. s. n .Vr ft V rtTT'T A XTT T?"PRPTTAP V O 1913. HHMMBMBMMWMH - f I POH.TLAXD, ORBOON. Entered at Portland. Orecon, Postofflce as second-class matter. Subscription Bate Invariably in Advance. CBT MAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included. one year. .....S-0 Dally. Sunday Included. six month!.... .-o Sally. Sunday Included, three months.. Bally, slmdav Included. one month.... .o Daily, without Sunday, ona year. Daily, without Sunday. six months.... J" Dally, without Sunday, three months.. l.o Dally, without Sunday, one month .JJ Weekly, one year - V a'so Sunday, one year ........... Sunday and Weekly, one year (BT CARRIER.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year.. t.0 Dally. Sunday Included, one month How to Kcmlt Send PostoMlce money or. dr. express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at the senders mk. Give po.tolflce address In full. Including county and state Postage Rates Ten to 14 Pas. nt 36 to pages, 2 cents; 80 to 40 pajea .3 cent.; 40 to 60 pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage, double rate. . Eastern Bu.lne-. Offtoes Verree & Con; lln. New Vork. Brunswiclt building. capo. Steg-er building. , Kan Francisco office R. J. Bldwsll Co., 74i Market street. . a European Office No. S Regent street o. V.. London PORTLAND, SUNDAY, FEB. . A GREEK TE.HPLE TOB. LINCOLN. The debate in Congress upon the Lincoln Memorial bill gave many members an opportunity to deliver eloquent speeches. Mr. Humphreys, of Mississippi, and Mr. McCalL of Massa chusetts, carried off the laurels, ac cording to the report, but others scarcely fell below them in the pro fusion and beauty of their oratory. The bill carries an appropriation of 12,000,000. The better opinion seems to be that the money should be spent upon a Greek Temple near the Po tomac, but there is opposition. One faction favors an automobile road to Gettysburg. Another wants a temple, but not a Greek one. Mr. Humphreys prefers the classic memorial. To quote his burning words, he "would not stain the even virtue of our enterprise by exchanging the in spiration of the artist for the sordid commercialism of the road builder. No doubt he is right, bat a pensive philosopher might reflect that we have not seen very much of the road build er's commercialism in this country. On more intimate acquaintance with it we might perhaps discern that it was not irredeemably sordid. Roads are as fall of inspiration as temples. The Greeks did not build many because they traveled by sea, but the Romans did and, from one point of view, the Appian Way is as worthy a monument as the Erechtheum. Still a temple is no doubt more ap propriate than a road for a Lincoln memorial, though one cannot help a longing glance toward a great highway from ocean to ocean and wondering which of the two Lincoln himself would have chosen. And since we must have a temple and there is no American architecture the next best thing is to fix upon Greek models and Imitate them as well as we can. Con gressman McCall believes that we shall thus "cultivate and satisfy our sense of beauty." One may agree with him that build ing Greek temples will cultivate our sense of beauty, but let us hope that no such Imitative process will satisfy it. The democracy of Athens produced works of eternal beauty which ex pressed their spirit and genius. Some time American democracy may achieve a similar triumph. While we are wait . . i, ; .n iTtMi.n m7A can do nothing so excellent as to imitate the Greeks. The only architecture that can rival theirs for an instant is the Gothic, but this speaks too much of gloomy fanaticism to suit the calm and gracious memory of Lincoln. Some Congressmen might like to build the monument after the model of the churches in their native hamlets, but aurely the country will be preserved from a calamity of that sort. A NEW SECTIONAL DIVISION. The fight between conservation and reservation has divided the country on new sectional lines. Party is forgotten by Western conservationists in their determination to have our natural re sources used and developed. Party Is equally forgotten by Eastern reserva tionisU in their determination to treat as thieves Western men who seek to use the public domain, to allow no man to acquire publio land by patent or lease unless he pays fat toll to Uncle Sam, the landlord, to. play the miser with our latent -wealth, to bury our one talent of silver deep in the earth where it will show no increase. Secretary Fisher. Republican, and As sistant Secretary Adams, Democrat, forget their party differences in their common zeal to compel the West to pay tribute to the East. The laws under which the public land has been to a large extent alien ated In huge subsidies and by fraud were made by the East, not by the West. Western Senators and Repre sentatives were numerically too few to inject any element of prudence and common sense into the legislation by which tracts as large as empires were donated to railroad companies. The West is not responsible for the timber land law which, intended to provide a wood lot in the hills for farmers on the treeless valleys, ignored the fact that the whole stretch of country west of the Cascades was heavily timbered and that similar conditions existed hi T?nrirv and Blue Mountains. The West, therefore, is. not responsible Tor the vast holdings of timber by syn dicates, hlch simply seized the oppor tunity created by the law as the East made It. The East, not the West, left the range open to be destroyed by im provident grazing. It is high time that the East ac cepted the guidance of those who, by Intimate knowledge of the West, where Is practically all that remains of the public domain, are best qualified to legislate for and administer our natural resources. It is time that this work was placed in the hands of men who do not regard a desire to acquire public land as presumptive evidence ,. a man is n. thief and a perjurer. The section of the country which has bred trusts, stock gambling, etoc watering, custom-house frauds, and which submitted supinely to the grafting which has been exposed in New York. Philadelphia, Pittsburg, rhii-am Cincinnati and other cities, is no fit censor of Western morals. The West knows its own problems ana t-. y,mv tn snlve them better than the Eastern men who in 1S96 rode through the Wesron Pullman cars to create forest reserves where nothing for forty or fifty miles and who in later years- have committed blunders of equal enormit through a combination of Ignorance and indolence. The tim has crone by when the West will allow the East to make laws for the West, as the Czar and his ministers rule Siberia. Though still in the minority. Western members of Congress are strong enough in num bers, ability and Influence to compel attention. As Fisher and Adams have forgotten party in their zeal for reser vation, the West can forget party in its united fight for its own right to de velop under a rational system of con servation. PTT ON AN EMERGENCY CLAUSE. Th Oree-ontan is fair to the pro gressives and Just to Itself and the public when it approves the plan to amend the election laws so that we may have our own primary, writes a gratified Progressive; and there is m of the same. The Oregonian will go somewhat farther in its com mendation of the proposed legislation, at the risk of offending the self called iruardlans of the Oregon sys tem. It thinks an emergency clause ought to be added to the bill, ana mat it ought to pass the Legislature by (inanimmis vntA. And be sisned by the Governor without hesitation or ques tion as to whether it Is for tne "puduc health, peace or safety." Yet we are It la for the eeneral political health and for thepeace.of all con cerned. And what could be safer man an act of unquestioned propriety and common fairness? The Progressives of Fortiana aesire to participate In the Portland primary which occurs May 8. If the proposed measure shall pass, but shall not be effective till ninety days after the ses sion adjourns, there can be no progres sive primary, but the memDers oi tnai nnlrlnr nartv must resort to the ob noxious convention system. If they shall be permitted to register ana to hold a primary, the issue with other parties will 'be clearly drawn, and there will be no occasion to complain that any Progressive interfered- in some other party's concerns. The Progressives now have a party and they wish to get it a-going. No one should put any obstacle in meir path. THEIR BROKEN IDOI. The New York Globe, a long-range .An.B.i.Btinnlet nf -Via Advanced tv IjP. is unable to discover anything in the recent mavis exposure to juauu doubt as to the integrity of Glavis' actions in the Ballinger ' episode. Sharply rebuking the New York Trib une for raising the inquiry as to whether Glavis may not have wronged Secretary Ballinger, the Globe says: Glavis charged Secretary Ballinger with trvlng to get the Cunningham claims pat ented. He also charged that these claims were presumptively fraudulent. After Bal linger got out and Walter Fisher became Secretary the Interior Department did de clare these claims fraudulent. This official declaration upheld one of Glavis" main con- .. . i i 1 V. . him tentions. tne contention winii ui.". Into conflict with Ballinger. Between the beginning oi tne conirumiajr nn ..... of it an inquiry took place before a com mittee of Congress. In the course of this Inquiry Secretary Ballinger, under cross examination by r,ouls D. Brandels, gave one of the most pitiful exhibitions of shiftiness that any Cabinet officer has given for years and years and years. As an illustration of persisting in standing by one's preconceived prejudices, the Globe does very well. The whole case against Cunningham was built up by Glavis. All the con temptible effort to entrap Cunning ham, from the dubious capture of his personal note-book to the sneaking alliance with Cunningham's enemies, was traceable to Glavis. The explicit Issue was Glavis vs. Cunningham; the broad issue Pinchot vs. Ballinger. Glavis and Pinchot won; but that is far from saying they should have won. t, ia YiDt,,rai fnr thfi honest but wholly mistaken Journals that former ly regaraea tjiavis a . ucm, o cambvoU eaiii Via wnfi to have a aualm or two now and then when they know the truth about mat pronen iaou CREATING A ' DENTAL OLIGARCHY. When the State Senate passed the extraordinary measure for the crea tion and perpetuation of a dental trust in Oregon (officially described as Amended Senate Bill 11) it is to be supposed that it either ignored -wholly the provisions of the bill or was un informed as to their nature. The Sen ate is fortunate in having among its embers one or more practicing dentists; and no other Senator would presume to raise a question about any measure favored by Senators who have expert knowledge of their subject. Naturally not; but we are restrained by no such laudable and delicate feel ings of formal courtesy and we shall venture to point out the design and probable results of the bill, in some of its Important aspects. The bill is "to regulate the use of diplomas and certificates of dentists, and to provide punishment for tne violation thereof, and to provide for revocation and suspension of licenses for the misconduct of the holders thereof." All these powers are lodged with the State Board of Dental Ex aminers. Now let us see who shall be affected by the act. Section 3 has this significant clause, re-adopted from the original dental act passed aDout 1905: Bat nothing In this act shall apply . . to those who have been engaged In the actual practice of dentistry In the State of Oregon for rive years immeaiateiy precuu Inw Jnnuarv 1. 1903. and upon proper proof by affldavlta and other evidence being fur nished that the applicant has been engaged in the actual practice of dentistry during all the term ox five years immeaiateiy precea- lng January 1, 1806. It shall be tne duty oi the 8tate Board of Dental Examiners to issue a Ucense to the applicant upon payment ot the regular examination fee. In this neat way it is arranged that the newcomers alone shall come with in the purview of the board, and the others the established- practitioners who are pioneers through the fact of their residence and professional work in Oregon for a brief period of years shall have a license for the asking, whether they are competent or not. But the mantle of security, for the dentists now on the ground is even broader. If "nothing in this act shall apply" to the established dentists be yond a direction to give them licenses without examination and without any condition beyond the fee, it is clear that "nothing In this act" authorizes the board to forfeit or cancel any such license for any reason whatever. The list of offenses which other den tists may commit is enumerated at length, and the board is given auto cratic authority to suspend or revoke the license of any dentist outside the favored group. The proceedings under this sec tion" (relating to revoking licenses) declares the bill, "may te taken by the board from matters within its knowledge, or may be upon the in- formation of another." In other words the board may do Just what it pleases with any offending dentist, with or without taking evidence, and upon its own Initiative; and that evi dently is final. For nowhere,, from beginning to end. does me bin pro- vide Ihe right of appeal to any court or any other reviewing authority. What a remarkable grant of unlimited Dower over the dentists! There are other provisions of the bill which are highly interesting, and are aismlficant of its eenerai design. such as the requirement that a dentist's diploma must be from & aentai col lege which is a member of the Na tional Association of Dental Faculties or from a college whose "requirements for graduation are equal to tne nrsi association- But it is further arranged, in most handsome and dis criminating fashion, that a resident of Oregon who shall have been "en gaged in pupilage" or the practice of dpntistrv "rjrior to the passage of this original act" need ot be a college graduate. Evidently all others must be. This dental measure throughout is hlchlv Antertainine- as reading and as disclosing how far some dentists will go to arrange hard sledding lor other dentists; . but as legislation it is poor business. DRAWING A CONGREGATION-. Ethically, the New York preacher who preached twenty-one sermons in as many hours may deserve the censure that Is being directed against him by many preachers of a more conservative mold. Actually, he may be commended for adopting methods that attract attention to himself and thus insure large congregations. Should the ministry be wrapped in a stolid, unbending dignity or should it recognize the fact that unusual methods often must be employed these stirring days to attract people away from the many counter attractions on Sunday. If advertising or spectacular methods, provided they are not car ried to undignified extremes, will fill the church of a pastor, why should he preach to empty pews? No matter what motive draws the sinner to church the fact that he is there puts him in a wholesome atmosphere where great rood may come. The New York pastor in question has been accused of grand-standing, of exploiting the gospel of Christ for the sake of ephemeral notoriety. It is unjust to say that he was more than strenuous and enterprising and determined to draw people to his church in spite of themselves. The straight-laced preacher who refuses to bend and is content to preach to fail ing congregations may be lauded for his regard of professional ethics, but the preacher who draws people to his church is the one who must be rated the greater success. ON LOSING ONE'S MEMORY. The world Is full of marvels when one stops to think of it. One of the greatest is the fixity in our minds of ihe association .between names and the things they stand for. Why do we not occasionally call a horse' a cow ana an ax a spade? Such a question may annear Killt- to the thoughtless, but if It were not for the peculiar structure of the human mina we snouia uo making mistakes of that sort con stantly. Memory really depends on the power of association, which, as it were, glues words to objects and at the same timA Hiia o-hiArts tosrethec- into work ing groups. Were we differently framed the world would do composeu of entirely different groups of things. TVia minri unites them for its own pur poses and then treats the result as if it were decreed by universal law. What grammarians call common nouns cling to their objects more closely than proper names. When the intelligence begins to disintegrate from oia age or disease it is the names of persons and places that we forget nrsu xo torget. In this sense at least, means simply Via hrpnkine- ut of the association d- tween the significant sound and the object It stands for. Tne name imam nff- l iv on a direction, the thing in an other, and the mind is unable to bring them together. Rainh Waldo Emerson was a great sufferer from this affliction as he grew old. The names of his best friends mranprl him and he could only greet them with that benign smile of his which signified more than language does on the lips of most men. It is a ni-Attv snfA uiirn of advancing age when we begin, to stumble mentally over names. Normal persons retain their common nouns to the very verge nr tViA o-ran-A. hut not the titles of per sons and places. Sooner or later they must resign themselves to rorget tne names of their best friends and their children. They are fortunate if they can recall their own as the shadows deepen. It is common enough to hear the mother of a large family make an indirect -approach to the name of her youngest Doy wnen sne wishes to scold him. She begins by Viaiiino- Viitn an John, then Thomas, William, .Henry and Peter until finally she lights upon hl9 true name, wnicn la .Tnmes Association is strong in her mlnrt between the older names and the boys they belong to, but James has been in the world only a iitue iraui and the glue has not had time to harden. v tmcohka often does the same work as old age in disassociating words from v.aIt- fihieots. It la not infrequent to ..oo a individuals who suddenly for get their whole past, including men names. De Morgan makes use or sucn on in.MHont in "It Never Can Happen Again." The hero enters the story in total ignorance oi nis antecedents anu the plot turns on the eventual dlscov his hlstorv. De Morgan's hero owed his defect to a shock from an electric current In a trolley car. Any imi,itai incident mav Droduce the ef- rKi if It Is startling enough. The brain seems to experience a Jar which shakes the associations asunaer aiia ou disarranges them that they cannot .,nita a rein ATnst of our associations are temporarily deranged In sleep, but they fall back into meir places agaiu nn m-akino- The nrocess Seems to be largely mechanical, though, of course. there is more to it man me mere operation of a machine. The will can hair, nut the memorv in its difficulties now and then, but on o'ther occasions it is a hindrance. When one has a name on the tip of the tongue, but nonnnt onAoir if Ajxactlv it is useless, as a rule, to try consciously to recall the elusive vocables. They noat rouna ex asperatingjy on the fringes of the memory, but they will not come to hand and the more one seeks for them the farther they flit. The best way to get hold of a name that will not de-hai- itself un is to DUt the subject quietly aside and let the subconscious mind work at the difficulty. This dili trans' And efficient servitor will labor while its master sleeps. Perhaps a day or two will pass Derore me tasic is done, perhaps it will be weeks or mnntha hut In the long run if a per son has ever known a name and there I. nn lAdnn in the brain, the subcon sclous mind can and will recover it if we do not keep nagging it by futile efforts of the volition. But when names are lost In conse quence of destructive disease the sub conscious mind is unable to help. It may go on working Just as before. No body knows whether it does or not, but at any rate its work is unavailing because the connection between the parts of the machine is severed beyond the power of art to unite them. Sur- erv does wonders in me way oi re lieving pressure on the brain, removing abscesses, and regulating nutrition, but when once the internal lines of communication are broken it is baf fled. It cannot join them again. The reticulation of the system is too minute and complicated. Hence when a person loses his memory as the re sult of a disease which actually dis integrates its seat in the brain he need never expect to regain it. But that is a very different thing from the mere breaking up of associations Dy a shock. In such cases nothing need be per manently impaired and in time the old connections are pretty sure to fall into, Dlace aeain. When a man appears, coming apparently from nowhere and la unable to tell anything about his name or antecedents the chances are that if we are patient with him it will all come back. Frances Hodgson Burnett has in troduced one of these tantalizing char acters in her new serial "Tembaron." The hero found him wandering help lessly in a vacant lot He has not d laved much of a part In the two in stallments which have been published, but the reader feels certain that he is going to figure largely in the story by and by. Of course when he recovers his past will reveal stirring secrets about the hero. MR. U'BEN'S WICKED PARTNER. OREGOV CITY, Or.. Feb. T. (To the Edi tor.) It would be very difficult to put more of falsehood in the same space than there Is In your editorial this morning on a "Re jected Innovation." Instead of having made an efrort to prevent legislative repeal or amendment of laws adopted by the people, I used air my Influence when the Initiative and referendum amendment was prepared to leave that power with the Legislature. I have always been of the opinion that the legislature should have that power, though think now It should require a two-tniras majority to make euch repeal or amend ment. - As to Mr. Bchuebel'a proposed amendment for "Recall of Judicial Decisions," I know absolutely nothing about It except what I read in The Oregonian today. Mr. Schuebel and I are partners In a law office at Oregon City. In politics we are both Republicans, but differ very widely on many measures. In all fairness to the parties criticised and to the readers of The Oregonian, I do think the editor should be more careful to know and write something of the truth in the edi torial columns. W. 3. 17HBS. The Oregonian is fully Informed as to the nature of Mr. ITRen's efforte in the past to deprive the Legislature of power to amend or repeal the peo ple's laws. It has learned to look for jokers and obliquity in all of the U'Ren proposals and it has found both in most of his measures from poll-tax repeal and proportional rep resentation of 1910 to graduated tax and proxy voting of 1912. In his so-called legislative reform amendment submitted and defeated In 1912 was the following provision: No statute, ordinance or resolution ap- o roved by vote of the people shall be amended or repealed by- the Legislative As sembly or any City Council except by a three-fourths vote of all the members. His amendment, presented and de feated in 1910, which proposed radical changes in the make-up and power of the Legislative Assembly, contained a similar provision. Mr. U'Ren knows, or ought to know, that such a provision would be an inhibition against the improvement or correction or repeal of any initiated bill by the lawmaking body. Of course he would permit the dog to eat, but only with a muzzle on. If Mr. U'Ren had steered a straight course toward enactment of his other ideas some doubt might exist of a wil ful intent on his part to shear the Legislature of a needed and never yet abused power. But his county option tax amendment was concealed and carried' under a provision repealing a poll tax that did not exist. His grad uated tax measure was framed with such cunning that hundreds of voters approved it, 'believing that it preserved the present taxation system and only Imposed a sur-tax on large holdings. In the same amendment he professed to retain county power to repeal single tax but so hedged it about with sly restrictions that its application would have been impracticable and next to impossible had the amend ment carried. Such things as these have opened all of Mr. ITRen's work to suspicion of concealed intent. If Mr. U'Ren had read the news dispatches from Salem Wednesday morning, he would have learned that he was reported to have attended a conference held for the purpose of drafting the Schuebel bill for recall ot Judicial decisions. The privilege is cheerfully accorded him of denying all knowledge of the measure and of placing the whole odium of its author ship, like the lawyer of fiction, on my wicked partner. "IC ANTIQUE SHIPPING LAWS. Discussion of our shipping laws has been stimulated by Panama Canal legislation and by the Titanic disaster has been brought to the front as one of live public interest. A remarkable example of the antiquity and injustice of these laws is their limitation or the liability of the ship-owner to the owner of cargo and to passengers. It Is a survival of the days of sailing ships, of individual owners of single ships, of long voyages, when the ship was for months cut off from communl. cation, and of the days when England was doing her utmost to encourage ship-owning and foreign commerce in order to maintain naval ana commer cial supremacy and. to secure her sup ply of food and raw material. It is entirely out of date in these times of steamships, of telegraphy by wire and wireless, of ownership of a whole merchant navy by a single corpora tion. It makes carriers by sea a fa vored class, exempt from liability to which land carriors are subject. Prior to 1893 the courts had uni formly held that ship-owners were liable to shippers for loss or damage due to their own on their employes negligence or mismanagement and had held void, as against public policy, "negligence clauses" in bills of lading. But as such clauses were valid in other countries; notably in England foreign ship-owners insisted upon them and the frequent necessity of set tling disputes abroad under foreign law enabled ship-owners to escape liability. In order to furnish relief to shippers and to bring the law relating to ocean carriers into conformity with that governing land carriers, the Harter bill was introduced in the House" in 1893. It placed upon the owner re sponsibility for loss or damage due to faults or errors of navigation and mansurement of ships plying between American and 'foreign ports. The House passed the bill, but the Senate so amended it as not only to relieve owners of ships in foreign commerce from this liability, but to relieve those engaged in domestic commerce aiso from the liability placed upon them by the then existing law. The House was misled into accepting the amendments and thus the shippers were left in a worse nosition than before. Senator Nelson has introduced a bill to give redress, so far as foreign com. merce is concerned. He proposes to declare void clauses In bills of lading relieving ship-owners from liability for damage caused by faults or er rors in navigation or management, but to continue the present law as apply ing to vessels plying between American ports. The Nelson bill would place respon sibility where it belongs on the ship owner. It would compel him to exer cise proper care in loading and navi gating his ships. It would deter him from hiring cheap, unskilled, reckless officers and seamen.- It would put a check on the speed mania and cause masters of ships to avoid ice and fog, even though.' their voyage were lengthened a few hours or even a day. It would therefore add to the safety of passengers and crew. The bill is' not made to apply to coastwise and lake carriers, for the reason that they generally assume voluntarily the responsibility which it Is proposed to put on ocean carriers. But the same law should be made to apply to all alike. Those carriers who now voluntarily- assume liability can have no objection if those who do not are compelled to assume it. This is only one of several evidences that our entire shipping code needs revision. The laws relating to seamen place them in semi-slavery and have almost driven Americans from the sea. The law limiting liability of a ship-owner to the passage money and the value of salvage is out of date, w e may have trouble with ' England, but the logical working out of our free ship policy will gradually relieve us from her dictation in maritime law and place us in a position to deal with her on equal terms. SOUTH AMERICAN DIFFERENCES. Diplomatic speculation concerning differences and threatened war be tween Bolivia and Peru suggests that Peru may be utilizing a tentative quarrel with her immediate neighbor as a blind for preparing to wage war on some other country. It isn't clear to students of Latin-American affairs Just why Bolivia and Peru should fight. . Even should Bolivia desire a free means of egi-ess to the Pacific it would be difficult to Imagine her at tacking her ancient chum in order to gain that end. Bolivia and Peru have been looKea upon as the Damon and Pythias of South American countries. Their armies have fought side by side as allies in many a long, hard battle. When Bolivia set out to gain her inde pendence from Spain in 1825 Peru's troops helped. Ten years later the allies got into a bitter quibble, went to fighting, and were having a right" merrv melee when Chile lntervenea. The allies immediately fell into each other's arms and some years later combined on Chile to their mutual sorrow. Bolivia lost her coast line and Peru had her line greatly reduced. Amone other things produced by Bolivia is a Quarter of the world's tin supply. Her exports reach the world bv way of the Atlantic, necessitating a series of river hauls, a fact which long has galled the Bolivians. Pacific Coast Dorts would be a national boon, to oe sure. At the same time the rumor that Bolivia may seek to wrest coast line from Peru doesn't ring true. It sounds too much like a report that the United States and Britain may fight over the Panama Canal. Hence the latest views of diplomats that the two countries have an understanding ana an ulterior motive in war talk and preparations are plausible. Perhaps they will seek recovery of coast line lost to cnne, though that would be a big under taking for the diminutive allies. Any way, whatever they are up to, we will watch them with a great deal of inter est in our capacity as peacemaKer and policeman of the American con tlnent. - HUE KINDLY SIDE OF JOHN BROWN. John Brown's only surviving son, Salmon, who lives at Lents, near Port land, has contributed to the Outlook an account of his father. It is brief and fragmentary. No new incident is riven and not much light is thrown upon those long known. The value of the contribution lies in the urgency with which Salmon Brown insists upon the tenderer side of his father's char acter. We hare all been taught that the old hero of the anti-slavery fight was a man of rugged sternness, un bending in his fanatical devotion to an ideal and almost destitute of the gentler traits of manhood. He com mitted murder without scruple when he had made up his mind that it would bring his ends nearer. He planned without remorse a slave insurrection that would have deluged the South with the blood of women and children If it had fallen out as he wished. Knowing these circumstances, it surprises one agreeably to read in Sal mon Brown's account that his father was, in his domestic life, a man of un UBually kindly habits. He loved to sit before the wide fireplace of his dwell ing on a Winter night and sing hymns to his children. Often three of them would nestle in his lap at the same time. He kept sheep and when the lambs were born he gathered them In his arms like a veritable Good Shep herd and saw to it that they were warmed and fed. If we may believe what is said of him in. the Outlook and elsewhere, there never was a man who loved his children 'better or clave more faithfully to the wife of his youth and old age than John Brown. But these domestic virtues did not hinder him from doing bloody deeds to carry out what he thought was his mission. He seems to have been one of those men who are able to separate their duty, as they call it, into dis tinct departments entirely disconnect ed with one another. In one depart ment they may be false, cruel and unscrupulous, execute hideous crimes and plot outrages on humanity, while In another an"d almost at the same time they may be gentle and passion ately kind. Many men have exhibited this strange contradiction of character and through It all. Just as John Brown did, they have managed to keep up the conviction that they were serv ing God and man. How they did it is not so much of a mystery as may ap pear at first We are all more or. less under the illusion, if it is an illu sion, that deeds may be done in an official, or representative, capacity which are not permissible to' one who acts as a mere individual. The case of the soldier Is the simplest and per haps more to the point than any other. As an individual he obeys the Ten Commandments, says his prayers and loves his fellow man, but as an instru ment of the government he kills, burns and plunders without a thought that he is doing anything wrong. It sometimes seems as if the great Con federate commander Lee exhibited this species of divided personality as clear ly as any man who ever lived. His private character was no doubt per fectly impeccable. His honor was stainless, his sentiments sweet and pure. But for all that he betrayed his country, fought for human slavery, and, if he had had his way, would have perpetuated that monstrous wrong at the foundation of a powerful empire. Lee has fared better at the hands of history than John Brown. His offenses were far worse, but they have been overlooked and only his kindly personality is remembered with the shining abilities which made it irre sistibly attractive. John Brown had no great abilities. He was the plalnr est kind of a plain man, or he would have been, had It hot been for his im mense devotion to duty. This amount ed to genius in him, or insanity. If one chooses that view of It. By one theory of life all sacrifice for duty is insane and there is only a difference of de gree between John Brown and Bene dict Arnold, the latter being far the wiser of the two. The divided person ality which seems to excuse breaches of the moral law when a man is some one else's instrument runs through all life. Poor humanity eagerly grasps at the slightest excuse to sin without in curring responsibility. There is a fear ful Joy in committing crimes as the agent of the deity or the servant of the state which would horrify us if we were answerable for them as individ uals. The troublesome question is whether we really do escape accounta bility by the plea that we are nothing but tools. The law has long held mat the principal is responsible for what his agent does, but how about the agent? Can he go scott free, no matter what orders he executes? The Britisn theory Is that he cannot. With charm ing consistency it is held over there that, on the one hand, me riing can do no wrong, which amounts to saying that he can give no improper com mands to his ministers; while on the other hand it Is also held that the min isters can receive improper commands from him and if they proceed to obey them they will be impeached and pun ished. Next to a Lord the British mind loves an anomaly. Macaulay ex pressed the national feeling pretty well when he said that he never would remove one as long as It did no posi tive harm. The courts have found the divided personality we are speaking of at work in the big corporations. Men of the most saintly character in private Ufa have been discovered lying, stealing and even countenancing murder for the advantage of the companies they represented. Where Is the moral dif ference between their conduct and John Brown's in the Kansas frays? If there is a difference it is on his side, since, like Torquemada, he sinned for the glory of God, while our corporation magnates sin for dividends.1 In Kan sas and at Harper's Ferry John Brown merely put in practice, a little harshly perhaps, a theory which runs through the entire structure of civilization. We find it in business, in diplomacy, in war. We even find it active in the colleges. On what other grounds could faculties excuse the tricks by which they evoke appropriations from reluc. tant Legislatures? Put in plain words this theory is that all means are justi fied to gain an end which is command ed by the deity, the government or a corporation. If one could always be sure that the commands were authen tic would the theory be sound? More than seen hours' sleep per day makes criminals of men, says a St. Louis professor who has given several years to the subject. We can't help recalling, however, mat jtsismarcK required twelve hours' sleep a day and that Lieutenan t Becker gets along with six. nffir-era mav be sent to Ger many to learn the latest wrinkles in military science. With Turkey s ex perience in German tactics before us we suggest that our officers be kept away from Germany. The United States will meet the ruta that befell Rome, according to the prophesy of a noted prelate. At that we have something over 800 years yet to run, so why worry A Chicago judge rules that it is illegal to hit the umpire. But then, in fairness to all concerned, it must be admitted that the temptation is very great at times. When Chicago plain clothes detec-aA.io-ht m rescue him from con fidence men, a Canadian farmer fought them off. He knew, when he was well off. A Portland woman wants 1250 for a stolen kiss. No doubt the jury will viaita tr iaVa samnies in order to de termine whether the claim is excessive. To add the final touch of Democratic simplicity President-Elect Wilson might wear that felt hat and ride a bicycle in the inaugural parade. Castro is to have at least another week of freedom in New York. After two weeks on Broadway he oughtn't to care what happens. More than seventy-two millions in deposits in Portland banks make a creditable showing for active business of the metropolis. A Pennsylvania man has been ar rested' for repeatedly robbing a pie bakery. Who can guess the fellow's politics? There is an unconfirmed report that Doc Cook is writing a second novel entitled "My Attainment of the South Pole." . - - " It may be that Bolivia and Peru have been signed up for a little scrap by some moving-picture concern. Now that the divorce colony at Reno has been wiped out we probably shall never hear of the place again. Harry Thaw says he now is resigned to Matteawan. What an awful -blow to the laywers and alienists. X great musical comedy could be built around William Rockefeller's plight. Wilson says he will take no vaca tions. Does he expect that to be pop ular ? . ' London scientists assert they have created an atom. Pretty small busi ness. Our Navy Is rapidly being converted Into a South .American police force. Purely by way of a memory test, who is Mrs. Finley J . Shepard ? The shoe-last trust didn't last. Father's Farewell By Dos Collins. mnnir bv a Senator to His Bill.) Little bill, with many clauses, Led across the Senate floor By thy father, now who pauses Just outside the mystic door Where the atern committee waits; vnr he hopes to Ket a line On the dllt'rent kinds of fates They are mixing .there today, tr vnn list, vou'll hear him sari "Little bill, what fate is thine?" Little bill, the road Is bumpy Leading to the last O. K.: Other bills have found it humpy As they struggled on their way. Father's heart may yearn to guide the, But he can but stand and pine. Figuring what may betide thee. In that dark committee room Hear him murmur in his gloom.; "Little bill, what fate is thine?" Little bill, without direction From thy father's tender hand. Others now will make selection Of thy path through Senate Land. There are pathways bright and fair, Leading to indorsement fine; Pathways leading otherwhere To the basket by the casement: To the furnace in the basement "Little bill, what fate is thine?" Little bill, will -they have pity On thine innocence, or rather Will you come from that committee Changed, unrecognized by father? They have done the like before To a many a bill of mine; So I stand outside the door. Kiss a fond good bye and say. As I see you lugged away 'Little bill, what fate Is thine?" Portland, February 8. FREE TEXTBOOKS NOT DESIRABLE System la Both Expensive and I nsenl- ary, Says) Writer. PORTLAND, Feb. 6. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian of a few days ago appeared an article In which the writer. "A Renter," advocates the pro posed free textbook system, and at the same time criticisea my icwiifc iun.i.iu- nication favoring our present textboolc law. While he declares my statements to he 'Very superficial and misleading." Is It not possible that unintentionally our friend may" have made a few as sertions rather broad in character? First of all, Mr. Renter says that he "cannot see how the property owner pure and simple can have any Interest except such as he takes voluntarily In the publio Rchool system." It 1r ob vious that the proposed scheme of free textbooks would increase the taxes ot every property owner In the state, whether a "man or . a woman with or without children to support. Therefore, I wish to ask. how could the payment of such a tax be a matter of pure voli tion on the part of the property owner? Our friend further informs us that lie considers "the man who pays rent Just as Important as the property owner, as he pays the taxes, interest on the money invested and other incidentals which the property owner charges up to him in the way of rent." Mr. Renter appears by this statement to take It for granted that every property owner is a landlord who collects rent. If he will only Investigate the matter a little more fully, I think that he will find, that a large percentage of property owners are not rent collectors, but, on the other hand, pay their burdensome taxes out of each month's salary. There is one other statement that "A Renter" makes in his communication In which I tnink he is mistaken. He as serts that "under a free textbook sys tem there is a great saving in books and stationery, where the students must practice care and habits of clean liness in handling the materials lent to them by the public." Would not the pupils In the grammar grades and the students in the high schools be more apt to use a greater amount ot sta tionery if they received their supplies from a public source, free of charge. Instead of purchasing them themselves? Is It not true in our public affairs that more stationery supplies are used when, they are paid for from the publio funds and not from the private pocketbook? As to the matter of sanitation in the use of free books, it is a fact weU known to the medical world that books circulated in public libraries or schools are one of the principal means of the spread of disease. They declare it is almost impossible thoroughly to disin fect books that have once become in fected. For these reasons, the maintenance of the health of the students, economy of supply, and justice to the taxpayer and all concerned, I maintain that the proposed plan of textbook distribution would be wholly undesirable. W. VERNON. DEFENDING THS3 MUSICAL BILL) Professor Goodrich Haa a Laudable Pnrpoae to Protect the Dear People. PORTLAND, Feb. 6. (To the Editor.) "Bill, 'ere's a foreigner, let's 'eave 'art a brick at 'Im," seems to be tbe attitude of The Oregonian on all move ments and measures that It does not clearly understand. The bill for the creation of a state board of musical ex aminers is one of such measures. The author of the bill now before the Ore gon Legislature has no desire to com pete with our morning newspaper as a purveyor of humor, but is rather in clined to think that The Oregonian is the humorist In its newly-acquired zeal against setting up any kind of a ma chine. The words "trust" and "machlno" are splendid terms with which to frighten the people, but those "professional mu- Dlnlana" -nrtiA A r A And OilTnH n BT tn 11 TO- tect the public by this bill have no thought of forming either of these I tlllQKS HO Biruuiicui v .... conscience. A trust is generally under stood to be an organization to which only a select few are admitted, but the proposed state board of musical ex aminers would not keep out any per son who possessed a minimum of com petence. The patron of the music teacher has as much right to be pro tected from mis-spent money as the client of the lawyer, and the incompe tent music-teacher is as much the trustee of that money as the unworthy member of the legal profession. It Is a great privilege to be attacked by The Oregonian, for it makes us real ize that the subject under discussion Is of far greater Importance than we had hitherto supposed. ' Still The Ore gonian is fair, and If it will only ex amine this question , through the eyes of the large number of people who will be benefited thereby, and incidentally examine the text of the bill, it will be found that there is another Bide to the question and in the end our critic might say with the cartoonist of old, "Bill, 'ere's a foreigner, let's give 'im a cheer." By the way, a minimum wage tor tne music-teacher might not be such a bad thing. FREDERICK W. GOODRICH. The Oregonian understands this fool ish measure clearly enough to know that it is an absurdity. It Is paternal ism ' gone to seed. Why not a state board of dancing masters? Or a state board of roller-skate examiners? Or a state board for the regulation of per forming dogs and bears? Hla Son-In-Law-to-Be. Llpplncotfs Magazine. Girl's Father Before consenting to your marriage with my daughter, I should like to know what you are worth. young Man Well, I get 10 a week, but I am worth $60. f.