THE OREGON SUNDAY "JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING ; FEBRUARY 13. 1916. 1IICY OF WATER POVER DEVELOPMENT, lil:UfipM CONTROLLED BY FEW POWERFUL CONCERNS Models to Kepresent Big Fashion Centers , Kiss Kales J gom to- Open Shop Peetur- . tag Womin'i Wearing Apparel la This ; City. vj;? ji "I i .-.v f Mis Helenlgoe. well known on the Paelf id. coast ' and Jfn - the east, will open a. hop for" the "presentation " of Parisian and American models In worn, ea'a apparel In PorCumd . Wednesday . A Permanent . store room has been luxuriously ; fltted fronting ; on , the Report of Secretary of Agriculture Which .Power Inter ests' Sought to Have .Withheld from 'Publication Gives- poa " Proof Situation in "West to be Over-Developed,' Bf Claude McCollocbv IlerewUh Is briefly, sketched the Ira rortant parts of the recent report of the secretary of agriculture on owner, ftilp of electrical poweV. In the united -.- tales. -.. - -. - ' . ." '' Heed Smoot, father ronfessor to the late Portland water, power conference, and Mother, well known representatives of the power. Interests In the United states senate,' have been fighting, vlg- rously to suppress the report and pre vent Its publication s a public oocu roent because It shows so strikingly the tendency to monopoly-in the elec trical power field. : Senator Gedf ge IS. Chamberlain has been 'leading ' the fight for publication f the document The Journal is In receipt of advance c oples of the report, from which -the following excerpts are taken; -.-, .', a Otwt Monopoly.' --- Louis a Brandels t has warned the country: In his "Other People's Money" of the, dangers of ' monopoly in th water ; power "business.,--....Tola report bears out the Brandels contention to the full; ; it shows conclusively that the pqwer of the country, developed and undeveloped. Is in the hands of a few men and corporations. The report eays:.' "It is. found that eighty-five public s arrice corporations, through owner fMp. of properties, majority) owner- Up of stock lease, or direct manage ment, control 60.6 per cent of the total public service "power in the United ttates. f Thirty-five of these eighty five . control one-half - of the total; s ixteen , control one-third; and ten ontrol one-fourth. Of these tigbty Hve corporations, ; fifty-nine have water , power' developments; ' and of these fifty-nine eighteen control 2,326,531- water horsepower, or more than : one-naif, of the .total water rower used in publio service opera tions in the TTnited States. Of these eighteen corporations, nine control more than one-third o the total, and ,six more than one-fourth. "The character of control, which Is considered with reference to the above fig-ares, i definite and complete. It consists either of actual ownership of properties, of majority ownership of stock, pf lease, or 'of direct manage ment.. Control of undeveloped Water Power. Undeveloped power, the power in which the west Is most Interested, Is also held in a close knit monopoly. On this subject the report Bays: . "Time has not been available to make a. detailed study, of-the control of undeveloped water power or .to verify 'the information which has been collected .. in connection' with other branches of Inquiry. Such data as love been secured, however, show that 120 publio service corporations out of some 1600 corporations, the develsp jnents of which have been listed In this report, claim to own or control a total of ' 3,683,000 undeveloped water horsepower or 80 per cent of the total water power at present developed and used in pnblio service operations." . .' Over Capitalisation. - Great values have been' placed on the - power- aites, far 1 beyond their aetual cost for purchase and develop ment, and on these values the public is compelled to'pay, tribute by way of increased rates to make up the excess ive interest charges and necessary "HODCKIN'S DISEASE" RARE AILMENT THAT BAFFLES SCIENTISTS Due to Malady He Sought to i displayed - productions of American coe turners In addition to models from European fashion center. . Miss Igoe has maintained a ' shop in Ki f t 1a th ' mi-r vtr nrl stations, wmcn report an aggrerste i -MB mad frequent visits to ; Portland ; w 01 mwirai ano a coat per i to handle business here. Her growing """"' uisiauea ox sxsu, less nn i clientele in Portlandnow warrant her oua-iuux n xae reported cost ox com- opening a shop in this city, she said, j acrdai etstlonav While municipal ac-1. -. . . ' - ; ! vuuuiuig IIW SIKB tail lO OCIUUB tne items of expense properly charge able against Its undertakings. It is not probable that any considerable part of tne difference shown can be explained on this ground. It is very doubtful If amounts reported; sr commercial sta tions as 'cost of construction, equip ment and real state' represent actual con at all in tfce ; sense of cash ex. pendltures or their equivalent. Coats in this sense have rarely been kept except in recent year in a few states under the pressure of public utility legislation. Furthermore It atmeaxs to be the general practice of pnblio I H r Lkn TaumaHlp Hni'k utility corporations to denominate as ciooii o uouuj 10 'cost of . construction the amount which will make assets eaual . to lia bilities on their balance sheets. Since stocks and bonds are carried on such Balance sheets at par the so-called coat of coBstrnctidn' la scarcely more than net capitalisation. In .the ma-1 The death of Tr. John Fawcett last JOrity of cases it would be more I Tuesday night from whaf id known as nearly correct to call this item 'as-1 Hodgkln's disease call attention to sumed present " value of properties' the fact that, while the diuawe is than to call it 'investment in" or 'cost I familiar to' the medlca orAfeaslon. or such properties." I very little is known of the orlflrln cf the disease In the human body and of A Xoht LiU. I an absolute cure for It. The Frri. hui i- tnt.n t f 1 Professor E. F. Pernot. city Toac- cilitate development of power projects teriologist. who has given considerable on public lands bv srrantine- a. definite " to tne Study Of diseases, says . m I -V AV. 1 1 f II term in tne power sites of fifty years. I -"o iw.uk a th leiTsr n. . I Rlz&Dla br DbysicianjB It la verr. un. aa vw UV VT Im 1UUI c LiJBkU ttl i ' revocable permit over th nubile landa common, particularly in this country, can be secured for n- nnwor "The , disease was named .by Dr, development. The Ferris bill ha been I Thomas Hodgkin in 1823," says rro- bitterly assailed by "power men" I fr Fernot. "and although it i has tF. T. Griffith's phrase) on the ground Dcen nown au or tnis time, very t- that it does not give certain enoueh tl known, as to its cause and its title and a lone nourh term. The cure. power men ' want the fee simple titles I 11 Is n infection, you -might say. to tne power sites if thev can eet or ln lympnauc gianas, more noiice- thejn. Capital la timid and will not able in those of the neck. It resem- inveet without a long term and title. I Dle a cancer or tumorous growth as so iney say. 1 gianas enlarge. But. astonishingly, the fitnren torn- JPatient Qradnally Strangled. piled by the secretary of agriculture I Tnls growth, gradually grows larger show, that large developments have I a tne disease advances until nearly ENGLISH TEACHER EXPLAINS - - ' - - ) V, - i -'V I - - ' V i" - - ' , ' t 1 OLO AGAINST . NEW : CAUSED HIS TROUBLE, . SAYS J. W. JEFFERIS Former Franklin -Instructor ?, Explains His Stand In Fight- ; tng Existing System. ORIGINATED HIS METHOD Teacher Believes He Xs XHrst "to i vocate Abolishment of Khetorio and Orammar la Schools.:- J. WlUfs Jeff oris He Predicted Snowstorm ci aims Supernatural Powers that Secretary Lant proposes throug the Ferris bill to limit the title the lower corporations may pet in the unappropriated-power sites to a lease hold right of fifty years. They cannot then claim to own. as they now do, a natural monopoly of great value, and cannot capitalise it to the consumers' detriment far above the actual coat. On this Important point the report t-av: , - . "The total investment in commercial central, stations in the United States In 1912 as represented by the reported cost of construction for the year was over two -billion dollars, equivalent to C301 per horsepower of primary power Installation. Zn v marked contrast to t'.ioie, flguxes are those Tor municipal Philip GagrvB is a man of 'sorrows. Every time he gets one of his ex clusive -advance - hunches regarding disaster, he begins to grieve. And Tie has had so many lately. that he won- H arm vhatKsr m. nrt th wnrlil 1 m nnt been goinr on on the nublic lands. I the entire neck is circled, although I in oi .., even under the wholly unsatisfactory lu most cases the growth will be no- j For Philip has the gift of prophecy. revocaDie permit eystem. The moral "a as starting rrom a point a snort He haa lt strong. but it is of the in is. that the power sites are evidently I distance front behind the ears and r so valuable that capital is attracted extendjng around the front of the cia-d at wm. Kor exmi)le. several to their development even unoer ires- neck. , , dv hfnr th hir nnv. h wnt ent adverse conditions.- This shows "As the disease grows worse this down to M Bevan's wood yard and Secretary Lane to be right, that the I tumorous growth has the effect of a akid- sites are of such treat value th fee I metal band around the neck and. you . title should bo retained by the people, might say,, has a tendency to strangle WOod it's going. to snow It wiU be mce development has gone on indus- I the person and prevent breathing. This a big snow " - triously under revocable permits it tumorous growth may appear 'any-. pfUi for you" replied the incredu may certainly be expected to proceed I where, however. 1 1 i ,! o lAuEiu pruviaiQns ox I ilu liic wirunxnieni ma tils- ; foolish" ojia um. nisi capum win not s me wane corpaBcues ox ine oiooa, invest under the Ferris bill Is thus which are in the minority in the proved conclusively to be a bosrev and I healthv person. Increase and the red a threat particularly directed against corpuscles decrease. western people who are anxious to seel "As though you were stnng by a t nelr COUntry build Ut. Ountlnj fmm h unit th, wh-ft Mirnninl.. fnm, n I tue report: throw off the poison from the stlne. Met wvan aiur ne. miM w "Of the l.SOO.000 water hnrMnnwl m th whit, mniwiu nmm get one cord delivered ana said: developed in the western states in fight this disease. - With the dimin-1 ' It YOU b&ve any wood stacked up 1915. 30 per cent is in plants occupy- ution of the red corpuscles an anaemic!01. Iow roUJ '?" tw' TJfoJS ing national forest lands with some condition results and in time the suf- , -ulcls- fc We ar2 guing to have a flood And the Snow Came. But the snow came. . It came Just as Philip's inspiration had told him it would. ' Then, just the other day, Philip rent saw a picture of rushing waters devr astation a fertile valley. He felt a shock, he heard a crash and 'his head swam, as if he were himself be ing torn from his habitation and sent onward on the breast of a tide. , . "I was suffering Just what thpie people of the Otay valley were suf fering, said Gagne. "I never knew that a dam existed near San Diego, but when the impression came, I knew it was San tiego that was to be "stricken." .. . ' , San Away from Some.; I Gasmo lives at -4694 Sixth street. He came to Portland - six years - ago after selling nls property and deciding Oregontq be the land of plenty. That impression, he says, was gleaned from the rosy literature ' sent him by .the O-V1" R. & N. But Gagne is 64 now and there are not enough Jewelry fac tories to make employment in his line . . . ... . v. Mj 11 ei,uc V- Mia . . I don't know how I do it," admit secret grudge against an educational part power house, water conduit, or I f erer dies. diversion reservoir of the immediate iMseaee Tong i XJnratioiu generating plant. Twelve per cent "The duration of the disease varies, more are directly dependent upon however, from a few montns to a year, storage reservoirs owned bv th nnr. Ti onm int,iuw, . ir . ating companies or by their subsidi- known in its early stages, it may -be dividends..--It is to stop this practice anes, and constructed on national f or- combatted hut in the advanced stages ighpi 'a"u. 01 power develop- I little can bo done for the person af- GRAY TEA TURNS HAIR DAR K Tf Mixed With Sulphur It Dark ens So Evenly That It Can not Be Discovered.' , to? ' That beautiful, even shaue or dark. ssy hair can only be had by brewing mixture of . Sage Tea and Sulphur. ur hair la your charm. : It makes or rs the" face. - When it fades, turns y, streaked and looks dry, wispy and aggy. Just an application or two of -o and Sulphur enhances its appear- a a hundredfold.. r : .; on't bother to s prepare the . tonic; i can get. from any drug store a 6ft- t bottle of "Wyeth'a Sage and Sui jr .Compound, ready to nee. VThis i always, be depended; upon to bring the natural color," thickness and -re of your hair and remove ;dan : stop scalp itching and falling verybody uses "Wyeth's 8ag and . hur because It darkens so natural nd evenly that nobody can tell it -, t een applied. You simply dampen onge or soft brush .with it and v this through the hair, taking one .1 strand at a. time; by morniag the v hair has disappeared, and after '.er application it becomes beautl - dark and appears glossy, lustrous : bundant. ' ' ' mxn- ,1... una T . " . I ' tMining uuosu zorest i flictea. l!ir, ,uas". w W r the "The exact cause of the disease is IIZIJ iopea power or tne western unknown. It may he by San outside in states. Nearly 14 per cent in addition faction or a bruise or form as does a i.i upi.-n puohc ianas outside I wurt rttir tt Iomim i..a. hiii thA natlnnal r . I . .u v ' u - . reservoirs con- ticularly if it results -in the enlarge structed upon such lands. Piftv-six h,mni,.ti. fw- -t.tl- L,,-t ol . l wew "It also causes an enlargement of -' wvwaawav -vsr u airaoxiw ns i i i s.. s Srne vJmtL BtZlZ. LVV Jnd" Kn in the upper part of the abdotninal nanS- an?n 1 J.BUC OCm" cvlty the of the stomach. Here. ErtinT uw- ntlionsed under sx- of courser it is not nearly so readily It lA . ' I 3V"tb iwacu - an. rriicu a v aviW'v'aO fLaJO ..,i,j,m.m urows Apace. I glands of the neck. Aven in. tne last few vea whlln -Unito-uirj'a i)im i nn ine power narons nave been bewailing few diseases the mysteries of which inai iney were unable to flnanr. fur. tho ni,rfimi ,ion. hi. r uevciupraeri unless rreed from to satisfaction." governmental restrictions, new power anes nave oeen goopied up and their development pushed. In comparison with the -rest of the country power de velopment in the western states has gone iorward at an am art no- na m this connection the report reads:' in tne eleven western states in cluded within the Vaciflo and i . groups, primary power installa tion zrom an sources and for all cses Increased 840 per cent from 1903 to 1912 .or mors than two and a half times as rapidly as in the remainder am uniteo. states. In primary power equipment. pr capita "the west ern states during the same period added nearly twice as much to their which the average annual additions for the last three years have been ap proximately twice as great ' as the average for the preceding firs years." Western Power Over Developed. To cloud the issue and fool the peo ple, a great hullabaloo haa been raised by friends of the power men that con servation is holding back the western country. As shown oy this report the' facts' are that there is more" power and a big one.' Bevan chortled agalnv Now we 'have the flood. So, you see, the old saying regarding the prophet in his own country is again vindicated. . ; Gagne used to live in the east, where he worked for 30 years as a Jewelry maker. It was thus that he first knew he had the portentous faculty o fore vision." :- :- The steamer Larchmont was cruis ing along in the seft within sight of "the Gagne home. . Ship Sinks as Predicted. "That ship will sink tonight off Block Island," croaked Gagne to his wife. "I feel it." "Philip hush; how can you say. those things?" asked his , wife with a But that night the-Xarchmont went down and with her 200 human souls. From that time forth the impressions of disaster-kept coming-; The last one came the other day when Gagne ted Gagne. "I am not a crofessoW of religion ; 1 1 am not a .New Thdugbfj 1st; I am not a Spiritualist. If thesoi prophecies come from some peculiars! mental trait, i aont. Know what ifca could be. I have never studied mend tal scfence! I am uneducated; I ra"f away rrom home when I was a bovj in Quebec because r didn't like to gr What of J. Willis Jeff eris? He . was a teacher . of English ; at franklin- high school. . ' ' He resigned to escape dismissal and other .trouble. He views his trial and resig nation as .the temporarily ' success ful i thrust of the old against the new, and that the injury to him is not personal, but because he . represents ideas. To his students ;-he said, "Forget your . text books " on erammar i and rhetdric and learn English by reading Etevenson, modern authors and current literature. ' . - Text Books Scored. "No great man ever condescended to write a text book, and the authors of technical texts on grammar - and rhetoric are penny-a-liners ' compared with authors whose work is published in the "Saturday Evening post His superiors the supervisor, the principal and the superintendent were aghast. They named his method heresy. "The formal charges cited Jefferies for evil influence, -incompetence and In subordination. When the situation warmed up and he was brought to trial, he referred to his accusers as "crustaceans and mastodons." The metaphoric epithets contained perhaps the inner secret of the whole ruction. . Jeff eris was impatient .with the pedagogues whom he thought, barked back to a dim and dead past for .their formulae to use in training the youth . And his- superiors, who are included in the sweeping criticism without doubt, resented what they construed as an attitude of seir assumed superi ority and held more tenaciously than ever, perhaps, to their creed that lifs without rules is naught, and rules must be learned first, then life. The charges and the trial before the officials . of the school system, dwelt upon the allegations of insubor dination and Incompetence so exclu sively and made the thing : the : man was trying to do so incidental, to. his infraction of the established order, that the question, for very lack of utterance, asserted Itself the more strongly? - ' What Was Purpose? What seal; possessed Jeff eris mind? " What was his motive? Did he want publicity and cheap notoriety? Was be endeavoring to vent some to school. I Just can't tell yoa wot a vuw t. i uvau.v ,u uioaoicia art coming.", ' Earthg.nake Xs Poreseen. t, , Gagne doesn't pretend to be able "ttN lorecast disasters atfwiir. Lots of them get away from him. He cannot sit down, contract his brows, put his t inger on his forehead, gaze into -a crystal ball and get an impression of evil. But he claims to have forecasted the Messina earthquake. ; I ' "Think of the, thousands of lives that" could have been saved If I had been able to tell them over there what was going - to happen and if they would have- believed me. But people don't believe me at ail-when I peak of ; the Impressions of vil that ,1 'gefc Those impressions- have never' failed yet. I wish I didn't, have them." Verily, Rocky tke Stool Pigeon s Pa tk e. st Lawyers ; Despise Tkem, B ut Use Thefxk i : . How wbuld you like to be a stool pigeon in these stormy days of boot legging trials? Thr never was and never will oe I a closed season on "informers. When- developed in the west today than VJtJriT find a market. It is not true that 1 It. n t,Mt vortifitfa great development would at once fol- 4"1 V ?.TZZ.r I'TsSi thrown ; al .- .... . - - low if the power sites were thrown thi 3t U. H?n 88 h -emalnder of They would be grabbed up quickly If LLn"fd Statesand had an installa- I enough but for speculation only, to be tion at the-end of the period one-third man ior tne remainder of the United States. This comparison , in cludes primary power used directly in manufactures, 94 per cent of which is iouna in tne central and states. j eastern enough but- for speculation only, to be held out of use until the country grew. In this connection the report says: There is at the present time a con siderable over f development in nearly all the power centers of the western states. . California, Oregon and Wash ington in particular show installations far in excess of maximum demands. While there are doubtless many re mote ' sections where - small -. amounts "If a comparison is made of the de velopment of electric power in the western states and the remainder of the United Htntu . while primary power employed in the of r ould be used if it could be electrical -iniitrJtJ2I-m.-zvMt. reasonable expense, the cent in the remainder of the TJnited States, in the ten year8' 1902 to 1912. it increased 440 per cent la the west em states, or nearly twloe ' rapidly, waiie the development per capita, in the western states la 19 la was two and a half v times as great as la the remainder of tae United statu ll water power be consider, statistics cited in ; the report.. The from aU : other source's of power, the J tot1 of both developed and . undevel- "ra,u - are iound to occupy a stll more commanding position While water power-development in tal re mainder of the TTnited States increased 98 per cent from 19oa to 19ia, x in creased. 451 per cent in , the western western states in : general have : more power than they are ftbie to 'dispose of and the demand i for more market rather than for more power." ' -. - . Prepomderamee of the West. What an overwhelming Interest the west -has In the proper solution of the water power question is shown by the Af nl?Mn. Then, after he has Daggea the game, the legal light goes to his neighbor and confesses that:le hated to do-it. - He. the attorney, admits that the stool pigeon is a necessary evil. - ' - , t Pages and ; pages of ancient ana modern law books are filled with in formation as to liow much i weight Juries and Judges should not give t3 testimony of informers and profes sional witnesses., It was John Mc- Cue, defending George Scbults week, who resurrected 13 volut each containing a separate and. tinct roast on the stool pigeon. ': While Attorney Farrell was seari ing he innermost .x crevices ; of i brain to find words -with which express his ' contempt..: for Joe Singi in the course . of argument , beforel Jury on ' behalf of W." O. Ttfannin) , associate? Why was" he toot content to insure his Job by remaining quiet and incon- snicuous. true to the rote or tne texts and obedient to the rules laid down for him? . , Waa it Dossible that in education he was fired with a dream of reform and was willing to lay upon the altar his own comfort ; and security, as some, have done for religion and others for political freedom? - : Says Be Pioneered Plan, rHow much of your method did you originator he was asked. , -I belieye that I am the first. Eng lish teacher publicly to urge the total abolishment of grammar and rhetoric in the grades and high schools." He did not claim authonslfip of the idea that English is better taught with out these texts. t President Wilson, while at Princeton, be said, believed that the teaching of English was such a'total failure that it should be abolished. ; He spoke of the stuyvesant high school of "New -York, that uses the In dependent, a current publication, in its English work, and r of other- schools that similarly employ the Literary, in gest. Spokane, and San Diego schools use newspapers and magazines. .. . Systems Are Compared. With -this liberty he contrasted his Own. typewritten instructions issued by the- supervisor of his department, tell ing how many pages of grammar and rhetoric must be covered in a given period. -' "There were excluded from our class rooms by the principal." he said, "the rollowlne magazines: Saturday Even ing Post, Literary Digest, American and Current Opinion. V ' '"Why,. 0 per cent of the time of students in the .lower grades and high schools is taken by technical grammar and rhetortc," he exclaimed. Such . selections .of good English ijtomposition as are assigned for study rT n,ni,rv . Thpra are so manv MRS. S. S. SPARKS HAS A : BIRTHDAY PARTY CRED it ,;eij will GIVE INTERESTING T PROGRAM A nnmcn UIMULI 1 Play Composed by One of , Members to Be Feature of - the'Meeting Wednesday, PRODUCTION f IS . SATIRE Present Method of Giving Credit and the Sesulta That Follow Are Strlk- lagly Illustrated. " . 3Irs. Barilla Sparks Forest Grove, -Or., Feb. 12.- Mrs. Ba rilla Spurgeon Sparks, who recently celebrated her - 75th- birthday anniver sary, is one .of the best known plo neers of this section. A large num ber of. her friends 1 called.', to con gratulate her. - .!'..,"-- :. Dixon, Progressive; Outfor.G.0. P. Place Montanan Thinks Progressive aad Be- pnblloans - Should TTnited f or Xooae velt to Bring Trinmph. Missoula, Mont.,-Feb. 12. (U. P.) Joseph M. Dixon, former United States senator from k Montana and until re cently ' chairman of the Progressive national committee, today onnounced his candidacy as a delegate to the Republican' national convention to be held in Chicago in June. He declared that he believes both the Progressive and Republican - conventions should unite in the 'nomination of Theodore Roosevelt as candidate of a reunited and trimphant -Republican party. . In his formal announcement Mr. Dixon declares that he is not acting with the knowledge or consent Cf Roosevelt, and that he is taking this ctep on his own personal responsi bility. i0 U. S. Being Robbed In Panama, Charge Washington, : Feb. 12. I. N. S.)-i The United States is being "robbed" of between $18,000,000 and $17,000,000 through a too liberal attitude on - the part of the Panama-United States Joint land commission, 'according- to statement - here today by , General George W. Goethala. ttravagant payments he told the house com-H merce committee, are being allowed private' land owners whose property is needed for canal purposes, i . "Squatters" without legal title have been enriched. General Goetbals sug gests that legislation . be enacted to compel payments to - be of the .value of, those of; 1903 when' the Panama canal none was acquired. He also asks for the introduction of a bill abolish ing the Joint commission. - vi- "The . commission, said General Goethals. "has taken the ground that Paneumalans are poor and that we are rich and. should be liberal. In some instances -they have awarded clai- For their regular monthly meeting and dinner, to be 'given at the Cham- bt." of Commerce on Wednesday eve nlng Fehrtlftrv 18. :th Pnrtlnn1 linn. elation of Credit Men will have a di versified program. It will Include a play written by one of the members, a brief excursion into phrenology and a string of rhymed take-offs on the characteristics of those present The program is in charge of J. E. Breed, -credit man for Rosenfeld-Smith Co.,- who ! chairman of the commit tee on credit cooperation. He will be assisted by B. F. Wagner, W. 8. Tuj per and W. J. Henderson. The play, which is entitled "Every Credit Man," is a morality, and is a satire and preachment on the present methods of credit giving and the re sults that follow. j f-t-i.Cast Xs Given. The cast of characters Include nine ' speaking parts, as follows; - Prologue. Miss 6. M. Orr; Showdown, B. ' K. Knapp; Cooperation, E. M. , Underwood: Experience, Edward Drake; Statistics, R. P. Pouch er; Credltman, P. L.. Bishop; Salesman, E. J, Cashin; Lame Duck, H. S. Mont gomery; Kurlous-to-Know, J. J. aayer. . There are also six pantomime parts: Slick, Mrs. I. L. Bruce; - Slack. Mrs. H. B. Hall: Straight, Miss M. Blake! System, Miss A. C. ifaaon;. Security, Miss Agnes Hummer. Cnsloal Selections Pasture. Other numbers on the program win include two . musical selections by a trio consisting of Miss Beulah Clark, flute; Mrs. Helen S. Breed, violin, and Mrs. Eleanor N. Everson, piano. 8. L. . Eddy will deliver a series of topical verses under the title of "Who's Who In Dunville." Professor -G. Morris, the phrenolo gist, will give a talk . on his special subject and illustrate n.is points by a series of photographs End the reading of the heads of a ', number of mem bers.' ., . . ; ! r '.. -. 5 B. K. Knapp, manager of the ad justment bureau, will tell of his ex periences at the natl9nal convention of adjustment bureaus,, which be attend ed in Chicago in January. Tbe' meeting will be in charge of W. W. )ownard president.: - mants 4000 per cent over the valuation placed on the land In 1903. "The commission Is ignoring agree ments of the original land owners, is exceeding its authority and violating laws and treaty provisions. ' "The commission has one American' member, the others , being Panam- -alans." " ' pumps 'which -are being tested in a plant to supply London with water operate by the explosion of gas and air directly : against a volume of water - -' Ifjiintirig Time Standard Price For Eyeglasses Planned Prevention of Price-Cnttlag How : of State", Association of regoa Optometrists. , ' standard price list for eye glasses In an endeavor to prevent price-cutting is the plan of the Stata Associa tion, of Oregon - Optometrists as dis cussed by its members in their semi- oped power . In this section : of the country, far exceeds that in any other. The .r - minimum potential .-, water ' annual convention held ' in Portland power resources are 27,943,000 horse- last night. - "- power, and the maximum S3.905.000 j j A committee was' appointed to in horsepower. Of these amounts th na-i t-mmUtratA nnA fix a " standard.' It is states or more than four and tional forests contain va. minimum of f nmnnuj t win war against those mw. mm rajaoiy.s in installed water! ww norsepower, or 80.4 per cent who do not adopt the price list. 8: W Moodv of Oregon City. ,W. J. Curtis of Oorvallls. ' and W. M. Pear of La Grand were ss'ected as candi dates for the position on the state board of examiners.' - one is to De.se- power per capita the western states ot tne otal- minimum, and a maxinfum in 1912 had more ' than our times as of 18,874,50 horsepower, or 1.S per much .as the remainder of the United eent .of" the ; total maximum' for the "An - examination of "the do ?'aI' I s Mi..t ' jJT i ' !w tt nM rt uW liowi United States eves 7a per eeat ; is lected; by. the governor; from the list r We"tera stateaare stui main- foomd lm . the aaouatala and Paotflo to t submitted to Mra to fill the va t&imng their commanding position in states the pnblio land states.' Xfeaxly . cancy of Henry E. Morris, Trhose' term power. development. Primarv m.. n.i nr ttm , i in.Hi - ? " , - . . - I Ur VJ1 MM , - ... TTZir' w eiecwrcai inflnstry fonnd in the three states, Washington. ieeS? Z'ZZfLZFZ'fZy.10" Of. the water Si. it i a-r Power , within the national forests, sue -ISia- Jhe average annual In- 91. per cent are found in the west- crease has been 29,00 horsepower ern states, and these power, amount ta i-!i''TB,utta ot pr cnt " 'the maximum estimated ths to increase l, water power, ta power resources of those states.- . Taglieri Presents .'. Singers in Recit f . . Thara r met, Tri a n 1T1 cti - . . m.. - , . i v i are lniK ii-cumu j ... rf i nth.- Iwwrlo-Jv,, o l . a rt4 i rUlCB W IIU l..a. vviwv.. v .v InFroonl-sTngerad ltJi'tJ dence against Manning and Oatf iefM V-ThT schools, knowine- that , verily, the path of the stool pigei tf-4t ft probably suppUnt Latin and is not peaceful. UrJlv 'The of English are' al- But," the officers asfc "what cillC "r.i.,.iiff ,Mli,i.t,. nf ik.i. you do 'without 'emT' tvJWi rmrM who learned Latin and xnvariaoiy, tne answer r even ; irov T-3re,ir by the grai tnose u wtiom the class is mo ,.r. -.v.i w vhi.h h,v , .i ivautov-uic - io it cant De did. fKngllsh imffet be- taught. 'I f Dr. O. F. A. Walker of Portland rwas appointed secretary of the association to fill the vacancy, left by Dr. Irving R.'T'Fox. r resigned." - A I committee ef five waa also appointed to- arrange for the annual meeting to be held in June. Given Klgn Bating. I . "Thus they lose sight of the fact that ' ability to read, and understand la. the key to ail anowieage.-- . jeiieris pruweuvu - iu itwiv tudents who did poorest' work under in method were given highest grades Mrs. Walter Kendall and B. W. Bel bv a substitute' who took-his place for Delight Auditors at Studio Musical k month, and that those given highest trmm sn.nn-ti. r.Mii. 5 grades ' in technical grammar by, the -Woicea Smooth and Controlled. eubjStItutes were least able to rank Taglieri presented . two-' singers in creditably under bis standard.- -a studio recital last night who have; -Reports will be graded according - .! , i ... - . ,i , . J to the ability to read, write and speak real . yolce inuality and besides giving nEngLh language." ' - 0 the niessage of the composer give alsoTij . Mlnch Tims Wasted." - ' ;. '' the nessagp of the poet through clear,- jje concluded.' -. enunciation! -f The singers fwere Mrs.-? "Technical, grammar : and rhetoric, Walter.: Kendall, mezzo-soprano Of.! per se. have no place in an English twU t txr trii tt- !icourse .The application of gramma- Portlind, ahd IX W. Hall, lyric tenor,, and fhetorJcal principles . should of Toledo.. Wash. Lowell Patton ac-V;De inductively through the etudy companled both singers. ; , - f 0f current and classical literature. Mi. I Bell'S vfJIce showed to best ad-ij Mimoni. of dollars and years of Valu- vaniage in sucn Mcwormacic songs as j w time are heltig wated in this . pawning.- ana An, wd t hHk, ... Delight.' In Gounod's "Salve Dimo rahf his high C was .reached without evidence-. .of v strain.:, r Mrs. -Kendall's mezio appealed to her hearers especi ally an her I "Vainka's - Song." - by Whi shaw,f and fNadeaha, by Thomas. . i - scientific section of the National Op tl-! cal . association, read a paper on the "Kducation i of the Optometrist," and a' discussion - followed. - Dr. Pear of 'La Grande also msuie a ahnrt. tnlfe on T!f.. country by the use of grammar and rhetoric text books in the classroom. Un Portland, to- abolish these texts. would - mean : a saving or some 7U0S a year to the parents of approximate ly 2000 students. ,X had a classical education with much grammar- and rhetoric, but It showed me the Deed of the better method. ' - . 'i novl belt for iUDDorttm - men's iruuBCES im xusuv ciaauu - uio. ill- sertlon of a flat coiled . spring in a Dr. S. W. Moody, a member of the ficiency. Political and EducafT6naL" 1 pocket. in" the back. jmmmvMmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ,. L - i , " ' It Is Tims to Plant Friiit; SKade aiidprnamen Flowing Biilbs, Peonies, In Lilies Start Early Flower fieed and Early Vegetables inside. Special pamph let Just out tells you how to ba successful. Buy That Incubator Now and Be Ready .'' - " OUBi 1918 CATAIOO TBXH -i.y.' '.-1 "J'.,''' i - BBS oatalogef or WEBTEBJf PXAVTBBS mad Vaysm of PBAT, SPBATBBS. PEBTIilXBBS, OABBBB,- POUIiTBX and BXBB SVPPZ.ZZS. 423 Pages Pull of TP-to-ste ugnesr wnauiy- Stock JN1692DSte Ww Dct;Morri:on6Yr,hni; S 1:4S '.Ck V Buys Thi: eiJlili $350 Piano Its tone is fell nd nellcw. Its action easy and elastic SECUIuTY STORAGE CO. WILL CLOSE OUT TOM0IIROJ7 Also one. 4oo; Wellington Ucrleht at S9S cash and a S3 SO -Valley Gem Ud- right from the Baldwin Piano Co. factory, $85 cash a S400 Chickerinsr & Son, old model for S4S cash; a small Upright for SSO; a 750 Steger & Sons at Jt5; a unickennf upntnt ior.ioo cash, all jo.to first caller at 1C7 Fourth St., Couch Bldg. 'r.