THE WEST SHORE. 341 short range and is powerless. It is only when it bursts ami spreads devastation among the bespattered artillery men that it becomes at all effective. Such is the weapon this scandal shoot employs in its defence. It was not a brilliant intellectual flight when it sought to link arms with other weekly papers and say, "Lot us resent it, we have been attacked," for the respectable press of the city promptly and unanimously .repudiated the ignoble fel lowship. This matter hns Income one of tho moral issues of the day. The leading journals of this region have taken hold of it in earnest, and it will not lie allowed to drop until a law is upon our statute lxxks suppressing such criminal publications, and a public sentiment created which shall demand its rigid enforcement. Our ex changes teem with vigorous editorials on the subject, showing a determination to purge the press of such un worthy and degrading members. Says the Omjimhn: "Au editor who offers his newspaper as a spittoon for every scandal-monger to expectorate his private and public hates into, may be congratulated upon his success in getting it filled, if it is his ambition to be offensivo, but he should not be permitted to think that decent pooole look upon his management as enterprise." The Sunday Welcome gives the following succinct statement of the position of the press on this subject: "The next Oregou Legislature will be forced by the combined pressure of self-respecting newspapers and public opin iou to do something toward checking the unlicensed indecency of a certain class of literature that is spreud broadcast over our State. Defenders of 'smut' who point at clean papers that print criminal news, and imagine no law can be framed to sufficiently distinguish the bad from the good, should bear in mind that the movers in this matter of purifying our literature have no idea of accomplishing any other end than the suppression of papers that make a specialty of vice and vulgarity." It is unnecessary to multiply these quotations. They are but samples of the unauimously expressed opinion of the representative journals of the Northwest; yet we will odd just one more. In closing a long editorial the Boise SluteaiMin, the leading paper of Idaho, says: "They thrive, too, at the expense of able, worthy, dignified periodicals, and are responsible for much vice and conse quent misery. It is self-evident that, for the general well-being of society and the highest beneficent attain ments of legitimate journalism, all such flashy, fcc.imlid ous publications ought to be suppressed by law." It is difficult, if not impossible, for the human mind to conceive the actual existence of virtues itself doe not xwsoss, or to ascribe to others loftier motives than those by which itself 'in actuated, This is the reason why honorable men are invariably misjudged by the vile and despicable; why the bribe-giver and corruptioiiist sneer iugly asserts that every man has his price. The man agers of the scaudol sheet have boostiugly asserted that they have money and "influence" enough to effectually smother all attempts nt legislation upon this subject What a bum lusull to the hottest, iubjiil and purity of the men who have boon selected to compose our next Legislature! What n mistake to thus attempt to measure by their vile standard some of the most intelligent and worthy men the Slate of Oregon contains! It cannot but be resented. Wo have every confidence that when those chosou representatives of the jsmple, with many of whom we have a personal acquaintance, and for whose in nd character we have the highest esteem, assemble nt Salem, and this matter is clearly laid Wforo them, they will vole for the protection of our children and tho pre servation of our homes with a feeling no intense and a voice so unanimous that the publishers of such crime, breeding sheets will then realize, if they do not now, that they will not longer be permitted to outrage decency and insult virtue with impunity. SOMETHING FOR NOTHING. Thkhk is no business which does so much to promote trade and advance tho material interests of the section in which it is located as the newspaper, and yet there is nothing which certain business men consider ho cheap and such a subject for imjxmitiou. It is the province and 'conscientious aim of a paper to give all news which falls within its legitimate sphere; to chronicle all local events and treat nil local interests and industries as fully and frequently as is demanded by the public. It must look at everything from the standpoint of its general interest , Whatever is proper news, whatever is of inter est generally to its readers or necessary for their infor mation, it is its duty to publish in its columns. There are mauy men who, having something in which they nro Hrsoually interest id - generally in n financial sense --are offended if they are not grantl an editorial mention or free local notice, irresHctive of its interest to the readers of the piqMT. They desire to secure an advertisement for nothing, on the plea that it is "news," and consider publishers niggardly and unenterprising for refusing to gratify their longing to obtain something for nothing. The advertising columns of every jmir are opeu at a reasonable rate to every advertisement which is proper to apMar in a paer of general circulation ; and, we are sorry to say, muny are osn to advertisement which van hardly lx considered proxr, those which no welf-rmqtect-ing journal should ever publish. When an advertiser is assigned all the space he pays for in those columns the publisher's obligation to him is fully discharged, and yet he often demands that the business or industry iu which he is engaged In) made tho subject of local or editorial o immeiit. The publisher has tho right, and must 1st Kriiiittd, to decide for himself what class of news his readers require, and he has good reasons fur feeling ex cessively annoyed when such unreasonable requests are made. Long exsrieiice has proven that tho liU-ral and legitimate advertiser seldom trespasses Uxu his good nature in this reMt. That Is left for tho man who wants to get a puff for nothing, and whoso name rarely appears in tho regular advertising columns. It is tho man who wauU something for nothing who is tho severest critic of tho newspaper.