102 WEST SHORE. UlLltHID IVIRY SATURDAY. WEST SHORE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER, L. lAMUIL, General Managtr, PORTLAND, OR., AND SPOKANE FALL8, WA8H. tnttrtd In tKt Pott Oflct In Portland, Or tan, far tranmluUm throw " Mcmd clod ralu. iUiSCKIPTION RATIt Strlotlr In Advane. OhTh, I Thrw Mootlu, .... i.S Hi Month. I llCopiM. Tha Wiit Bhori offera the Best Medium for Advertleere of any publication on the Paelflo Coaet. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2B, 1800. Warn Biiobi'i motto la, " Organize." Read about tlie great exposition at Spokane Falls. Disappearing guns have been Invented. This is evidently an effort to create a closer sympathy between the soldier and bis weapon. The latest advices from the census bureau are to the effect that the clerks threw more beer bottles out the back window than they did names out the Portland schedules. Wsht Biioks will Issue a large and beautifully Illustrated holiday num hit. Adversers should take advantage of the opportunity to reach so great a number of the most prosperous and Intelligent people as will receive that elegant Issue. Grand larceny of 50,000 people la what Oregon charges against Super intendent Porter and bis beer gutiling subordinates, while the indictment from the country at large calls for 8,000,000 of people either feloniously ab stracted or lost by criminal carelessness. Those congressmen who emulated In silver and find their wind-earned salaries slipping away from them, will receive little sympathy from the people, who are, somehow, Impressed with the Idea that a legislator should not base his speculations upon his vote In congress. 11 l)o men gather grapes of thorns and figs of thistles? " is a question that receives a complete answer In the following editorial comment in an Idaho er Immediately after the late election : "That this county Is democratic Is proved by the small republican majority." That the laws of the state when passed by the legislature should be pub lished for the Information of the people In the columns of the newspapers, the only place where they will be seen, requires no argument. The legis lature at its next session ought to provide for this being done. Some of the Chicago papers still give vent to their spleen at the director general of the fair. The enemy In the household is the most harmful, and the evil results of tills course will surely be felt. The commonest Instincts of patriotism should make such reprehensible conduct Impossible. According to the oltlcial returns promulgated by the census bureau, Oregon contains 2M.M9 people west of the Cascade mountains, and ?J,881 east of that range, a total of 81S.440, being fully 50,000 lees than the true population, the loss ol which can be charged to the contaminating Influences of poUU The Columbia Waterway Association met In its sixth annual convention at Oregon City Wednesday last, and passed its usual resolutions. It la going to take something more than resolutions to open the Columbia river, an achievement Wist Siioai deems of the most vital Importance to the people of the northwest, New Orleans has Jiut had a little experience with un-Amerlcaniied for elgners. When congress shall conslJer the Itn migration question, and It must do so very soon, the movement for restriction ought to receive warm support from the Pelican state ; but as politics is stronger than principles, it may be otherwise. little sympathy will be felt for the census officials who have been charged with a deliberate attempt to falsify the returns for political ends. Tbey have shown such ignorance, incapacity and spitefulness in the Oregon matter, as well as in others, that one can but believe them morally capable of such an effort, however mentally unfitted to accomplish it they might be. It is now just four weeks since West Shobs, with an eye single to prac tical accomplishment, called for a representative organization to handle the world's fair question. Now that the free discussion called out by its vig orous cartoons and comments has somewhat cleared away the mists sur rounding the question, other papers are recognizing the strength of its posi tion and are adding their voices to the call for an organization. Practical action without further loss of time is what it needed. Six months ago a wedding ceremony was performed in Portland, and last week the circuit court issued a decree of divorce on the ground of ex treme cruelty on the part of the husband. It does not require a long essay to show the weakness of our divorce laws as Illustrated by this Incident. Here is a man whom the court bas officially declared unfit to continue in the matrimonial state, one who has demonstrated his incapacity in the brief period of six months, and yet there is no bar to his entering it again. When either a man or woman so behaves that it becomes necessary for the courts to dissolve the marriage bond, the decree of dissolution should also be a decree of perpetual debarment from matrimony of the guilty party. If such were the law we wonld not see such difgusting and debasing matrimonial careers as that of a recent resident of Portland, who has been married seven times and divorced five times. Society should protect itself against the de moralizing example of such brutes, as well as against the possible trans mlseion of these instincts to an undesired posterity. The trouble is not bo much that divorce Is loo easy to obtain, but that it is too easy to gel married. Probably nothing will have a greater effect in causing an increase in prices of various merchandise than the campaign speeches of free traders and the editorial assertion of free trade papers that prices are compelled to go up In consequence of the McKinley bill. Merchants will not be slow to follow the suggestion and mark up goods and keep them np as long as the deluded public will stand It. But the law of competition and the sober com mon sense of the people will soon begin the work of scaling the prices down again, and It will not be long before the markets will be adjusted to the real conditions of trade, when it will be learned that only certain lines of import ed goods have actually been affected, and those are chiefly such as may be classed as luxuries. Under the stimulus of a better market caused by the natural tendency to use home made goods In preference to the Imported article, the former will be made in greater quantity and of better quality, and will, ere long, under the well known laws of competition and increase in quantity of manufacture, decrease In price. The experiment to be tried in the manufacture of tin is the only doubtful feature, and If this shall be a success it will prove well worth all it will cost. The argument against such a censorship of the press as will deny the use of the mails to harmful books and papers, that boys who want blood and thunder literature will " get it somehow," is purile. Admitting that Its circulation can not be entirely stopped, the throwing of so serious an ob stacle in the course of the muddy stream must seriously retard its flow and to that extent lessen its destructive power. These publications are issued for profit, and if the profits be lessened, the number of publications will naturally be less. The reading of flash and demoralizing literature has not obtained the hold upon the people that the drinking of liquor has, nor is it Intrenched in ages of education, nor does it wear the buckler of social custom. The demoralizing Influence of a certain class of literature upon the young is unquestioned, and its effect in the increase of crime is very marked. If such publications can be denied the use of the mails, their numbers would be materially lessened and the evil reduced In quantity. This is not a prohibition of reading. Other less harmful, and, possibly, even elevating, literature would take its place, and there would be little incent ive to surreptitious purchase or supply of the proscribed publications. They would simply be eliminated by the substitution of a sufficiently higher class of literature to remove the greater portion of the evil all thoughtlul people recognise and deplore. Nor would there be any complaint from the body of the people, whose literary appetite would be easily satisfied with the belter mental pabulum. Even the publishers themselves would have little ground (or objection to the law, since they could make just as much money publishing the better class of literature, the total demand for reading matter being not In the least diminished.