THE SXJXDAT OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JANUARY 19, 1913. 6 S xxgpimratt . PORTLAND. OBEGOJJ. Entered t Portland, Oregon, Poatofflca Second-class matter. Subscription Bates Invariably In Advanca. (BY KAIL) Daily. Sunday Included, one year Dally, Sunday Included, auc montha. . Dally. Sunday Included, three montha. ri:v Si-nHaw itvlniln ana month. .. .s.oe . X.M . .75 Dally, without Sunday, ona year - Dally, without Sunday, lU montna a." Dally, without Sunday three montna Dally, without Sunday, ona month. .. Weekly, one year Sunday, one year ..... bunday and Weekly, one year (BY CARRIER.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year.... Dailr. Bundar Included, one month. 1.T3 .. 0 .. 1.S0 .. z.so .. S.50 0.00 .75 How ta Kemlt Send Poatofflee money or der, ezpreaa order or peraonal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the tender-, risk. Clae poetott.ee addreaa In ull. Including county and atate. Postage Kate 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent: In to Jf paea. i cents; SO to 40 pagea, 40 to 60 pare, e centa. Foreign postage, aoubie rate. Eastern Buslnew Offices Verree Conk 11a New York, Brunswick building. Chi cago, fcteffer building. ban rranrfac Office R. J. Bldwell Co.. T4- Market street. European Office Na S. Regent arret. S. W.. London, " PORTLAND, SCXDAT, JANUARY 19, 1913. MINSEV8 HER&KR SCHEME. Frank A. Munsey, as a practical pol itician, proposes that since the Repub licans and Progressives combined were shown by the election to outnumber the Democrats, they should unite their forces and take control of the Govern ment under a new name. Theodore Roosevelt, as another practical poli tician, says: "We have beaten the Re publicans, after they had cheated us out of the nomination, .now ir anv of them believe In our principles, let them Join our party. As for us, we will have no dealings with the men who swindled us." The Colonel's reply does not truly present the editor's scheme, which is summed up in these words: vnrm a new nartv a holding party. take over the Republican and Progressive parties, a a holding company in tne ousi ness world takes over and amalgamates competing concerns. The Republican and Progressive parties. politically speaking, are emphatically competing concerns and In competition with the big Democratic party they are powerless. Let the voters of each party In the sev eral states call a conference, a state-wide conference, to discuss the plan and appoint delegates to a National conrerence. jaci party would hold its own conference mad im nf i Lit own men. The National conference, on the other hand, would consist of an equal number of delegates from the two parties. The work of the National conference would be to get together on principles and policies and to select a name for the new holding party. It would not only embrace the problem of harmonising, but would have to work out policies and principles that would be representative of the best thought of the day. A thorough study by the conference of the problems of government, both state and National, would be a businesslike way of arriving at a sound basis for amalgama tion and for nxlng upon the policies and principles of the new party. The New York Mall compares the Munspv arheme with a veil of "Come back" from the troops to the color . bearer who has planted the standard on high ground right in front of the foe. It makes the color-bearer reply: These colors never go back. Bring tip the men in the rear!" It recalls the 4,000,000 votes which the Progres sive party polled and says that party's work has only begun. The Mall takes the force out of Roosevelt's allusion to Barnes, Penrose and the "theft" of the nomination by saying: . His proposal for a union of voters carries no plea for recognition of the old Republican machine and Its discredited bosses. On the contrary, he distinctly declares against such recognition. Insisting that they must go out of business But the Mail predicts that, the Re " publican machine being in the scrap heap. Its voters will spurn It and join the Progressives. Munsey Is warned by the Indianapo lis News that "it is never safe to out line a policy for his party without first consulting- Its anointed chief." .The News sees an edging together of mem bers of the Republican and Progres sive parties, but says: With the leader oppfklng all schemes looking toward a rapprochement there Is not likely to be a coming together. The Progres. etve party Is distinctly a one-man orgnniza . tlon and what the "one man" says "goes." The Brooklyn Eagle thinks recon ciliation impossible for these reasons: The Republicans and Progressives do not merely dislike each other. They are ready lor such bitter business as the day would quake to look upon. Nor Is this all. The Republicans have anme respect for the Constitution and the courts: the Progressives none. And about other matters they differ not less rabidly. As an amendment to Munsey's scheme the Kagle offers this sugges tion: As each side wants nothing more than to beat the other to a fraxzle. Mr. Uunsey mlght hire a hail for a few of the belliger ents. He would get his money's worth. The Eagle heaps ridicule on Roose velt's revived rage over the Chicago "fraud" and suggests that, if the Re publicans accepted his invitation to Join the Progressive party, the "bare faced swindlers" might carry the Pro gressive primaries, "not honestly, of course, but by the customary tricks and devices"; that "the thieves who stole one convention might steal a party" and that, therefore, "there is safety only in isolation." Roosevelt's new declaration of tsar on the Republican party Is taken by the Chicago Inter-Ocean as an admis sion that it Is very much alive. It sug gests to him that "it has been the habit of American political leaders to regard the slate of controversy as wiped clean by the loss of the prize over which It arose, and to look to the future rather than to the past." - Munsey's advocacy of abolishing sectional lines in politics meets with the Inter-Ocean's approval. The question raised by Munsey is pronounced by the New Tork World to be the least urgent, the World say ing that "neither wing of Republican ism will be in a position to command anybody for two and probably four years to come." It continues: What may happen In that time no one ran tell. A great deal will depend upon how the Democrats, now In power In most of the states, and soon to be In control at Washington. Improve their opportunity. The men who disrupted the Republican party made a good Job of it. Are they al ready penitent? Referring to Roosevelt's reply, the World says: It was certain that no holding company could control the Roosevelt vocabulary. Ilr. Munsey will kindly consider himself evicted from Armageddon -for conduct unbecoming aa "angeL" Munsey will be regarded by Roose- , vert as' a backslider, in the opinion of the Springfield Republican, which sug. gests that he may be read out of the Progressive party. It says his merger scheme "has served to disclose the ex istence of a body of sentiment In the Progressive party favorable - to the Idea." and continues: Several progressive gentlemen like Mr. Prendergaat and "Tim" Woodruff, of New York, heartily Indorse It. Others approve It more warily. It might be added that. In New Jers, Progressives and Republican arranged for a get-together conference some time affo. Roosevelt's rejection of Munsey's i scheme Is approved by the Chicago Evening Post, which comments: There la plenty of room In the Progressive party for all Republicans who want to work for principles. There la no room In the Re publican party for the Progressives. It ia futile to talk of artificial mergers and the reconciliation of irreconcilable forces. The "Progressive party represents certain Ideaa of govern meat which are plainly set forth in the party's declaration of faith. The door le otgen to every man and woman In the NarWm who cares to enter Into the faltn. . EVidently it Is the opinion of news papers reflecting both Republican and Progressive sentiment that Munsey's scheme betrays a decided wavering in the Progressive ranks. Republicans smile and jeer at the Colonel s reply, while Progressives cry: "Close the ranks" and "Let therh come to us." But are the Republicans going to the Pro gressives, or are the Progressives' re turning to the Republican party? CLEARING I P SOME ERRORS. The Oregonlan has a letter from a valued correspondent, discussing the auditorium and its site. It prints the communication here, for it deems the question .of acute public interest, and it thinks the opportunity ought to be taken to clear up several misappre hensions. . Regarding the Auditorium: It la not the purpose of this letter to recommend any alts, nor to enter Into any controversy, but rather to ask The Oregonlan to answer a few questions, questions concerning all cit izens and taxpayers. Does the Oregonlan, the Portland plans committee or the Auditorium committee ad vocate or recommend the market block for any other reaaon than that It ia the only available location (If either doea recommend said location)? Is It not true that with streetcars run ning on two sides, the market block would be so noisy that It would be Impossible tor the majority of large audiences to hear a speaker? This question J am led to ask because last Wednesday I waa unable to hear speakers where one line of cars passed the hall, notwithstanding the crowd num bered less than 300. If noise would kill the efficiency of the Auditorium, and If voters were advised of this fact, la it not the opinion of The Ore gonlan that they would readily vote $200. 000 for a site rather than "nave the $800,000 already voted lost by being; Invested in a useless building? , Again. If voters really realized that the market block la surrounded by shacks, laun dries and - livery stables, that It Is so near the waterfront that visitors would be un favorably Impressed with surroundings, etc., would they not vote for the bonds which they turned down. at the laat election? Can the market block be legally aold ? Will additional land required If the Auditorium la located there be very expensive? GEO. T. ATCHLEY. The Oregonlan thinks the market site the most available location. K could name several sites in the heart of Portland such as the Portland Hotel, . or the Postoffice, or the Corbett block that would be better. but they cannot be procured for obvious reasons. All things constd ered,' the market block is satisfactory as to location, and the argument as to cost is unanswerable. The archi. tect now says no more ground need be acquired. The architect says that street noises will not be audible within the Audi torium and there need be no alarm about passing streetcars. ' . The market block cannot be sold. It is idle to talk of resubmitting' the $200,000 bond issue. The people have passed once decisively on the ques tion of more bonds, and it is trifling with their deliberate judgment to ask for another vote on any pretext. Finally, If shacks, laundries and livery stables orfend the esthetic eyes of any visitors, we reckon the loyal Portland man or woman ought imme diately to distract his attention by pointing out the beauties of the Audi torium. . ONE VETO THAT SHOfLD BE SUS TAINED. Two of the bills that have passed over the Governor's veto by the Sen ate deserve " thoughtful and mature consideration by the House before the action by- that body makes their dis position final. . ''-.' In one' of these, S. B. 216, the Leg islature in 1911 apparently attempted -to correct what has been an undesir able: condition in commencing, actions against 'and . serving summons upon certain, corporations. It. has been pos sible for the foreign corporation to maintain its accredited agency in some county remote from the places where most of its business is transacted In Oregon and practically avoid the ser vice necessary to get the corporation into court in a civil action. The second of the bills, S. B. 217, was designed to relieve, ior ex ample, the traveler residing in one county who might be Injured while on board a railway train In another county. Under the present law he could not bring action for damages in his own county, but only In the county where the accident occurred, or in the resident county of -the railway cor poration. ' The supporters of these bills per haps were unconsciously laboring un der a common delusion that whenever the word "corporation" is used, a pub lic service company or trust is re ferred to. But there are hundreds of mercantile, manufacturing and other businesses thut are incorporated and are not public service corporations or monopolies or other than properly con ducted institutions deserving of the same rights and privileges accorded partnerships and individuals. Senate Bill 216, which relates solely to service of summons, would perhaps not be unfair toward these institu tions, but its' companion bill. No. 217, is so sweeping that Its enforcement would Inevitably result In injustice and hardship. A corporation must now be sued in the county where it has its principal office, or in the county where the cause of action arose. The proposed bill would per mit actions te be commenced and tried against a corporation In any county where the corporation had an office or agency established for the purpose of transacting or soliciting any portion of its business, if the Plaintiff resided in sam county; more over, if the plaintiff did not reside in that county, but the cause of action grew out of or was connected with such agency, the- action might be brought therein. Further severity is given tne act by the unavoidable implication that the only ground for change of venue Is a showing that the action has been commenced. in the wrong county. In other words relationship between the judge and the plaintiff, personal in terest by the judge in the event of the action, prejudice by the judge or the Inhabitants of the county, or conven ience of witnesses none of these would be grounds for removing the place of trial if the defendant were a corporation. The effect, say, on the incorporated mercantile firm "that is sued for al leged delinquency In some particular in the delivery of purchased goods is clear. Even though books, records and material witnesses for the defendant might be had only in the resident county of the mercantile house, and witnesses outnumbered ten to one the plaintiffs witnesses, a change of venue could not be granted, while suit might be brought wherever the" house had a selling agency. The true scope of this bill has ap parently not been discovered' by the Legislature. If, after consideration with care and deliberation, there are certain points found that have merit, they should be incorporated in a new measure. But the bill as it now stands should not pass. PROTECTING LIVESTOCK INDUSTRIES. Senate Bill 43, passed by the 1911 Legislature, ia a lengthy act designed to eradicate and suppress 'diseases among domestic animals. It provides for the appointment of a State Veter inarian and a State Livestock Sanitary Board. The bill was vetoed by Gov ernor West, but has now passed the Senate. .' In his veto message the Governor declared' that the bill had merit and "ordinarily would have met .with no opposition from me, but as it carries an appropriation of $50,000, I feel that the best interests of the taxpayers de mand that it do not become a law at this time. Even if the creation of such a board is necessary no harm can come from postponing the matter two years, when, .perhaps, the people may be better able to bear the burden." In the two' years that have elapsed since the bill was vetoed considerable harm has come to the livestock in dustry "through the -spread of, com municable diseases from other states. Certain Eastern Oregon localities have suffered and some parts of Western Oregon were lately combating hog cholera. The Governor now says that he does not object to the passage of the bill. Whether he has noted the harm to the livestock industry that might have been minimized by en forcement of this law, or believes the state in better financial condition now than two years ago, is not definitely expressed. ' But it would require a remarkably discerning eye to discover a better ability now to bear the burden of a $50,000 appropriation than existed two years ago, -for the" appropriations for the biennium have not yet been made up. The natural conclusion is that the Governor has discovered at least one mistake in his free use of the veto power. ' . , "LITTLE WOMEN" OST THE STAGE. Some long extracts from the drama tized version of "Little Women" are given In the January number of Cur rent Opinion. ; The play has excited so much pleasant interest in New York that even this somewhat unsatisfac tory method of learning what it is ac tually like will be welcomed by per sons who care for the stage. It was made by Miss Marian De Forest, who has transferred the tone of the book to the theater in a marvelous way. The plot remains just as Miss Alcott left it, unartlficial, homely, sometimes disconnected, but full of that human tepderness which makes the fortune of a book or play more surely than any other quality. The dialogue In the play Is changed no more than the requirements of the stage made Jin avoidable.' All the simplicity and fam ily frankness remain in it. The four girls, Jo, Meg, Beth and Amy, have the faults and foibles and, it rejoices one to say,' all the generosity and self-sacrificing spirit that . they had when young people first began to read and love "Little. Women"; long ago. Very likely New Yorkers flock to see "Little Women" not nearly so much for the story or the beautiful acting with which it is presented as for the never failing charm of the life it depicts. When a play: manages to show life as It Is, "with the full stream of love that makes trials dear and dif ficulties but opportunities for service, an audience will be charmed by it whether there is a good plot or none at all. The scenes may shift with as little logic as they do in Strindberg"S "Dream Play," or In dreams them selves, and frar all that its spell will hold. Perhaps the best part of the sentiment, in "Little Women" Is Its hopefulness.. The March family have their bad luck. The father is wounded, the rich old aunt has the worst of a temper, accidents befall the girls and poor little Beth pines away into the grave before the story ends,- but through it all there is an assurance that they are adequate to their tasks and burdens. As their days, so is their strength. The girls grieve, but they do not despair and they finally work out happy destinies for themselves, each helping all the rest to do so. The most helpful of the girls may have been little Beth, who died so pitifully, for the brief years of her life and her memory when she is gone pass like a sweet perfume through all that hap pens. To some readers "Little wo men" is a divine essay on the text The maiden is not dead, but sleep eth." Beth does not even sleep, so active is the spiritual life that flows from her to the end of the story. "Little Women" Is notable for the total absence of that class feeling which plays such a part in later Amer ican books by women authors, those- of Edith Wharton . for example. In "The Custom of the Country," which she has Just begun in one of the maga zines, the gulf between classes in New York yawns before us as wide as the Canyon of the Colorado at the very beginning ai a we feel perfectly sure that it will be just as wide at the end. There is an aristocrat in "Little Wo men," two aristocrats. Laurie and his father, Mr. Laurence", but they are not snobs. Compared with their opulence the Marches are miserably poor. The shifts they are put to in order to make both ends meet are despicable, or they wduld be despicable, in the eyes of Edith Wharton's great people. But neither Mr. Laurence nor his highly educated son ever feels the slightest scorn for the humble condition of their neighbors. Louisa Alcott s art in de scribing the relations between the two families seems to us to have been ex quisite, though it may have been un conscious, for she belonged to that sturdy New England stock which predicated human ' distinctions on something very unlike money. Laurie is the girl's playmate from the begin ning and he finally, marries one of them. Amy. He wanted to marry Jo, but her astounding ; common sense would not permit the match. She un derstood that as a man of wealth he would need a handsome wife who liked society, while Jo was homely and preferred writing stories to teas and gossip. Amy with her refinement, the trace of frivolity in her character, and her pretty face withal, was Just the wife for Laurie. He found this out for himself when they were all sobered by Beth's death. Would It not look strange in an up-to-date novel to read that the million aire hero's tutor had married one of two sisters and the millionaire himself the other? That is what happens in "Little Women." Perhaps the defi ance of convention in such a combina tion forma part of the play's charm in New York, where occurrences of this nature usually lead to the police court. Laurie married Amy and Laurie's tutor, Mr. Brooke, married Meg. The millionaire parent, Mr. Laurence, was not put out of temper by the awkward combination of partners. On the vcon trary. Miss Alcott makes him favor it. His original plan was for Laurie to wed Jo, so little sway had modern ideas of i propriety gained among middle-class New Englanders of his time". These are some of the factors which contribute to make the play "Little Women" as much loved by New York audiences as the book has been by all Americans ever since it was written. It is full of a sturdy individ ualism, but an Individualism which never asserts itself to another's Injury. It is charmingly unconventional. It abounds with audacious defiance df hard luck and difficult circumstances. But after all we believe that most peo ple 'love the play because it shows them a simDle' picture of an ideal home. The Marches form precisely such a family as we should all like to have grown up in, with Just enough struggle to form the character, and just enougn affection to lend life its share of gold en glow and sunlit gardens, and Just enough sacrifice to bind hearts to gether and just enough happiness to make the promise of heaven real. It Is the light of life and not its shadow that schools the soul for the better world. We shall not know how to be gay in heaven unless we practice the lesson a little on earth. A NEIGHBOR SCARED TOO JSASH.Y. . The Bend Bulletin ought to knon what It Js talking about when it dis cusses the proposed scheme for a sur vey of the Deschutes, through which the state is to be asked to appropriate $50,000 for co-operative effort with the United States Government; for the Bulletin is printed along the banks of the dashing Deschutes, and can see for itself every waking hour that its waters are all its own, and that no body has interposed or offered the slightest successful resistance to their progress. - Yet now this watcnrui guardian of the great Deschutes is so mightily scared about the proposed survey that it prints a long protest wherein it ignorantly makes the rol lowing statement: What of this "narrow conservation" policy at which The Portland Oregonlan and Ore-, gonlans In general have hurled so many just anathemas? How often have they scathlngly attacked the efforts of the landless East and the treeless Middle West" to tie ud the resources of Oregon. And yet here we see the same men and the same organs that become hysterical at tne very mention of the word "conservation" pro- Doslng that Central Oregon's greatest asset. the Deschutes, be sewed up In the tightest kind of governmental reserve. It 1 colossal conservation scheme. It is putting Into local practice the very methods which Oregonlans decry when Easterners try to foist them upon Oregon. One section of the state, politically the strongest, proposes to gag the resources of another section, it Is the story of National conservation revised and adapted for home use. So far as the Bulletin implies that The Oregonlan is supporting the Des chutes survey scheme, involving a state appropriation of $50,000, it is utterly mistaken. The Bulletin has seen nothing in The Oregonlan in any way justifying its complaint. To com fort the disturbed soul of our too-excitable contemporary, we would say that Tfie .Oregonlan is not at all con vinced that the expenditure by the state of so large a sum for the sur vey of a particular project is war ranted. It can see no other serious objection to the plan, which contem plates investigation, and not im mediate, or necessarily ultimate, cre ation of a reserve. A NEW VIEW OF INSANITY. - A conviction is growing up among scientific men that a great many cases of insanity are caused by "conflicts In the minds of the patients. To un derstand these conflicts, which are of a singular nature, we must begin by remembering that the mind of an or dinary person is divided up into a number of logic-tight compartments. One such compartment may be a hobby, such as fondness for fishing. A man might be devoted, to this pas time without any expectation of catch ing fish. He may not be able to give any reason whatever for his predilec tion and yet there it is fixed in his mind and all the argument in the world cannot shake it. The mentality of a great many people is composed of just such logic-proof compartments as this Irrational fondness for fishing. They may have begun In some neces sary routine habit, or in some course of instruction, or in a hundred other ways, but once solidified in the mind they stay there forever and it is per fectly useless to attack them with ar gument or evidence. Sometimes even the law is powerless against them. If we think of our friends' minds as made up of sovereign independent States whose- boundaries are unalterable we shall not be far wrong. Now we come to the "conflicts." The Interests of these states are not always the same. Sometimes they are incom patible. An example of this is very easy to find." Suppose our friend who loves to go fishing has a wife and fam ily dependent upon his dally labor. His "herd instinct," which means his duty to society and the law, urges him to stick to his Job. His love of fishing Invites him to the woods! and streams. Thus a conflict arises in his mentality which may become fierce and pro longed. The bitterest fights of this nature arise between the deep-seated, fundamental instincts. ' The herd in stinct is one of these. This Is the mental compulsion we all feel to obey the law, go to church on Sunday, pro vide for wife and children and, in gen eral, to yield to the social conventions. But this herd instinct acts in flat op position to others which are even more fundamental. The sex passion is. one such. The tendency to live a lawless life is another. Any of these profound mental "complexes," as the scientists call them, may come into flat opposi tion, with the herd instinct and then there is psychological trouble. When a conflict of this nature breaks out in the mind one of two things must happen. . The individual may sit down and deliberately make p his mind which of the contending complexes, or logic-proof compart ments, he wishes, all things considered, to retain. When his decision ia made he completely suppresses the rejected complex and the battle is over. -We see instances of this kind every day when a man with some bad habit de cides to swear off and does so without paltering or evasion. His action amounts to an execution in his mental world. An offender has been con demned and put to death summarily. This is one way of endlirg the internal conflict. The other Is to let each of the combatants go on living in Its own compartment and keep peace be tween them by alternately obeying one and the other. We are now upon the verge of "double personality." One complex. Is Jlr. Hyde, the other the pious and conventional Dr. Jekyll. Victory may alternate between them. I One may gain the upper hand for months at a time, completely - ob literating the other, and then we have an instance of a man forgetting house and home and beginning a new life with a new character. Usually the suppressed complex resumes its control sooner or later, and then we say his memory has returned. - Probably a great many flagrant hypocrites carry about with them an internal war of this sort. Their mu tually hostile complexes take turns at ruling, their conduct and discord re sults which we, in our blindness, at tribute to moral obliquity. No doubt conflicts between the herd instinct and the sex passion are more frequent than any others because it is this particu lar passion which social conventions have restricted most rigorously, or tried to. It Is a hopeless rebel, how ever, and chooses every imaginable way' to obtain control of the individ ual. Among the consequences of the struggle - are those perversions of which the law sometimes takes notice. The revolt against the herd instinct may become so widespread that the whole mentality is affected by it. In its lighter manifestations It makes a person solitary, unsocial, disinclined tp take part in the ordinary affairs of the world. When it becomes more pro found the -patient's behavior disin tegrates. He grows "slovenly, filthy, degraded and shameless." Of course these are all symptoms of insanity. In fact there is "a vast group of insani ties" which are directly caused by the triumph of a confederation of primi tive instincts over the herd instinct. This species of mental disease results from an internal war, in other words, where the original tendencies of the individual have won a victory over the social control. " - Some writers ascribe the fury of the conflict to hereditary " anarchism in the mind and tell us that the best way to prevent it is to cut off its victims from the hope of progeny. In their view social control is always right and ought to prevail over the primary in stincts. Others teach differently. They admit the possibility that the herd instinct may be fallible and that it ought to yield occasionally to other mental complexes. Their doctrine is that the best way to prevent this spe cies of insanity is to modify society in the direction of individual liberty. Let the fundamental instincts have their way to a reasonable extent and internal discord will not become so destructive as to break up the mind. The reader will perceive that this dif ference of opinion goes to the founda tion of eugenics. Shall we prevent in sanity by sterilizing the insane or by giving people a rational world to live In? OUR. LIVES GROW SHORTER. While medical science has won not able battles over disease in decreasing the death rate among the young, the growth of luxury and sedentary occu pations has caused the ' .death rate above the age of 40 to Increase 20 per cent in the last 30 years. This is the meat of an address by E. E. Rltten house, delivered before the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His conclusions, based on statistics for 30 years from Massachusetts, New Jersey and 16 , cities in other states, are: " - In Massachusetts the mortality rate from apoplexy, paralysis, diseases of the heart, circulatory system, kidneys and liver has in creased 86.4 per cent in 30 years. In 16 Important cities the death rate from organic diseases of the heart and from apo plexy, Brlght's and nephritis has alone in creased 4 per cent in SO years. In ten registration states the death rate from thesa causes has increased 10 per cent in 10 years. In Massachusetts the death rate from cancer has increased 66 per cent In 30 years and 81 per cent during tne last J" years. In the entire registration area the death rate from external cancer alone has in creased 03 per cent in 10 years from 1900 to 1010. The increase In mortality from diseases of middle life and. old age Is reflected In the v-eneral death rate bv an Increase com mencing In Massachusetts and New Jersey In age group'40-44; In Ifi cities group 45-54; in ten states group o-:j. The death rate of the total population, ago 40 and over, has increased, 1010 over ls-ff: In Massachusetts and New Jersey, SO years, 21.2 per cent. In JO cities, 1V Jara, 40.0 per veiiw In 10 states, 10 years (1900-1910), "3 per cent. Mr. Rittenhouse affirms that at least 50 per cent of the deaths from degenerative diseases could be pre vented or postponed. He suggests that Americans of middle age submit to' periodical examination by their physicians, that these diseases may be detected and checked or cured in time. We would add the suggestion- that every man and woman remem ber that luxury can only be purchased at the cost of length of years; that a life spent mainly indoors and at se dentary occupations is not the natural life and that- nature will inevitably punish violation of .her laws. The most vigorous men in Oregon today are those who bore the hardships and en dured, the labor of the pioneer and those who work -on the farm and In the lumber camp. Their lives, far from being shortened by labor, exposure and hardship, are lengthened by those means. The frame is toughened, the blood Is purified and the man is equipped to fight and conquer disease If it invades his body. While statistics compiled from the limited registration area may not be conclusive that the death rate above 40 is increasing generally, it neverthe less Is true that if the people will enjoy a life of luxury, they must do so with their eyes open to the fact that they will pay the price in' shortening of their years on earth. RECONCTIJATION. The desire expressed by ex-Governor Osborn, of Michigan, for a re union of the two parties Into which the Republican party has split is shared by many men, both Republi cans and Progressives. But the time is not yet ripe. It may not be ripe until one of the two parties has so decisively beaten the other as to destroy all hope of the defeated, that they can ever "become supreme. The election of 1912, so far as the Republican and Progressive, parties were concerned, was a drawn battle. Each considers that it won a -victory in foiling the hopes of the other. The battle cry still rings too distinctly In the ears of the combatants, the wounds each Inflicted on the other are too fresh and smarting for them to meet at friendly council board and talk of forgetting bygones. The permanence of the Progressive party will be decided by the extent of the natural drift of the rank and file back to the Republican party, by the degree of success Roosevelt has in ef fecting a permanent organization and perhaps most of all on his ability to make an issue which has a popular ap peal. We must not reckon without the remarkable intuition by which Roosevelt is able to say today w-hat the people will think tomorrow. That and his energy In pushing his pro-J paganda and In executing his plans are the chief sources of his political strength. In his appeal for what he terms social and industrial Justice - Roose velt undoubtedly struck a popular chord. The policy of social reconstruc tion which it implies will loom large in the nroeTammes of all parties. One may not approve all, or even any, qfi the specific means Roosevelt proposes for attaining his ideal, but measures of the same general type will find al most universal support. There is a growing protest, amounting -to revolt, against the reaping of rich harvests by those who never sow and against en richment by legislative favor of a few who recognize no social obligation as a consideration for the favors they receive. Such revelations as those made recently of the horrible condi tions existing in canning camps add Impetus to this revolt, . . JSefore the Democratic Administra tion has completed its prigramme of tariff, trust, currency and ' conserva tion' laws, new issues of the type de scribed may have pushed those ques tions to one side in public estimation. The question will then, be,-not whether women's labor shall be restricted and regulated; not whether child labor shall be prohibited; not whether men who sell shoddy as wool, paper as leather, poison as food, shall be pun ished, but how the law shall do these things. There are many, of whom Jane Addams and Judge. Lindsey are types, who regard a party as a mere Instrument and will readily support any party which will do that which they consider of first importance. That party may well be the Republican party if progressive leadership is now accepted. It would then draw to its support, the whole band of social reformers which constituted the most sincere and disinterested. element of Roosevelt's following. The automobile owner, too, has his troubles with the trusts. One of his worst foes is the rubber trust,' which keeps adding a little' here and a little there to the price of tires. Tire ex pense Is the motorist's heaviest cur rent outlay and It' will grow neavier every season until, some " inventive chemist discovers how to make syn thetic rubber. H. G. Wells' hero in "Marriage" actually perfected the great discovery, but it is one thing to do these feats in a novekand another to" make them go in the laboratory. Synthetic rubber still waits for its for tunate inventor. When it comes, as it surely will before a great while, the price' of tires will collapse. The other trust which threatens to devour, the motorist Is Standard Oil with its con trol of gasoline. The price of this delectable liquid has advanced from 2 cents a gallon a few years ago to 40 and even 50 cents now, in some in stances. There was a happy time, long, long ago, when the Standard Oil Company actually gave away gasoline as a useless by-product. Imagine any body giving it away now. As the price goes up, inventors are seeking a sub stitute. Alcohol promised great things at one time, but it has. finally been dropped and expectation turns fondly to kerosene, which is an explosive liquid and can be used In most motors after they are once Well heated. The development of the motor car ought to interest every intelligent citizen of the world, because its influence on civiliza tion for the next dozen years will probably far outweigh that of r.ny other factor. It is revolutionizing the conditions of human existence both in town ani country. The Oregonian stated yesterday-that Thomas McCusker voted for Elihu Root for temporary chairman of the recent Republican National conven tion. The record discloses, however, that McCusker did not vote at all on that question. McGovern, a La Fot lette man, was proposed by the Roose velt forces to oppose ifoot, but the candidacy of McGovern was repudiated by the La Follette managers and led to a split in the Wisconsin delegation. McCusker's action in voting for Wil liams for National committeeman greatly offended the Roosevelt dele gates, particularly Dr. Coe, who was himself a candidate. How thrilling it will be when those electors get together and name the next President of the United States. Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey, is said to be a prime favorite in the run ning. The Rotary Club of this city ran the sane New Year's eve open air festival, stood most of the expense, and' now reports $5.45 in the treasury. Good for the men of the Rotary Club. Illiteracy and character tests for Immigrants are needed. We already are cursed with tod many aliens with the poison of anarchy in their brains. Wives for bachelors aie guaranteed by a Boston woman. But wouldn't it be more to the point if she would offei to provide husbands for old maids? Taft will attend five banquets in the next two days. We shall not be surprised if the dispatches shortly re cord another attack of gout. ' Congress proposes to save- twenty minutes on every rollcall- by dropping the "Mr." And then, too, the title may soon not invariably apply. Control over artificial limbs is the latest medical innovation. Science may eventually be able to supply even miss ing or deficient brains. Lieutenant-Colonel Du Paty de Clam may be made a full Colonel. Who fished him out of the chowder of fif teen years ago? i In these days of many pardons it is far easier to get a crook .out of Jail than to put him in. . The plan in Washington for a grid iron of highways points the way to substantial progress. Blushing, is a disease, according to the announcement of a French neuro path. Also an art. French candidates shy at reporters. American candidates pursue them,' if necessary. - Anyway the snow was a boon to indoor workers who cleared their own walks. . . Portland's bank clearings indulged their favorite habit the past week. The stingless veto appears to be the latest in political hybridization. Supposing all those bills should be put through the Legislature! Feed the birds while the snow is on. Scraps and Jingles Leene Cass Bacr. "Man and wife quarrel over religion," , wails a headline. Another case of cat echism and dog-tnatism. I reckon. Paradox note: It's the woman 'with the past who gets the present. m e Dispassionately ruminating, It seems to me the Legislature is a bundle of sticks bound together by red tape. Legislature's minstrel your seats, gentlemen." cry: "Take Too often the flight of genius Is to the attic. The average poet Is an ass If we heed the bray of them. They're flehly. And since flesh Is grass We must make hay of them. London correspondent says Cowes i suffering from' a deficiency in the wa ter supply. Over here we'd say cows "are" and- milk is not. e Motto for profession of dentistry: A . tooth will out. see That account ' of the woman who married the mart who cleaned her chim neys should have been under sporting records and labeled, "she won the sweep." . Apparently the understanding of the average orchestra' Is "when in doubt play 'William Tell'." see (With apologies to ."The Lost Chord.") Tatting one day at the Circle I was happy and quite at ease. A pianola was playing "The Lost Chord" Outside In eight different-keys. But I cared not how they were playing, Thore fat. Impossible men. For I'd broken the tatting record And was tat'tlhg champion then. II. It flooded my chf-ks with crimson. The praise of my co-tatters fair. Though the band seemed blending "Old Hundred" With a touch of "The Grlrlly Fear. But rov loy soon turned Into sorrow. My calm into mental strife. For my record was broke on the morrow And It cut me, too, like a knife. A woman had tatted ten million yards In a tenth of a second less. And henceforth my name. In silence, Was dropped ty the whole tatting mess. III. I have sought, but I seek It vainly With the circle again to shine. 'Mid names In our cluu of tatters. But they never mention me there. It may be some day, with hard work, I may break that record again. But at present the glory all goes To a speedier tatting hen. Story says many horsemen have na moral feeling. S'pose their hearts ar. 'ossified. Apropos the Snow By Dean Collins. PROLOGUE. Make haste, good Muse, 'tis apropos That we should warble of the snow. LAnd laud tha spreading "mantle white And praise the IiaKes as iney aiigni; In short, that we should strike the string And In the proper fashion .sing About "the beautiful." Now gush, Before the snow has turned to slush. r- ' Oh beauteous scene, of vision fair Of snowflakes whirling in the air; i !; Spreading a mantle without speck. Till 'neath its covering is hid t The steel expanse of cellar lid; So that I slip and breack my neckl Oh. whirling fairies, in the track Of Winter's wind;' you gently float Inside the collar of my coat, , To melt and tr-r-r-r-rlckle down my back. IX. The artless children's voices call! They soak me with a hard snowball! Oh' spotless blanket, full of grace! How pure upon the streets you He Until a taxi slithera by, "Sploosh!" And you spatter in my face. Oh, dancing horde of Winter bees White flakes, on twig and branch you pile. And when I'm walking afterwhlle, ' You dribble on rrle from the trees. III. Oh,- noble altruistic chap Who sHovels clear the walk, mayhap. And when, with thanks, I gladly will Repay you, you demand from me A portion of that lonely V I kept' to pay the doctor's bill. 1 Oh, beautiful, white, shining snow! I sing, I chant, I worship thee ' But much delighted I shall be When the Chinook doth bid thee go. EPILOGUE. Thus, Muse, our duty is complete. We've sung the snow a ditty sweet; Now please excuse me while I get Some quinine, for my feet are wet; Then let us watch the snowbanks go And, while the warm winds softly . blow. Keep our feet dry and stir the fire And, as the leaping flames aspire, Knock wood and hope the Winter's maw Will not disgorge a "silver thaw." Portland, January 18. KlBbt-Huur Lnvr. PORTLAND, Jan. 17. (To the Edi tor.) In the late election we voted on .,im vrt of an elKht-hour law for all city, county and state employes, and The Oregonian has printed Items con cerning that law's effect on different employes.- especially dredgmen In the Port of Portland employ. Afrain, you mention the trouble at the City Hall about an engineer who wants to work ore than eight hours. xt innnirv la this: Does the law apply to employes of the School Board, mechanics. Janitors and engineers? GEORGE T. GOO DELL, Secretary of the Marine Engineers Association. The law is. considered inoperative, because It was adopted without an enacting clause. 1he Legislature may re-enact the bill. ' Section 4 provides that, "In all eases where labor is employed by the state. county, school district, municipality, municipal corporation or' subdivision, either directly or through another, as contractor; no person shall be required or permitted to'labor more than eight hours In any one day, or 48 hours In any one week." We think "there can be no question that the act was In tended to include School Board em ployes. " School of JotirnallMBa. ' PORTLAND, Jan. 11. (To the. Edi tor.) (1) Can you tell me someone who rives lessons to beginners in car tooning? (2) Is there a place in Oregon where one can take up a course In journal ism? RAYMOND M'MAHON. (1) We know of no one making a specialty of cartoon Instruction. (2) University of Oregon, Eugene. Wlreleaa Llaks Pern and Brasll. Indianapolis News." . Although mountains 20,000 feet high Intervene, Teru and Brazil, heretofore Isolated from each other, have been linked by wireless telegraphy.