TTTE SUNDAY OREC.OXTAX. rORTLAXD. DECEMBER 31. 1911. (Drortmuro rOKTLAXO. OUTGO. Inml at a-ortlaad. Orea-oa, Scoad-C:aa Matter. t.Hcnpuua iui-Invariably m Advaaea. (BT AII- affy. Btrnda tnelvried. oaa rr ? i Pally. Fandir Included, aim month..... - t"7. ana4ay lae.uded. Ihraa monlh.. Iai:y. I.sd.y Included, oa. moat-... baliy. Wltnoiit Puad.r. an. year ...... PlTr. arirnout fc'jnd.r, e:s moo-.he .... a -a Lai:y. without Suadar. thra. moo in. . 1-ts t a- r. without Sunday. Mt maul We-kly. aa. year 1 J? aaday. aa. year J-ff fcuMi aad W aa vux (BT CARRIia.) paly. "trnday Inclosed, year...... Ia!:r. 6on1ay Included, an. month.. T" Haw flenll rad PoetotTlr. money See. espree. orlr or personal chec. on y0 Wal aaa. Stamp, cor or currency ara at th sender, rlsa. Ot Bo.toff.ca addr.sa I fu'.I. Inc'utllr.a county aad state, rataa Hal.. 10 to 14 aa(ea. 1 cant: 1. la 28 p(ea. J casta; SO ta (. centa. U It u . east. ror.ua poelase. ob:o rata, Casters Boat Oflnl V.rr. Cook. Itn .Sew York. Hruaawlc hul.dins. Calca lo, ai.awr bu..d!na. Ear.p.a Offk. No. Recent atraat. a. w. Loajoa. rn Pin. A n. Kl D V. PET. t. ' Itlt 0MnX. MIOC.RE.HS) IX TEN" VUI. A most noteworthy feature of the detailed census report on the popula tion of Oregon in the showing of rapid growth by Portland and the urban population In general in comparison with the rural population. In the decade ending In 110 the population of the state as a whole Increased 62-7 per cent, but that of Portland in creased 12.3 per cent, and the entire urhan population that of cities of 25nn or more increased at the rate of 113 per cent, while the entire re mainder of the state increased only 3V1 per cent. In 1910 the urban pop. ulatl"n was 45. per cent of the whole, as compared with S2.3 per cent In 1900. The comparative arrow th of ur ban population t more rapid than in the whole Cnited States, where the percentage Increased from 4 0.5 to 4S.I per cent. and. unless the scale should be turned the other way by some, new Influence. Oregon will have a larger proportion of its people living in cities at the end of the next decade than the general average of the whole country. Though the drift of population to the cities 1 a Just caue of concern, there are some circumstances con nected with the situation of Portland which should not be overlooked. This city is the commercial metropolis, not only of Oregon, but of a large part of Washington, both east and west of the Cascades, and of Idaho. A fair com parison of the population of this city with Its tributary rural population should include the whole tributary country, not Oregon alone. Extension of railroads and trolley lines and use of automobile haa also facilitated transaction of business In the coun try by men residing In cities who would formerly have found It neces sary to live In the country- A study of the maps showing In crease and decrease of population by counties brings Into strong relief the fact that the largest Increase of popu lation has come to the Willamette Val ley and the counties around Portland and to those counties which have been newly penetrated by railroads, and to the counties of Central and Southeast ern Oregon, where agriculture Is sup planting grazing. Curry, -which has no railroad, gained between S and 15 per cent: Wheeler and Union have gained less than S per cent, and Grant alone has lost population, showing a decrease of S.T per cent. The gain In rural population follows the general gain with some exceptions. As might be expected, one of these Is .Multnomah, where rural population Increases only between 5 and 15 per crnt. while the urban population hus more than doubled. Benton. Jackson and Josephine show a less rapid, Uma tilla and Kaker a more rapid, rural than general growth, and Union shows a loss of 13 3 per cent In rural pop ulation as compared with a general gain of less than 5 per cent. What abundant room Oregon has for more people Is shown by the rec ord of density of population. In this respect the density Is greatest In Mult nomah, the smallest county 501.7 persons per square mile And In other counties has followed the general course of, increases in numbers. All of Central and Southeastern Oregon and Curry have Nti than two persons per square mile, and Harney has less than one. Kven the most densely peopled counties around Multnomah range only from IS to 45, and other counties ranire only from two to It per square mile. A survev of these figures Impresses one with the fact that, though Oregon has mado great stride In the last decade, settlement and development have only Jut begun. The census of 110 reflect only the settlement which tame In anticipation of the new rail roads into Central -Oregon and the coast region of the Natron cut-orf. and of the Irrigation of Crook. Harney. KlaJuath and Umatilla counties. That of 1J0 will refWt the settlement fol lowing upon the completion of these roads and Irrigation works. alo upon the construction of prtwpecflve rail roads, mi. h a the Hill and Harriman lines through to the southern, bound ary, across the state from east to west and to Coo Hay. the extension of the Oregon Klm-trlc line throughout the WUlamette Valley and trolley lines through the Kogue and Umpua Val leys. It will reflect the vast Immigra tion from Europe which is sure to fol low the opening of th Panama Canal. There can be no reasonable doubt that the Influx of new settlers will Increase the population of Oregon to an extent which I now Impoaa.Oie to estimate, and will go far to restore the equilib rium between urban and rural popu lation. TltS MACHINE HI BROKEN DOtTX. The prevalence of lawlessness and th Inefficiency of our machinery for detectlrg. trying and punishing crim inals I now generally recognized that the time has come for the next step discovery and adoption of the best remedy. Let us pass on from the general to the particular. We are told that perpetrators of S per cent of crime are not detected. What Is the matter with our detec tive!? We know that mar.y of those who are detected escape punishment through Inefficiency or worse short comings of prosecutor. Why can't w gat better prosecuting officers and how can we get them? We know that many more criminals ecap punishment because our Jury s stern Is radically defective In allow ing the most competent men to escape jury service, or forbidding them to aery and encouraging the placing of meat Incompetent men on Juries. Where men are guilty acquittals often result through the unwritten law, class prejudice or bogus pleas of insanity. Even when a criminal is brought be fore the court there are endless delays In empaneling a Jury and completing the trial. When he Is convicted, sen tences are annulled on appeal on all manner of technical and absurd pre texts. What Is the matter with our Judges? When a criminal Is finally landed In the penitentiary a Governor sets him free on parole or on honor after he has served but a fraction of hi sen tence. What is the matter with our Governors? Finally, what Is the mat ter with our people, that they elect such officials and allow them to con tinue In office after their unfitness is proved ? We all recognize that the machine for the detection and punishment of crime has broken down. It is time to cease bewailing the fact. We must either repair the old or build a new one. M HOOI. BOABD HELM ITSELF. The purpose of an annual school meeting under the law Is to give form and expression to the will of the tax payers. The function of the annual school meeting under present custom is to fix things In the way the School Board wants them fixed. 'The school meeting Is of course a farce, and worse. It does not reflect the desires or de signs of the voters. It merely regis ters the prearranged schemes of the school directors. The Portland School Board fixed the annual school levy for 1912 at 6 mills. The annual meeting Friday night rat ified the 6-mill flat In due form. That Is what it was expected to lo and that Is what It did. Now-, w e hear renew ed talk of abol ishing the annual school meeting and. perhaps, recalling the several czars on the School Board, or doing something else heroic and drastic. But school board 5re much alike, as annual meetings are alike. The tax levy would have been mills if the school meeting of one hunftred and fifty or sixty tax payers out of 18.000 had not been held. The mischief lies In. the arbitrary power of the School Board to levy any tax. It has to all Intents the same ul timate privilege as to taxation as any other tuxmnklng body. The C ity Coun cil, the County Commissioners, the Port of Portland, aad the School Di rectors all decide how much money they want or need, and then help themselves. There should be. a central tax-reviewing authority. Tax levies then might be placed on a safe and sane basis. t WHO KNOWS THE LAW? Carl Snyder, an Interesting and ac curate writer, contributes to a current periodical an article on 'The Scandals of the Law." Former articles by the samo writer treated successively of The Encouragement to Kill" and "The Breakdown of the Criminal Law" and the Indictment which they pre sented against our boobylsh methods of handling crime and criminals was terribly severe. In the current ar ticle Mr. Snyder presents an array of facts -which In his opinion prove two ominous conclusions. The first Is that a man cannot go to a lawyer In an ordinary case and obtain an honest and reliable opinion as to what the law Is. Secondly, a man cannot go Into court and obtain Jus tice without undue delay and ruinous cost. The common, judgment of the country will be that Mr. Snyder is right upon both these points. It is difficult to find a plain man anywhere who believes that the ordinary lawyer knows what the law Is or will always Impart his knowledge without reserva tions and subtle evasions. It Is still more difficult to find a man who re gards It as anything less than a ca lamity to go Into court either as plain tiff or defendant no matter how Just his cause may be. Mr. Snyder adopts an effective form or method of presenting his case against the courts and lawyers. He of fers the counts of his indictment In the form of questions which he proceeds to answer by heaping up evidence. His first question Is. "Do the lawyers know the, law?" To prove that they do not he presents the Instance of twenty-five lawvers of mammoth reputation who combined to offer a certain opinion to the United States Supreme Court. The Court decided against the valiant twenty-five and slew them Intellectu ally In an opinion of ten lines. At least a doxen of these lawyers were themselves of Supreme Court magni tude. Everett P. Wheeler was one of them. Frederic R. Coudert was an other. When such men as these In the most solemn manner say what they think the law Is and turn out to be utterly mistaken, shall we say that the lawyers know the law or not? It Is a common remark at lawyers ban quets where no foreign devils are supposed to b listening that "nobody knows what the law Is on any given subject." In fact, the law la the most elusive thing In the world. It exists only In the decrees of some 150 differ ent appellate courts, each of which ay differ from all the others and from Itself day by day. It Is the most common thing under the sun for a court to reverse Itself. A brilliant example of It was the late trust de cision of the Supreme Court, which not only flew squarely In the face of Mr. Taffs published opinion, but un hesitatingly turned down previous de cisions. This Is heroic. If It promotes right and Justice, but think of the mess it makes of the law. . The search for the Jinn who became successively a soldier, a cock, a fish and a pome granate seed was an easy task com pared with It. No wonder the lawyers do not know the law. There Is no Jaw to know. Mr. Snyder ask In the sYtcond place whether the lawyers can know the law. and of course In view of the facts we have cited already he Is obliged to answer that they cannot. Nobody short of an omniscient being with all embracing powers of prophecy could possibly know the law aa It ebbs and flows In the United Staes. That part of It which has a delusive semblance of stability Is comprised In a surging flood of reports, statutes and codes so Immense In volume, that It surpasses human power even to peruse them, to say nothing of remembering their contents. To bring this within the range of possibility It Is necessary to compress the swollen monstrosity Into d.gests which by their comparative brevity diminish the difficulty. But 1f anybody thinks the difficulty Is abated by the abridgment he has only to be told that the Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, a little pocket manual for the busy lawyer. U a work In twentv-thr volumes, each volume having 1100 Immense page, so that this, pigmy condensation of the law on a single aubjeot contains 15.000 pages. , Taking the two other parts of the great "abridgment" which a man must have to go with his "Pleading and Practice" there are altogether 81.000 pages In this handy little pocket guide to the labyrinths of the law. When Gibbon came to write his famous chapter on the codification of the Roman law by Justinian, he reveled in witticisms about the absurd multi tude of the volumes which the com mittee had to wade through. But their task was child's play compared with that of any man who seeks to delve Into the fathomless abysses of Amer ican law. The Chaos and Old Xlght through which Satan pursued his fatal voyage to Eden was a well-ordered realm beside It. Mr. Snyder makes his climax by asking. "Do the Judges know the law?" He replies .that they do1 not, and gives a convincing reason for his opinion. The Judges do not know the law because "The law is what any Judge happens to think at the moment when he makes his decision." and no two Judges are apt to think alike. How can any single Judge know what two or three hundred others are going to say about three or four thousand dif ferent subjects between now and to morrow night? Like other blessings. the law is something which we are always going to get but never actually getting. It Is an ever-riowlng tide which must take the Judges as well as the rest of the world by surprise the greater part of the time. Finally Mr. Snyder tells us that the courts make the law for us. and Inasmuch as each one of them goes Its own wild way. and is completely irresponsible, it naturally follows that our law is a chaos as well as a chimera. The law Is anything which any judge at any moment says it is. It Is not difficult to deduce from Mr. Snyder's facts that this Nation is about as completely ruled by the arbitrary whims of ir responsible Individuals as any that ever existed. HONDKRITL GROWTH. In another part of The Oregonian today will be found Mr. Bennett's sec ond article on the stockyards and packing Industries of this city. The sta tistics given of the North Portland postoffice. situated In the office build ing of the stockyards, will show better than almost anything else the remark able advancement made at that place. An Independent city Is being built up there, a little city with all of the Im provements and advantages of a me tropolis, with Its hotel, its bank, its water and electric light systems. Its every convenience. Three years ago the place was a bar ren waste of sand nnd water. Only two years ago on September 15 the yards were opened for business. The Swift plant was not In operation until many months later. Recall these facts and then look ahead a few years until there are several packing plants there, until many Industries to consume the by-products are there in operation to the time when the receipts of live stock will bo doubted and trebled, as they 'will be almost before we are aware of It. What these industries mean to Port land Is no guess work. We have but to look to other cities with not a tithe of our advnntages where such Indus tries have been established to see that North Portland will In the near fu ture be a par: and portion of Portland one of our most populous and pros perous suburbs. BY CONTRAST. Rural development due to, or con tingent upon, the building of electric railroads in the Willamette Valley, with Portland as the terminal point, will be extensive and Intensive during the next few years. Already substan tial improvements on the line between Portland and Salem and thence on to Eugene are In progress; Forest Grove and Its promising environments are already on 'the line of quick transit and substantial service: McMinnville Is looking confidently forward, to like connection with the metropolis during the year that will be ushered in with the ringing of Joy bells next Monday mornlng. while the ultimate construc tion of the railway to Tillamook har bor is among the certainties of the not distant future. There is in all of this a promise for the early occupation and development of rich sections of the Valley that axe big with unguessed results. The very essence of .growth Is In it. as the es sence of stagnation was In the old era of slow and tedious Journeyings from place to place with heavily-laden wagons during the Summer and Fall of a past era of isolation, and a com plete cessation of travel during the Winter and early Spring months of the same period. Wide areas and prosperous and rapidly-growing communities ae al ready served by the rural electric lines In the Willamette Valley that -relatively a few years ago were without the "human touch" or the touch of co-ordinate business and trade Inter ests beyond the narrow horizon of their own boundary lines. Less than forty years ago, for example. It re quired ten hours of laborious travel to convey the weekly mall from Portland to Forest Grove in a lurching vehicle drawn by a pair of straining, mud-bespattered horses, and an entire day while yet the roads were good In the Fall to draw a load of wheat to mar ket over the same road. The ease and swiftness with which this Journey Is accomplished now Is striking by con trast. It Is recalled further that the news of Oregon's admission into the federation of states In February, 18, reached Salem then as now the cap italon horseback, the second day after the lumbering old steamer AJax brought papers and letters containing the announcement to Portland from San Francisco. The early settlers of Oregon Irked for many years over their Isolation and the slow growth that was due to the stinted facllties for travel through out their own domain. Many of them, however, became reconciled lo these conditions and settled down Into an apathetic contentment that won for them the title of "mossbacks" an attainder that clings to them to this day. Others, however, and the ma jority, including the meager yearly, accessions to our population, encour aged the get-together spirit upon which substantial development de pends, but the processes of time were tedious In this direction and growth was correspondingly slow. But the embargo of isolation has at last been broken and year after year we are able, partly by contrast, partly by the satisfaction that It engenders, to note advancement in Industry. In trade and In social development that is due to the human touch In the relations and activities: of life. Of all these agencies the building of railway lines, whether suburban, rural. Interstate or conti nental, has been the most active. The main arteries of travel completed, it now behooves us as a progressive and growing state to encourage, by every means possible, the building of rural railway lines. In the construction and completion of these lies the open road to continued progress and prosperity. This statement does not in the least disparage the greater enterprises 'of transcontinental or coastwise railroad building, or of waterway transit. It Is auxiliary and supplemental, to these greater feats of engineering skill and corporate energy and investment. Without such supplemental energies these great enterprises would not be able to realize to the full the benefits that can only accrue from the devel opment of natural resources. Corre spondingly this development comes only with cheap and easy transporta tion facilities that feed, and support the main arteries of travel. It is the local "Bet-together" system . that is able to accomplish that of which iso lation dreams but is unable to realize. THE FARMER'S PROBLEM. "Those who sit in high places, far removed from the sweat and toll of the fields," , says the Philadelphia Farm Journal, have suddenly had a fore warning of what may happen "should the hand of the husbandman be stayed." Men" who speak with the voice of authority; men who In their boyhood worked upon farms; men who like James J. Hill, came up from the furrow to the management of great business interests sound the voice of warning saying: "Unless we produce more we shall not long be able to eat." Because of this we are told the population of the cities is facing not alone the reality of the high cost of living but many, at least face the fear of not being able to live at all. Federal and state governments and railway and steamship lines have harkened to this cry of apprehension and have set about to answer it. The farmers' mail Is heavy with bulletins and circulars of advice and prognosis. Demonstration trains flit hither and thither carrying lessons in successful farming, dairying, poultry raising and horticulture. Free and exhaustive lectures are given wherever these trains halt and farmers in throngs hie themselves thither and eagerly listen to the presentments made. All of these aids, however, as cited by the Journal quoted, have to do en tirely with the problem of produc tion; the burden of this advice pertains to how to grow more to the acre "in order that thos3 who live in the cities may not starve." The farmer is con fronted by a far different problem. What he wants to know most of all Is how to get a living and in time secure a competence from the proceeds of his toil. To be sure greater yields per acre cheapen the cost of production: but it so happens that the big crop lowers the price of the commodity and only the consumer is benefited. "There fore." says this exponent of agricul tural Interests, "while the farmer wel comes all outside suggestions intend ed to increase his crops and lighten his labors, he is more vitally concerned with getting his share of the dollars." MONOPOLY AND PRICE. It Is probably worth while to make some comment upon the letter from A. B. R. Smith, which is printed In The Oregonian today. Mr. Smith thinks he will be sustained by the average consumer's opinion when he expresses his belief that "were all the trusts and combinations of today dissolved and the factors thereof put upon a com petitive basis the price to the con sumer of articles In common use would be affected but very little. Not in these days can the price of any article in common use be kept up arti ficially for very long." We have cut down the language of the letter a lit tle, but the meaning Is not altered. Mr. Smith knows very little about the opinions of the average consumer or he would not venture to make the statements he does. The ordinary purchaser of the necessaries of life understands very well that most of the food prices ho has to pay are held up by the trusts. The price of steel products is higher here tan In Can ada or England because our trust has a practical monopoly. It has been selling to the Canadians for 322 a ton the same rails which It sells at home for $28. The price of coal is steadily advanced by the coal trust as Winter progresses. In Portland there is a combination of plumbers which fixes prices to suit Its own sweet will, and there is another combination which keeps the price of wood "at an arti ficial figure." In the face of facts like these it Is nonsense to quote the outworn maxims of a dead and gone political economy. But no sane person wants to anal yze the trusts into their elements and put business back "upon a competitive basis." That is, nobody wants to go from the waste and extortion of the trusts to the worse waste of petty com petition In great industry- What sen sible people want Is. not the destruc tion of the trusts, but the destruction of private monopoly, which, according to every just thinker in the world, is Intolerable. XCODLEO. The Pendleton East Oregonian is a singularly stupid newspaper. It is in a queer muddle over the lively ques tion of Governor West's parole and honor policy. A few days ago the Pendleton, paper had this: The Orogonian baa had iurh to pay about two MrxL-an. whom It claaacd aa "hooor nn" and who wera raarra.tad at Saj Dl.so. fal.. nut Ions tea But it cornea to Itsht that tha M.xlcaoa wera not honor man at alL Th.y wera serving- indeterminate aenten coe and wera released under tha regular oparatlona of tha law. The Oregonian haa not said any where or at any time that the Mexi cans vera honor men. It Is characteris tic of the Pendleton paper not only to misquote and misrepresent The Ore gonian, but to contradict and traverse its own statements, so as to suit any occasion or emergency. For illustra tion, look at thi now from the East Oregonian: Aa to tha prisoners over whom Tha Ore gonian fa ao sanctimoniously stirred it la Immaterial whether they were "paroled" prlsonera or "honor men." A more Import ant point In the story Is the fact that tha two Mexicans had been liberated by a former Governor and not by Governor West at alL Tha Eaat Oregonian objected because tha Portland Oregoolaa was trying to discredit Governor Wast when Jt should have taken after hla predecessor if after anyone. Wa quoted Ralph Watson in a statement that the Mexicans had been paroled several years ao by Gov.rnor Chamberlain. Nevertheless The Oregonian Is frank to say that it regards the distinction between honor men and parole men as the difference between tweedledum and tweedledee. Papers like the East Oregonian have worked themselves into a great fever of pretended excite ment because some people and some newspapers have not realized how ex emplary the honor men are and how wicked the paroled convicts, or some of them, are. Private Secretary Watson will be amazed to learn that any newspaper has quoted him as saying that those itinerant convicts iwho levanted to Mexico had been "paroled several years ago by Governor Chamberlain." Mr. Watson said nothing of the kind; nor was The Oregonian mistaken when it reported that they had been paroled by Governor West, or prom ised by West a subsequent full pardon if they went to Mexico. , The officers of the Pendleton Round-Up ought to provide a special exhibit for prize asses at their next show. The East Oregonian. has a world-winning entry that will distance all comers. THE UNEMPLOYED. The problem of the unemployed has, in the main, so far as this city is concerned been a question of hearsay one that our people have only been called upon to solve theoretically or to marvel at. as having a real or seri ous aspect, only through more or less imaginary recital. "The poor ye have always with you" has. it is true, been a recognized statement of" fact, but the term "poor" was an expression of pov erty limited to those who had been overtaken by sickness or had wasted their time and what substance had come through spasmodic and grudged endeavor in the world of work, in drink or in the various small ways of unthrtft. For the relief of need thus Induced enough has come through the ordinary channels of benevolence and charity to Insure temporary help, and opportunity for self-help later on. Singularly favored In this respect, we have heard as from afar tales of indi vidual and family destitution and per haps given little thought to them. This season, however, and to a less extent for several Reasons past, the problem of -the unemployed has pressed upon us as a reality, demand ing immediate solution. And lately, so insistent has it become, some sort of temporary solution became necessary. Hence the spectacle presented for the first time in the history of Portland of a line of willing, competent, sober men standing In line In the gray dawn of December mornings in the corri dors of the City Hall asking not alms but work whereby to keep themselves and those dependent upon them from starving. The city and county au thorities have responded to this plea with, so far as possible, due regard 'to the rights of the taxpaying public and the more pressing needs of the suppli cants. The story is before us. These custodians of the "public weal could do no less than they have done to re lieve the distress that has been pressed upon their attentionl Thus far it is difficult to see how they could have done more and still have remained faithful stewards of the public funds. The problem of the unemployed thus brought close to our doors is not one that it is pleasant to contemplate. It It not, however, one that a responsi ble community can shirk. Its chief difficulty arises In the segregation of the worthy from the unworthy and de vising means whereby to relieve the former without encouraging the latter in the pernicious idea of the hobo that "the world owes him a living." In point cf fact the world owes nothing to any intelligent, alle-bodied man thaKhe cannot wrest from it by his endeavor. It is true that many worthy men have found themselves at times In straits Induced by circumstances. Illness, mistaken judgment, unfortu nate Investment, the failure or even carefully considered plans may and not Infrequently do contribute to con ditions that bring distress upon worthy men and women, and most pitiful of all, upon little children. As a pros perous, opulent, humane community we cannot afford to Ignore the claims that these people have upon us, to the extent at least" of giving them work whereby to live. Nor is it wise or kind to Inquire more closely into the cause of which this temporary destitution is the effect than is necessary to show that the distress for the relief of which application for work Is made to the city and county authorities Is genuine and that the work supplied will be honestly performed. This much the public has a right to demand. The rest consists in giving the work where the need is the more urgent. A RESOUTIOX FOB THE NEW TEAR. When Benjamin Franklin was a boy he went down cellar with his father one day to fish a piece of salt pork out of the barrel for supper. While watching the emergence of the viand from the brine a happy thought oc curred to the boy. His father was In the habit of asking a blessing over the slices of fried pork which appeared on the table at each separate meal. Why not abridge the process and esk a blessing once for all over the barrel in the cellar? The elder Franklin did not adopt his eon's suggestion and we rather incline to think that It was not altogether wise. If we carried out his idea to Its logical conclusion, we should ask In childhood for all tha blessings we expect to need in the course of our lives and then drop the subject forever. Perhaps a tribe of blessing-mongers would grow up who, for a consideration, would provide each human infant with a complete list of the favors he ought to ask from the Almighty. This list the- child could read aloud on his knees with the proper formalities and make this exercise his first and last communica tion with the powers above. But even If all the blessings thus petitioned for should be vouchsafed, we do not believe that anything would be trained. The rigorous disci ple of efficiency will reply at once that the petitioner by wholesale would save time. "Think of the hours con sumed by the ordinary individual," he" will argue, "In saying his prayers. Ten mintues a day Is a moderate esti mate, and in a j'ear this comes to sixty-one golden hours, or more than five complete days of twelve hours each. An employe of the steel trust, for example, would accordingly sacri fice $7.50 every year by saying his prayers in tidbits. How much better off he would be if he had the whole business over and done with on New Year' day. He could rise a little ear lier on that morning and get his wholesale devotions finished before breakfast. Thus his relations with the Almighty would be kept In proper order without a moment's actual loss either to the workman himself or to the trust." Lucidly fascinating as this reason ing may appear, still it does not con vince us. To our minds the attempt o get one's full quota of blessings from above without spending the time . 1 necessary to ask for them in due and proper form savors of fraud. It looks too much like a get-rich-quick scheme. We concede that a man who should devote only ten minutes once a year to petitioning the Almighty would stand in a better light than he who never remembers the giver at all. but for all that his sacrifice looks poor and mean- There is something in the old-fashioned practice of daily family worship which strikes one as sincerely honest. The head of the family be lieves that all the good he enjoys comes day by day from a benevolent being who watches over his steps, feels for his sorrow and smiles to see him happy. To the man of intelligent faith God Is not a distant monarch ruling the universe from an unapproachable elevation, but a comrade who Is closer than a brother and always ready to help in time of trouble. . He looks upon prayer not as a dis agreeable exaction wrung from him by a hard taskmaster, but as interchange of mind with his best friend. The song which speaks of the Lord as one always near and dear, helping to bear "all our griefs and woes," is not to him a mere ecclesiastical formula, but a rich mine of truth. "To carry every thing to God in prayer" Is the sweetest privilege life offers him, and he would find his days desolate without it. Nor is his prayer a.mere petition for what are crudely called "blessings"; that is. for money, firewood, rain and Christ mas turkey. What he cares for more than these things Is the "companion ship of the Holy Spirit," as some de vout people call It. They really mean by this phrase to signify that feeling of comfort and security which comes to those who confide in the ever-pres ent love of God. Without his love we are helpless children astray in a wii derness whose paths lead nowhere. With it we are "traveling home, though" passing through a vale of tears." New Year's day Is the accepted time for resolutions, and it Is natural to want to make the very best ones we can. It is desirable to make those Which, if we keep them, will bring the utmost happiness into our lives and promote most richly the well-being of those around us. But to make a great many miscellaneous resolutions is fu tile. Some of them will be forgotten in a few days. Others will be broken at the first onset of temptation. In fact. New Year's resolutions have be come a Joke. There are men who make them in order to boast that they have broken them, which is a pity, for the best time to make a new start in life is at the beginning of the year, when the whole world is getting ready to spring into new birth. . Why not fix on one supreme resolution -which will include all lesser ones and fill the whole coming year with good if it is carried out? There is one such, supremely good, supremely beautiful, supremely potent over evil. It is the resolve to spend a little time every day In communion with the power that rules the universe. He does not care by what name he is addressed, nor for the ceremonials by which he is approached. All he asks for Is the contrite heart and the open mind which will permit his power to flow In and take possession. With his power comes peace, the peace that passeth understanding, because it Is Infinite, and with his peace he gives all the other blessings of life. God has money, power, learning, happiness in store for every human being. Each can get his share by opening his heart to the inflowing rivers of Almighty love. "The plaint of the dying year." that was voiced in a lesson in a school read er of the long ago contained (we quote from memory) this passage from the address of the Old Year to his "twelve fair children": "You my poor Decem ber, dark in your complexion and cold in your temper, greatly resemble my first born. January, with this differ ence that he was more given to antic ipation you to reflection." As the shadows of December darken and go out in the night Just at hand may all who have been oppressed by the gloom that is reflected from the cold temper of the last of "the twelve fair children" of old 1911 take new cour age and in supplanting reflection with anticipation greet the first born of 1912 with new hope and courage. A big city seems inevitably to out grow its water supply and its fire alarm system. Portland has met and tempo rarily, at least, surmounted the first difficulty. With the second it has not yot been called upon to grapple. Let us hopo that it may be wise enough to forestall the seemingly inevitable in this case and thus escape the peril that is now menacing Brooklyn that of a fire of which the department will not be notified until it becomes a conflagra tion that practically defies control. The Progress Edition of the Corval lis Gazette-Times is a book of twenty six pages, printed on heavy paper that serves to bring out the fine lines of its many illustrations, which, with the letter press, tells of the year's prosper ity of that city and Benton County. There is no particular boosting Just facts about "The Heart of the Wil lamette Valley." The work, literary and typographically, is what was to be expected. Efforts of the Municipal Association to abate the smoke nuisance are to be commended. Let these enthusiasts abolish anything less than a ten-center. Colonel Hofer. stormy petrel of Ore gon politics, is seeking enough birds of a feather to place the Big Colonel on the primary ballot. Statistics show Massachusetts has .v,a rrroa f dtjf nprcentasre of lunatics. perhaps she has the best means of caring for them. The New Year will have a dismal beginning for English textile workers, with 250.000 idle. A combine of Coast brewers to pro cure cheaper buying cannot affect the Oregon hop, which is a world product. Why not let the attorneys In inter est settle it in a six-foot ring? After twelve years' trial Success Magazine finds it is misnamed. Grand Juries everywhere are much given to pernicious activity. Blizzards in the East, while de cidedly seasonable here. Many are indicted, but few- don stripes. There was a sound of revelry at nisnL. WHERE AMERICAN TYPE IS FOUND. rltrr Believes Gravitating: Point la West of Allegkanle. El'GEXE. Or., Dec. 30. (To the Ed itor.) Anent recent comment regard Ins; the part of the country which rep resents more, nearly the American type, it may bo portient to Inquire what are the. elements which constitute the said American type. One opinion was thd mid-Wexst was the, type: anoth er the, South; some, think the West. As to the South, there are elements which formerly at least were regarded as Anti-American, viz.. the, spirit of feudalism or aristocracy fostered by the slavery system. Tills spirit llngej-s there larcely yet. Also the caste or class influence ffirst family ideas), bound up with it. which on fuller view surely would render doubtful the typ ical aspect of the South. As to the West. we. are too new yet, laying aside many important elements and characteristics, to have really founded a type, though there are good reasons for beltevinir we are more near ly typical than some other sections. The Kast is beromlnp: more a type by itself in one way largely also adopt ing elements from a post or ulira cul tural basis, thoush It has many good phases on the mental and educationul side. Yet it ran hardly now approach the typical. It is too cosmopolitan. As to Mid-West, that repion between the Mississippi and the AUegrhanies, is getting: largely "Atlantic," to coin the phrase, in sentiment or trend, though retaining much good Americanism of the bold, utilitarian type. The real flowing volatile Americanism would seem to be largely west of the Allepha-nie-s. with perhaps the valley of the Missouri as its center or irravitatinir point. Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. I think few would question on full consideration as more typlcally American than any other part of the country. Then they are sturdy, of an inquiring disposition, yet not too much given to dilettanteism, nor yet givem to the reckless innovation of new com munities. The question is. of course, largely a matter of Individual opinion, yet Is It not natural that tho type would be found somewhere near the geofrraphio center of the country. R. J. LONG WORTH. BILL HVNLKY'S FAME GROWING. Big; Orrgon Ranchman Attracts Atten tion on necent Tour. Washington (D. C.) Post. "Those who did not see 'Plain Bill Hanley when he was here with tha Western Governors," remarked 1 W. Williams, a lawyer and former Legis lator, of Williams. Ariz., at the New Kbbitt. "missed meeting one of the wonderful characters of the West. "Hanley operates one of the biggest ranches In that country. He owns hun dreds of thousands of cattle, and has the distinction of being able to drive for 80 miles over his own ranch. Han ley is the counterpart of William - J. Bryan, and, seen separately, it is al most impossible to tell one from the other. Besides owning and operating a ranch greater in extent and impor tance than the famous Kins ranch in Texas. Mr. Hanley Is much Interested in the development of the West in gen eral. He is famous for his rude epi grams. "When the conservation movement started in the East, he uttered one that went everywhere. Ha said: 'They have used up thelr'u and now they want our'n.' Perhaps his most famous epi gram he sent West when on a visit to New York City. Some of his friends wanted him to return West at once to close a business deal. He sent back word: 'I've Just struck the Great White Way. I've staked out on Broad way. New York Is going to be the horns ranch for the next 10 days." And it was. "One of the wisest of "Plain Bill's' sayings, in my opinion, was his observ ation about college men. It ran some thing like this: 'There are too many college graduates running around help less. They're so polished it's Impos sible to fasten a hook on 'em and make use of 'em.' " One Way to Get Trade. Baltimore American. In one of the rural cities of Franct lived a physician who was in the habit of employing an ingenious artifice. When he came to a neighboring town where he was not known he pretended to have lost his dog, and ordered the public crier to offer, with beat of drum, a reward of 25 louls to whoever should bring it to him. The crier took care to mention all the titles and academio honors of the doctor as well as his place of residence. Ho soon became tha talk of the town. "Do you know." says one, "that a famous physician has come here, a very clever fellow? Ha must be very rich, for he offers 25 louis for finding his dog." Tha dog was not found, but patients were. Kleetlona to Kill Vacancies. PORTLAND, Dec. 28. (To the Ed ltor.) will you kindly inform me whether the Secretary of State, to be elected next year to fill a vacancy, will serve for two or four years? I have been urged to become a candidate for the office, but will not seriously con sider it until I understand just what the term of office will be. I contend that at the next election a Secretary of State will be elected for the unexpired term of two years, but one prominent lawyer advises me that it wiU ba for a full terra of four years. E. E. SHARON. He will be elected for two years, as the election will be to fill the remainder of an unexpired term. A Case of Marksmanaha). London Telegraph. jn f,iignaiuiia.i - ...... by a New Yorker to accompany him on : , T . 1 . . a nunirng trip ox wig io.auu. (1Y n emnll wram?' 1 Q I fTI f ra 1 1 V uaia vi o.i.a.i e,t . ........... . . . asked the Briton, who had hunted in every qparter ot ma gwua "You do not expect to find lions and tigers on Long .Island, do you?" que ried the New Yorker. ,.u.l., ...nnnHol tha other, with a laugh: "but I like a spice of danger in my hunting." "If that s tno case, answereo w . .,.. 1 ' I ' ,i vnur man. all right. The last time I went out I shot my orotner-in-iaw in ma jbbi The One Charm of Venice. Kansas City Star. A voung woman who had returned from a tour throusrh Italy with her father informed a friend that he liked all the Italian cities, but most of all he loved Venice. "Ah, Venice, to be sure!" said the friend. "I readily un derstand that your father would like Venice, with the gondolas and St. Mark's and Michelangelos." Oh, no." she Interrupted, "it wasn't that. He liked It because he could sit in the hotel and fish from the window." Elements of Wool and "Water. Housekeeper. Smith and Jones were speaking about the fine points of their respective sons. "That boy of mine." remarked Smith extravagantly, "is the genuine article. He's all wool, you can bet-" "Shouldn't wonder." commented Jones. "I notice that he shrinks from wash ing." A Tearful Pair on Exhibit. Puck. "I'm the saddest thing there Is the ghost of a lost love." "Huh! I'm worst than that! I'm the ehost of a vanished bank account;"