THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING, 'DECEMBER 29, I9l "TLJ CV' M IPM Al j M001 institution 'with which be among the ise9 Mora y women, are t f. IAi'KiUjV . IHMt.a-i t-niitLiir airrr aieatua loiccui' SouiImi aid afcJJunisj ana-alnc t The Joaraal Bolla- ierr-J-r iwf Vmnhltl l fiirumia w . kuftmi- .liu UMtluIIlm at 'urlin. Or, tr triowilaniaa Uxouta 16 intllt awooS clan .. utter. ktl.U HONK - Null Mom. A-uM. All 4rita mrlicd lir thr nwbr. Hell Ibe oneraHir' what aVtie'rtwnt fon wat. M. , , tti.4.n.lk -ajiVaUtl'lSi.Nii hti liUStM"; "'i.'tj ffcJWia, '- Xoo Ce., Buawlr BolldlU. rK tM u!5 aWirmrw Vera; 8lS PauoWa ' '"r BiilMtnit. Chicago. . . fcuMkcrimtua )iuu by wall or lu aay adureai . I tt United State or Wfiloa: ' n. DAILY . Om rmrT?.... W.flO I one month .M I ... 1'--... . . srtviiA v ae j .83.60 I Oue maarh 8 .43 ., -..( PAILV ANJ1 eCKDAt PM rnr J7.50 I fin month .83 was connected. , studying me8ifcina than year ago, What is the status and . what tho although only half as many gradu nauonai meaitauon wnerj tie very aiea tms year as lasti .-. , fountains of knowledge are Invaded The time was when some medical ana polluted by corrupt capital In schools turned but "doctor" at so an effort to monopolize trausporta- much a head. It was. notorious that uon ana iay a people under exior- diplomas could be purchased at a uonr fixed price. Legislation has assisted PORTLAND REGIONAL BANK S remedying - this condition, but the larger Influence has been public opinion. HM. .... A RECOItD OP PROGRESS I If we neglect to exercise any talent, power, or quality, it soon falls away from us. Henry Wood. ARE WE INCOMPETENT? IHERE are signs of a revival of Interest in a public auditorium for Portland. May 1, 1910, there was a high tide of public ' ' sentiment for an auditorium after ', an agitation of many weeks. August 11, 1910, it was discov ered in the midst of active agitation j that the charter would have to be amended to get the auditorium September 27, 1910, the "Live wires" voted to ask the city coun cil tp submit a measure for a bond Issue for an auditorium at the next ejection. 7 December 4, 1910, the city lost a great convention for lack of an auditorium that would accommodate delegates; OMB step"' 6ther thartfe re gressive demand for a regional bank are necessary In order to Induce the committee to desig nate Portland as a regional bank 1 city. ' i There will have to be a aatisfac-1 tory showing as to what alacrity and interest local banking lnstitu- 'and Clark exposition one of the chief uwUtt uiuna m cuupernuflg wjvn contributing causes, the figure had the government lu putting the new , nJOlluU,., t0 207(214, 6inCe which currency system into operation. ' tlnu, Poi.tland-B growtn ba8 been There will be some interest at Wash- ,.lm(iy and persistent. niitinnc r v,. h.nv. t! 111 i"". le exposition year. j'iv.m iuuo v. tug inuno vi iuiO l iu P i2d. ORTLAND has grown to a city of an estimated 277,000 peo ple. Twenty-three years ago the city's population was 90. In 10 years, with the Lewis February 23, 1911, In the midst of general discussion, there was agi tation for a pipe organ for the pro posed auditorium. March 4, 1911, the Portland Com , njerclal club announced that it would at once get behind the proposed auditorium. ' ; June $, 191 1T a - bond issue of $600,000 for an auditorium was authorized at a city election in a , vote of 14,025 for and 10,782 I against. '' , June 21, 1911, an auditorium commission was named by Mayor i Simon. September 1, 1911, the commission favored setting aside a portion of the $600,000 bond Issue for a pipe organ. October 10, 1911, T. B. Wilcor re turned from the east urging more ; ground space for the' greater Port- - lead auditorium. ' - October 18, 1911, the people's views .were requested by the com mission respecting the auditorium site. : : ' .. October 25, 1911, the exposition site was urged for the auditorium. , iOctober 26, 1911, 62 architects ' were awaiting the decision as to the auditorium plant. ' , pctoberji.29, 1911, two years and two months ago today, J. H. Freed- lander ajnd A. B. Seymour, of Newf xorK, were-, namea . as auditorium architects, . ; November 1, 1911, 787 days, or , two years, one month and 28 days ago today, the auditorium plane were halted tot selection of a site. December 29, 1913, two years, six months and, 24 days after the vote ordering construction of the audl- mediate region for relations with the new system are generous, prompt and universal. The regional reserve committee will obviously be Interested In the showing Portland makes in its of fers to assist in underwriting the regional bank. The committee will also be concerned a great deal with the attitude and atmosphere. in Port- Portland's bank clearings totaled $228,402,712. This year the total approximates $625,000,000, nearly three timet the 1905 figures. In 1805 postal receipts were $473,083. This year the corresponding Item will be more than three fold what It was eight years ago. Those statistics, together with others reflecting advanced business their Investigations are recommend ed, but complicated ; toys re not barred, provided . parents are not too free with the "You' mustn't touch" command. . Dr. Montessorl says children can't help touching things. , 'They obey natural Instincts In taking things apart and putting them together again. They learn much fn this manner, and the. child is Intent upon learning. The Italian' educator says ft Tis a . mistake :W'iuWoi9'WiicM' dren are destructive. They break many of their toys,' but the break ages are Incidental to Investigation The children are Unconsclouslr ask ing questions and finding the an swers themselves. And so, if the Christmas toys are beginning to show signs of wear and tear, parents should question their own judgment rather than scold the children. Fathers and mothers muBt accept the fact that their children insist upon knowing the how and the why of things. If PERTINENT: COMMENT AND-NEWS JN BjUEF land respecting the new -currency , oir,u"B "lttue Bjr roruana ano uro--.v.tAnv .nri ha mnim-ii with rh S0I in a year, are found in another warmth or coldness here, na th mso 8?ct,on of The Journal today. They warmth or coldness here, as the case i may be, with which the new legis lation is accepted. It Is very certain that no regional bank will be located in a city that refuses to be In harmony with the new currency plan. ' Nor will it be H ' SMALL CHANGE t At an r rate, th Unltsrl Rtatea la not oarrytng on a war iMwy..','. ChrUttnaa la vorv fin, tin arm : yaar t .plenty often enough. - t - .! .'. : . ',1 K.C-. It la nearly tlma for thi annual ,an tltlon of thoaa stale water wagon Jokea, Mora -Dnrtl'a' ' haarts -Bra hnri--tn ins nim Diace" man i.iiiiv amn, It la bfttteV-lo tirav aln. A vA.i.in. uu awoarne oi year out ana .V , V'-v- V . " Tet It Is unllkaly that the Willamette river wUJ ever be uncomfortably crowd ed. with Christina swimmers. Some ot the men given Jobs, It eeema, wanted the pay out not the work; they only loafed. Lat such fellows go hungry. Matters that some people think to be of immense , importance many others regard a trtvlaUties. or ol not much consequence. a A contemDorarv iMm tn rhintr th.t this phase of childhood is kept in the Pregon aenator should have secured mind when Christmas toys are tiwttlffit&vSS?" M 0on M bought next year the purchases may y , lest longer. ru,v rry Christmas, to many, Christmas time hrlna-a . it trrihi Farias, the 22-year-old California tragedies of disaster and crime. bandit, sentenced to be hanged for aW4jr Aretio ocean, eoo shooting Montague In the train bold- miles north of northernmost Norway, up expected when he pleaded guilty. tSff a?i,aVr.SJS to be given a life sentence. Leaving thought wireleea teiearaDhy waal ; ' OREGON SIDELIGHTS . live . carload "of rnaohlnery for the new flourlna- mill at Astoria have been shipped from th eat and three more eartoaas win oe shipped . in the near iuiure.4 v "All roads wiineatf to Salem,- ay the Statesman; "but the" proposed 15 mile .. hard surfaced road leading- in kirpm.ina nOKft. .WUL..M. L,!?5r perhaps the heat one la t)rgon.T A ... " ' The . Smudging Pot man of the Med- ioru sun Bttya n tne new currency aci unea every tniDf me juemocraiio panj ImaKlnes. the ' Roirue river valley, wil be flooded knee deep with half dollars oy tie i wnnstmaa. . Eugene Quardr ' The Commercial club, which"! composed of the city's moat progr8iv , business men and heaviest taxpayers, ha son on record ae favorlna- the lmDrovement of Kkln- nera butts and turning It into a real Christmas optimism aa editorially voioea in tne waxer democrat: -unrist-mai In Baker la nrobablv -the moat Joy ous one in many year. The health ot tne community la exceptionally good, our CeoDle are, renerallv nrosDaroua and the prospects for advancement In ail thing during the coming, year are ex- If Rogue valley people are not Con tented and happy the fault must be wiinm mcmseivea, me uranis rasa Courier bearing witness against them In this strain: "Christmas Day in southern Oregon was bright and sunny, with balmy air. vibrant with ths mer ry note of caroling bird. It wa not a far reach to give to the day its place In midwinter season, for th valley was given a life sentence. Leaving thought wireless telegraphy w'as home at 16 to face the world un- . . . guided by a father or a mother, no- moVcVn "JB?i!'!5 are significant, for they prove. If body knows what chance he has had. dent Wilson and the Democratic leader ! Rogue valley 1 Just far enough south mW naa.a-v ,ho pmi. So lone as our boys become dere- '" 7 w" "lil.? to get the deUght of a m Id winter cli- vw w, - - - " "vv). "u iw me country a . mats combined wun to beauty of the and Oregon afford opportunity forjUcts at 16, we need pot be bu r prised praise. northern ummer." men and women who wish to iden- ,f thy ar on he gallows at 22. placed in a city Jn which there is not liberal backing and universal acceptance of the program by the national . banks. These are considerations that the general committee working for a re- gional bank for Portlan'd should take into full consideration. No government can afford to try out a new plan of banking and cur rency in an enemy's country. REAL TAX REFORM r HE Denver Times Is demanding tax reform.. Denver's taxes are declared to be too high. As sessei valuations in many cases are exorbitant, almost confiscatory. The per capita revenue collection is said to be too great, and Is out of proportion to the public service rendered. In taxes .for state, city, county, schools, parks, firemen's pensions, sinking fund and Interest on funded debt, Denver in 1613 paid $4,589,823 In 1914 that city will pay $4,640,- 376. This will . be an Increase of $50,000, in the face of a reduction of $140,000 in state taxes. The 1914 tax levy amounts to $23 for every man, woman and child in the city, and the per capita tax does not in clude an item of $900,000 which will be received from licenses, fees and other sources of revenue other than direct taxes. Denver people are becoming ap palled at the mounting cost of city government. They are also becom ing alive to many discriminatory features in methods of assessing property for taxation. The Times says such conditions do not attract TorttrmT-the-tiaBS aliUJialfced outside canital. and thev rmiflA thA pending selection of the site. (present resident to be warv of in- All these years and months and vestment. nmand i mad tnr aays, ine money nas oeen available, chane-e which will do awav with The people's vote of instructions to discrepancies and Injustices, which -umu buai Btanaa. J tify themselves with a prosperous BesideB, society helped him along community. j wuta his crime by making and wan However there Is another chaseJton,y Belling him the revolver fori From th Duluth (Minn.) Herald. to ths .city's and state's growth. The tne exact . purpose for which he Lately two morning newspaper in MORNING NEWSPAPER NARROWING IN EARLIER DAYS I Ry Fred Lockley, . . year Just closing marks a wonder ful advance In the accepted re! a tlons of people to each other. This attitude is responsible for Port land's new form of city government It is responsible for advanced legte Iation, all based upon the principle used it. 8an Franoiaoo were consolidated. A Uttl later the Denver Republican. In eplte of repeated notices by I a morning paper, was consolidated with the secretary of state, onlv 3 RftO the Rocky Mountain News, leaving only automobile and motorcycle licenses " ' " T'r" in 00Jtr Maua bays been Issued for 1914. The 1913 Th"f?tPa?"8- A . . Ihese items are significant They licenses expire at midnight next ara .lltriiflr!.nt nf .,. ' that it is the city's and state's duty Wednesday, and all drivers without la a definite limit in the capacity of to look after those who are unable iuem wr" suojeci to wppwi newspaper, to look after themselves. It is re- With 14.000 licenses snonsihle for a e-nneral mnvftmnnr in t0 0 Issued by the moming Of next latter noint la naoullarlw -nl. k. ' Is Portland incompetent to build 'a public auditorium? SERVING TWO MASTERS nhalf nt nAonlA flrat nrl tha n 1. Thursday, It will be Interesting tp cause there was a. time when the morn mighty dollar second. watch developments. Where is the ln paper dominated the field. That Women are having a large part commutee or tne automoone Th0ugh t his Vevelment T.-compar- in this new movement. They are ciU0C atlvely recent, it has been Inevitable rrom the beginning. When mean of I aHbhi r-. il, communication were meager and lnef- LetterS From the People " riclent. the moming paper gave the better service because It had the whole clothed with the ballot's respon sibllity, and the year's record shows that they are accepting their new duty of citizenship. There has been iv on o the paper, ataoold not eteeen prompt and o world-sweeping aa they ClUbS are 00 word to lcnftb and out ba aeeoaipanleri toAv th avenlna- nnr la .hi. 1(a r,. by tbe aame snd addrew of the odr. It the fj8 m lay- evening paper la able ta Brown- writer doe oat delr to bare to aaaw aub- to Kather and present the full news iromn.B.tr.rin Unt t n,. t rK. and night to gather the news of the a marked change in 'women's Club 1 "'",,, ' ! departmeot ahoold be written oo I day. With means of communication so activities. Some ot the still sticking to Ibsen and ing, but there is a tendency towards I n,hi. be thuuid so stat. j of the world at the supper table. affairs. mn atArnlv rrn ntra CLnnA I . .. . . - I ' - v v . f uimmwion if ids' area eat or an reronawa. I fpw- w- nn.vi. u . V. ... 111. ui.1 I II rattan.llcM innlhl.. It likH. I. nh. 1 uuiuma uiui UI babies. Cleaner Streets, a greater kirk on their reaaooablenee. If they halt ee life than the devnlonment nf nam.rath. general welfare are topics now Uk- ra&U5TV rtta,M'y't?i" Ing place of the so-called cultural uad."-woodrow win. , nas, .mada thl possible. The rlfaniicolrinsi I ' " I ww iu ui 5ouiisqu. uvudu wiui avuuv waive i hrAPlllvarlAfi 1 Wl rf Anrl sinlrlArl nrfrh crant si nf the The year has seen the Parent- Portland. Dee. 17 Tn "th. great news-gathering organieatlons. Teacher associations Spread through The Journal It was to be hODed that Communication of great events to the out the city. .There 1. to be actual L unworthy a mTsure a!, t-w cooperation between parents and lamented sterilization bill would be will- ing newspapers, la don with a speed teachers. ' The Oregon Congress Of ln" die th flrt time it was killed, and certainty that is truly marvelous Mothers has taken on renewed Hf but th originator comes out with the Even the dally processes of the solar and vigor. Charitable organizations 8tatet 7e act is not dead; I will fjal.n, whin ,7S have been efficiently busv aa never "e that " kPt .- and propose "enlng paper. When the Herald nave been ernciently busy as never t mAk0 meMur, .tn, more drastio oe" ?Tl n ulut V tv.o cioc' before. . . . ,i . , 8 otclock in New York; the day s The story of progress is inspiring. la tu" " work Is practically over, the day's new. It illustrates a great truth. No city ut it was risht that -neh a s " or state can grow symmetrtcally un- tion should h killed. It was an unneo. .tro.iti, by themselves, the feeble less people as well as property are cessary measure. The purpose of the act minded ln segregation and the sick in given full consideration. s developed by the pro-terilist them- comfortable hospitals and humanely eive wa tnat confirmed criminals, care for all. In other words, continue mi'liTfl a i-n TTTSTTrrn miraiui, wi nuireimmy to be men. jsmascuiauon la Druusn ana. --- ... 1 ot course, a aiep oacuwara in oivuisa- .irawmicug w uuumuiiy oiiuuiQ De pre-1 tion, W. N. COFiTElS. eastern empire ars settling down to ward the evening rest It la 10 o'clock in tne evening at London and only a few minutes earlier ln Paris. The news of the east and of Europe Is ripe and gathered wnen the ueraid goes to press, and the last new of the day in Asia and Africa Is in for ths early edition or the .evening papers. In tb local field ths new come hot from th place where it tiKmad to the evening paper, then ln th mak iiil,-. and is sent out from Duluth. to other point ln exchange for the day' new there. Ho when th Herald goes to preas and we speak of th Herald only as typifying the evening news paper the cream of the world's new. foreign, domestic and local, has been gathered for its readers. There Is little left for the morning papers except to report evening meetings and to record fires and accident that occur at night when the likelihood of anything hap pening la the smallest of the 24 houcs, Tbia la the reason, on the news side, why the evening paper everywhere has stepped Into the field once occupied by the morning paper, and why the number of moming papers 1 dwind ling. , Since newspapers exist by their ad vertising receipt rather than by their subscription receipt, there 1 a still stronger practical, reason for th com merclal aurvlval of the evening paper. This 1 that th evening paper comes at a tlm when th whole household has leisure to read' It thoroughly, ad vertisements and all. Instead Of at a time when father 1 hurrying . to the office after a hurried glance at the headlines over hi morning meal, and when mother after a hasty look at the personals must get about the day's duties, first, getting th children ready for school. With these condition, th dominance ot the evening paper and the gradual but certain decline of th morning paper were inevitable. D ECIDINO a loan shark case the vented from reproducing, the object be- other day, the Kansas supreme ln" to prevent crime, to exterminate de court said: "Where a party fec,Uve8v is the standard of phy- Burns and the Boosters. Burns. Or., Dec. 2tt To the Editor of TnakeB an nnlawful demand and f .i.. i .... J The - Journal The Improvement for pocui jr ivu aiu i case 111 uvLuiKlluili . , . . maliciously UBes the machinery of In the flrt place, confirmed crtm- ,1918 ,tna,t ara mat m"ke.d I?,8,?, ! til BRUCE WYMAN, since 1900 pro fessor of law at Harvard uni versity and one of the best known members of Harvard's law faculty, has resigned for the good of the university. Investiga tion of the "other expenses" account Of the Now Haven rollrnn I. K' reason for Professor Wyman'a resig-1 eca0 ,n P"0 expenditures, but nation. While a member of Har-j? ff'ness and efficiency n tax vards law faculty he received a ! col,f,ons- Cities will not progress salary of $833 a mohth as counsel if ey BJ.0U l 7 for the New Haven road in its at-' in the c0,lect,?n ' taxes- E1ultv temut to mononnii7 vw Pn.,,,11101 6overn In in18 unu' we pres- . "-" jju(jiaiiu a i transportation facilities. will guarantee fairness ln assess ments of property. Til. TlmM t.V, tfiof tin lnl..M..nl . OWJD bum. UV lUUlTlUUdl I UlUflVIWUDiJ UOVB I.UO K . I ' .UW yi.bl, VVUlilllllU VI lil- ... t 1 . !. should want or receive the best of the law to enforce-payment, the in- VIo VoS Z'LR ,mprt'onn,ent any .untoward along, th. it, nor should any class of property Jured party Is entitled to recover the At this point it is argued that it 1 lln0 of an nflux ot people, or an lmme get the worst of it. "But this is loss and damage resulting." too costly an expedient to keep crlm- dlate chane In conditions as the re- fact. The enormous total 1b now being paid In and all of it Is being spent, while the demand for more is being heard." Denver, like Portland and many other cities, Is beginning to realize that tax reform Involves not only . Ten years ago a railroad conduo- sult of the anticipated connecting up of this Interior section with th outside ent shop-worn, slip-shod method of assessing property Is discarded for an efficient system. MEDICAL EDUCATION F IGURES given out by the bu reau of education indicate that medical education ln the United States is being revolu- In his letter to President Lowell Professor Wyinan said he had seen .CO faul in the combination of his 'functions- For years he had be i Jleved, and he still believes, that centralization of the management of ; transportation and public control by . administrative bodies afforded the w " railroad problems, tionlzed. There is said to be a He looked upon his New Haven re- marked improvement In qualitv co taUier as an opportunity to give ' Incident with decreases In the num- practlral effect to his Studies. I llPr of mr1il BtndAnta anH n0 O-.ifV..,. ... . . . " " -,..-Bvo i.vm-onui vtvumii was employed as counsel by tho New Haven road there were a year ag, and 1200 by former President Mellen. It was fewer persons studying medicine. Professor man's duty to use his This change Is said to be the direct prestige and ability in combatting result of efforts to arouse public the legal attacks being made upon opinion in favor of a higher Btand- lamuauH luauHiieinpnt H. lnals In constant confinement. tor borrowed 125 at 10 ner cent a To this I reply that our prisons can tnls, ln""r "eJ 011 on .7 u, .T !!Ltv .11 . , I. ? ,! . nd should be so conducted that tbeir world through the 'medium of a railroad. - Inmate by their labor not only maintain " m,B"l"",c""""D" " ream hn hnrlnairl fl4n fni- tho una ,,m.Ai... km n r,.n. .,. I toforo who have spent money ana en n in: j i i .i.i.', rr. iv,. e ihi.. courasea me DOOBiero irum uuiiiiuci ui.i S30 was credited on the loan The Pauperized by their crime. The imbecile f"1 railroad bodies who frequently visit 1 ! , 1 8hould ln a suitable home. P"ts and discourse of "the great other 11& had gone into the loan And long as the Insane have, to be Harney country" and give veiled asur- shark's pocket, and the conductor cared for they can be segregated. More- of early Improved transportation was told that he etill owed the orig- over U sometime occur, that the InJ sane are reaiureu 10 reason ana we aoi r - not always know who are hopelessly In- ' eB peopi w com. gyjay, 1 DQUBJ t( BU V B.I J bchb V-Va viv,w J' In the case of the physically lmper- lug out money for their coming and glv . -nihil, them ar. nlwava hcrpiiii.rv I Ing time and energy toward their en "3 t,";r' " Thlr. th. endencies; physical development may tertalning while here. The feeling here several times over. Then the loan k ,',,,', ai.r.tion: hMidM w lis that the dog and manger policy of shark garnisheed his wageB, caused nften find admirable development ln the the Harrlman and Hill systems is their him to lose several positions, and I children of physically Inferior parents, Dursned him into the courts. Pin- and sometimes inferior development ln inal $25 and accumulated interest The victim finally refused to make further payments on the. ground that he had already liquidated the debt ally the victim realized that he too ! the children .of physically superior pa rents. j . .. . , . . . , . v- "'u, 1 i. i v. j nuivi aiv a. 1 1 call T ua v- TfLT"Jl ..'m? ,i,td "efre n an influence throughout the luunuene commission, country ?Zh:ltley ,8!,,,,,,i bp ton" Attention is called' to the fact "'"v " itis service fnr .!, .1,. i a t i i i iitiL iuo it icwer eiuuuui mignt nave some rignts under the sometimes misfortune has come to law. and he sued the loan shark. - men and they appear at a great disad The higher tribunal awarded vantage, it wouldhayltlabl to deprive i j ..i., such or mannooa in aaauion in weir aa uu iumi,iYe otner misfortunes. damages, at the same time laying why not begin in the right place? down a proposition which will ap- Other opuses than heredity and con- peal to any man's sense of the dig- sanguinuy are response rc-r . . , .... . , moral and physical defectives which nity of the law, efficiently admin- Beem t0 be erttireiy overlooked by advo- - . - v VI il ' - Ativiv v-su iv i.kt 4UVOUVU 1 CftlcS Ul BtKIillitHlUli. -a. JlO wquui WUIOO, u.D i-. uml t doctrlne tnat a man who with all Its baneful attendants, produces maiiMnnaiv- 'naoa th lnw'a mneiiin- thousands or these derectives wnere one . , (g caused by heredlty ci 10 euiuicB au uuhwiui uciuauu nnmatal Influences. should be punished for so doing. Has not society tried enough scheme Courts are too prone to limit U0 better mankind? It has tried sterill- twci0 tr. ih ,,ltfo ioi I eation. too. out it must learn mat ae- They are courts of Justice, and yet case after case in endless proces sion comes' before the Judges' ln the working out of manifest injustice. Happily the Kansas tribunal has hhmi - ... .... rr" 1 ttn' fraction of those affected by reform. ,m ' tha uu. . i ij lu c"o-,u upvii uio iuo-u i ouai IYB IU trsiizatlon." as he himself termed Th thai rnfll'o rtr 1 i .l. : ., .1 ro i . i Now that the nature of his serv - ,, icuue or Ices aro known Prlt l mora yeara of college .work as a ' admits that The ITu u man PreaulBite for .entering upon the InZ rnnn J T discounten- 8tudy of medicine. State examining fers lie "List thartVeni tW0 T' boards ln 8even 8tatea have lere nure but he withV" m,UVi8 rulatin8. effective within the near '7Z JiJZJl ? i. With,drars from fture. that every applicant for a li h h? I n hM hB des not i:cenfle to practice medicine shall wish that Institution to snffA k .. "7 ro .' uu"ithat state that it is dangerous busi ness for them to go Into court ex cept with clean handa. THE CHRISTMAS TOY8 through public opinion. ,iT. a . r . T:r OI year of collee work, wlH soon be- S ifirl"? m Six other stated 1 F THE children' 'have already be gun breaking . their Christmas toys, parents should profit from the destruction. Tlr Mario Mnn. i ..ijiu..;.. . . It is a fair assumption that Mr Cu 3 " J, D1n i?es?or' tn.e ItalIan woman receIy Mellen did not emoloy Professor i ' . ut8imua meu-ijeciunng in America on her method Wyman,' and cover hi T saUry ?n 11 1.. 'lmllar uiremetet. i(f teaching children, discussed this 51-.-,- exeeP4 tna H Is limited to one pase of childhood while ln Chicago. She recommends toys that appeal to the cbild'a instincts for discovery, construction a n d, simplification. Simple playthings that cannot be destroyed , by curious children ln prestige was far more valuable than bis ability- as a lawyer, and that prtstlge aii)e:thraugh. tbe great, edu- It is interesting." If ot signifi cant, that all of the decrease in the number, of students baa taken place prnvlty is located in the heart of man. Restore the Bible to the school and the home, put away the saloon, ths licen tious dance hall, the sickly, sentimental, voluptuous blood and thunder sensation allsm of tho theatre, and the nickelo deon, cease trampling divine precepts under foot, and along the lines of bet tering the conditions of humanity mere will be realized Infinitely more than the most sanguine pro-terilist could hope for. Sterilization would not catch the gen teel seducer of the Innocent, th man who takes advantage of the poor, the white slaver, frequenters of the red light districts, and the operator or tn vice region. - . It Is said that mental derangement ta sometimes caused by sexual ' derange ment. Very well. Do not confound med ical necessity with the proposition at is sue. In this measure' under the guise of benevolenc tho most malevolent measure ever before . -man . would be Disced in the hands of 'personal -and po litical enemies, for things can be and are manipulated till Justice is some times we might- say voften perverted and th Innocent are caused to suffer. ' Incarcerate the incorrigible, place the insane. In asylums, . the physical mon- funeral, and they either should resurrect their corpse or else furnish their own undertaker and mourners. The senti ment here Is that Burns and Harney county have succeeded heretofore with out having to support a poor rarm ana can continue to do o and still be fre- nentablv successful. They have the money; they hav the cltlenship and they have the resource. H. W. M. Lines of "Humanitarian" Policy. From The Nation (London). The Guildhall speech robbed the Mex ican crisis of what was for us its most anxious possibility. It Is clear that our foreign office realises that no stake and no Interest which British capitalists may hav ln Mexico Is worth an es trangement with th Unjtod States. Mr. Asqulth's declaration means, we take It, that American policy need fear no active or covert opposition from this country. and the American pres has already accepted with candor and good feeling hi explanation Of the unlucky Incidents in tho pat which lent tnemseives to misinterpretation, bur relations .with the United States will not suffer from a policy of severe neutrality, but we could wish that something more were dob slble. The one evil which all civil lsed men must chiefly wish to avoid Is w drifting of events, - whicn may ulti mately lead th United States into war Wa are alow to believe that a presi dent .whose habit of" mind 1 o mani festly humane and seir-reatrained as Dr. Wilson's will easily allow himself to be maneuvred Into war. But It needs some patience' for a great power to allow itself to be , "defied" by a disreputable military adventurer at ths head of half th forces of a thlrd-olas state on Its borders. 'There are. eager Interests which would profit from war, and It Is fatally easy to cloak such an Interven tion a this, in pseudo-liberal formula. The. best .to nop for would be. that the moral pressure exerted by the,.states, hacked bv th refusal of other nowera to;. flnanCa general Huerta, may , rencfe' his resignation" Inevitable by the bank ruptcy -of ills treasury, the-, success of th Insurgent, or by both, causes tcom- YOUR MONEY ' By John M. Osklson. 'The crowd 1 always wrong la a Wall street saying. It Is based on a long experience in buying and selling for th customers who support the brokerage house and Investment bank er. Of course, to th broker, who gets his pay from his commissions on sales. it doesn't matter whether the crowd 1 right or wrong so long as they buy and ell. But he really would like to see the crowd come nearer the truth 1 their guesses on whether or not one ought to buy or sell. If they did, they'd traa more, and he d earn more com missions. The present furnishes an excellent Illustration of th truth of Wall street's axiom. The crowd Is staying away rrom tn market and prices of stand ard securities (first class stocks and bonds) are lower than at anv tlmesinca the panic of 1907. , The crowd , thinks that Wall street Is on tho point of of stocks and bonds will continue to go aown until they disappear; and then the crowd prophesies, vaguely, there will be some sort of government, owner ship ana control of capital and rail roads and big Industries. wen, tne crowd is always wrong. investors who swim against the cur rent of th crowd's belief have always made money and always will. It is not th time now, certainly, to follow the crowd. Ten minutes' talk with any banker or broker who is familiar with the course of prices of the good ami time tried securities is enough to show you that they are so cheap as to b bargains excellent bargains. After a time, when the wise ones hav loaded up with bargains, the crowd will begin to believe that stocks ana Donas are cneap; there will result a long sustained scramble to 'buy, and you will see price climb and climb until the wise one start to sell. If you know that the crowd is al ways worng why follow it? Whether you nave 1O0 or 1100,000 to invest. r member what the experienced ones of the secdrltles market have learned about me crowd s Judgment, "In th. spring of 1881, after return ing - from th California gold , fields." said Cy Mulkey of Boeburg, !'I went to work on Wllliant Martin's farm. After digging gold and fighting Indians, plow--ing seemed pretty prosalo so, at,th ? ' the month I said to Mr. Martin that h need not pay me anything if he would give m hi white ppny with ye. n - agreed to thl so r rode tomy home in, Yamhill county. 1 v - 'A few -days aftar t ti. m.v;. ueneral Lan pasted our place. ,.. He -as following some soldiers whoi haa deserted at Oregon City and he-wanted a posse or citisena to go with him.- H promised to give a reward of 130' for each deserter captured and - returned. Ihe soldier were mounted dragoon wno had come across the plains the year before. " A good manv nf. lh.n ... soldiers who had served under general Lan during the Mexican war. , ' "fltftila. , w aAM. l i . ' -"-t mo ivnunn wing maae in the California gold fields were too much for them. A large pumber of them Jjad desertad anrl.haif a.. e.. California, General Lane knw that th men were not Dreoared tn mair. th. .-. mil. trip. They had left without sup plies except what they could carry, on their back. -We overtook 88 of them at Grave creek ln the Rnua ri.t ley. s Their clothes wer worn out They ! uui rooq ana werenot at all Unwilling to ba cantiirnrf w. tnntr th.. back to Oregon City and General Lane paid the reward to those of ua who hud gone with him. On this trip General Lan told me tnat he himself waa toina- tn roHfWni on the first of June and on his way ne was going to stop, hold a peaea coun cil with the Rogue River Indians and try to get them to ceaaa their attnnlr. on the miners traveling through their country. As I had lost two good horses anrl . ailv.. M.n...Ajt . j . ... . uiuuuiw oauuie, Dnuie ana spurs snd 13800 In gold dust, th fall """"I was anxious to go along tn th hope that I might recover some of jL-propriyr General Lne offered m a position as interpreter, I gladly aceptd hi of fr. At this time ther wer a good many Klickitat Indian ln th Willa mette valley. Their chief wa very anxious to make a raid on the Rogue River Indians to get the horses, which tney had stolen from miners and pack er. They bad several hundred stolen horses. blhed. The chances of such a solution tl ' ri i . ! . I V. lb... -i . . uV iiiiincuBBi j ennancea if our government were to join with France in lending moral support to American pol icy. Huerta might well yield to the united wish of the civilized world, whereas h might feel that patriotism would approve his resistance to the de mands of a single neighbor. It Is one thing to bow before a species of concert, and quite another to admit a sort -of American protectorate. The further our diplomacy Is able to go .ln associating Itself With th American oblection tn thl bloody and aeir.eeklng usurper, ine ieo nxeiy le-ir. tnat war wlll.be the outcome. W hold, moreover, a general conviction that where any pre, sure 1 exerted . for humanitarian1 ends, whether by. advice "or boycott or toroa off arms, it is infinitely preferable that it should be exerted not by one power out. oy aii. , ine or.viousrt,bjeption that tne Monroe doctrine stands in the wav Of any formal ooneext" on the Amerl can..!9ntlnent is Inapplicable In ' this lnstanoe, since Washlngtrm clearly in vites and welcomes European backing. Quarterly,' the head of the Kllokltat Indians asked General Lane If be would let 40 of his warriors go along with him so that If General Lane failed to make the treaty, th Klickitat Indians could mak a raid on the Rogue River Indian and secure the horses. General Lan agreed to thl and took th Indians along. "Wa had with us, about EOO head of beef cattle which belonged to General Lan, Phil Thomnon and 'Mr. Martin and Mr. Angel. We reached the South UmDaua river. near what Is now the tn vllle, without special incident We camped there several day while the Klickitat Indiana were out scouting to find the Rogue River Indians. They located a small band near the head of th South Umoaua. Thev brnua-ht th.a. Into camp. With them there was a boy about 15 years old whom the Rogue River Indians had camured frnm th.. Calapooia Indians. This boy could talk gooa i-ninooK, so could I. General Lane would give me hi message which I would translate Into Chlnnnir tn th. boy and he would translate Into the tongue of the Rogue River Indians. The Rogue River Indians agred,,t-end runner out and set all of the trih to gether at a council on the Big Bar on the aouth aide -of Rogue River. Just above where the town of Gold Hill is now located. They kerjt their and met General Lon as agreed. - Azter a two-day council they signed treaty. We named the chtaf wh signed the treaty for hla neoni. rhi. Joseph, naming him after General Joseph Lane. General Lane klllarl beeves and gave the Indian a big barbecu. in return, the chief of the Rogue River Indians made General Ln a presnt of an Indian boy whom they had captured from the Calapooia In dians. During the treaty I saw an In dian on one of my horses which had been stolen from m th year before. General Lane had my horse returned to m and ona. af th Indian gave' me -8100 of th gold dust that had been taken from me. The rest of It about 18800 they had thrown ln the river. Their had taken from our party the year be fore, over 820,000 in gold dust and of this entire amount they had only saved 8100 ln nuggets, throwing all of th rest away. "General Lane wa afraid that as soon as he left the Klickitat Indians would make a raid on the Rogue River Indians, steal the horses and break the treaty he had Just signed. He called th chief of the Kllckltata and told him that I was hi . personal representative and would go back with them to the Willa mette valley and that he would hold him responsible for any harm his In dians did on the way back. ' "The Indians made no trouble what ever on the way back. General Lane went on to California while I returned to Oregon City where I spent that win- ' ter." Pointed Paragraphs There'a no us ln worrying and there is no us in telling people ther Is no use. )e If th front parlor is clean a girl Is apt to think the whole houss is all right A married man always says he is glad of it but he seldom attempts to' prove It a a . No, Alonzo, a girl isn't necessarily a modern Venus Just because 'she has an offhand way. a a Nor ta the high cost of beef due to the enormous quality of veal It takes to feed the prodigal sons. ' a .. - Occasionally a young man' who' be gins by sowing wild oats ends by roap-. ing a graaa widow. v a a A thief Is bound to get the worst of It sooner or later. Many a young than who . 'has stolen a kiss . marries " the giri. . a w ' - On their wedding day a man . willxT- readily agree to gratify his wife's '; smallest wish. Besides, th smaller J the wish tha easier It Is to gratify. The Sunday Journal - The Sunday Journal's '.' news,. , columns are supplemented ; ' by a variety ot news reviews . and illustrated featnree that '. command, attention, i This big paper is complete In fire news sections, ia page -. magazine and comle.sectloa. :5 Cents the Copy -;. f- r mmwmrn :f:,