6 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTIi3LNT, FEBRUARY 15, 1914. PORTLAND, OKEOON. Entered at Portland, Oregon. postoffice, as econd-class matter. t.u Inscription Kates Invariably in Advance: -. (BY MAIL.) Illy, Sunday included, one year ?',J2 Daily, Sundap included, six months .... X)aily, Sunday Included, three lnontns ... Xally. Suuday Included, one rnontn -'AT Daily, without Sunday, one year hi Iiaily, without Sunday, six months Daily, without Sunday, three months ... Daily, -without Sunday, one month -WJ Weekly, one year i..." J'fL, Sunday, one year JH' fcunuay and weekly, one year .......... (BY CARRIER) Dally, Sunday included, one year ""?9 Daily, Sunday Included, one month How to Remit Send postoffice money or cr, exprebs order or persoual check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or-currency are at tender's risk. Give postoffice address In full, including county and state. Postage Rates la to 16 pages, 1 cent; IS to Zi pases, S cents; 34 to 4o pages, 8 cent; 6u to eo pax-is. 4 .cents; 62 to i pages, u cents; 78 t UK pages, B cems. Foreign post age, double rates. x Kaftera Business Offices Verree & Conk Xln, New York, Brunswick building- Chi cago, steger building. ban Francisco Office R. J. Bidwell Co., 742 Market street. PORTLAND, SUNDAV, FEBRUARY 16, 1914 BRYAN'S DIPLOMATIC POLICT. Secretary of State Bryan, by his changes in the diplomatic service, has raised an issue which must sooner or later be decided by public opinion. He has opened the question whether our foreign missions are to be headed by trained diplomats or by men chosen without regard to special training, but with regard only to per sonal fitness and distinction and to political service to the ruling party. 1 The merit system was introduced by executive order under President Taft, but he was not bound to appoint heads of missions by promotion, and political considerations were not en tirely excluded. He sent Jacob Gould Sehurman to Greece during that gen tleman's vacation year as President of Cornell. He consoled Henry'S. Bou tell for defeat in a Congressional elec tion with the Ministry, first to Portu gal and then, to Switzerland, and he sent his personal friend Theodore Marburg to Belgium. None of these men had diplomatic experience and all were appointed after the merit system had been introduced into the service. Examinations for admission to the lower grades were not thefi, and are not now, open to all. Candi dates must be designated by the President, who acts upon the indorse ment of eight Senators of his own party. Promotion of secretaries of legation to be ministers is optional with the President, but the Secretary of State is required to keep a roster of those secretaries of the higher grades "who by reason of efficient service have demonstrated special ca pacity for promotion to be chiefs of mission." Mr. Taft appointed ten men from this roster, but did not adhere strictly to it. , The new policy pursued by Mr. Bryan is described by Edward G. Lowry in an article in Collier's Week ly. He says that Mr. Bryan has dis regarded the roster altogether; he has dismissed twenty-four chiefs of mis sion and has not disturbed seven. Of those dismissed, two entered the service-by competitive examination and worked their way up on efficiency markings; eight entered witho.ut com petitive examination, but also worked their way up; five had what Mr. Lowry calls "fugitive diplomatic or Consular experience," but were ap pointed and .promoted on political grounds rather than on efficiency, and nine had no experience and were sole ly political appointees. All have been replaced by men without experience. Mr. Bryan's policy is thus explained by Mr. Lowry; The Secretary of State does not believe In the merit system or civil service promo tlon as a sole basis In determining- fitness for diplomatic appointments to the grade of Minister and Ambassador. Pie does not purpose disturbing the civil service protec tion accorded under executive order to sec xetaries of legation and men in the consular service. No dismissals have been made by Mr. Bryan in the secretarial grades of the diplomatic service or in the consular force. Mr. Bryan does not feel that civil service (principles extend to Ministers and Ambas sadors. and until Congress passes a law covering them into the civil service he will continue the practice he has established of appointing such men as he sees fit and as he deems qualified to these posts. He has not yet come to favor or to look with sympathy upon the idea of building up .trained and permanent diplomatic; force with a permanent tenure of office such as obtains In the Army and Navy and the Fed eral Judiciary. He regards as one of the current risks of being a Minister the like lihood of being supplanted and let out of office when a new - Administration comes Into power of an opposing political faith and having other conceptions of govern ment. Mr. Bryan helleves that Ministers and Ambassadors should be In sympathy with the Administration under which they serve. He regards unfavorably the "Euro pean system" as applied to a republic like this, with a government by parties. Thus, again to quote Mr. Lowry, "the effort to build up a permanent system and the beginning made has been stopped by Mr. Bryan. As far as he could, he has undone what had been done." The question is now before the peo. pic whether they wish to be served abroad by trained diplomats who have risen through merit alone and who will continue in office without regard to political changes, or by men with out previous training, selected purely on the opinion of the President ana Secretary of State as to their quali fications and their fidelity and serv ices to the ruling party. The people must judge whether it is better, to encourage ambition and devotion to the public service by opening to sub ordinates the door of promotion to the highest diplomatic posts or to say In effect to these subordinates: "Thus far shall you rise and no father." Mr. Bryan seems to assume that the two parties are In radical and permanent conflict as to foreign policy and that, for this reason, the man who has served one AdmirLstratin as Am bassador or Minister cannot faithfully serve a succeeding Administration of the other party. He appears fo regard experience and training in diplomacy as of no consequence, setting at naught the example of older nations. He does not consider diplomacy a pro fession, but views it as an occupation Into which a man can Jump without fear of discredit to himself or disaster to the Nation he represents. The one thing needful in our for ign policy is continuity. Without it the dealings of foreign nations with an American Administration will al ways be colored by the possibility that a change of the ruling party may bring a change of policy as to the matter they have in h nd. Party dif ferences on foreign policy give other rations an interest in our domestic political controversies which is not conducive to our National security. The highest patriotism demands that, when we. as a Nation, are dealing with other nations we should speak and act as a unit, iot only in war, but in those more frequent contro versies -which arise In times of peace. As contributing greatly to attainment of this ideal it is desirable that our (envoys bo chosen by, merit from among trained men and remain un disturbed through political changes, as are officers of the Army and Navy. WORKING SMOOTHLY. When Commissioner Daly presented to the City CommU-lon for action on Thursday his pet plan of appropriat ing $7500 of the taxpayers money to hire an "expert" to appraise the prop erty of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company, thus needlessly duplicating the work of the State Railroad Commission, Mayor Albee in. dulged in these highly moral observa tions: "I look a' this proposition in another light. At recent meetings I have urged the people to have " faith in public officials and I be lieve we should have .faith in the Railroad Commissioners. The minute we find that they will not work with us we can do some thing else They are appointed to serve for the purpose of rate adjustments. That Is their function the same as the City Com mission's function is to govern the city." As an incentive to the public to have faith in public officials, Mayor Albee on the following day joined with the other Commissioners in en dorsing Commissioner Daly's "expert" project, the sum being fixed at $5000. The Mayor had lost interest In pro moting public confidence in the State Railroad Commission. On the same day (Friday) Commis sioner Daly put over his other hobby a water meter in every house. He was authorized to advertise for bids for 5000 meters, which will cost, in cluding installation, about $11 each, making a total outlay for this little item $55,000. When Commissioner Daly gets through revolutionizing the water department, by putting in 40, 000 more meters, he will have in vested about $500,000 in this useless and foolish plan. On the same day (Friday) the City Commission, through a majority (Albee, Daly, Blgelow) decided on an East Side site for the auditorium, though Commissioner Daly had on the previous day expressed himself in favor of the market block as a site. The "gentlemen's agreement" in the triumvirate that now runs the City Commission is in fine working order. THE FALSEHOOD AND THE JOKER. On the back of a circular issued by the Homes Tax Exemption League, W. S. U'Ren, president, this circular carrying on the reverse side the text of the proposed $1500 - exemption, is the statement that the rich man's automobiles are now exempt from tax. It is hardly to be expected that the influences which put the poll tax fraud across in the 1910 election would confine themselves to state ments of fact. Yet the assertion about automobiles is so preposterous that one must acknowledge that the "League" possesses an abundant nerve. Every automobile in Oregon, unless it has been sequestered from the as sessor, is taxed, and in addition pays the state a license tax. That not many automobiles have escaped the tax rolls is indicated by the public records rof Multnomah County. In this county approximately 8000 auto mobiles are listed and every one of the cars will pay a direct tax at the rate that is levied against real prop erty. Also the tax exemption measure contains the usually to be expected U'Ren joker. The U'Ren amendment, since repudiated, which provided for county option in taxation, professed in order to gam votes, to repeal a poll tax when the poll tax of tj per head had already been repealed and the road head tax was unenforceable. Likewise the new U'Ren bill, to gain votes, purports to exempt household furniture with other personal property up to the value of $1500, when in fact all household furniture in use is now exempt. The Oregonian repeats a question of the campaign of 1912: "Why can not Mr. U'Ren present an honest, straightforward, flat-footed measure?" OUR RECKLESS AGE. Automobiles caused the death of 302 persons in New York City last year, an increase of ninety over the previous year. In the same period there were 103 deaths from trolley cars and 132 by wagons. Thus it ap pears that in 1913 in New York 67 more persons were killed by automo biles than by all other vehicular traffic. These startling facts are learned from the report of the National Highways Protective Society An average of one person a day, except Sundays, killed through auto mobile accidents in a single city! Or six persons per Sunday, if the statis tics are to be estimated on a basis more nearly in accord with the facts for it is true that more automobile disasters are to be credited to Sunday than any other day. ' There is noth ing about the rest day, of course. that yields this shocking result. If the day were to be spent in church Or in some other quiet occupation Sunday could not be marred by so many fatalities. The reason is, . of course, that Sunday Is everywhere given up to the pleasures of automo- biling by large numbers of people. The report further shows that In New York City In 1913 there were 1485 victims of automobiles, either killed or injured sufficiently to re quire medical attention. Only 62 per sons were arrested following these ac cidents, or about, one in every twenty five cases. In one accident out of every fifteen the. driver of the auto m6bile ran away without attempting to give any aid to the victim and without making his Identity known In New York during the past year the society notes 162 such cases, or about three every week. The automobile is ordinarily not to blame for these fatalities, but the au tomobile driver is. It is probably the fact also that the number of pedes trians run down was far fewer than the victims who were riding in auto mobiles, and who were themselves killed or Injured by collision, or other similar accident. The number of automobilists killed by trains in attempting to cross rail road tracks is astonishing. It is strange that anyone should take the slightest chance of speeding over the rails unless he knows the way is clear, The automobile is u, mighty contri butionto commerce and to recreation In safe hands it is invaluable; In un safe hands it is a menace. But the automobilists themselves know that there must be regulation, and their organizations everywhere such as the Portland Automobile Club are making proper and well-directed effort to pun Ish the speeder and make travel safe to the rider and the pedestrian. New Jersey has met the objections to laws for eugenic marriage, that they discriminate between the sexes in requiring medical examination, by making its law apply to both sexes It goes beyond the Wisconsin law by directing that cognizance ehall be taken not only, of specific diseases which may be transmitted to conjugal partner or to offspring, but also of chronic infirmities, deformities and what not which may militate against satisfactory parentage. But will not the expense of examination tend to discourage marriage and encourage concubinage among the physically un fit, with the result that the number of degenerate children will not be de creased ? The difficulty about many well-meant laws is that they produce results opposite to those intended. LET THE PUBLIC DECIDE. If any J. Rufus Wallingford should conceive a great auditorium project for Portland, and should solicit stock subscriptions from a more or less in terested public o- the basis that the site would be in the immediate vicin ity ofEast Ninth and Clackamas streets, more than a mile from the civic center, across a great river, he would hot get a dollar, except possi bly from interested real estate pro moters. Yet the City Commission proposes to do with a large public enterprise, supported by public funds, what no private investor in his rational mo ments would dream of doing. It is no wonder there is general talk of a referendum. There should be a referendum, unless the City Commission recedes. Obviously the location upon which the public will unite is the Market block. It is the property of the city and it offers no complications. As between the Market block and any other available site, there is now no question as to the decision of the pub lic. MUSICAL AMERICA. ' John C. Freund, the editor of "Mu sical America,'1 stirred up a peck of trouble for himself last Spring and Summer by a warning to American girls who go to Europe to study music. , He told them, to begin with, that the trip abroad was unnecessary because we have just as good teachers In this country as they can find anywhere. But in case they were determined to go, Mr. Freund urged them to take along a mother or some other pro tector, and especially to provide themselves - with ample funds. The hope of getting through by lucky ac cidents, he warned them, was Illusory and dangerous, citing instances of young girls who had been stripped of everything, their money, their honor, their very belief in God," while study ing in European cities. Why should American girls incur dangers of this sort, asks Mr. Freund, for the sake of musical atmosphere" and musical education, when they can do just as well or better at home? Coming from a source so important as Mr. Freund, this advice naturally caused a commo tion in the European musical centers. Berlin was particularly excited. That capital draws several million dollars a year from American travelers and stu dents. If Mr. Freund's counsels should be heeded, there would be a considerable lapse in its annual reve nues. So the boarding-house keepers of Berlin combined with the musical fra ternity to make things unpleasant for the foe. They induced" the American Ambassador's wife to preside over a great - protest meeting where Mr. Freund's "slander" was vigorously re pelled and "the honor" of American girls who go abroad to study was gal lantly defended. It will be observed that the commotion was strictly finan cial. The editor of "Musical America' had not whispered a syllable against the honor of our girls. He had merely given them a sensible and timely warning about certain perils which we all know are very real indeed. But anything to keep business going. Of course the Berlin music teachers and pension people may perhaps not care what becomes of the American girls who patronize them, provided that their fees and board bills are promptly paid. Mr. Freund, on the other hand, is deeply concerned for the welfare of American music and musicians. He believes that musical affairs are, upon the whole, more prosperous here than in Europe, and gives some interesting reasons for his faith.. One of them is, of course, the fact that our schools of music are giving quite as good instruction as can be ob tained abroad and often better. There are fakers in this country, Mr. Freund concedes, but so there are In Europe, and we possess our full proportion of musical Instructors as honest and com petent as there are in the world. Even admitting all this, however, it does not necessarily follow that an American girl acts unwisely to go abroad for study. While she may not Improve her technical education much by doing so, she may broaden and deepen her culture, which is well worth while if she can afford it. But Mr. Freund goes farther and holds that in many respects we have a decided advantage over Europe in musical matters. We produce the great operas better and give more of them. "Parsifal," for example, was recently presented both In New York and Berlin. In his opin ion New York did it by far the better. There are no operatic performances in Europe to compare with those regu larly given at the Metropolitan Opera House. The only opera in France Is at Paris, and there the opposition to German music is always more or less vigorous. Only lately the director an nounced that he would produce no more German opera. In America such provincialism would be unthinkable. We choose the best from all countries without prejudice. In Italy the opera season is short and very few works are produced- Such as are performed are usually chosen from the national rep ertory. For us the repertories of all nations lie open. Mr. Freund boldly. says that there are dozens of sym phony orchestras in this country bet ter than one can find anywhere in Eu rope. Moreover, we pay higher prices for performers and therefore attract the best men to be found in every country, so that our orchstras present a degree of perfection equaled, no where else. " All this is extremely flattering to our National pride. To be able to pay better prices than the Europeans can afford and thereby obtain possession of their pictures, .their violin players and their prima donnas Is wonderfully de lightful, but there is another side to it not quite so agreeable to reflect upon. We produce operas better than the Europeans, perhaps, but we can not compose them nearly so well. When we want anything really bril liant, we must go to Germany, France or Russia to get it. Money, it seems will buy everything but genius. We can form magnificent orchestras by hiring the best playing ability in France and Germany, but we do not rear any such ability at home. We have 'millions to spend for Raphaels and Rembrandts,- but nobody to paint such pictures. Our musical situation as Mr. Freund depicts it resembles the military situation in ancient Carthage. That great city trained up no soldiers among her own citizens, but she had plenty of money to hire mercenaries. The plan worked admirably as long as she had no foes but barbarians, but when it became necessary to fight with Rome, the defects of alien troops were painfully apparent. America is conducting her art upon the same principle as Carthage did her wars. We buy everything and pride our selves enormously because we are able to pay for it. All this looks dazzling on paper. As Mr. Freund describes the situation, he makes us out to be the artistic leaders of the world. In music, he assures us, we have gone as far as our Rockefellers and Carnegies have in finance. Of course success has been achieved by similar methods in both cases. All that money can do we have done. Our musical expenditures run up to some $600,000,000 a year, which is two or three times as much as Germany uses for that purpose. The only difference in results seems to be that while Germany gets Wagners and Beethovens for her money, we get rag time and slush. NOBEL PMZE-WTXNERS. The Journal des Debats, of Paris, has compiled the awards of Nobel prizes by nations, with the result that the smallest nations appear to have done most for science in proportion to population. During the twelve years from 1901 to 1912, inclusive, the awards by countries have been: Ger many, 18; France, 13; England, 6; Sweden, 4; Holland, 3; Italy, 3; Spain, 2, and Norway, Denmark, Switzerland, Belgium, Russian Poland, Russia and the United States, 1 apiece. Taking the ratio to a theoretical 100,000,000 population as a basis, this puts Sweden In the lead with 71.9, Holland next with 50.5. Norway third with 41,8, Denmark fourth with 36.4, while other countries trail, along as follows: France, 32.8; Germany, 27.7; Switzer land, 26.7; Belgium, , 13.5; England, 13.3; Spain. 10.2; Italy, 8.6; Russian Poland, 8.0; the United States. 1.1: Russia, .8. Had the Nobel fund been created a century ago, the United States could have claimed credit for Fulton, the in ventor of the steamboat; Morse, the inventor of the telegraph code; Bell and Edison, for electrical Inventions; Walter Reed, discoverer of the causes of yellow fever. Either the period during which prizes have been award ed is too short for fair judgment or American genius is stagnant for a time. The supremacy of small nations in scientific achievement may, how ever, be due to the greater ease with which recognition is secured among them. OUTLOOK FOB FRUIT INDUSTRIES. On another page of The Oregonian there may be found an article dealing with the fruit industries of Oregon as viewed from the standpoint of Mr. H. B. Miller, a gentleman as widely and favorably known as any man in the West. Mr. Miller has had pecu liar and appropriate training as some thing of an authority on the fruit in dustries of Oregon. He has been a grower of fruits in this state for more than a quarter of a century; he has studied at close range the fruit in dustries of the Orient, where his posi tion gave him the best of advantages for such work; for a number of years he was the president of the State Horticultural Society of Oregon; he also served as president of the Board of Regents of the Oregon Agricultural College. For the last four or five years Mr. Miller has been engaged in develop-, ing a large orchard tract near Sheri dan, but the actual field work has been done by his son, Kenneth. This has given Mr. Miller time to go into the study of fruit conditions in the state as thoroughly, perhaps, as any other man has ever gone in any sec tion of the country. Mr. Miller believes the marketing of products can only be accomplished in a way to insure the greatest suc cess to the industry by co-operation among the growers in establishing plants to take full charge of all of the various fruits and vegetables that the members may produce. Then further co-operation must step in and combine these plants or associations Into one great central selling agency to be located at Portland. This should1 be the clearing-house for the entire fruit industry of the state. It should have ample warehouse and cold stor age space, good dock and railway facilities and sufficient capital to make such advances as the growers or con signors might require. Another end to be accomplished by Intelligent co-operation is the knowl edge it will confer on newcomers as to the varieties of fruit trees and-berry bushes to plant. In a neighborhood where all of the growers were pro ducing loganberries It perhaps means failure for a person to be the sole pro ducer of raspberries. Heretofore newcomers have had to guess what to plant and they often guess wrong. The lack of such facilities now is hampering the fruit industries of the state very heavily. If some plan can not be formulated for relief our growers will far from reach the suc cess they deserve. MAKING A COUNTY PROSPEROUS. The County Court of Baker County makes an annual appropriation for the support of the Baker County Com mercial Club, of which Mr. Walter E. Meaeham is the secretary. There has recently been some opposition to such appropriation, coming largely from the farmers of the county. This oppo- sitiop came about principally because the farmers as a rule did not under stand the workings of the club, claim ing it was an organization operated principally in the interests of the City of Bilker. Lately some of the foremost farmers In Baker County have gone more thor oughly into the matter and it has de veloped, at least to the satisfaction of a good many of them, that this idea was erroneous and that in reality the club was laboring for the upbuilding of the county as a whole. This feeling has been intensified very recently by several get-together meetings held in various parts of the' county, the more recent being a dinner given to about zuu ot tne residents in jsaKer. At this meeting some of the farm ers were the principal speakers and they perhaps voiced the general feel ing throughout the agricultural com munities and the smaller towns when they expressed their opinions that the Commercial Club was not only doing good work, but that the appropriation for its maintenance should be in creased rather than diminished or lopped off altogether. It is a splendid thing for the people of a county to stand together shoulder to shoulder for the upbuilding of every portion of such county. A peo- pie so united are bound to succeed. And this Is surely the case with Baker. Baker is a land of wonders, rich in all that goes to make a people happy and prosperous. For diversified re sources It is mighty hard to beat. Its mineral resources surpass those of any other Oregon county; more money is going into the county for lumber than any of our counties, with possibly three exceptions; the payroll ranks well up with the highest in the state; the agricultural products are enough to make any county rich. Baker Coun ty has about all the good things any community could ask for. Let us hope this get-together spirit will resolve itself into a permanent stay-together partnership between the whole people of gooa old Baker. Di vided they might not much more than hold their own; united Baker ought to be one of the banner counties of the state In all ways that go to make a people really and truly prosperous. ' RECLAMATION CAN PAY ITS- WAY. Allotment by Secretary Lane of all the money now in the reclamation fund, together, with the proposed ex tension to twenty years of the time of payment for water rights and the steady decline in proceeds of sale of public land, leaves the cupboard as bare for further reclamation as Mother Hubbard found it. It is not to be tolerated that the progress of reclamation should be restricted to the driblets which will come in from land sales and water-right payments. From the projects already com pleted and settled, the Government can gauge with reasonable accuracy at what annual rate the money 'ex pended will return to the fund. It can therefore Judge how large an is sue of bonds or certificates could be redeemed from this source by serial payment without encroaching on the general public revenue. Money for the completion of each project can then be raised when it is finally adopted. Receipts from each com pleted project can -be applied to re deem the bonds issued for its con struction, just as yearly installments on street improvement bonds are ap plied, or the receipts can be thrown into a common fund for the redemD tion of reclamation bonds in general. Mr. Lane is on the right track when he proposes a $100,000,000 bond issue, but there is no valid reason why the issue should be limited to that or any other amount. By the issue of bonds secured by the reclaimed land itself and redeemable with payments into the reclamation fund, the arid land can be made to reclaim itself without drawing on the Government at all, provided land is not irrigated any faster than it is demanded by settlers. With due care, the operation could be so engineered and financed that, when - the last payment on the last acre was made, the last "bond would be redeemed. The work would then be completed without ultimate ex penditure of a dollar by the Govern ment. , As Oregon has contributed far more to the reclamation fund than it has received, equity demands that Oregon projects have first consideration un der this plan until all meritorious projects In this state have been car ried out. Oregon is entitled to recom pense for long neglect. THE THEOSOPHICAL PATH. , In the February number of Cather ine Tingley's "Theosophical Path" a curious passage is quoted from Glad stone's writings. It relates to the state of the soul after death. The distin guished British statesman seems to have believed in something like the doctrine of purgatory. He says that "the Christian dead are in a progres sive state," and adds that their sins "will have to be effaced by a process of discipline." He ventures to believe also that while the results of the dis cipline will be happy, we are "by no means warranted to believe that it will be accomplished "without an admix ture of salutary pain." This consigns the future state of the Mahommedana, Buddhists and Mormons to consider able doubt, but it leaves no gap in our knowledge of what is likely to happen to Christians. They are to be purified by a disciplinary process "between death and the resurrection." If this is not exactly the theory of purgatory as it is taught in some of the churches the difference Is inappreciable. It chimes in very well also with the be lief of the theosophists. His notion of a disciplinary interval between death and the resurrection Is reasonable In itself, and it is supported by the concurrenc . if innumerable Christian "theologians. It seems in credible that even the most righteous souls should be deemed fit to pass at once from the turbidity of earthly life to the Immaculate serenity of heaven. Must there not be an interval for self examination and repentance? It Is safe to assume that the best of us carry some stain of sin with us when we depart from this world. Of course there is a theory that all such stains are instantaneously obliterated at the moment of death, but what obliterates them? Gladstone thought some time must pass before one could enter para dise and the disengaged soul would spend it in purgatorial discipline. The theosophists, as we intimated above, differ with him somewhat, but not rad ically. According to their tenets,- the purification of the soul Is effected on earth, but that, after all, is a matter of detail. The essential point is that the good work is done somewhere. Like Gladstone, they relieve us from the impossible supposition that human souls, with all their earthly impuri ties, rush at once into heaven after leaving their bodies. The theosophists have not quite the same conception or neaven as otner devotees. To their minds it is a place of rest and refreshment between our successive lives on earth. To enjoy it no especial purity is required, since it is not a final home, but only a cara vansary, as it were, or a camping place between journeys. The real work of redemption and purification is accom plished here below. Thus the theoso- phist holds a radically different opin ion of this world from some of our Christian brethren. The latter looK upon it as a' vale of tears, a place of temptation, and our terrestrial life as a miserable pilgrimage from which the sooner we escape the better. "This earth is not our dwelling place, heaven is our home." To the theosophist earth is home. He goes to heaven now and then to recuperate, but the real business of his existence Is here, and no matter how often he goes away he always comes back: How long we may expect to stay in heaven, with Its peaceful river and serene meadows, we ate not told, but the supposition is that the periods of rest and refresh ment there will be long. Katherine Tingley assures her readers that they will be longer than any mental image we can frame of infinite time. But each sojourn in heaven, be it long or short, will com to an end, and then the soul will return to earth to begin Its work of self-redemption over again. Thus we are destined to be born in numerable times, starting at each birth a little nearer the goal of perfection than we were before. It follows nat urally that each of us has been born Innumerable times already. No human soul is a stranger, on earth. It is a traveler who has made a trip to a far country and come back again to take up the work it had dropped. - Reincarnation is the means by which, according to the theosophists, our redemption is accomplished. There is no such thing as a final judgment and a permanently lost condition of the soul, if we may trust their teach ing. The worst of us will have mil lions of chances to make good and the best of . us will need them. Persist ently through the eternities the prin ciple of Karma is at work, they tell us, tending continually to make the balance swing even between right and wrong, good and evil, happiness and misery. Each individual has his Kar ma, and so has the entire universe. We are permitted to believe that the Karma of the whole world is worked out through the efforts of individuals. It is by attaining to self-redemption that a man helps best to redeem the universe. A person's Karma is his ob ligation to right all the wrongs he has committed and make good al his fail ings. When one of his lives ends on earth the balance is struck and the debt charged to his account. He goes to heaven, regardless of the record in the books, and enjoys his" allotted pe riod of recuperation. Then he must return to earth and begin to square his accounts. So he proceeds from life to life and he is a lucky man if each time he departs from this world there is a smaller debtor charge against him than there was before. There is no conflict between theoso- phy and the ancient doctrine of the transmigration of souls, which was held by Pythagoras and many other sages. These wise men taught that we might work out our Karma in the bodies of cattle, swine and serpents, as well as in the human form. It will be seen that the doctrine of Karma looks toward the establishment of complete harmony throughout the uni verse. When all obligations shall have been worked out and every retribution made, peace will reign everywhere and evil will be no more. This is a most engaging hs-pothesis. If there were convincing evidence of its truth we cannot see why the whole world should not adopt it. Some of our more erudite contem poraries are exercising their minds over English grammar, a subject which they seem to study a good deal without learning much about it. "Is it correct,'- asks one correspondent. it say lie is uppust'u iu my siuui ing grammar ? we cannot believe it is correct. Why should "he" be opposed to such a wholesome, if somewhat hopeless, pursuit? The only sane ob jection to any one's studying grammar would be that his time might be bet ter spent splitting wood. One of the express companies has formed a projec. of worthy competi tion with the parcel post. It plans to deliver country produce directly to city consumers, collect the price and remit to the grower. In Germany the government does this. Here no body has done it hitherto. The ex press company which takes up the task will be a public benefactor and should earn a great reward. It ca'n charge a profitable fee for the service and still make things better for both grower and consumer. It is not. however, from the classes, but from the masses that Judge Bennett will poll his biggest vote. It is his natural hon esty, his admitted ability and his popular ity amonar the rank and file of the party that make him the strongest candidate for the Democratic nomination for ' Governor. Albany Democra What! A Democratic paper refus ing to line up for the Residuary Leg atee? But perhaps the Residuary Legatee does not want Democratic votes. New York suffragists abandoned their twelve-hour meeting after an hour or so because of the cold. That Isn't the spirit that wins battles. Deep snow has brought relief from bitter cold in the Eastern' States. Warm sunshine has driven off what little chill we've had lately. Greater respect for the National air will be enforced at military posts. There should be no need for enforc ing such a sentiment. Congressmen disagree over the state of general prosperity. Prosperity is, to a considerable extent, a matter of locality these days. , A new asteroid has been discovered by science. Small compensation for the threatened breaking up of the dipper. . An expedition is beiig outfitted at San Francisco to hunt for $60,000,000 in buried treasure. Quick, Watson, the needle! Oregon growers oppose a California plan for relaxed grading of apples. Oregon growers, you see, are on the square. ' A big English -.-ailroad company having hired an American manager aiviaenas snouia pick, up bit. American cavalry horses were pois oned .by drinking at a Mexican water hole. Typical Mexican trick. With water meters ordered, spark ling Bull Run will shortly join ths high-cost-of-living procession. Bryan has acquired a llama. With a little coaching it should help him In his Chautauqua work. Whole reeiraents of the French armv are down with measles. Liter ally a measley army. , At last! Costa Rica has accepted the Bryan peace treaty dream. Now for Congo Free State. Huerta is reported to be toppling again. But he may be merely another leaning tower of Pisa. Lina Cavaliert has wedded again. Got to be a regular habit with Lina. The meadow the meadows. rks are singing in Gore Insists that they're after his political gore. The fans are growing restless. Regular Spring fever weather. Straw hats next. Gleams Through the Mist By Dean Collins. Valentine Adaptable. 'Tis season of the valentine. When I must sing a tender ditty. And offer up this heart of mino Unto that pearl of maidens, Kitty; Oh. fairest maiden of my time. Tour voice the warden of my will is; I love you (but I lack a rhyme.) 1 guess I'd better sing to Phyllis. Phyllis, sweet Idol of my soul. Your gentle eyes with love Inflame ra; For you alone (I'm in a hole For rhyme again.) I'll sing to Mamie Mamie, my heart's delight divine. Your grace, expression quite eludeth,. (I'm stuck again for that last line.) I'll have to sin,g the praise of Judith. Judith, fair star, I'll praise you then; My warm heart beats alone for you (Confound itf Where's that rhyme again?) 111 switch my lay and sing ofv Sue. Sue, queen of all within my heart; Ne'er shall my firm affection vary (Why can't I finish what I start T Helgh-ho! I'll "have to turn to Mary. Mary, my own. my lady sweet; Loved I not thee. I'd be a felon (No rhyme to make that thought complete?! Sooth, I must yield my heart to Helen. Helen, sublime sweet evening star. Whose light my deepest spirit shook With woniTrous mood (and there you are.) Hang it! I'll send this to the cook.- To thee, sweet cook, I give my heart. With burning, strong emotion toasting. To practice on with all thy art For hearts are better for a roasting; Thine, thine alone, who feedest me. Shall be this heart, and I'm not bluffing. If you will but agree to bo A gen'rous lady with the stuffing. It is a more certain sign of approach ing Spring than the birds flying North, for one to see the Beavers getting ready to fly South. x Solemn Thought. Bravely I've lived the tango down. Hoping a fair "raanana"; But now I face the "maxlxe". And likewise the "furlana". "Sir," said the courteous office boy, "are you interested in antique knock ers?" "Very much, my son." I said gently. Whereupon he slipped me a bust of Diogenes and fled. Passing It On. The poet has an easy job. He never has to think; He only needs a fountain pen. Some paper and some Ink. The cook, she also has a cinch; She never has to eat. But only move her jaws awhile And smell the roasting meat. The chauffeur has a sinecure; He has no woes or cares. He can Joyride and never have To pay for the repairs. Chicago Evening Post. A life of ease the plumber lias. As I can plainly point; He draws his pay, and all the day Just hangs around some Joint. The butcher man. he has a Job That's really more like play; He merely stands about the block And cuts up all the day. The bartender should love his job Immensely. I should think; For he can mix the livelong day. And never has to drink: . "Do you really think Hamlet was mad?" was the 140th question of the Young Thing to her escort- Did he have to sit near you during the last performance?" Interposed the Long Sufferer In the next row. Mexican Society Notes. ((From El Toro Gazette.) A comic valentine, sent from General Villa to His Excellency, President Huerta, was Inadvertently opened by Captain Bombasto, one of the aides yesterday. Captain Bombasto's little finger and shoulder straps were posi tively Identified after the uproar had subsided. The popular drama, "Arms and the Man," is to be staged near the border by local talent, under the direction of General Villa. Stage properties are furnished through courtesy of Presi dent Wilson, of the United States. A "get-together" meeting for the promotion of peace in Mexico is to be held at the Capitol on a near future date, under the joint auspices of His Excellency President Huerta and Gen eral Villa. Gorgeous fireworks are to be a feature of the entertainment, fol lowed by a general potlatch, in which gifts of real estate in six-foot plots will be distributed among many of the celebrants. If Gray Lived In Portland. Perhaps, in this political parade. Some heart is live with gubernatorial fire. His hand the rod of empire might have swayed And then, again, he may be just plain liar. Petitions to my eyes their ample page Rich with the spoil of names do aye un roll. Until my bosom swells with noble rage And freeze the genial currents of my soul. Yet even my course from insult to protect. No scanty refuge seemeth to be mine; Petitions, with their uncouth scribbling' . decked. Thrust still before me and I sigh and sign. , Approximate History. 200.000 B. C. Oldest antediluvian man in America wills his mummy to the Smithsonian Institute and crawls into the asphalt beds at Las Erea, Cal. 1014, A. D. King Canute falls down on that well-known tongue twister: "The sea ceaseth, and it sufficeth us." 1493, A. D. Columbus begins to write the story of his voyages without re serving moving-picture rights, and not for $2 a word. 1564, A. D. Galileo born; originator of the expression: "The world do move." 1779, A. D. Captain Cook acts as "piece de resistance" at a banquet held in Hawaii in honor of the opening of the missionary season. 1886, A. D. "Volapuk" new universal language, invented by L'Abbe Schleycr. Later "Esperanto" and "Ido" invented by others. English and other ol'' lan guages are till spoken, however, in a few of the outlying districts. Marrlajxe and Mivorre. FREE WATER. Or., Feb. 12. (To tiie Editor.) "A." being a divorced w.'mr.n in Oregon, marries "B" four months after the decree of the court. Is her marriage with "B" legal and will she have to have a divorce from "B" in or der to be legally married to "C"? F. B. SMITH. If the second marriage was prior to June 3, 1913, it is legal; if subsequent thereto It is not. In the first event, before marrying "C" she should obtain legal annulment of the second ntar-riage,