-'iWW it.it-.,y.'J.1Ii..:Ji.r,'.XvV 4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. ' SUN DAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 7, 1013. : A THEJOURNAL "4 JKD1CPBNDBNT NKWSPSPSB C ft. etwBON . . pabllahar fubitabed ery a-raolnc leirapt Simdaylead . every Snn1 y uorolnt it Toe Joernal Boils, tot, Btoedwar and Yamtalll-'ata,, Portlaad. Or. Kaierea at tbt poatofflce at Portland. Or, for : tranamtaeloa through tha atalte aa eeeoaS elaaa naner. - KaXfcPHONM . Mala TITI; Boom, iWL AU departments rraebed toy tbeee BShere, fall the operator vbat Sepertawat torn treat, SOKK1UN ADVBBTISINO BEPBKSKNTATIVS Benjanila Kantaor Ce Browwlck Bulldles, im rirtb arcane. New Xorkt JSU People , aa Bnlldln. Cbtcaao. ttabacrlpttoa Tarma by mall or to any aodreaa I tba Unite State or HaxJcot DAILX Was I ear ...... 10.00 One montk I M SUNDAY . Ooa year 12. W I One noatk I DAILX AND SUNDAT One year $730 I On month ( .! ca ts - The power of applying- atten tion, steady and undlsslpated. to single object, Is the sure mark of a superior genius.- Chesterfield. THE WAY TO EMPIRE 1 on , their way,, to Join. Montgomery In an assault upon Quebec. ' Arnold led his men through the wilderness of Maine and Canada, and his cour-ae-e wm unauestioned. This was in the fall and winter of 175.' Ar nold had assisted in the capture of Fort Ticonderoga, and later be fought at Saratoga, there losing' a leg. Gates minlmlred Arnold's ef forts, and a sensitive nature turned traitor. Arnold has a traitor's place In American history, but he was not always a traitor. What harm can there be in erecting a monument to the former Arnold? A just Judge gave that unfortunate man full credit, for all the good there was in him. Why should not we do the same thing? Besides, the Plttston monument- commemorates the Valor of 1100 men who did not turn traitors. free to run their own affairs. That RIVAL FORCES r IT IS -almost certain that, unless the unexpected happens, there will' be delays in the prosecution . , of-the work on the north Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia. - The one thing that ought not to happen now is any kind of post ponement of work on the Jetty. Water is to be turned into Culebra cut in the Panama canal the fifth of next month. The work on the cut will be practically completed' on ' the fifteenth of this month. It is of the utmost importance that every agency that will deepen the entrance to the river should be ' pushed with all possible dispatch and all possible energy. The dif - f erence between aggressiveness and non-aggressiveness in prosecuting the work will be perhaps a year's delay in the final completion of the north jetjy. A difference of a . year In the completion of the Jetty -. may mean in the opportunities over looked, a loss of millions to Port- Jand, to Astoria, to Vancouver and to points all along the river. When trade connections are once established, they are difficult to break up. "When trade routes are ' once mapped out, It requires time and trouble ' to Change or divert mem. When the " great sea traf flc to pour through ' the Panama canal . first appears along the Pacific coast. It will be tremendously disad vantageous if the Columbia river is i maintain schools N THE development of democracy are manifest two great forces, now contending in opposition, now working in cooperation. These rival forces may be desig nated individualistic and collective. In the early history of our society the individualistic was - in the as cendancy. As society has become more complicated and its member ship more interdependent, the col lective has gradually become the controlling force, through the , Ina bility and Impotence of individual effort. f. if;',;; The battle of these two grea.t forces Is most clearly seen on the primary field of education. In Its first manifestation education has individualistic form but while de-( voted to the Individual the chief ob jective is the collective good. Collective interest demands that the individual units be educated for every human occupation that gives free play to each individual's pe culiar power. - The best thing done by American colleges the past fifty years has been the widening of in struction to meet the individual needs of students in an ever increas ing number of subjects, fitting them as units to Initiate those works that are for the common welfare. Although the collective Interest is in reality the Interest of every Individual there Is an extraordinary Interference with individual liberty. State laws compel parents to send their children to school and force cities, towns and rural districts to for a definite day has. not been hastened by, for mer administrations. ; : 1 Mr. Worcester's statement con cerning'' slavery as ian institution will .bear investigation. Judge Tracey of the supreme court of the Philippine; -Islands has refuted It. He says proof of so-called slavery was proof 'only of an Igorot custom of parents binding out their chil dren, often against the children's will. Such . custom," according to Judge Tracey, cannot be consid ered Involuntary servitude, even though it may be .condemned by ha manltarians. . What the United States wants is the truth about the Philippines. An effort is being made to exploit the Filipinos under the excuse of pre paring them for, freedom. We are told they are not'flt to govern them selves, that we are doing them much good, that this sjpod will be lost If we give them independence. Moorfleld Storey In a recently is sued pamphlet quotes former Presi dent Eliot " of Harvard university to the effect that "political freedom means freedom to be feeble, foolish and sinful in public affairs, as well as freedom to be strong, wise and good." The United States has made its wayL to ' freedom through- folly, bloodshed and civil war. and -errors of the, past justify pur freedom, for we have saved1 ourselves from error. This much is Certain, the United States must, not Mexicanize the Philippines. The greedy American dollar must not be ,given firm foot- Bom tnere under,, tne guise oi.Deneil cen$ government;'1 " ORAVTY MUST PREVAIL there was twenty .feet ijlenth of chan nel He said 5, that, in projecting a new, line : ho. would, f ollow; .a fiver's , bankk becau,s, there he would avoid heavy grades, expensive both' la con struction " and operation.'';, He ; now nas a water level grade to the tea at "Astoria, his:- ship are being built, and Astoria is ' providing the docks and terminal. facilities, ,.' 4 ? Mr. Hill's insight into transports ' tion problems Is needed" just now. The ' Columbia basin should not be required to fight for equitable rates;' it snouia ,ipi ne required to battle ror an opportunity to; enrich tne railroads by. routing trafflo along water levdj grades. The Colombia basin's ana the railroads'. Interests are , common.1 ' One ' cannot prosper without t .enrlchlngi-the!-other j. one cannot stagnate without impoverish ing the others ' v-- THE ABATEMENT LAW- .''V- .REMBRANDT - Hi ' i ' i ii By Dr. Frank Crane. , 0 -not ready to receive and take care period during the year. This is an of its portion. If big ships knock at the door of the river and have no facility for entering, the loss and cost to Columbia, basin, to Columbia , river points and to the shippers and producers of the, whole Northwest will be enormous. ' the section to nrovide-against Ae- lays in compieung . yie noryi jetty. The great commercial bodies of ' cities along the river should become active. Half a .million dollars ought . to be made available from private pBources to supplement the work when the appropriated government . funds are exhausted. . No moment of time should be permitted to elapse between the ending of government operations and the beginning of op erations financed by the Northwest communities. . t Astoria should throw 'her re sources into the balance. Portland should come forward with a great ' contribution. Vancouver, The Dalles, 'Arlington, Kennewick, Lewlston, Pasco, and every other point. along Infringement, on individual rights and demonstrates the domination of collectivism. Universities and colleges are maintained by taxes on private property. Every taxpayer is forced to con tribute to the support of higher edu cation though he may have no child to benefit or have no interest in the subjects taught. As a matter of fact only a small minority at any one time makes use of the higher schools, or are conscious of any per sonal benefit from them. Notwithstanding this, the state legislature makes large appropria tions for higher education on the theory that It Is for the collective the river should give heavily of .moral if not material support. The struction in all subjects. To do this the legislature uses Its taxing power to compel the taxpayer to contribute to the support of college and uni versity. Again collectivism overrides In dividualism for the purpose of lm- j proving the individual and indirect- OMMKRCH like) ' water, follows ins 'line of least resistance, you . ..cannot overcome gravity; In the na it win prevail. James J. , Hill. 'If railroad Interests seriously con template fighting .Astoria's demand for common point 'rates; on a par with Seattle and Tacoma, those in terests should fortify ' themselves with some principle of railroading which James J. Hill has not discov ered, x " ' Mr: ' Hill says you cannot over come gravity, that commerce fol lows t$o line of least resistance That is why he is a successful rail road builder and an equally success ful railroad operator. He knows the utter Uselessness of attempting to. overcomes natural laws. They may be disregarded, but if they are, the railroad and its patrons pay the , x . . ...1. .jr pouauy. nr. tun preacnes, in sea 'son and out of season, that In the end gravity must prevaiL . Applying Mr. Hill's railroad axi oms to Astoria's case, the conclusion ii Irresistible. Railroads cannot haul the . Columbia basin's freight over mountains to Puget Sound as cheap ly as the same freight can be hauled along water level grades to the Columbia's month. Railroads can not continue using two engines to pull thirteen cars across mountain ranges into Seattle and Tacoma, while one engine will pull one hun dred cars along the Columbia's bank Into Portland and Astoria. Why should the railroads insist upon the . mora expensive haul? They should not--and possibly they Interest to maintain advanced in-rw111 not- tBut a11 ''JlrOad men have , whole Columbia basin Bhould rally around the slogan to rush the north Jetty, and summon every available force for promoting aggressive and . continuous action at the Columbia entrance. It is no time for narrow vision. There are tiny shipping points alopg the Columbia that will be cities of 15,000 when the Columbia river reaches its ultimate development, v In that time, such cities as Vancou ver should have a population of 100,000. Opening of territory by roads connecting the interior with the river will build up back country ' points as well as the river points. The Whole Columbia basin fed by the impetus of a deepened entrance ,'and great ocean trade routes would be a throbbing empire of trade and business life. Pnrtl.tnri In th ------ . ... laid miast or sucn an empire would be infinitely greater than the com Tsratfvely puny thing she Is In the midst of her present scantily populated back country. ueD r.mmuons tnat will age of the expert, who Is a highly .come if the great .kingdom of jthe : Individualistic product, but a prod .. Columbia seizes its opportunity and I net which an intelligent collectivism ly the mass. Collectivism has also undertaken? the Improvement of agricultural methods and the dissemination of increased knowledge among the farmers. This is not done in the interest of the individual farmer but because of the collective, interest in the intelligence of the farmer in general. Collectivism demands that all useful fields of endeavor be well filled and to this end education is desirable in the preparation for every human occupation, especially in that occupation on which the hu man food supply depends. It does not trust individualistic effort which has proved to be Incompetent. As a, result of collective pressure cooperating with individualistic in itiative, the enlargement of educa tion in the United States has as sumed vast proportions. This could not have been accomplished had not collective action overcome individual right All business, public and private, must be directed by trained men who are called experts. This is the not Mr. Hill's vision. Many of them are concerned more with pres ent annoyances than they are with future possibilities. They lack vis ion, ability to see clearly into the future. They lack an empire build er's actual Interest in the territory which gives them tonnage. The Columbia basin's full devel opment should be a chief concern of the railroads. Mr. Hill saw clearly in former days; he should see clear ly today,. When timber was vainly awaiting the woodsman because of excess freight charges, appeal was made to him. A lower rate was asked, and he put in a still lower rate. What was the result? The stumpage .value of 725 bil lion feet of timber advanced a dol lar a thousand. Railroad rates opened a way to market. Freight cars ' that formerly went east empty then, went back loaded. The east bound traffic grew so rapidly that empties soon began coming west. Then, to load these cars,-Mr. Hill put In rates that attracted cotton to his railroad, and Great Northern cars have been loaded ever since. Railroad rates did it. They made the Great Northern a certatn divi dend payer because of traffic's bulk not because of excess charges REGON'S injunction: and Abate ment Jawis, proving effective In , suppressing commercialized TV I A A' ' Ifl lAVf 1 O M A "w f hAn jtP V 1VV U V Mfra jy' AiVAM ;Vi prosecutions . undejf it nave secured promises '.from" several .:roperty owners ; thahouses will bo. longer be used ror immoral purpose, Dis trict Attorney Evans is t-uslng. the law as an efficient-club '-to -beat down vice in Its worst form. The plan of ' the ' law . It4 slmplel It holds the property,,, 6wner re sponsible for the character and acts of" bis tenants. He- receives pfo tection?,to ,ma. property throagn po lice and . fire , departments; courts are maintained to enable him .to col lect his rents; bis property's value is enhanced . thi'ereAtlon . of schools, churches and libraries.,-All this is done for him by the, public, which in turn has the right to ex pect protection : from hint against immoral or dangerous use of; his property,' ; 4 , 'i The laV- contemplates nly a square deal between property;; owner and the public. If he has .tenants who abuse the privileges granted him by sthe," people, they have a means under this law by which they can protect ' themselves by . depriv ing him. ot - the right ' to use his property for any purpose" unless he guarantees; the public, with a prop er bond, 'that he will discontinue its wrongful' use. '.JPhat Is to say, a property owner cannot accept privi leges without assuming obligations. The law provides that any citizen can bring an action to abate a so da evil .nuisance without action. by the ponce authorities, Tne pur pose of this provision is to make the - public independent-nf-xorrupt or Indifferent officials, If each ex ist. It gives every good "citizen the right, to invoke .the state's power against people, who feed upon vice. For further protection - of the public, court procedure('.ls altered. Under criminal laws a man acquitted in "a lower court cannot again1 be tried for the same offense, nor will an appeal to a higher court affect his acquittal: .; Under this' law an acquittal, may be reviewed, '. by a higher court and the penalties be Imposed. Neither officers nor witnesses can demand fees in advance. If the defendant is found guilty, the costs are taxed against him, but'jf found not guilty and the costs cannot be collected from him, the state pays them. This provision gives the .cltl zen bringing the action; protection that any officer of the law has "In prosecuting1 criminals. ' if 1 . States have experimented with drastic criminal laws in attempts to suppress the social . evil, but these attempts have been practical fail ures. Iowa first, adopted an kit junction and abatement law and it has been effective In closing houses of li I fame that existed for years In spite of severe criminal penalties. Nebraska tried a similar law, and, it is "claimed that in a year every public house of prostitution had dis appeared front the state, . Washington, South. Dakota, Utah, Minnesota and Wisconsin have adopted ' the law, and r California's t legislature enacted it for that state. What is known as . the ; Property Owners' Protective , Association is attempting to Invoke the referen dum against the California law, and It is significant that , the '.white slave Interests of San Francisco are behind the movement. V Advocates . of. the vn . .do 'i not claim that its enforcement . will eradicate the social ,evil, but they do . claim that It Is effective as a weapon against commercialized "vice (CopjTlght, 191. by Frank Crane.) iK curious light' la thrown upoa the money value" of human- genius or labor tT the recent sale of ' Rembrandt's "Bathsheba" far $200,000 or thereabouts. Wa '-speak, of what "a man's work Is worth,' say that Bo-and-So la not setting as nftich money as be Ought, and wonder whether any man can really earn a mil lion -dollars. '. ' .The fact la that mnnav la Antlna-rllv. aridjij the general run of affairs, an aoceptea standard of values. But it Is neither scientific, Just, nor perfect uiten It Is legally paid ever tor noth ing at all, as (when on dies and leaves a shiftless son a fortunes and often work of the- very highest , use to the wojrld Is, pal for by no money or a ridiculous pittance '- V'.ri? ' ; jTow fantastic Is the money standard, for Instance. In the case of Rambrajidt Uarmenssoon van Rln, the world-master In the use of light and shadow In painting! . HI greatest work la supposed to be the picture called "The Nleht Watch." which all visitors to the Kyks Museum at Amsterdam -can never forget, aa the wnue nana, or the central f laure seems to reach out from tha canvas to greet me oenoiaer. . Enough money probably could not be got together to purchase It .What It Is fWorth" may . be conjectured by. the mathematically inclined from the price or tna -ijamaneba," which Is 68 by 7 centimetres. Th Night Watch" is 9.69 by 4.85 metres. Fiaura it out your- self and let us know how much per inumDnau square Kembrandt la worth. The two paintings' are of about tha same, period, 16M4S. it would look as If a manwho could produce stuff as valuable aa this must nave, lived in Imperial Splendor and have had goldfish for breakfast There was no levelling democracy those days, butj wr in siory 01 qoDie-Dorn magnuicent onev. The facts, are that la -years aftes painting theae two ' masteroleces his foods were sol at auction by the law ecause he could not pay his debts. He died poor, because ha could no more find any one to sit for a portrait v flrhe' "connoisseurs" ' of that time thourht his work too aombrS. Th no. pie with money in their jeans dropped him, sa he waa no longer tharfad. Rembrandt", save Kmlle Michel, "b. longs to the bftaed of artists which can have no posterity. His place is with the Michael Angelos,' the Shakeepeares, the Beethovens." Yet after that auction, writea Walter Armstrong, he was "stripped of all the property he had accumulated in the hlgtorio house In the Breestraat and for the rest of his life was a sort of nomad, shifting his lodgings with un comfortable frequency, carrying with him- nothing but tha materials of art." All that men could aay of him when he died Is found In the register of the Werter-Kerk ef Amsterdam; "Tuesday, October t, ?69; Rembrandt . an Rljn, painter, on the Roosegraft opposite the Doolhof. Leaves two children.".1 f Now millionaires and governments are bidding a thousand . dollars or so an Inch for his caavaa; but what did the IN EARLIER DAYS - 13; VttA ' Lockley. sad old tramp painter get out of, JJ? Think "of that wben, you are -complaining that you are not paid enough for your work. ' j . t Sam IliU and Good Roads. "c" - ' From 1 Collier's. - " """j? There are a few men' In Oregon who ' Samuel HIU, "father of good roads in are known all over the- state and who .mf.C rAtUrn" f rom FurPaB tour are at home wherever their bats are off. 1 persuaded that as many tourists-as; go fl h " "Bin" Hanlev T T or to EMrope each summer Swould come to S"1 ""V " Z' vlJl?"' this country front Kurope If tonly1 had v Chapman and J, B. N. Bell have a haps he is right ' Certainly more Amer-l n the hotel register.' ' leans would tour at home. 7 But there is ( Recently I visited J. R. N. Bell at his one more requis ably backward, tha citiea of the they are the best. In the wprtd. With sls'sembly of the -Presbyterian church good Inns arid ''good roads we should neJd at Atlanta Ga., and after the close get the full value out of our fine seen, f the- general , assembly I visited the ery and railways. But reads Cost money, southertf spates and came home by way France will spend" $60,000,004 Jn.the ff NW Englsfadi Oh, nothat Isn't the next 10 years Improving p00- miles of longesf trip 1 1 ever made. - Back of you thoroughfares thai are not'uo to her On tne wall there is picture of my- high standard.?. France s a-irugal na- ""i' and some others taken in front of tion; be sure that this, expense vonld h Sphinx in Egypt There is a plo- be. spared unless it Wff a paying Vln-Jllu' Ho( yself; and three other Ore vestment . " , O . -j ;' i.!?.f' -;.iUJ sToniaas taken at the Fortress of An- .1, I, , n .j I,,,;, i , -.,-ni ( , ., tomo in tne xempie -Area on Mount NEWS FORECAST F0R7HEI -iASini V riiiairt ktrr-tf 'v. ' .r Shr'ners Jr?m the Al Kader Oasis .,i COMIlNG WEEK! ' J. E. Horn, - Baptist minister from would tbur at home. But there Is -Recently I visited J. R. N. pen at his ore requisite. America Is. lament- home at Corvallls, "1 have Just re- ackwaml.,ln its hotels, vexoept in Wrnd !;from a 44 day trip,"; said Dr. tea of the first magnitude whero Belt was delegate to the general They made the ' Great Northern rich and they enriched the Columbia !Deprlve the bawdy house of its presses into tho struggli! the forces that are within its easy command. It is a vision of jiopnlation, growth, power, wealth, arid activity that this section can realize within a decade, if we but force the Ihsuo. There should be $500,000 of pri vate money to supiihiTiifint govprn ment work at tha Columbia en trance when public money is tern porarlly unavailable to empire. calls for, regulates and supports. THE PHILIPPINE'S FUTURE T , A M5jfUMEM TO ARNOLD ' snpnEASON is an unforgivable sin, and there is wender why Pitts 'J ton, Alaine, has erected a mon , ument to Benedict Arnold and men Commanded by him. Perhaps a nation's Surprise is caused by the " people's inability to distinguish be i tween jgood and bad when, combined in one individual. The Plttston monument marks 'the spot where Arnold, then a colo nel, ; directed the transfer of iloo men under his command from tran.. jjorts to beteaux The troops were HE appointment of Congress man Harrison of New York as governor general of the Phil ippines has thrust the Insular iesue to the front. The Baltimore platform declared for Filipino in- lt Is the way dependence, and the only statement bo rar issued rrom the White House is to the effect that Mr. Harrison will carry out Democratic platform pledges. Governor General Forbes resigned Immediately upon learning of Mr. Harrison's appointment and the prpblem was further complicated, apparently, by . a statement from Dean C. Worcester, insular e'ecre-i tary of the interior, that peonage and slavery stiir exist in the islands. Independence for the' Filipinos does not mean withdrawal of th United States today or tomorrow, Dut it does piaa that this govern ment will hasten the day when the people of (hose islands vwIU be Inland water competition unless. basin, which now seeks opportunity to further enrich the railroads as well as itself. . , The Columbia basin must have access to the sea, just as It once re quired outlet for Its timber. In ask ing, the railroads to remove the bar of discriminatory rates, no, favor is demanded. A million and a half people now developing the resources of a vast area wish to cooperate with the railroads. They are not "denying fair rateB to the roads, but they are insisting that rates must be based on the cost of easy haul. Fulldevelopment of the Columbia basin depends upon equitable' rail road rates, and maximum prosperity for the-railroads depends upon' full development of the Columbia basin. It cannot b that Mr. Hill now lacks vision. He is already build ing three fast coasters to ply from San Francisco north, breaking bulk at Astoria.' He saw possi bill tfes of the future' when he acquired rail entrance into Astoria. . He is pre pared, to meet 'the Panama canal competition. v :; ,"-Vr Eight years ago in a public ad dress at St. Paul Mrl Hlllsaid that in building new lines he feared no mqneytmaking power, and the bawdy house will -disappear. There . is good ground ,for standing on the assertion ' that f the "respectable' owner of a building, used-for im moral purposes la as great menace to "society as more openfdrms of vice. bo long as tne money continues to pour out of the -Thaw coffers there seems . to ,S be-fJiQ dearth ; of technicalities In 'the. battle of wits now being - waged oetween "leading lawyers of the United' States and the Dominion in - the new International game of legal ping iong..v ' The reported offer pf a woman juror- In Aberdeen to , wed one of her male colleagues - if ;jh , would change his vote on the case afj(sBue, suggests that a ; mjstalte may ' have been made in' tiaklng. single women eligible for Jury service.,, ' n i ii i ' ')''- .! ' ';ir ..: .J " la 4. j. V Cannibals of German New j, Guinea who are reported to have eaten four American professors ' ses,t to ) study the Paupan Malay tribes, may have, in their, own primitive 7wayy; com mitted the ,' act "In vthe interest of science.'' By Herbert Corey. "London," said Rhlnlander Waldo, commissioner of New JTork'e police, "re spects Its police; Berlin obeys; Paris bate." ' Tjr -"New 'York Is the fourth great city of the world. Mr. Waldo didn't . dis cuss New York's turn of mind toward the force. What's the use of waking sad echoesT tie has Just returned from a atudlous trip to Europe. "I found three great - policemen in Henry Hennlon and Jagow," said he, "In Scotland- Yard, Paris and Ber lin. London's police and polloe methods correspond most nearly to those In vogue in the United States. The Paris detective system Is being torn to pieces and rebuilt Benin's police department Is a highly efficient, humanised card- .index. Its mala function la to keep tab." Mr. Waldo explained, the law-abiding ways and love of system 'of the Ger man people. "Wherever you go." said he, "you find placards, "Verboten.' 'That means I-forbidden." No one ever thinks of disobeying. They do not even question. It a: mad wag were to slip Into Ger many over night and change all those 'Verboten' placards he would auto matically alter the habits of an en tire people." , 7. He permitted the inference that when m-y German, after proper deliberation, decides to commit a murder, he pro ceeds according to Iron precedent It Is probable that the victim voluntarily holds his head over the blue and white wash bo wL in order not to mess up the place. - No German or Londoner ever thinks of assaulting a oopper. In this town one of the favored sports at the weekly athletic meets of the Gas House gang" or tha Gophers la to whang brick oft a coppers cap. That's the formality which always precedes a foot, race. The Gophers, hold the record in the Cod handicap. Their best sprinter did four cross town blocks in eleven seconds and an ambulance the other day.- ., : , r:r I asked a Scotland -Yard official." said Air. Waldo. "If the Londoners often assaulted his. bobbles. " 'My dear fellow, 'no." aald ha It simply isn't dona'" ". Paris policemen are beavil armed anavwaw Ttooan m ; pair. Mr. Waldo did not care to go more deeply Into this matter. He said that over In Bfurope they "take the press seriously. On a-athara- hovivw that Mta advan tage of the arrangement la that there is usually a survivor after the Apache attack. A , sort or 60-60. split so to Speak. He 'would not make a direct comparison or the personnel of the New York police force with that.of the three other great cities. "The police force of a great city Is always fairly representative 6f the-cttt-sens of that city' said he. "New York's force has' the 'defects and the merits that characterise New York's" people. As tov honesty -whenever 11.000 abso lutely honest, men can be gathered bi a civil service examination, there ,wlf do no neea lor ponce xorce." It was suggested that the Ho'uns ditch affair,1 Jai which London called out a- regiment of Infantry to capture a trio of anarchists,', and the movlna picture oaiuea oetween tne Paris po lice and the automobile bandits, would be Inconceivable on ,tbts side of the water .v " ' "That comas under 'the head of Vsus toms of the eervioe'." . said New York's police head. "We do things differently ever here. That's all v . .' . wamo commenaa tne ract that crime news is not ' given the . Prominence abroad that Is the rule here. "A story should have something more than just Diooa ana tears to get on the first page said he. "If a murder la committed in njurope the fact is chron. icled In the briefest possible way, unless It contain- other elements Of interest. Our newspapers begin with the spot marked 'X,' count the sobs of the worn, an and end by a description of the kind. faoed chaplain 'watching the condemned eat his last ham and eggs." x r--. New York is the only one of the four Washincton. n. C Ht s.-Of inil terlan minister from Indsnendencei Pro- taraa tn .Vi- nnlllnl.n. l . lbf i.M lessor . J. ' B. Hornnr ana nf tha taanh. days special election In the Third coa-1 & the .fkregon .Agricultural college gressional oUstrlct of Main to fill ' the w myseir are tne tour m . the group." vacancy caused by th death of Rep-J rWhat does J. B. $1, stand tort Where reaentative uooawin.. it is a three cor were you Dornr vnat have you doner' nered contest v between the Democratid, I asked. ',. -. ,; -.. (.-- Republican am) Progressive candidates, "3. R, N. stands , fot John Richard with each party predicting success. Newton Bell. I Was born January 25, Wednesday will be the .one hundredth 1846, in Pulaski county. Virginia. , My anniversary of Commodore Perry's vlq- people sent me to school to a Lutheran tory-at the battle of Lake Erie., :The college in Wyrheville, Va. With moat centennial will be observed with a great of. mv i-lannm).a t m.rrh.4 fmm h. celebration at Putin-Bay, within sight school, room to the battlefield. All of 1 ',',iJhAattl',' Voufhr' ..BoI schools and colleges in the south the United States and Canada wljljbe, before thai, war trained the boys in represented. : President . Wilson,.' has mmtarv - t i promised to attend if his otheij, engage- when I enlisted. On March 15, 1861. our menta permit and ex-President -' Taft nhnAi -V also will be among the speaker..: , SliVlc. of wlr TZTZ Z?Z birth of Maior Generaf John Bedwlnk. r.lX.."'"' r coma a distinguished soldier of the Indian, ?n tha, cvir t i Mexican, and Civil wars, and one of tha wa. dlmi2 7-S22Ir 7! ln ablsst oVticers of ' the Army of the Po- 7 waa TbT?h t W'! tomao. General fiedgwick was bom at L?tl v?rlfw ,t,fpw'7 ; T.wentf: Cornwall. Conn.. Bapt.mber 19, 1818. He S??? waa killed near Snottsylvanl& w court ?mb.erJ! ' .company I there Were but House, Va.. May ., im." V, .,' ,, , Ji ?-0"m1ttt out 0B nl At th invitation of th ' -Swiss Ped-1"' .1. -0 regimeut, seemed always ... i fAM.n .i..t.. - - .v. I to be able to find the olace whera thai principal industrial countries of the ajting wss goed.-- i was in M battles world will assemble Jn Berne to con- fr Vf oean't include Innumerable elder the drafting of an international hi,lmJshe ' ' ' . asrreement rnhlhlt that annlnvmant JTrom the 19th Of BeDtember. In 1S84. of children; below-specified ages and to J 1,tn October, we fought every nx a maximum. AO hour day for work- " -u" yu wouia go to work era within certain other ages. Other every , day that Includes the time be events ofthe Week abroad will Include twen Winchester to Cedar Creek, where the annual grand maneuvers of the Ger- Sheridan made his famous ride. Our man army, which will take plaoe in 81- company was nearly wiped out at lesla, and the anneal meeting of the Cedar Creek. At Cold Harbor we re British Association for "the Advance- slsted the rush of tho federals with ment of Science, in Birmingham.- clubbed muskets.' I got a Yankee bayo Among the Important meetings and net through .my shoulder. E. B. Mc conventions of the week will be those Elroy, one of my good friends In later ' of the American Publio Health assocla- years and for several times superln tlon, at Colorado Springs; the American tendent of publio Instruction In Oregon. Fisheries Society, at Boston; the Amert- was not over 20 feet from me at Cold can Association of Passenger Agents, at Harbor, only he wore a blue uniform St Paul; the American Chemical Boci- and mine was gray. We visited the bat ety, at Rochester: the Union Veteran tlefteid fna-a.th.r v. .,.., fLegion, at Zanesvllle, Ohio; the GeiM "After the war I went home. I was ere,! council or tne Kvangeiical Luther- It' years old. I worked that summer an church, at Toledo, and the Canadian I an i. ,. .u t . v.I.. L r at0W,nniCDe0f "d Corr6CtlM Md- tookup my literary coursI was at Winnipeg. graduated with tha d.a... a t the riextw--years tauarht achoni in Bland and Giles counties, Virginia. "In 1868 I married Margaret S. Kirk. Wa have had 10 children, alv of whnm form of government Here therefore. Jara .'n"- I came to Oregon In 1874, and in all other cities similarly gov- -etulnS at Ashland. I had been 11 erned, the police become an Item in censed to preach. In the M. EL chupch the political situation. . south In Virginia, and for four years in "While I waa In Paris." lie said, AsWand I preached and was the presld brlgadier and six men were fired for ,Bfr1(Iur ,n tnat churcn- ' grafting. That would have; been a . In faU ot I moved to Rose political scandal here. There. It was ?Tg-X 1 wa8 the dltor and owner of dismissed with a line. But, not long njR8eburg Review for five years, ago a young man connected with the- " 1 j11"! b?n led a Lutheran, so I Paris department wished to-place a Jmen the Presbyterian church, but it young woman friend In opera. He ap- not ju 1886 that I became a pas proached a director. . - tor of a Preabyterlan cHurch, s:v. . "For some time I owned and ran four " 1 will be glad to give the young at once. I went to Independence lady an engagement' said .the di- wnere I bought the Weat Side. I bought rector, 'but in the meantime I would the Monmouth Democrat which I later like the ribbon of the Legion of Honr' consolidated with the West Bide, and 1 and my chief of orchestra and my boss founded the Oregon School Journal, stage hand would like the ribbon. Year- Pour papers was too busy a Job, so I So the ribbons of the Legion were sold the Roseburg Review. While I secured for the operatio politicians was 4 Roseburg Governor Pennoyer and then they didn't deliver the goods appointed me clerk of the railroad Corn to the young woman. So that her mission, which had just been organ young, man. probably oroddad bv th lsed. I was its first dark ambitious songstress and having sore! "From Independence I went to Bekar spots In his own feelings, said en-'iClty, where I was pastor of the Preeby tirely too much In the wrona- nlaca. I terlan church for 14 ve&ra. Pram h. The whole matter got Into the papers I came here where I have been pastor of and kept In. You can't blame 'em?' the Presbyterian church for the past six xar. waiao nas never Deen superstl- years, tlous about the powers of the "I am school director an police dog. So that he was mildly for the past five years. I was school pleased to observe that the jthree other director for 11. years In jBakef City and great cities are doing just what New for four years at Independence. For 10 York is doing experimenting with a years I was one of the regents of the handful of kl-yla. There Is nothing O. A. C, and I taught physics and Eng- new In the actence of criminal ldentlfi- Hh literature In the collea-a tar nm cation, although M. Bertillon, the daddy time. I have' done considerable lectur of it, has drawn a series of maps show- lng all over ' the V state, usually on Ing from which department Of France Shakespeare. I helped lay the corner- ine largest noses come ana wnere the Bo oi vuiara hail at the State unt shortest ears are raised. Mr. Waldo verelty and , also of the administration regards this as Interesting, but ho building of . the Oregon Agricultural col more. BertHlon has also invented a. lege. I Lave known Intimately all the camera which shows the ground plan presidents of the O. A. C. W A. Flnley of the room in which a crime has was. the first Dresldant. than An, o T been committed when the plate is dn- Arnold, who was president for 81 years: veloped. Waldo commented on the semi- then President Bloss of Topeka. Kan Judicial pewera with which Berlin's then Henry, Miller for one year then SHKE-UP AMONG POLICE OF PARIS commissioned officers are Invested. If Herr Patrolman Schmidt reports to Herr Lieutenant Jaeger that Herr Householder Huckleberry's e-ar- bage can was on the ' pavement after the prescribed hour," said he, "the lieutenant fines the householder, The first that unfortunate knows of It -Is when the herr patrolman cornea around with a nice snappy salute, andapapor requiring tne payment or. two marks. Can you faintly Imagine what. New York's criticism of .that system would sound nicer' Berlin's commlsslsoned officers' are SU college graduates, and promotion is xainy rapid, Deing dependent ofl merit , plus examination. A somewhat similar plan is in vogue in London, wnere promotion rrom- one, grade to anomer is not at an a matter of lona-th of service, but wholly of efficiency.s shown by the service, record and The periodical examinations. Commianinna,r vvaiao recently recommended that a like -...... V. B ' . t iuuuuuvqq nere. , ;. Hennlon. who succeeded tha hmnm Leplne as chief of Paris, was -not a all aatlsf led ; with' the bureaucratic de tective bureau. He Js rebulldlng.lt on the plan In use In Scotland Yard and New York. Hennlon Is but 40 years old, looks like an American, has the energy oi a aynamo, and-Is a gfeat d- leuijYo. , jio is coniunt T-On tha ank out for improvements, ,,t unaer me Oldnian- evarvthin ,T o"rai , omce in Paris," said Waldo. , "Hennlon is doing away with that and holding Ala -dlvlnlnn chiefs respdnslble for what goes on in. iiu la 'tne plan we took from Scotland Yard two years ago. Berlin is the only one of the .world's four great ; bitiaa . hih still operates Its nolloe denrm.na under the old plan. . The morning line up" and round-up Of ; detectives has been done away with. . r- .T . xne humorous Dart t .m. k. added, "is the absolute horm.' ,,.. which the. 'old policemen regard these Innovations, No polios force can -ha thoroughly efficient without Its sherW ef - young , blood today. The conser vatism of age la desirable but . too much- conservatism u deadening." Professor T. M. Gatch. and th.n a present president W. J Kerr.' X?1 5m ault, loAs mAtu I m the oldest grand Chaplain of th Masonlo order in the United States. I have been grand chaplain for 88 consecutive years in Oregon. I am a member of the Masons, the, Odd Fellows,- the Knights l vLtbtM the Woodmen,- the Red- Men. I16? and 1 m charter member of the Baker City lodge of Elks. "Some time age I was given u AM. degree by the affiliated colleges of Ore gon and the D. I. degree by the Philo math college. My chief claim to dis tinction, however. Is that I am the only private Confederate soldier who sur vived the war. All the rest are oninnai. or majors --or captains. I went in a nn. . vate, -served over four years as pri vate, came out a private, and am .nu a private. The passingyears have Pro moted all of my fellow soldier, to I be officers." Vast Pastures Await Action flf0!-.!;-..1?; Ansreldei Examiner. , ' Invthe past 10 years tha nnn..i. L?n,ed State" has Increased 18-k 000,000. The number at h. i ' decreased 6,000.000. If the lncreas. .V,,V decrease keep up the same ratio, the Will be aa 40 to 100; Ten vm n . proportion was as 67 to 76. The nrlce ti nhihmr" 0lnthln8- done, will; be prohibitive, except to the very well. MllUonS Of acres n Ala.lr. ...a ed to raising cattle of the hardy breeds, such as the Scotch v;JliV.' raise. . These acres are good for nothing else and never, will be good 'for any- ' thing else. If ; congress would ensct range laws for Alaska.) ao that ati.. .men could put herds n' these vast pas- ""'us, ww oeer zamine would be adjourned to a much later date than is We glean this bit of philosophy from -The Dalles .Optimist; "Knowledge i. never gained, nor.. is strone- th.tlZ developed ' by drifting with the our rent It Is by stemming the stream that advancement Is made and We eav a a v . : .-'X i