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Pontage Rmtes 12 to la pages. 1 cant; 18 to 32 pages. -2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, 8 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 paces, 6 ."mi in; ts to uz pages, e cents. Foreign post age, doable rates. Eastern Business Office Verree at Conk lln. New . York, Brunswick building. Chi cago. Steger building. , .Sn. Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Co, T42 Market street. PORTLAND. SUNDAY, MARCH IS. 1914. ENGLAND'S MONROE DOCTRINE. Instead of surrendering: free tolls to gain British acquiescence to our policy of "watchful waiting," ' we might though two wrongs do not make a right point an accusing Hnger at England. The case of Portugal is ot exactly parallef with that of Mexico. Foreign investments have not suffered there to the same extent nor have foreigners been exe cuted. But outrageous tyranny has existed for several years, if English investigators are to be believed. England's duty toward Portugal, as outlined by precedent and treaty, is somewhat more imperative in re spect to internal troubles in Portu gal than is ours toward Mexico. Eng land has frequently intervened in Portugal's internal affairs. Some of .its treaty obligations toward that country are strikingly obligatory. In one "The King of Great' Britain doth profess and declare . . . that he will take the interest of Portugal and all its dominions to heart, de fending the same with his utmost power by sea and land, -even as Eng land itself." Yet England does noth ing, though spurred by writers, so cieties and publications. The monarchy was overthrown in Portugal about three, years ago. The country is now a so-called republic whose President is a figurehead. Its real ruler until a few weeks ago was the premier, Dr. Affonso Costa, Elec tions are carried on somewhat after the Mexican manner. Those opposed to the government do not dare vote. Two-thirds of the electorate has been disfranchised as illiterate. One of the instruments in defense of the present regime is an organization known as "Defenders of the Repub lic," called "carbonarios" in the gov ernment papers. They are a horde of state-paid spies. One branch known as the "Formiga Branca" or White Ants, are entirely In the service of the government. They haunt the cafes, spy on private citizens, search private houses. xne wnite Ants nave Been ac cused of setting upon and beating workingmen for refusing to take off their hats to the "patriots." They maul suspected conspirators on the streets or throw them in jail, where they are kept without trial. They invade the Chamber f Deputies and threaten violence to any Deputy who dares criticise the government. A favorite diversion is to raid and wreck newspapers. .Republican leaders have expressed a determination to destroy the "Christian myth." If a teacher men tions the rajne of God In class he is immediately suspended and his school Closed. Children are encouraged tu parade fhe streets carrying banners inscribed, "No God, No Religion." Half the. schools in the country are abandoned. The protests in l.ngland, however, have been directed against the im prisonment . and harsh treatment of countless political prisoners. Jails are so crowded that prisoners are housed in what were once' convents and bishops' palaces, and new peni tentiaries are. being hurriedly erect ed. The constitutional requirement that prisoners shall be formally ac cused within eight days after arrest lias been ignored in hundreds of cases, prisoners remaining in solitary confinement and incommunicado for months at a time. One writer tells of three hundred syndicalists, not Royalists but Republicans, impris oned underground from April to De cember, 1913, for protesting against the government for its failure to re deem pledges with regard to wages and the cost of food. Doctors, law yers, professors, peasants. Royalists, Republicans, Socialists, all crowd the prisons of Portugal; poverty stalks in the slums, emigrants are leaving the country as if it were plague-stricken; farms, schoolhouses and churches are abandoned. Premier Costa, who is directly charged with the tyranny of the Portugese government, resigned late in January, but it is English opinion that the Cabinet will continue previ ous outrages. The demand on Eng land Is that it intervene in behalf of the thousands who are in prison un der bare suspicion or false accusa tion and demand a general amnesty toward political prisoners. England once rescued Portugal -from foreign dominion. For centur ies It has exercised a sort of benevo lent guardianship over the country. Thus has England a Mexican prob lem of its own. So long as it shows no inclination to solve the problem concessions to induce England to keep hands off our Mexican problem are hardly in order. WHAT IS JAPAN'S PART? What part does Japan play in the "matters of eve:, greater delicacy and nearer consequence" to which Presi dent Wilson referred In his message on canal tolls? While Irritated by the California land law and by dis cussion of that subject in the United States, Japan is said to be extremely friendly to Huerta. A Washington dispatch to the Biooklyn Eagle con veys the impression that Mr. Wilson wishes to strengthen our diplomatic fences in Europe, particularly in England, that he may continue his present policy tcwards Mexico with the countenance of the powers until he can send battleships through the canal to the Pacific Coast. It is inti mated that the reason is ' that "the attitude of Japan toward Intervention is highly uncertain," and that "the canal must be open, in the minds not only of many statermen, but of mili tary experts, if Mexican Intervention loi-s come, for the mere facility of access to the Pacific that it will af- ford may be a preventive of trouble beyond the borders of Mexico herself." It is confidently predicted that the canal will be ready for the passage of ships by July 1. Hence only three and one-half months remain before we shall be able to send warships quickly to the Pacific. If such haste was necessary in getting ourselves into England's good graces by repeal of toll exemption as was asked by Mr. Wilson and as is shown hv his lieutenants In Congress, then we must infer that within that period there was danger of Mr. Wilson being driven from watchful waiting to vigorous action. Does the Eagle mean td say that this danger came from the direction of England, which would no longer tolerate Mexican an archy, or from the direction of Japan, which would give aid to Huerta against our forces? Was It advisable to enlist England's aid In restraining Japan in case we should intervene in Mexico ? The President's dark hints have set everybody guessing, but they tend to confirm the impression that surren der without parley of our rights In the canal is the consequence of i our at tempt to eliminate Huerta by a spe cies of international interdict. . LAWS AGAINST EXTRAVAGANCE. . A lawyer friend in Roseburg,. like many others, has observed that a number of candidates for office in every election declare themselves to be for strict economy and lower taxes, but that after their election we have higher taxes, profligacy in office, extravagant appropriations and more commissions. Promises have ceased to impress him and he now proposes to engineer a short cut to economy by submitting a constitutional amendment provid ing that taxes "shall not exceed for all purposes, including state, county and municipality, road and school purposes, ten mills oh the valuation of property assessed, unless a greater tax shall be levied by a vote of the taxpayers in the st'.te, county or municipality, school or road district at an election held for that purpose only." The correspondent suggests that the ten mills tax might be appor tioned in such manner that the state would levy one mill, the county two mills, the municipality two mills, the school district three mills and road districts two mills, but . he does not suggest that - this be an arbitrary division. An objection to this amendment is that it is offered too late to be of great service. Much of our extrava gance has been contracted In ad vance. In Portland, for example, a two mill levy on the present valua- tion would not provide Interest and sinking fund for the bonded indebt edness. The Oregonian does not think highly of attempts to obtain efficient government by rigiu constitutional inhibitions against inefficiency. The best way to obtain efficient govern ment is 'to elect efficient men to of fice. BAiSEBALL AS A PUBLIC UTILITY. Tris Speaker is a baseball player. He has just been signed up for J 37 000 on a two-year contract. Joe Tinker, fondly remembered as an in field star of a former Portland base ball team, has been seduced into the new Federal League with another $37,000, said to be intended to cover a period of three years. Christy Mathewson. the pitcher,' stands pat with the New York team, and signs for something like $15,000 per year. We have forgotten for the moment the exact advertised stipend given to Ty Cobb, Hans Wagner, Home-Run Baker, Walter Johnson and the other great luminaries in - the baseball firmament; but It is somewhat more than' $3 per day for eight hours' work.- This new Federal League is mak ing a lot of trouble for organized baseball. It is said to- be backed by $50,000,000 capital. We rather think it will be needed before the war is over, but perhaps we do not know. These magnates have a way of fixing up things when they see that the rank outsider means business. These great sums, - invested in human flesh in the name of sport, cause one to conjecture that the American people may be taking their amusements rather too seriously. We would not do away with baseball if we could, though we have wondered many times how the thousands of young men who spend their after noons in rooting for the home team, earn a living. If we had our way, we would de clare baseball a public utility, and give franchises to the highest bid der; and we would give the proceeds therefrom to the support of public hospitals, orphans homes, detention homes, and the Associated Charities. Probably something like that will be done some day. - ,' v THE VICE-PRESIDENT'S I'OOT. Vice-President Marshall says some admirably -wise things in the course of his eloquent speeches, and some that are less wise. Part of the time, as he pours forth his floods of ora tory, his head is unquestionably work ing hard. The rest of the time we may charitably suppose that his brain has given way to his heart, which is large and soft. The other day . the Vice-President addressed an audience of young men which may have numbered a thou sand. The sight of so many ambi tious,' youthful faces woke the depths of his nature and caused him to dwell feelingly on the value of the spiirtual In us. Among other notable remarks he made this one, that 'ith co-ordi nation of the head and heart among our people there is no problem that can eonfront our republic but what is easy of solution." . This was most cheerful and reason ably sound. We do not go so far as to believe that co-operation of head and heart would make our problems quite so easy as Mr. Marshall seems to fancy, but It would certainly put us in a position to attack them more hopefully than we ever have. If the Vice-President had only stopped with the remark we have quoted It would have been ' well for his fame. The trouble with most ora tors is that they make a beautiful pie one minute and sterJ on it the next. The Vice-President now pro ceeded to step squarely Into the mid dle of his pie. This fcas his next sentence: "Get the men of America to act as their hearts speak and the complexities in our commonwealth will disappear." He discreetly avoided saying how he 'wanted the women to act, whether with their hearts or heads. Perhaps he does not want them to act at all. At any ratj that the' ' present position of his re- nowned parfy. But think what a muddle we should be in before a year was gone if the i men should "act as their hearts speak." We have had far too much "heart" - and too little brain. In our politics for lo! these many years., What the United States '.needs, and what every- other country needs- for that matter, is some good, solid thinking on political questions. If the thought is based on adequate knowledge it will be all the -better. The time for sentimentality . w ill come, perhaps, after we have done the best we can with our heads. TEN YEARS AGO. ' Somehow In contemplating the Mexican situation, one's mind travels back to the strenuous days of 1904 when we had a different kind of President and a different kind of Secretary of State, and a different kind of Secretary of War. The trio that controlled the diplomatic des tinies of -the United States . In that far-away time nearly a whole de cade ago were Theodore Roosevelt, John Hay and Elihu Root. In June, 1904, Ion Perdicaris, an American citizen,, was captured In the mountains of Morocco by a dar ing .bandit, one Raisuli. Possibly Raisuli did not know that Perdicaris was a citizen of the United States: but he speedily found out. He held Raisuli for' ransom; he : barely es caped with his own precious hide. : President Roosevelt ordered the South- Atlantic Squadron, under Ad miral Chadwick, to Morocco. Then Secretary Hay sent the following peremptory message to the American Consul-General in Morocco We want either Perdicari alive' or Raisuli dead. , The weak and vacillating Moroc can government got busy and Perdi caris was delivered alive. There was no war. with Morocco. Now suppose iTheodore ; Roosevelt had been President, John Hay Sec retary of State and Elihu Root Sec retary of War, when the record of infamies against American citizens by Mexican bandits or fighting gueril las, or Federal soldiers, whatever they were, had been given to the world. It would not have taken the ruthless murder of an Englishman to startle them into action. ' We rather think Villa would have been in jail, and there would have been no war with Mexico. But how will It be now? . REVIVE RIVER TRANSPORTATION. Completion . of the Celilo Canal, which is promfceu by January 1, 1916, should be followed promptly by re newed efforts to revive water trans portation on the Upper Columbia. We shall then have 400 miles of continu ous navigable waterway to' Priest Rapids on the north and to Lewiston on the east. . e shall ask Congress to extend the channel farther up the Columbia and to improve the channel of . the Snake. We shall be in a poor position to obtain what we. ask unless we can show that we are using what Congress has already given us. As it now is the navigable. Colum bia corresponds to -a trunk line rail road devoid of branches. Such a railroad would have a" struggle to earn interest on its bonds. A water trunk line must . have branches, not only by water on its navigable tribu taries, but by rail to the , interior. Either the companies owning these branches should be compelled to pro-i rate with the water lines, as in Ger many,1 or the r.-ater transportation companies should own the branch rallrqads and operate them as feed ers to the water line. Water transportation In this coun try has decayed -because the water trunk lines have no feeders, because the vessels are as much out of date as a stage coatjh and because they have no modern terminals at river ports, equipped with cranes, grain elevators and belt railroads. Railroad facilities have improved, while water facilities have stood still. In order to be as .up-to-date as the railroads, water lines should have all the con veniences already mentioned and should also have tugs towing fleets of steel barges. The amount so far expended on im provement of the Columbia frpm Ce lilo to the mouth does not approach the $?6,400,000 spent on improving the Elbe above Hamburg from 1864 to J894. but the Elbe at' low water has only 3 feet 1C inches in the chan nel from Hamburg, to Magdeburg, 3 feet 1 inch from Magdeburg to the Bohemian border, and the Elbe and Moldau combined have 6 feet 6 inches for the further distance - to J'rague, 500 miles from Hamburg. TJie or dinary depth below Magdeburg is only 6 feet. Yet the Elbe is navigated by tugs which draw 6000 ' tons :in eight or ten barges upstream, and 1200-t0n barges are used. Express steamers, having their en tackle for loading and unloading, are also used to carry freight. One com pany on the upper Elbe has 103 river and 41 Harbor tugs, 1200 steel barges, 19 express steamers, 250 lighters and 75 auxiliary vessels, with terminals in Hamburg and warehouses at the up per Elbe ports. A'... its Hamburg pier six barges can be nloaded simulta neously by eighteen cranes, which then drop goods through hatches in the floor to lighters lying underneath. which carry, them o ocean vessels, The upper Elbe port have perpendic ular quay walls along basins exca vated from the shore. Along the quay-side are cranes, which swing goods to cars on railroads running parallel with th - river or to sheds be yond the tracks; elevators, which drop their "legs" into, barges and un load direct; coal hoists, like those on the Great. Lakes. . ' With these modern, facilities . and by co-ordination with rail lines, the water, lines of the Elbe carry an Im mense traffic, at rates which -the rail lines cannot touch, of bulky goods of low rvalue. By pro-rating with the railroads and by means of canals which : connect the Elbe with other streams, the' Elbe draws to Hamburg traffic which ."might hav gone to Bremen, Dantzic or other ports. ".For example, oil is taken from Hamburg to Cottbus, 383 miles, of which 320 is water and 63 rail, for $3.12 a ton against $6. 02. for an all-rail haul of 260 ' miles. The respective rates for grain are $2.31 rail and water against $4.57 all-rail. From Hamburg to Chemnitz the rate is $5.76 a ton for an all-rail distance of 283 miles, against $2.93 for 320 miles water and 44 miles rail. The, water gets the bulk of the traffic, the total receipts and shipments at Hamburg to and from the interior in 1907 having been 9.030,050 tons by the Elbe and 5, 425,724 tons by rail. That cheap, bulky goods are carried by water, and more costly, less bulky goods by rail is apparent from the fact that the value f of water shipment, was 1,697,110,880 marks and that of rail shipments 2,- 4o,178,970 marks. The experience of the Elbe shows that with modern piers and equip ment, modern means of transporta tion and co-ordination of rail and water lines, the water can carry freight at rates which rail lines can not touch, Mit rail lines do a great volume of business with high-class freight. If the Elbe methods were pursued on the Columbia River, at least as g5od . results could be ob tained. Development of the power of Celilo Falls would give even better results. The power could be used to operate electric roads into the back country and the loading and unload ing machinery on . the wharves. It could operate freezing and chilling plants to keep fruit, mat and fish- in good condition. It could pump water to the arid lands, which would pro duce traffic for the river tocarry. By developing this power and applying it as described the people of. the Co lumbia Basin would not only enhance their own prosperity, but would make an invincible case for repeating the operation all along the upper river at the many places where power is avail, able. But until we have used what the Government has already given us, we shall ,not find it easy to obtain more. , OPERATIC LEAGUES. There appears to be nogood rea son why Richard Strauss', "operatic league" would not work in the United States as well as in Germany. He wishes to organize them to re lieve his country of the pernicious influence of inferior traveling troupes who sing unwisely and not too well. Strauss thinks they are depraving German taste, as no doubt they are. His plan is for the smaller cities to unite Jn groups of three and : com bining their musical resources pro vide a season of first-class opera in each place. If '.he operatic year were nine months long each city would enjoy three months, which is far better than nothing. It is said by some that this plan would not be practicable in the United States because we could not be persuaded to spend so much money on music as it would .-require. This is not quite exact. It is commonly known that we spend more money on music than the Germans or any other nation do. Our music bill is twice that of Germany each year, thodgh it must be confessed that our results are somewhat-less satisfactory. If by some miracle of organization we could establish operatic leagues in the United States many desirable consequences would follow. For one thing ordinary citizens would enjoy the privilege of hearing good music without depleting their pocketbooks as they must now. In some cities of respectable size good music is never available for th public. In all of them it is unreasonably expensive. But there would be other good re sults. With opera permanently estab lished in our cities we should pres ently become composers of good music as well as performers and lis teners. Each league ought to foster its own musical school and send gen iuses out to delight the world. The drama league aims at nothing less ambitious than this. It wishes, of course, to encourage good plays .from abroad but far more ardently it wishes to stimulate the writing of good plays at home. Local genius lacks opportunity almost everywhere 'n the United States It can find, no outlet in its home town, but 'must seek hospitality as an exile. And we know from Dante how bitter Is the bread eaten in another's house. PRIVATE OPERATION BETTER. The most Important' question of general policy to be decided by the men who will build the Government railroads in Alaska will be whether the Government itself should operate the roads or should lease them to an operating company. The purpose which the sponsors of the bill just signed by tbe President had in view will be served if the Government builds the roads and then turns them over to one or more companies to op erate on terms which will carry them through the period of developing traffic to a paying basis. The arguments which have been advanced against Government rail roads apply mainly to their operation, not to their construction, for fhe lat ter Is really a Government function. Wagon roads are still built by the Government, state, county and dis trict, and a railroad is, after all, only a road with rails laid upon It. The presence of those rails and the neces sity of single control over the traffic which uses them caused the Govern ment and the states to delegate their power of roadmaklng to corporations, which not only build but operate rail roads, aiid own the cars and engines. Bui examples are numerous of com panies operating trains over roads which they do not own. Some com panies, indeed, do not even own all the cars, but simply furnish the mo tive power' Thus the leasing by the Government of its roads to an oper ating company would be no novelty. The possibility of leasing was con sidered by the Senate committee which reported the bill, and Falcon Joslin, one of its most ardent advo cates, urged that "many of the fears of Government ownership would- dis appear if it were assured that there would not also be Government opera tion." He suggested that the Govern ment offer the line for lease to the best bidder, who would be the one who would contract to equip, main tain and operate the line and pay the Interest on Jts cost and who wouia in addition pay the largest percentage of its net earnings to the Government. He cited the case of the road which the Canadian government built from Winnipeg to Moncton and leased to the Grand Trunk for fifty years at 3 per cent on its cost, but rent free for the first e-ever. years, tie suggested, however, that the Government should get not only the interest on the cost of the line, but a percentage of the profits, as ' does Chicago from the street railways and New Tork from the subways. Owning the road, the Government would have even closer control over Its management than It exercises through the Interstate Commerce Commission and could more closely guard th Interest of the public, though rates would doubtless be un der supervision of that body. The profit-sharing plan would require that rates be sufficient to pay profit to both the operating company and the Government, but the latter's share could be applied to further extensions or to -other public betterments. If it were desired that minimum rates be charged, the lease might stipulate that all profit above a certain percent age be jiaid to the Government, and, when such a surplus appeared, rates might be reduced to eliminate it. By building the roads and then leasing them to operating companies, the Government wemld secure all the advantages and avoid all the draw- backs of public ownership. It would obtain capital at 3 per cent which" would ' cost a private corporation 6 per. cent, and would build substan tial roads at the outset, while a pri vate builder would construct more cheaply and improve as traffic grew. It would escape employment of an army of men -who might render oper ation costly and become a dangerous (-force in politics. v PRIZE INVENTIONS. Not a great while ago the Scientific American awarded three prizes for lists of "the ten greatest modern in ventions." The first prize o'f $150 went to William I. Wyman, of Wash ington City. His list included the electric furnace, the steam turbine, the automobile, the moving picture, the aeroplane, wireless telegraphy, the cyanide process for reducing gold, the induction motor, the linotype and electric welding. It is a good list and not so materialistic as it might have been. It includes one invention which appeals to the esthetic side of us, while very likely most of the se lections submitted to . the Scientific American ignored lhat feature alto gether. The moving picture is a money making contrivance, few more so, but at the same time it is educational and may be .developed Into something ar tistic before we are done with It. But none of the other inventions In this prize list appeals to the mind or soul. We have no fault to find- .vith this, but it may not be out of place to sug gest that there are some inventions, just as important as any of -he above, which have extended human knowl edge and increased the means of en joyment without aiming so exclusively at material profit. There Is the spectroscope, for ex ample, with its modifications, which enables us to analyze the chemical nature of the stars. The aeroplane is wonderful, indeed, but not so' wonder ful as the little instrument that tells astronomers whr.t metals exist In the mines of Sirlus and Aldebaran. To be sure, such knowledge does not pay any dividends, but neither does the moon. And If we had to choose be tween sacrificing- the moon and the aeroplane, is there any doubt what the decision would be? Shocking as it may be to some readers to say so, we are neverthe less of the opinion that Bergson's "Creative Evolution" is a more im portant Invention than anything men tioned in the Scientific .. American's prize list. It will last longer and more profoundly modify the course of history. Every mechanical contri vance is certain to be superseded in time., but nothing will ever supersede a true philosophical idea, a beautiful poem or a lovely piece of music. BACK TO THE FARM. As gentle Spring approaches, with its ethereal mildness, thousands of men who have been pent up in the city during the murky Winter begin to feel the lure of green fields and babbling brooks. "Back to the land" echoes and re-echoes through many a masculine breast. We do not believe that it echoes quite so loudly through the feminine breast. Perhaps in most of them it does not echo at all. The longing for rural life, with its more or less genuine joys, Is strictly a male passion. Women fix their minds on the lack of light, the water that. must be drawn painfully from deep wells, the solitude and the impassable roads, and the prospect does not charm them. Singing birds are all very well, but a good supply of hot water and stationary tubs are better. The morning dew sparkling on fra grant flowers is rapturous to behold, but, in the feminine life at least, a handy market and a clean pavement count for more. We draw our ac counts of country life mainly from the British poets, who usually com posed their rhapsodies in London. There are few mosquitoes in Eng land, and no flies. Moreover, the roads are good and the rural church is, upon the whole, as well served as the urban. It is one advantage of an established church that the pulpits are fairly well endowed everywhere, and consequently the country parishes are' not put off with scrub divines. Taking everythin together, country life in the United States attracts men a great deal more powerfully than women, partly, no doubt, because men have not advanced so far from prim itive barbarism as their wives have Country life is improving rapidly In many directions, but it is still crude and rough compared with what the city offers and the joys It affords must be purchased with severe toil unless of course, one is rich. If he is, then everything comes by magic In the country. Just as it does in town. Pro fessor Arland D. Weeks, of the North Dakota Agricultural College, thinks It is the prospect of better earnings that draws population from ;he farms to the city. There are more jobs to be had in town, he Insists, and upon the whole they pay better. A person earns more money for less drudgery and what work he does Is performed under more pleasant conditions. He has companionship, which counts for a good deal with most men. He has access to varied entertainments when the day's work is done, and, to cap the climax, the day's work itself is far shorter. These circumstances would be suffi cient In themselves to account for the drift of laboring men and women from the rural districts to the city. but there are other reasons, many of them. Mechanical inventions enable one man to do tne rarm worn wnicn required three or four in the good old times. Reapers, mowers and horse cultivators have made thousands of hands superfluous in rustic dells and the only choice left is between star vation and migration to town. Inven tion has been still more active In the country woman's sphere. It has cleared her household of all the old time Industries, such as weaving, spinning, knitting and, to an astonish ingly large exteni, even cooking, and left her no recourse but idleness if she clings to her old surroundings. Hence girls as well as boys have learned to flock to town ' lest Satan find some mischief still for their Idle hands to do. Again, the migration of " the young men has reacted with melan choly consequences upon the women. If they stay in the green fields with the birds and gamboling lambs they can find no husbands, or none whose enterprising qualities attract. The adventurous, the gallant, the ambi tious have sought the asphalt, and it stands to reasou that sooner or later the girls follow. . Wherever Jack goes Jill Is sure to come, 'give her time enough. Once a woman Is domesticated in the city she stays there unless she is dragged away by main force. With men the case is different. They are always dreaming, particularly as they grow older, about country joys and wishing they could be back on the old farm they hated so when they were boys. But women's memories are better. Time brings few illusions for them and the country remains as hateful in their riper years as it was In their forlorn and toil-bedraggled girlhood. It is safe to say that the great majority of married men who leave the town for the farm some back again within a year or two. Some of them stay, and in the end they and their families are happier for the change, but the period of transition is long and hard. There Is little poetry and a great deal of se vere, rough work in he years that must intervene between a moderate livelihood In town and reasonable comfort in the country. Compara tively few men and still fewer women have the "grit" to see the struggle through and enjoy the victory. It is very doubtful whether we shall ever again see the rural districts thickly populated with permanent dwellers. The trend toward the city does not lessen with time. On the contrary V. becomes stead ily more powerful. Nor can we depend upon the increasing demand for food supplies to fix population upon the land. It Is fai more likely that this demand will be met by the resources of chemistry and mechan ical Invention. The application of gas engines to farm work has only just begun, but already It has produced astonishing effects. Chemistry has scarcely entered the domain of agri culture, but its work has been revo lutionary and will become more so. The manufacture of foods by syn thetic chemistry is destined to make some part of agriculture superfluous. but of course npt all of it, by any means. - Still, it will help to depopu late the rural districts. H. G. Wells, in one of his latest speculations in the Century, predicts that working people will all dwell in town before long and only go to the farms for their day's task. Improvements in transportation and the cheapening of urban rents -will make this feasible. The chances are that evolution will ultimately gather everybody into town for permanent residence, while coun try life will be valu '. only for pleas ure and the nurture of children. But this will entail wonderful changes in the cities. When we come to regard them as homes instead of business conveniences, a profound transforma tion must follow. Patrick Cudahy is quoted as pre dicting that within twelve months food prices will drop, saying that Ger many and France have all the hogs they want, that high prices have made it profitable to raise livestock and that soon there will be enough to cut prices. Is it to take so long for the benetleent effects of the Under wood tariff to reach the consumer? From the Democratic . campaign speeches and platform we were led to expect that prices would tumble the day after the bill became law. Germany, having lecided to con duct an oil monopoly, politely but firmly kicks American oil interests overboard. That's the European way. Imagine Germany letting us in on an equality if she had dug the Panama Canal. Shocked by a si" skir'. at a royal dance, the staid Belgian King had the offender taken from the balk- room. By the way, how did his Majesty come to discover the offense? Lemons are said to be a cure for obesity. We see at last why Taft has been losing weight since the country handed him one a year or so since Onlv pIpvpti out of 175 men took jobs offered them. However, if any one has any sinecures to offer, the others will consider the matter. The Administration will not aid Standard Oil in its fight to get busi ness in Germany. V hat, leave the poor little orphan to its fate! Dreams caused a Medford man to rush into the street shouting that he had been robbe of, $1900. But what caused the dream? A movement is on foot to have university diplomas printed in Eng lish. But someone might be able to read them, then. English, militants have adopted hatchets and are smashing thincs. A clear infringement of the Carrie Na tion copyright. Sixty-five cars of Chinese eggs are to be stored. We shall soon be lucky to get eggs of the same century in which we live. A big express company will dis solve because of the parcel post. We can declare ourselves the old-time dividend. Peace is a delicious thing, but we shouldn't be expected to give away our choicest assets In order to pre serve It. Villa wants to be president of Mexico. There's nothing to prevent It If we succeed in freezing out Huerta. Three babes, left alone in ' an Idaho home, were burned to death. The moral is a very plain one. No doubt we shall hear shortly that adjournment of Congress has been postponed until July 15. The Income tax is being vigorously contested. Those who have the cash hate to part with any of it. By the way, what has become of the Benton case since free tolls were called off by the President! We will ado now over proceed to the McAdoo make nup- much tials. Carranza graciously permits us to speak, but not out of our turn. That water meter folly has suredly run into something. Anyway that idle army is keeping the authorities busy. Insanity -is on the with taxes. increase. Along random, is. growing restless. Gleams Through the lyiist By Dean Collins. Sons: of the Ancient Jests. A genius often may pull something new in Jest or in essay or solemn oration; A genius often some trifle may do That has all the ear-marks of new in spiration; But plain rank and file The world must beguile By carving out Joke in the old-fashioned style; And most of my Jests I'll own, if I'm pressed I dug from the graveyard, along, with the ' rest. Let Hamlets of mirth mock us humble grave-diggers. The band of my collar shall not grow caloric. Although they may sprljig, a 1 throw up the sniggers. That Jibe, the more ancient, concerning "poor Yorick." I grant that my mirth May be minor in worth, And its bones may have rested foU long in the earth; But rage shall not fester. Nor critic's words pester- It'a still pretty good for a mild -Jiiior Jester. So early at morning, and long after dusk. About the sarcophagi gaily III spade: The dry bones shall mingle with dry chest nut husk. As I unearth the wheezes Methuselah made; Joe Miller shall rise. - As my swift shovel plies. Til count any joke that I dig up a prise. For the ancientest Jest, Resurrected and dressed, May atill hold a laugh In its mummified chest. "There's nothing new under the sun," was the thought That Solomon sprung, and I note with de light. By every Joke that my digging has caught. The wise man's idea was utterly right; The jokes man may brew Today, and call new Their framework was cached where the pyramids grew; The ioke he releases, I've dug up in pieces from under the slab where they buried Rameses. The jest of the "mother-ln-law-ln-the-home," The "grandmotber's-funeral-offlce-boy" gag. Were there for the laugh in the old dan or Rome. Cheered Babylon up in its ancient-day Jag, And children at play On the Applan Way, Pulled Jokes that we blame on Abe Uncoln today. Though dust may enfold And years may have rolled, They bob up anew and they never seem old So laughing. I tumble them out of the tomb. Though critics may hold they are musty and worn; New polished and dressed in my space they find room. And seem just as good as the year the; were born; Perhaps they're not fired With glory inspired. But somehow, they bring the result that's desired. Although, it is true, I can't call them new I Just dig them up, as the other guys do. For, after all. a joke and a woman remain essentially the same, no matter what dress the fashion of the day may decree. And sometimes you can.niake an old. old one look quite kittenish if you're there with the correct hobble and mil linery. 'That bcins the case," interfered the courteous office boy, "please stitch a new coat for the one about the Eng lishman who couldn't see the point tu a joke an-d six weeks after " "Before you get fresh with me, my aon," 1 retorted, "you'd better begin your Spring sewing on the grand mother's funeral joke, for the opening ;aie is only a few weeks away." If Lowell Came to Portland. What is no rare as a day in June? Then. I thought, are the perfect days And only then, but 1 spoke too soon. For I was singing New England lays. If I i;ad been in the West out here, I could have ranged through the half a year. What is so rare as a day in June With its sweet blue sky and its gentle sun ? A day In March or April or May Or even December in Oregon. In fact I have found most any da Out here as fair as a day in June. Mexican Society Notea. tFrom El Toro Gazette.) General Villa, the prominent leader in insurrecto circles, has been more or less severely criticised for inviting Senor Benton, an Englishman, as guest of honor at one of his justly cele brated assassinations. It is feared that if his precedent is permitted to be followed, other Eng lishmen may thrust themselves into our social affairs, and the high quality of excluslvcness that lias heretofore characterized our social functions may be seriously impaired. "One cannoot be too careful." said Ilia Excellency, President Huerta, in an interview on the subject with the society reporter of the Gazette. "The Americanos one finds admirably dif ferent and at all times inclined to keep their place. On many occasions we have had Americanos as guests of honor at some i)f our most brilliant 'massa cres, yet at no time have they been so discourteous as to presume to thrust themselves into our social affairs in the way the British are inclined to do." General Villa has latterly denied that he was host to Senor Benton at the as sassination and attributes the social blunder to Major R. Fierro. Senor Bryan, the Americano who in the past year has so courteously as sumed the duties of social secretary to the President and to General Villa, has conferred with British social leaders and it is expected that the unpleasant incident will soon be closed. Approximate History. 41,233 B. C. First steps in the tango become highly popular among social circles of the Missing Links. 401 B. C. After the battle of Cunaxa, Xenophon and others lead a Greek army of 10,000 unemployed througn Persia. ' 1500 A. D. Pinzon discovers the Amazon River, recently rediscovered' by T. Roosevelt. 1864 A. D. Santa Anna, returned from exile, is Emperor of Mexico for one week, showing less staying power than V. Huerta. 1877 A. D. Electoral vote of South Carolina awarded to the Republicans. It sometimes not often happens. 1889 A. D. Railroad from Rangoon to Mandalay opened. Kipling writes ballad "On the Koad to Mandalay." not however, poking fun at the service on the line. 1911 A. D. Ditto last week's remarks about fhe Mexican situation. 1912 A. Vi. Ditto above ditto. 1913 '. D. Ditto. i 1911 A. D. Ditto still. (What's a ditto more or less between friends?)