainly in this case popularity is a true meas ure of literary merit. How is it with Webster's spelling book? This work of genius is despised and rejected by persons who profess to find consola tion in "Paradise Lost," but it does not necessarily follow that their judg ment is correct. Tolstoi defines a work of true art as one which tends tounite mankind into one great brotherhood. Now nothing promotes brotherhood so vigorously as a common lagnuage, and it is idle to talk about a common lan guage unless we all spell it in the same way. If one man spells "turner" with the letters "tyrniour," and another with "phtholognyrrh," both of which combinations indicate the desired sound equally well under our admir able system of orthography, they iwill not understand each other and there fore cannot be said to possess a com mon language. Fortified by consider ations of this nature, and relying upon Tolstoi's theory, with which William Morris and Ruskin agree, we conclude first that Webster's spelling book has done more to promote the brotherhood of the human race than any other book except the Bible; and secondly, that it is next to the greatest literary work ever produced. It ought, then, to be ,the second best seller in the world. Upon investigation we find that it Is. One rejoices to record that since Webster's epoch-making., work was first issued more than 30,000,000 copies have found an eager market. Even the most recalcitrant adherent of old creeds and outworn theories ought now to own that he is van quished and heartily concede that the number of copies sold is the true measure of the literary value of a book. In case he still holds out, he is invited to'answer the question whether a thousand times five hundred is more or less than twice a hundred thousand. At first glance the inquiry may seem impertinent in a literary discourse, but it is not. It goes to the very heart of the subject. By its aid we shall dem onstrate our thesis beyond all possibil ity of cavil. Let us make the ludi crous supposition that five hundred copies of Shakespeare will be sold an nually for a thousand years. The sup position is ludicrous because many more will be sold, but one likes to be on the safe side in conducting an argument. The sum total will be half a million copies. On the other hand, of a work like "Trilby" a hundred thousand copies will be sold annually for two years and then the book will be forgotten forever and ever. Ap plying our measure of literary merit, w-e find Shakespeare to possess at least two and a half times as much of that desirable quality as "Trilby." The truth of the matter is that in the long run popularity is the best and in fact the only measure of literary or any other kind of value. Fundament ally, all value is the same, and those j who undertake to discriminate between the value of a work of art and that of a spade will always find themselves in great difficulty. At first glance, to be sure. the difference sems -lna. enough. A spade Is useful, while a picture simply pleases. One has es thetic value, while that-of the other is only utilitarian. But if wa in riii T0-a ourselves for a moment in the luxury or oemg honest, we must admit that the spade also pleases, that in simple truth it pleases a s-reat deal -mnrA poignantly, and affects many times more people than the picture does. At the bottom of things the esthetic is nothing more than a faint and fer.in Image of the utilitarian. People -who say mat a spade is not beautiful are only less silly than those who say a picture is not useful. Everything which contributes to the extension of life is both beautiful and useful. When we delve beneath the surface of things the two words are found to mean the same. THE DEMONSTRATION TRAIN. The railroad demonstration train has become one of the most important features of promotion and educational work on the part of our great trans portation systems. For several years "corn specials" have been running through the great cereal-growing dis tricts of the Middle West. So effec tive has been their work that in many localities' there has been directly traceable to their efforts an increase of 50 per cent in the average yield' per acre where demonstration ' train methods have supplanted the old-time system of farming. In the South sim ilar good results have followed the ap pearance of the "boll weevil specials," which the railroads have operated through the cotton districts, where farmers annually suffered tremendous losses by the ravages of the pest that ruined such a large proportion of the cotton crop in many counties. The Harriman lines in. the Pacific Northwest have undertaken this work on an elaborate scale, their demonstra tion trains which have already made tours of the farming districts not only attracting large crowds, but actually awakening an interest in the subject that cannot fail to show good returns. The two demonstration trains which will be operated by the Harriman lines next week will cover widely divergent features of farm life, but each in its special field will accomplish much good. No farmer wio will pay strict attention" to the advice and 'instruc tions given by the experts who, accom pany these trains can fail to derive some benefit from them. The truth of this has been- demon strated " so' often that the railroads cheerfully spend large sums of money equipping and operating these trains, knowing to an absolute certainty that the money will be returned to them In the shape of .increased traffic cre ated by better methods of farming. The high prices at which all classes of farm products are' selling have quite naturally made the agricultural indus try much more attractive than ever before, and with the railroads striving to increase the output and showing how it can be done, the value of the industry to the country will be rapidly enhanced." m - AS TO PORTLAND'S MAYOR. Not diffidence nor lack of duty holds the many aspirants for Portland's Mayor . from marching up to the City Hall with petitions for Republican nomination. The gentlemen all are men of courage and patriotism. But somewhere is a flaw. Two years ago this day the candidates were not hid den; nay, indeed, they had hied them selves into the open, so that all their fellow-citizens might see and choose. It may be the aspirants are filled with too much respect for Dr. Harry, the incumbent, to declare by any act of theirs that he is not good enough to succeed himself. But, on. second thought, the aspirants are probably not to that degree respectful. Perhaps, then, they have so much regard for one another that they dislike to put themselves first. But as such fine sen timent was never seen in Oregon up to this writing, one probably presumes too much even to think of it. It may be the aspirants fear their respective superior merits may 'not win the regard of the people. If they feel that way, all good citizens will seek to dissuade them from the no tion. They ought not to look too closely at the fate of the patriots who were beaten by the present holders of office in state, couflty and city govern ment. Some day a Moses will arise to lead this chosen people of Oregon out of the wilderness, and who knows but the next Mayor of Portland will be the Moses ? Candidates should not, therefore, be dismayed by the dismal spectacle of United States Senators, Legislature, state officials or City Council. Merit will find reward If it lives long enough. Let the gentlemen all get in. The people cannot be so bloodthirsty that they will always scratch and slash. FRENCH INCOME TAX. The French income tax, which is causing some disturbance for the wealthy classes and corresponding hilarity among those who have no in comes, unlike some of its predecessors in European countries, was not levied as a war tax nor as a free-trade meas ure. Instead, it is intended as an ad junct to a protective- tariff, and is ex pected to ease the burdens 'on those who are in pcor condition for bearing them and perhaps to bear a trifle harder on those who have incomes. The income tax in Europe is more than a century old. It was France which first forced Great Britain to levy such a tax. Then it was regarded strictly as a war tax, and, as soon as the Na poleonic wars were ended, it was abol ished, and for nearly twenty-five years revenues were obtained from other sources. The Income tax was a prominent feature of the Cobden financial policy, and it has been retained since that eminent free-trader incorporated it with his scheme of finance as a sub stitute for tariff duties. It has grown into such proportions in England that today nearly one-fourth of the ex chequer receipts of the United King dom comes from income taxes. The new French law, while termed by its opponents "a cleverly devised appeal to the masses," seems on the whole to be framed about, as fairly as it would be possible to - have such a measure. It is based on the theory that the wage-earners and recipients of small incomes should escape with lower taxes than under the present system. To accomplish this result many of' the petty taxes which have made the French tax system ridiculous will be abolished, and in their place the deficit will be made up by the graduated tax on incomes. " , This rate of taxation will increase as the size of the income increases, nnri it will also be based to & considerable extent on the sources from which the Income is derived. For example, in comes which are earned will be tn-rAri less than those which are secured by inheritance or investment. There is also a provision in the law which pro vides for "a hle-riAi- ia r f taTstiAn nn an alien than on a French citizen. The income tax in the United States until quite recently has been a dead issue, since the Supreme Court decided that it was unconstitutional. The princi pal grounds for this decision, which was rendered in a test case to deter mine the merits of the income-tax feature of the Wilson tariff act in 1894, was that the Constitution expressly states that "all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform thrniirhnnt the United States." ' The French experiment will be watched with considerable, interest, as It is certain to make some great changes in the entire social and indus trial system, its effect being radically different from any which might follow the levying of an Income tax for war purposes. ' COLONEL BULLY SELLERS SCHEME. Colonel Daniel J. Sully, who became famous a few years ago by buying large quantities of cotton "from men who had no cotton and at the proper moment accepting in lieu thereof gold and greenbacks at par value, has an other scheme. He sets forth its merits in the April Cosmopolitan, and the proposition in many respects resem bles that of another celebrated Colonel named Sellers. Colonel Sully is desir ous that the American Government shall take charge of the cotton output of the United States and store it until such a time as the price rises to a point that is satisfactory to the grow ers. Against this stored cotton Colo nel Sully would have the Government Issue certificates which would pass as legal tender. He asserts that "the steadying influence- these certificates would have upon American finance cannot be overemphasized," and that the present resources of the banking institutions consist of stocks abnor mally sensitive to economic changes. "Cotton certificates issued by the United States Government under a comprehensive chain of bonded ware houses," says the Colonel, "would in troduce to the American banks loan ing money on these receipts and re-discounting-them a new and all-important form of what are called liquid assets. Cotton would, therefore, cre ate the elasticity long needed in Amer ican finance." "Elasticity" and "liquid assets" are fairly good terms for describing the kind of collateral that cotton .would make if it were stored away until tne price suited the growers. It is to be feared, however, that the elasticity would be so great that it would be im possible to prevent this new factor in American finance from displaying such excessive "stretching" that confidence might be disturbed. There is also the danger of some of these liquid assets trickling out through the cracks in the warehouse floor. There is nothing new in the scheme of Colonel Sully except the commodity which is to supply the collateral. There is also no possibility of its be ing seriously considered. If the Gov ernment began warehousing cotton and guaranteeing the warehouse cer tificates, it could not consistently re fuse to follow the same course with wheat, corn, oats, potatoes, butter, eggs and all other agricultural prod ucts which at stated periods and in some localities display so much elas ticity that they are not at all attractive to purchasers. OUR WHEAT "RESERVE." The manner In which the misleading Government report is being used to depress wheat prices in the East is shown in a circular Just received in Portland. It is Issued by C. A. King & Co., of Toledo, O., one of the best known grain houses outside of Chi cago, and reads: - Pacific Coast wheat la 'coming East. Re liable railroad officials say they are ship ping Oregon,- Washington and Idaho wheat east to mill in transit to southern markets. Farm reserves in the three states this month are estimated at 9.000,000. while the crop this year was 43.000.000 bushels, 6.000,000 less than a year ago. Pacific Coast shipped 20.000,000 east during the Gates year, but cannot this season. Prices are different and the supply is smaller. There is no wheat going East except the usual limited supply of fancy stock which is used for breakfast foods. The farm reserves of the, three states, as previously stated, are not to exceed 1,000,000 bushels, and the total amount In farmers' hands, at tidewater and in the mills in the three states is less than 5,000,000 bushels, an amount hardly sufficient to supply home re quirements until another crop Is avail able. The ridiculous feature of this story, which was eagerly gobbled up and used by the bear interests on the Chicago Board of Trade, lies in the Impossibility of securing any wheat in the Pacific Northwest at a figure that would admit of its being delivered anywhere in Chicago territory at less than 1.34 per bushel on track. Compared with this figure, it is pos sible to buy wheat of a similar grade In Chicago at less than $1.25 per bushel, and in the outyling markets for less money. If the gentlemen who are engineering the bear cam paign are depending on receiving a considerable portion of 9,000,000 bush els of Oregon and Washington wheat to deliver on May and July contracts, or to replace other wheat which can be delivered on those contracts, they are doomed to experience an awaken ing that may prove costly. FOREIGN LANGUAGES. Fresh Interest in the study of mod ern languages has been awakened, by the action of Harvard University, which has placed French and German on an equality with Latin and Greek as entrance studies. The student must be able to read and write them and to understand them when spoken. This Is more knowledge than students often acquire of any foreign language in school. All that a boy or girl usually acquires' is some knowledge of the grammatical structure, the forms of the irregular verbs and the ability to read if there is a dictionary at hand. Without a dictionary even reading is beyond them. The Springfield Repub lican well remarks that our schools do not teach the languages as well as they are taught in Europe. It Is a rare thing for an American to speak French or German as fluently as foreign pupils learn to spaak English. One reason for this deficiency is our Inveterate love - of formal grammar, which we conceive to Impart some pre cious species of culture not otherwise to be attained. Our pupils learn gram mar, but not language. In the sec ond place, we do not begin with them early enough. The time for acquiring new language is m the first school years. In the high school it is too late, except for rare scholars. Some can take up a new language in middle life and master it thoroughly, but most people either learn a language in child hood or not at all. French and Ger man would be desirable substitutes for the excess of arithmetic and geography now taught in the primary grades, and would have the great advantage of be ing useful. Nothing adds more to a persons's opportunities in the world than facility in one or more foreign languages. Beginning German in the third or fourth grade and pursuing it for three or four years, a pupil could leave school with a good speaking and writing knowledge of it. If he knew uul nnie oi me grammar, it would not matter. He could remedy the defect later in life. - SensiblA ln.air.ii.tinn i the foreign tongues, combined with manual education, would make a great Improvement in the curricula of the public schools. Monmouth repudiates any sugges tion or intimation that it supports the proposed referendum against the Ore gon Agricultural College appropria tion. The Monmouth Commercial Club has adopted resolutions designed to mate clear the position of that com munity, which is of entire friendliness to the Corvallis institution. It seems plain that the great Ashland enterrrlA will not have much indorsement else where. Or is it an Ashland project? ow many people there really fancy that the movement is judicious or is beneficial either to the state or to the normal schools? Just now, when feel ing is acute, it may be easier to get signatures to the referendum petition than later, when the inquiry will nat urally arise in the mind of the average citizen of Jackson County as to what he is really accomplishing for himself by endeavoring to injure Corvallis. In connection with the article on top grafting old apple trees, published on page 2 of the magazine section to day, M. O". Lownsdale wired The Ore gonian late last night that, owing to a fault in one of the illustrations (Cut No. 3), orchardists are likely to be misled in that particular. The scions at top, bottom and left should be re versed and all so placed that the cam bium of scion and trunk coincide. Nurserymen know and others may learn that the cambium is the soft cel lular tissue between wood proper and inner bark. It is in this tissue that growth takes place and perfect contact Is necessary. If grafted according to the plate,' a complete failure would re sult. If. to save time, we must abbreviate, let it be Taft, pure and simple, just plain Taft. It may be forgivable on the .unique occasion of the Yale din ner for the President of the United States to be universally hailed as "Bill," but hereafter all should drop that undignified familiarity. The country had a rest from this fashion during the period between "Jim" Blaine's candidacy and the accession of Roosevelt. After seven years of "Teddy," this Nation can afford to do without a diminutive name for its chief executive. There are more ap propriate ways of expressing respect and affection. It needed such an accident as hap pened at "central" yesterday rnorr.lng to demonstrate the universal depend ence on the telephone. ' Fortunately, paralysis of the service was of short duration. No one suffered except the subscribers ; still the loss of time and temper in the aggregate was very large. The mishap again illustrates the fact that any wire carrying elec tric current involves danger of fire. Perhaps experience will teach builders and electricians the cause of "myste rious" combustion, and inventive skill may fashion effective safeguards. Mr. William Hanley has been indict ed for illegal fencing of 85,000 acres of land In Malheur County." He is one of the gentlemen who want the state to go into the -railroad business for the benefit of their land in Eastern Ore gon. C. E.,S. Wood, In the pay of a land grant company, is another. The Hawaiian Legislature has a streak - of humor. The Senate has passed a bill to forbid aliens fishing in those waters. If there is anything in the islands that is not alien, it is in the dark. The bill is aimed at the Japanese, of course. Dr. Woods Hutchinson, formerly of Portland, now at large, is now de scribed by the reporters as "the emi nent medical authority." That will make the other Portland doctors feel good. When District Attorney Cameron wagered money on his own election as Governor next year, he did not have In mind one of the provisions of the corrupt-practices law. When Mayor Lane says Portland weather is unfit for monkeys, he ought to specify the kind he means -those in the City Park or those in the City Council. ' Governor Benson is said to desire his old office again after next election. The next Governor might not, how ever, be elected United States Senator. Let us see. The telegraph is state owned in France, and state ownership is the great panacea for labor trou bles. But not this year. Just yet. District Attorney Cameron has bet twenty-five dollars that he will be Oregon's next Governor. Then he ex pects to prosecute Banker Ross? A woman spiritualist leader has been jailed in Spokane for assault. Locks and ropes should not detain a true one of the cult. Stormy weather again at the equi nox. But of course it's an old fallacy that the two have any connection as cause and effect. The gentlemen who want the Job of Federal Judge in Oregon doubtless are grateful to Fulton for having the job created. - There was no maudlin foolishness about that Cooper verdict yesterday. The jury said it was just plain mur der. Luckily for Oregon's Senators, there is no prospect of moving Portland's postofflce to a Puget Sound city. . It will be noted that Harriman's physicians said he has done enough, not that he has done too much. THAT O. A. C. REFERENDUM. KnniR. w Harney County News. The people of Ashland have started a movement to call the referendum on the appropriation for the Agricultural Col lege. This is in a spirit of revenge be cause the normal schools were knocked out. Spite Work. Portland Labor Press. The proposal to call a referendum upon the appropriation for the Agricultural College u spite work pure and simple. The normal school sang are mad because their graft" ha3 been cut off and now they are going to do their best to cripple the most useful educational institution in th state. Whether the normal gang are get ting any help from other sources or not The Labor Press, of course, cannot say. Proposal In All Wrong:. Gervais Star. To curtail the usefuln?ss of the Oregon Agricultural College would be very un fortunate Indeed. The proposition to In voke tho referendum upon the O. A. C. appropriation is all wrong and should not be for a second tolerated by the peo ple of Oregon. It 'was born in malice and should have io standing. There is no warmer friend of the normal school any where than is the Gervais Star's editor. We cannot believe that the normals woul-i stoop so low as to interfere with a more fortunate educational institution. Better dwell in unity and keep everlast ingly at it. No Alarm Over This Bogle. Corvallis Gazette. The project will fail, as it-must Justly deserve to, for the simple reason that the Intelligent and sensible people of Oregon know the great work that O. A. Ci is do ing and . how necessary it Is for the col lege to be properly equipped In order to impart Just that sort of practical instruc tion the people themselves most desire. There Is no cause for alarm, no reason for becoming hysterical over the appear ance of this bogle, no profit to be gained in arousing further animosity. The people of Oragon know full well the necessity for thoroughly maintaining the O. A. C. and they cai be depended upon to do it, too. Overworking; the Referendum. McMinnville Telephone Register. There seems to be grave danger of the referendum being overworked this year. The result of Its abuse by the people of the State of Oregon can be nothing short of bringing an otherwise useful agency of the people into disrepute. Whenever the referendum is invoked through revenge the intent of the act is nullified. This referendum will very likely fail. The agricultural districts of the State of Ore gon will remain loyal to the only college in that state that makes a pretense of catering to the wants of the farmer, the dairyman and . the horticulturist in the dissemination of knowledge useful in their several vocations. School Stands for Enlightenment. Pendleton East Oregonian. It would be absurd, indeed, to hold up the O. A. C. appropriation because the normals were not properly treated. The Agricultural College was not responsible in the least for the mistreatment of the normals. The Benton County delegation fought for the normal schools. Possibly the Southern Oregon people want to strike a blow at the mossbackism of the Wil lamette Valley. But they should not at tack O. A. C. That school stands for the progressive element, not for the moss backiam of the Valley. Let it be hoped that nothing will come of -the attempt to refer The Agricultural College appropria tion. Making; a Great Mistake. S&ntlam News. While the News thinks the appropria tions made for O. A. C. are extravagant and ought to be curtailed, the spirit of revenge or retaliation with which our Jackson County friends are invoking the referendum, we believe, 13 a mistake. The referendum should be invoked only from a spirit of justice and fair dealing. Jack son County people should remember that the Crater Lake road proposition for the passage of automobolies is not yet out of danger. Other people can act from re venge motives, as well as they, if they wish to do so. Our Jackson County friends are making a mistake. They should have some other county start the referendum movement against O. A. C. Let Eugrene Set the Example. Eugene Register. Again tho Register desires to urge upon the people of Lane County the wisdom of passing up tha proposed referendum on the Agricultural College appropriation. The Corvallis institution needs and de serves every dollar asked for and received at the hands of the Legislature. If the Eugene Commercial Club and all other such organizations in the county as well as the granges would pass strong reso lutions in opposition to the movement it would have a big influence not only in this county, but over the entire state, toward stopping the movement. Let the Eugene Commercial Club set a good' ex ample by acting at the earliest possible moment. Modern Legislative System to Blame. Oregon Weekly (U. of O.) That some citizens are so blind to their own interests as to fight adequate support of higher education at every opportunity, would be no one's misfortune except their own if the modern Oregon system of making every man his own Legislature did not give to any person with the time and money to circulate a petition the power to hold up an appropriation, how ever just and however badly needed. In voking the referendum on the O. A. C. appropriation would not endanger it, for after tho campaign of education waged by the University last year no just ap propriation for either school would be refused by the people. A year's delay In making needed Improvements would be the unfortunate circumstance, a circum stance hardly to be avoided if the gen tlemen in Southern Oregon have not enough business of their own to distract bhem from securing the small required number of signatures. Jiew Excuse for Playing; Hookey. Topeka, (Kan.) Dispatch. An 8-year-old Ivansas boy, absent from school two days, was required by his mother to write his excuse, and this is what he handed to his teacher: "Mamma keptmehomewiththe smallpoxbutitbroke -out." Rhubarb Walts Pie Factory. Little Rock (Ark.) Dispatch. A. S. Perry, a farmer in Canadian County. Okla., has such A good crop of rhubarb on his 45 acres that he worried for fear that no one would start a pie factory. , 4