THE MORNING- OHEGONIAN, SATURDAY. JUNE 14, 1U02. Entered at the Poutofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class mattor. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In Advance) Sally, with Sunday, pr month 5 S3 "Daily, Sunday excepted, per year Dally, with Sunday, per year JJ 00 Sunday, per year 2 Vx The Weekly, per year 1 55 The Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday cxcepted.loc Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncludcd.20c POSTAGE RATES.. United States, Canada and Mexico: 30 to 14 -page paper.. Jo 24 to 2S-page paper... ........ ..........-.o Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not lo the name or any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or etorles from individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without eollcl tatlon. No stamps should be Inclosed tor this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 47. 4S, 40 Tribune building, New York City: 510-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago: the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 238 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market street: J K. Cooler Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand; Frank Scott, SO Bills street, and N. Wheatlcy. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 250 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 305 So Spring street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co., 429 K. street, Sacramento. Cal. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. C3 Washington street. For eale 1n Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1C12 Farnam street: -Megeath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam street. For eale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by C. H. Myers. For sale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co . 24 Third street Souths For sale in Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Celo.. by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 006-S12 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co... 15th and Lawrenee street: A. Series. Sixteenth and Cur tis streets; and H. P. Hansen. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, with slowly ris ing temperature; northwesterly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 07; minimum temperature, 48; pre cipitation, none. i PORTLAND, SATURDAY', JUNE 14. ROOSEVELT, A:TI-I3IPERIALIST. The Cuban deadlock calls for a man of G rover Cleveland's courage and reso lution, and Providence has raised him up In the person of Theodore Roosevelt The moral conviction of the man and his firm intellectual fiber stand out In every sentence of this remarkable and all but sensational special message Im ploring justice and even generosity for Cuba. The Nation will heed and ap prove It, if Congress does not. Every righteous- but sadly harried cause has times when it needs a man for whom the prospect of failure has no terrors. With the beet-sugar pha lanx undaunted before him, the voice of prudence would suggest to the Presi dent to take it easy or he "might be em barrassed by defeat That was what was said to Cleveland when the fate of the Wilson bill hung In the balance, but he sent in his message, and what ever glory rose from the episode was his even In defeat That was what was said to McKinley when Influences such as are now wielded by the so-called in surgent Senators resisted justice to Porto Rico, and when he yielded to the clamor he fell In the estimation of every brave and honest man. Roose velt does not quail. He thinks Cuban relief Is our plain duty today just as much as before the insurgents forged their threats, and what he thinks he says. They may defeat the Cuban bill, but they will never win the consent of the President to an act so ungenerous and unwise. The vital question at issue in this dis creditable rupture is whether beet sugar operations can be conducted without loss if a moderate tariff reduc tion Is allowed on Cuban imports. The beet-sugar magnates have themselves answered this question, in their asser tions of former years that the profits of the industry are such as to preclude loss in any event of Cuban annexation or tariff concession. It has been de monstrated that the difference in the New York wholesale price of refined sugar reasonably to be expected as a result of the proposed concessions to Cuba will not exceed a cent a pound, and will almost certainly be In the neighborhood of thirty-three-hun-dredths of a cent a pound. This slight reduction, In view of the beet-sugar magnates' glowing promises as to the profits of the Industry, and the osten tatious way in which the Oxnards dis play their wealth, power and control of the beet-sugar industry of the country, is pitifully inadequate to sustain the desperate resistance that has been made to Cuba's appeal. Th whole tariff question Is epito mized in this conflict; for the real suf ferers by the illiberal policy contended for will be the producers of this coun try. If we refuse to let Cuba sell to us, she will have to go elsewhere to buy; and all hopes of a profitable market there for our crops and manufactures must be abandoned. The island can do business with Great Britain, and wel come. Is our trade with Cuba to be throttled In its infancy, because a few sugar factories, controlled by a trust, insist upon the last ounce of flesh de nominated in their bond? The Senate seems to think so, and maybe It can have its will. There is no "imperial ism" in holding conquered territory un der rightful sovereignty and In exact ing from Cuba the just and necessary conditions of our protection. Where Im perialism begins is in economic Injus tice, fastened temporarily upon Porto Rico, repeated in the case of the Phil ippines, and now proposed to be dealt out to Cuba. The President is up in arms against this genuine-brand of im perialism, of which the plaintive and tearful Teller is the most aggressive exponent The late strike among the New Jersey glassworkers called attention to the vio lation of the child labor law of the state. The bottle-blowers' union se cured photographs of children of 6 and 7 year at work in the factories, though the state law forbids the employment in such places of children under 12. The work of these little tots was to carry bottles from one part of the factory to another, and its only economic value was that it enabled employers to avoid the expense of putting in suitable ma chinery to effect this transit This, as the Outlook points out, is a state of affairs similar to that In some parts of Continental Europe, where, being able lo procure cheap although Inefficient la bor, manufacturers refrain from intro ducing machinery which Is found In Engltea and American factories. This mating rr 4ne out of children Just from the nursery is a blot upon .Amerl- can civilization, and, having been thor oughly exposed by the energy of the striking glassblowers, it is not possible that the practice will "be continued in the factories of New Jersey. AS GOOD AS PASSED. The passage of the Irrigation bill Is big with promise for far Western development The possibilities of the great region this side of the Missouri seem at length to have taken Arm hold upon the imaginations of the" East, for the East, coupled with Southern apathy and the formidable opposition of men like Cannon, Grosvenor and Dalzell, could easily have defeated the meas ure. Few measures have ever passed Con gress so exclusively on their merits as public undertakings as this Irrigation bill. Largely through the efforts of Representative Tongue, of the Irriga tion committee of the House, the un worthy schemes of landgrabbers have been painstakingly eliminated from the 6ill, and now President Roosevelt and the National Irrigation Association have succeeded In working- the bill through the House. It is a triumph for useful and honest legislation as well as for Western development It does not appear as yet Just how certain this bill is of approval In the Senate. The measure passed yesterday is the Senate bill, amended in the House so as to remove Its objectionable feat ures. It goes, therefore, direct to con ference, and the natural thing to expect is that the Senate will concur in merely corrective alterations in its own bill. The only points of danger would seem to He In the rule or ruin principle of the 'corporations with high standing in the Senate, and a possible perversity grow ing out of the bitter conflict over Cuban relief. Considerations of this unworthy sort, however, will have much less lev erage in conference than in the tortu ous ways of committees and debate. We think the Senate will promptly con cur and the bill become law. Of the general scope of the measure It Is sufficient to say that it sets apart the sales of public lands in arid-land states for an irrigation fund, to be ex pended In departmental expert hands for storage and distribution of head waters. It is understood that specific enterprises, one in California, another In Arizona and a third in Montana, will be executed with these funds, and that experimental work will be done in other states and territories, including artesian borings and surveys In certain places In Eastern Oregon. This state's immediate benefit may not be consider able, but its ultimate profit from the law will be great Oregon has borne conspicuous and effective part in the work that finds fruition in this bill. Representative Moody has co-operated zealously with Messrs. PInchot and Newell, the Gov ernment experts whom he carted over Eastern Oregon last year, and by whom President Roosevelt has chiefly been ad vised. His influence at Washington, which has been potent among the lead ers there, has stood him and the state in good stead. Representative Tongue, as chairman of the House committee, has also labored faithfully and with signal success, not only to perfect the bill, but to bring about its passage. Eastern Oregon's debt is great, both to Moody, whom it refused to honor with re-election, and to Tongue, whose Western Oregon constituents are far more inter ested in rivers and harbors than in arid lands. Both are men, however, to whom the success attained will be considered compensation not to be despised. WRIGHT OS THE STRIKE. Carroll D. Wright United States Commissioner of Labor, contributes to the current number of the North 'Amer ican Review a very Interesting and in structive article concerning strikes in the United States. The first recourse to strikes occurred in 1740-41, when a com bination of the journeymen bakers in the City of New York struck for an In crease of wages. Under the laws of the Colony of New York the leaders of this strike were tried and convicted of con spiracy on account of their agreement not to bake bread until their wages were raised. In 1796 the Journeymen shoemakers of Philadelphia struck for an Increase of wages, and this strike was successful, as was another ordered for the same purpose in 1798. The next year the shoemakers of Philadelphia struck against a threatened reduction In wages, and, after being Idle ten weeks. made a compromise. These were -the only occasions on which strikes oc curred in the United States before the nineteenth century. In 1S03 ah Important strike took place In New York City, known as the "sail ors' strike." The sailors asked for an increase of wages from $10 per month to 514 per month. They organized a pro cession, compelling the non-striking seamen to Join them. Their leader was arrested and lodged in jail, and the strike was disbanded. The Journeymen Shoemakers' Association of Philadel phia struck in 1805 for an increase of wages, their demands ranging from 25 to 75 cents Increase on each pair of shoes. After lasting six or seven weeks the strike failed and the leaders were tried for conspiracy. The cordwalners of New York struck in November, 1809, and those of Pittsburg, Pa., In 1815. The leaders were tried for conspiracy and convicted. In 1817 the workmen in the leading shipyard of Medford, Mass., refused to work because their employer abolished the grog privilege customary at that time. The strikers finally gave up their contention. A notable strike occurred in 1834 in the great shoe manu facturing City of Lynn, Mass. The women shoeblnders to the number of more than 1000 struck for an Increase of wages, but after a four weeks' strug gle the strike failed. The same year the female factory operatives at Lowell resisted a threatened reduction of wages. Since 1835 strikes have been fairly common, not seldom expensive and destructive, but there were no very notable strikes until 1877, when the history of the greatest labor wars of the century began for the United States. The first of these great historic strikes took place In 1877 on the Balti more & Ohio Railroad, on account of a threatened reduction in wages. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company was the victim of a strike accompanied by frightful riots, violence and destruc tion of property at Pttsburg. Pa., In 1877. The United States soldiers were sent to the scene of conflict by the re quest of the Governor, and finally re stored order. The county in which the strike occurred was declared by the courts to be liable for all the losses sus tained through the riotous strikers. The amount was over $3,500,000. The next great strike was that of the tele graphers In 1883. Then came the "Mar tin Irons" etrikd an tba Gould system of railways, in 1885-S6. The most de structive and formidable strike in our history was that of June and July, 1894, at Chicago, but the most picturesque and sensational event in the labor movement of the country was the Homestead, Pa., conflict of July 4, 1892, which grew out of a disagreement in the previous month concerning wages. The striking workmen took possession of the steel works and repulsed by fire arms all efforts of the Carnegie Steel Company's detectives to dislodge them. Seven men were killed and from twenty to thirty wounded in the battle. The arrival of the state troops on the 12th of July "restored the town to order. The so-called "Pullman' strike at Chicago In July, 1894, began at the works of the Pullman Palace Car Company, but ended in a formidable insurrection of the labor employed on the prlc.li;al railroads radiating from Chicago and some of the affiliated lines. This terri ble strike paralyzed Internal commerce, delayed the mails and demoralized business, and was finally brought to a close chiefly by the action of the courts through the power of the writ of In junction, for the Federal troops were really ordered to the scene of action to enforce the orders of the Federal Courts. This great strike was disfig ured by riot, murder, burglary and 'ar son, not less than 10,000 cars being burned by lawless persons. The year 1894 was the high-water mark of labor conflicts. The most notable of historic strikes since 1S94 was the so-called "steel" strike of 1901, which began July 1, 1901, and lasted until Sep tember 15 of that year. This struggle was not . over a question of wages, hours, labor or rules or conditions of work, but a contest for the recognition of the right of the Amalgamated Asso ciation of Iron. Steel and Tin Workers to demand the unionizing of all mills, a demand positively refused by the United States Steel Corporation. The Amalgamated Association was defeated in Its demand, largely because It did not have the hearty Indorsement of a large number of workmen, since It was not a movement to redress any grlev ance. This unsuccessful strike stood for a loss of more than 4,000,000 in wages. Between 1SS1 and 1900 the sta tistical record shows that the losses to employers and employes amount to $46S,968,5SU that 50.77 per cent of strikes succeeded; that 13.04 per cent succeeded partly, and that 36.19 per cent failed. These facts recited by Mr. Wright Have brought him to the conclusion that "labor conflicts grow out of- increasing Intelligence; that "the avoidance or ad justment of such conflicts must be the result of increased intelligence; that fools do not strike; it Is onl.v men who have intelligence enough tc recognize their condition that make use of this last resort" MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP. Goldwin Smith has. more than once referred to the fact that municipal so cialism has moved rapidly in England compared with its small progress in the United States. In the United Stages only a little more than one-half of the cities own the public water serv ice. About one-eighth own electric lighting plants, limited In many places to the lighting of the streets and public buildings. Few plades own their own gas works; only one city owns and op erates a street railway system, and not a single city owns its dwn telephone service. Now let us turn to Great Britain, where since 1875 the capital invested In municipal enterprises has increased from $465,000,000 to $1,500,000,000. There are now In Great Britain 981 munici palities owning water works, 99 owning the street railroads, 240 owning the gaa works, and 181 supplying electricity. Half the gas-users in England use mu nicipal gas. These figures, which are reported to our State Department by Consul James Boyle, at Liverpool, indi cate that about all the municipalities in Great Britain own their own water works; that nearly all the important cities own and operate gas works; that a very large number have public elec tric light plants; that a considerable number own and operate the street rail roads. Sheffield, a city of 381,000 inhab itants. Is devoting the profits of Its street railways to the construction of shops and business premises for rent Two second-dare cities own Turkish baths, and Liverpool is about to erect the finest Turkish bath in Europe. This great city of over 685,000 people owns its water works, operates street-cars, sup plies the electric light and power, has one of the largest and best public bath systems in the world, provides public laundries for the poor districts, fur nishes flowers and plants for the win dows In the slums, sells sterilized mllkl for the children of the poor at cost price, owns a municipal organ and has a salaried organist to play it, gives municipal lectures, supports parks with concerts, sustains technical schools, etc. Liverpool's greatest municipal under taking is that of providing dwellings for the very poor, the evicted tenants of demolished noisome buildings in the slums. The city obtained a large area under condemnation proceedings and demolished 8000 unsanitary buildings. In, some cases the qlty resells the land to private individuals, who may build houses under certain restrictions; but in other cases the city itself builds blocks of dwellings; which arc rented on public account at about cost. Some 2000 tenements have so far been built by the city on Its own account The largest of these public tenements have four rooms, and are rented at from $1 25 to $1 50 a week. The three-room tenements are rented for $1 to $1 10 a week; two rooms, 60 to SO cents, and one room 45 cents a week. Some of them are furnished with hot water as well as cold; gas is provided at a cost of 2 cents for four or five hours' con sumption by one burner. The rents named, however, do not quite cover the cost Since Liverpool obtained its street railway system, about five years ago. it has greatly extended it and con verted itfrom a horse-power line Into an overhead trolley system. Under mu nicipal ownership the hours of labor for conductors and drivers have been reduced from 14 hours a day to 10 hours. The present pay Is $7 20 for a week of six days, while under private ownership the pay for a week of seven days was but $6 SO. The city's profits from the service are such that a gen eral 2-cent fare for all distances is con templated. In Glasgow the fares for.a short distance on the city railways have recently been reduced to 1 cent, and for 2 cents a distance of 2 miles can "be traveled. Consul Boyle reports further that British municipal activity Includes pub lic hotels, schools of art and colleges aside from technical schools, race courses, public musical entertainments, lectures, milk supplies, crematoria, etc Bristol has municipalized its docks, and those of Liverpool are managed as a public trust Only In the matter of education has the principle of public ownership been less extended in Great Britain than In the United States. With this exception Great Britain leads us by a long distance in the advance of every line of municipal activity. Of course, all these things are not without a certain degree of opposition in Great Britain on the part of those who believe that this municipal socialism is proceed ing too far, but it is not disputed that the best-governed towns and cities of Great Britain and those of the lowest taxes are the ones where this munici pal socialism most prevails. Consul Boyle says that "municipal govern ment in Great Britain Is honest, intel ligent and energetic, and politics has little to do with the engagement or re tention of -civic employes." These facts related by Consul Boyle are most Interesting and instructive, and yet it is exceedingly doubtful whether .municipal ownership, devel oped to the extent it s in Great Brit ain, would show equally admirable re sults In the important cities of the United States. It is true that the giv ing over of valuable streets and public privileges to private corporations for private profit has been a fruitful cause of Jobbery, dishonesty and demoraliza tion In the government of American cities, but municipal ownership, of its gas plant by Philadelphia showed equal ly deplorable results. The people ob tained wretched gas, the municipal government used the city gas plant as an asylum, refectory and hospital. for age's, decayed or needy political para sitea The grand Jury's recent report concerning the governme'nt of St. Louis for the past fifteen years is not calcu lated to prompt an experiment in the extension .of municipal ownership in that city or Chicago or New York. 'The trouble Is that the municipal govern ments elected In our great cities could not be trusted to administer municipal ownership. The Tammany government that always corruptly sold the public franchises to ' private corporations, would be sure to rob them if permitted to operate them for the municipality. British suffrage Is so restricted that the elements of "dan'gqr so vital here are held down to the minimum. ' The protest of George W. Willison, of Salem, published -yesterday, against permitting excursionists and other curiosity-seekers to "go through the state insane asylum" Is just and timely. Why, Indeed,, should these unfortunates be made to stand on parade while the thoughtless, the unsympathetic and the morbidly curious pass them in unfeel ing if not contemptuous review? Clear ly, this Is an outrage to which patients in the asylum, should not be subjected. Common humanity cries out against It, and it Is hardly deemed possible that its earnest voice will not be heard and its plea sanctioned by those In authority at what Is called, and truly should be, the "asylum" for the insane. The fraternization of the Boers with the British soldiers recalls the scenes after the surrender at Appomattox; when Union and Confederate soldiers treated each other like olcr comrades. Some of the Confederate and Union Generals had been old comrades in the regular Army. Generals Heth, .Pickett and Wilcox had been warm friends be fore the war of Major-General John Gibbon, of the Union Army, and their meeting was warm and hearty on bpth sides. Pickett asked General Gibbon what Lincoln would do with them. Be fore Gibbon could answer. General Heth said, with a laugh: "I know what I'd do If I were Lincoln;Td hang you." There Is a deal of practical common sense in the position taken by the synod of the Reformed Church of America that students, while being educated for the ministry at the expense of the board, should not marry. Broadly speaking, no student while pursuing his studies in an Institution, whether at his own expense or the expense of the state or of a society, should marry. The reasons, for this are so obvious that it Is needless to enumerate them beyond the mere statement that any matter which divides and distracts the atten tion of the student Is a detriment to his progress, and should be eschewed, or its conslderatlcn postponed. In a recent -article in a technical jour nal, written by a physician, "the hair pin as a surgical instrument" was treat ed seriously. The writer named fifteen different ways in which it may be used in an emergency, to relieve pain or save life. ' For example, it might be used as a drainage tube, as a probe, to compress a blood vessel, close a wound, etc. One James Howell, almost four centuries ago wrote: "One hair of a woman can draw more than a hundred pair of oxen." Recalling this saying in connection with hairpin surgery, the Youth's Companion suggests that per haps "some of the virtue of the hair goes Into the pin." Two members of "the Austrian Relchs rath exchanged insults and soundly boxed each other's ears during a debate 'in that body a few days ago. Worse would have befallen If the friends of the belligerents had not dragged them apart Thus does the example set by United States Senators 'extend across the waters and into the very heart of Europe! Fie McLaurin! Tillman, for shame! See how these old boys in the Austrian Parliament have become con taminated by your free-and-easy meth ods of presenting argument or settling a dispute! Portland wants quick connection with the surrounding country, in all direc tions. Why not let Into the city the proposed electric road to and from Washington County? The use of cer tain streets Is required. , No road can be of advantage to the city unless It can get liito the city. Portland, we take "it, is not a finished town. Are there not other things that may well enough be done here' yet? Kilauea, Hawaii's volcano, not to be outdone by volcanoes In other sections of the Western world, is casting forth "redounding smoke and ruddy flame," not to mention ashes, gas and sulphur ous fumes. An outbreak is generally predicted, and, strange to say, people are preparing to go thither to witness it, instead of remaining at a safe dis tance, duly thankful. The Boers, In the main, are behaving admirably. Not only have they proven themselves foemen worthy of the Brit on's steel, but they are lining up as colonists worthy of the generous con sideration of a great nation and as a people that challenge the admiration of J the world. TAFT AT THE VATICAN. Chicago Inter Ocean. The text of the instructions to Gov ernor Taft regarding the friar landa in the Philippines shows the care with which public documents are prepared In the War Department The manner of publication is an illustration of the perfect working of the system for safeguarding public in terests. No mission of an American official ever caused more d!scus3lon than Governor Taft's visit to the "Vatican. It was known that he was to confer with the "Vatican authorities on the disposition of the friar lands, and It was intimated that any definite instructions might bring tho Ad ministration into conflict with Congress. It was contended also that in sending Governor Taft to confer with the pope the United States Government was coun tenancing a movement to establish dip lomatic relations with the Vatican. The publication of the instructions at that time would have removed all doubts on both points. But Secretary Root saia only that Governor Taft's mission was not diplomatic; that he went to Rome on a business matter, and that his instructions precluded any encroachment on the pre rogative of Congress. But as soon as the Instructions had been presented to the "Vatican officials they were sent to the Sonate and were published. The Instructions were prepared on May 9. while the Philippine bill was under dis cussion in the Senate, and. therefore, in the absence of specific authorltv from Congress are made tentative in character and are limited to fundamental proposi tions. The Catholic church In the Philippines Is to give up state functions, the princi ple of complete separation of church and state is to be in no way modified or made the subject of discussion, the titles of the friars to certain lands are to be extin guished after fair compensation and in accord with a principle looking to' owner ship of the lands by the people. The Rom an Catholic church Is asked to continue Its religious and educational work In the Philippines through other agents than the friars, who have made themselves obnox ious to the Catholic Filipinos. It Is specifically stated that Governor Taft's mission la not In any sense or de gree diplomatic In Its nature, but "Is pure ly a business matter of negotiation for the purchase of property from the owners thereof, and the settlement of lands In such manner as to contribute to the best interests of the people of the Islands." There Is" absolutely no flaw in the In structions, even from the viewpoint of the most sensitive Congressman or the most captious churchman. They constitute an admirable public document drawn to meet a case without precedent In our history, covering negotiations of the greatest deli cacy and Importance, in accordance with the recognized principles of traditional American policy. HIS ASSUMPTIONS EXAMINED. Mr. Geer's "Claim," and HI Flatter ing View of His "Prospects." Forest Grove Times. Governor Geer. In an interview pub lished last Saturday, said: As to the Senatorshlp, I will only say that the flatteringly large vote given me by the people will give me the offlce -without question, unless the Legislature sees proper to Ignore the popular will, which la not at all likely. . . . A Presidential Elector would have the same right to Ignore the popular vote s would a member of the Legislature under those cir cumstances. This vote should settle the Sena torshlp. The Times does not believe the Gov ernor puts the right Interpretation on the vote given him. and he will find it so be fore the next Senator Is chosen. In the first place, he was not properly the nom inee of the Republican party. The con vention that selected the state ticket made no choice for United States Senator. Gov ernor Geer's name was never placed on the Republican ticket (It was placed on the official ballot by petition with the designation "Republican." but Simon and Fulton and Corbett and a dozen other gentlemen whose names have been men tioned for United States Senator could equally as welL have had their -names placed there also as "Republicans" if their friends had deemed It wise to circu late petitions for that purpose. It does not require a large number of signatures to such a petition, neither docs it require that the petitioner be of the same party as the man whose name heads the paper, nor that" the petitioner vote for him at the polls. In the second place, in this case there was no liberty of choice In the party. There were two. names on the official bal lot one marked "Republican." the other "Democrat" and the voter was directed! to "vote for one." Republican voters would naturally vote for a Republican. and so a large number of them put a cross In front of Geer's name, but agood many also declined to vote on that point not having an opportunity to make choice In either party. In the third place, the vote Is not man dator)', and the Legislature Is not bound either by law or unwritten custom to obey It. For Instance, the Representatives of both Multnoiriah and Washington Coun ties are understood to be unfavorable to Geer. He was largely an issue In the con ventions in which they were nominatea. and they were selected by the party op posed to him. Therefore, if they repre sented the local sentiment of the party that selected them, they would have to oppose him in tho Legislature. Thl3 was largely the case in other counties also. - Again in the Petition Business. Gervais Star. Brother Geer Is again in the petition business. Now he desires Co call an extra session of the State Legislature to place his successor on a fiat salary, as dictated by Horer, of the Salem Journal. This is possibly the passing squeal of a dis gruntled, left-over ofllce-seeker and party wrecker. Next! Well, Hardly! Gervais Star. Would Geer have caUed an extra ses sion of the State Legislature to put state officials on a fiat salary had he been the successful nominee and choice of the electors? Well, hardly! The Family Laramie. "William Henry Drummond, In the Century. Hssh! look at ba-bee on de leetle blue chair! Wat you t'lnk he's tryln' to do? Wit pole on de nan' laic de lumberman, A-shovm along canoe. Dere's purty strong Current bchln' de stove Were It's passln de chlmley stone; But he'll come roun' yet It he don't upset, So long he was left alone. Dat ' way cv'ry boy on de house begin No sooner he 'a twelve mont ole. He'll play canoe up an' down de Soo An' paddle an push de pole. Den haul de log all about de place Till dey 're nilln" up moa de room. An' say It's all right, for de storm las' night Was carry away de boom! l Mebbe you see heem. da young loon bird. Wit' half of de shell hangln on. Tak' heea firse slide to de waterside. An off on de lake he's gone! Out of de cradle de're goln Earn way On reever an lake an" sea; For born to de trade, dat'a how de're made, De famllee Laramie! An de reever she's lyln so handy d(p On de foot of de hill below. Dancln' along an clngln' de song As away to de sea she go. No wonder I can never lak her song. For soon It Is cotnln w'en Dey'll llssen de call, lettle Pierre an Paul, An w'ere will de modern be den? She'll sit by de shore w'en do evening 'a come. An splk to reever, too: "O reever, you know how dey love you so ' Since ever dey're seeln you. For sake of dat love, bring de leetle boy home Once more to de moder's knee." An' back dey'll come safe to me. ISSUE WAS SHARPLY DROWN. Boston Transcript Returns from Oregon Indicate that the Democrats have elected their candidate for Governor and that the Republicans have taken everything else In sight, choosing both Congressmen and securing control of the Legislature which will elect a United States Senator to succeed Senator Simon The returns received favor the belief that the pluralities for the Republican candi dates for Congress will equal or exceed those given two years ago, when Mr. Tongue had over 3C0O and Mr. Moody more than 9C0O. Mr. George E. Chamberlain, the Democratic Governor-elect, appears to enjoy a popularity in Oregon similar to that the late Governor Russell had in Massachusetts, and he has been assisted by the confusion in the Republican state camp, the nomination of Furnish having been unpopular. This fact Is reflected by several strong Republican counties roll ing up their old-time pluralities for every Republican candidate bu the head of the ticket. The Oregon election has the significance attaching to a first gun, so far as the Congressional contest is concerned, and the omen Is favorable to the Republicans. The Issue was sharply drawn on Imperial ism, the Republicans pleading that the President's hands be upheld. The Oregon Congressmen-elect are Republicans elect ed by overwhelming majorities. As the Governor of Oregon will have nothing to do with Federal affairs, while tne two Congressmen will, the Oregon election may be deemed an indorsement of the Ad ministration, despite Mr. Chamberlain's success. He will be surrounded by Re publican state officers and confronted by a Republican Legislature. OTHER COM3IEXT OX THE ELECTION The Issue "Will De National. Denver Times. Although the result of the Gubernatorial election in Oregon Is still in doubt, the more important question to be determined by the vote of last Monday Is settled. The Republicans have elected the two Con gressmen and have an overwhelming ma jority in each branch of the Legislature, insuring the election of a Republican United States Senator. The country Is deeply interested In this election because it is the first fight In the battle for control of tho next Congress. The fact that the Repub licans have elected the first members of the F.tty-elghth Congress to be chosen may bo accepted as lndlaatlve of the final result The Issue In the Oregon election was squarely drawn on the National question of the Administration's attitude In the Philippines. The Democratic platform demanded independence for the Filipinos, and the Democratic speakers and press were outspoken In their criticism of the United States Army and the Government's conduct of the war. The Republicans in dorsed the Administration's policy In deal ing with the insurgents arid its proposals for the future government of the Islands. This eame Issue will probably be raised in every Congressional campaign in the country this Summer. The Democrats have assumed that the people do not in dorse the Republican policy and have claimed that the electors will repudiate It at their first opportunity. Democratic prediction has failed of ful fillment In Oregon where the Issue was squarely fought, as It Is likely to fall else where. Will Be Follovred In November. Springfield (111.) Journal. The Republican triumph was decisive and significant Large majorities were returned for the two Republican candi dates for Congress, and all of the other Republican candidates for state offices were elected by good majorities. In the next Legislature, which will elect a United States Senator, the Republicans will have 60 members and the Democrats but 30. giving the Republicans twice as big a ma jority on joint ballot as they had in the preceding L?glslature. This is a striking victory, and gives sat isfaction to Republicans everywhere. It is especially gratifying because it was won on National issues, and affords an indication of the drift of popular senti ment regarding the Issues that will be be fore the American people In the Congres sional elections this year. In the cam paign in Oregon the Republicans stood squarely for National expansion and de manded the retention of the Philippines. The Democrats opposed expansion, and the result is seen In the triumphant election of Republican Congressmen and in the big majority in the Legislature, which will elect a Senator. The voters of Oregon have Indorsed strongly the attitude of the Republican party and the course of the Republican Administration, as jhe people of the Nation will do in November. A Lesson for Democrats. Minneapolis Tribune. The Democrats tried to make an Issue out of Imperialism, and clumsily turned it into an attack upon the honor and con duct of the American Army. This has brought a spontaneous reaction of public opinion against them, of which the Re publicans will take advantage in the cam paign, though they lacked the quick sense td do it while the debate was going on. The speeches of Democratic speakers against the Army are to be circulated in the campaign, though there seems to be no particular need of It This is a case where the people have taken the initiative lu resenting attack upon the Army, and Republicans will get the benefit of it in the elections. The Oregon election i3 slg-" nlficant in this respect The Republicans made the campaign on National Issues to cover up their factional fight The people elected a Democratic Governor to rebuke faction, but elected the whole Re publican delegation to Congress by 10,000 majority. Democrats; Losing- Hope. St Louis Globe-Democrat. Democratic prophets are not quite so exuberant over the outlook In the Con gressional canvass as they were before the election In Oregon a week ago. The increased majority which the two Repub lican candidates for Congress got in the election In that state shows that the chances for a Republican victory In No vember are extremely favorable. The Is sues which will be up in the canvass throughout the country were at the front In tho campaign for Congress In Oregon, and there the Republicans made a gain over even the high total of 1D0O. All the Indications point to a big triumph for the Republicans in this year's voting. The Democratic leaders are beginning to con cede defeat for their side already. What Lodge Thought. Boston Herald. It may be true, as Senator Lodge takes occasion to observe, that his Philippine speech swept Oregon. The announcement would have been somewhat more interest ing if somebody else l"?ad promulgated the information. It frequently happens that statesmen are more or less prejudiced In favor of their own statesmanship. Why Customs Duties Are "Odious." Indianapolis Journal. Mr. William E. Curtis, of the Chicago Record-Herald, writes that there Is no trouble with passing goods through the Custom-House at New York If those who do so are honest He says that one of the women who vlslteq Secretary Shaw with complaints swore to 5172 worth of dutiable goods, when an examination showed that she had 51S0O worth, and an other, who made oath to ?320 worth, was found to have goods to the value of 2S00. The odlousness of the law Is found In the fact that It prevents well-to-do people bringing good3 Into the country upon which people who remain at home must pay duties. - NOTE AND COMMENT. These days in June do not seem to be so rare. The posse is still Merrllly Tracing the convicts. Police! , Those convicts must have a taint of Boer blood In their veins. The sleuths who know exactly how to catch the- outlaws continue to remain at home. It Is the nlain dutv of Game Warden Qulraby to arrest Merrill and Tracy for violating the game law. Through some oversight the. Governor has not yet ordered out the regimental band for the benefit of Mr. Tracy and Mr. Merrill. A debate at the High School has de cided that the negroes should not be disfranchised. Go back and get your bal lots, bruddern. The Atlanta Constitution thinks a great Democratic victory has been won on Ore gon. The Constitution ought to follow the flag out here and take a look at the returns. One of the posse that was chasing Tracy and Merrill yesterday toward New Era plunged the rowels In hissteed and trolled forth the following carol, which sounds like something we have seen be fore somewhere: .On the road to New Eray. Where the lop-eared bloodhounds bay. And the hunted, hounded convicts Make the great, big get-away. Representative "Warnock, of Ohio, who was Judge of the Court of Special Pleas In hlb district for 10 years, was once try ing a case In which a woman was on the stand as a-witness. "How old arc you?" asked the attorney who was questioning her. The woman hesitated. "Don't hesi tate," suggested tho lawyer. "The longer you hesitate the older you will be." Immigration In the month of May at New York has broken all previous rec ords, the arrivals numbering over SS.500. Thl3 compares with a former high record of 73,000, which was established In the same month of 1S03, when that number of Immigrants landed at Ellis Island. Then, however, they came largely frcm Ireland and northern Europe; now 70 per cent of them come from Italy, Austria, Hungary and Russia. It Is stat,ed by one of the immigration commissioners thit at least 53 per cent of those now coming are undesirable, because having no trade or regular vocation. Dr. Tempest Anderson, the expert pho tographer, of York, England, who has inlled for St Vincent, Is the possessor of a large series of prints of volcanic features obtained during travels In va rious parts of the world. In September, 1S98, he made a stay of a week on the slopes of Vesuvius, taking photographs of the volcano at the period when it was in eruption. Again, in, the Summer of 19C0, he was exploring with a party of geolo gists along the Colorado Canyon of tho United States, studying the little known volcanic formations of that remarkable district Nile Is a member of many scien tific societies, and is a Justice of the Peace for the City of York. The form of service authorized for use In Anglican churches on coronation day ard the Sunday following- has not met with universal appreciation. Exception has- been taken to the omission BOf the elause in the oath which declares the King's Intention "to preserve unto tho bishops and clergy of England and to tho church therein committed to their charge all such rights and privileges" as by law appertain to them. The omission is prob ably due to the desire to make the serv ice more acceptable to the increasing number of Nonconformists who adopt liturgical services. It has also been point ed out that the words explaining the sym bolic meaning of the orb, the ring and the two sceptres should have been Included In the service. Some of the clergy have declared their Intention to omit the ab breviated oath, and others have sought permission from their diocesans to use it In full. The Prlmato will, it Is understood, authorize an alternative form for use In his diocese, and several bishops have in timated their Intention to do the same in their respective dioceses. A Professional Charity AVorker. Philadelphia Record. "The newest profession for women is that of a charity worker," remarked a prominent clubwoman yesterday. "You needn't laugh. There really is such a pro fession, and it is new, and If I were a young woman I would enter Into training for It There Is not much competition as yet, and the opportunities for studying charity work are limited, but still It is now possible. New York has established a training school for charity workers, and it is meeting with success. The women who enter are put Into active service at visiting under proper leadership, and then there are courses of lectures upon tho different phases of the subject. It Is quite worth entering from a financial stand point also. Philadelphia is proverbially conservative, and yet we pay the young woman at the head of our organizing charities the salary of &000. and she carl greatly supplement it by lecturing and literary work upon the subject of her profession. Other cities do better than this, and tho time Is not far distant when all charitable work will be conducted In a methodical manner by an expert who will be well paid for her services." PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGUAPHERS Don't worry about crossing a bridge until you come to it not even if It's the Brooklyn bridge. Puck. "Ho has had an Interesting career, hasn't he?" "Well, rather. He has been through two fortunes, three wives and a sanitarium." Life. Tempus Fuglt. "I don't like tho man." "Why not?" "I hadn't been talking to him flvo minutes before he said I was an idiot." "Why the delay?" Judge. Anything for a Cure Mrs." Nexdorc Tve been thinking of trying to have my daughter's voice cultivated. Would you? Mrs. Pepprey By all means. If you have tried every other remedy. Philadelphia Press. Questions and Answers Once More. A daily paper states that William Kobb has been sen tenced at Glasgow to (JO days for stealing bag pipes. Why did William Robb? Because it was his nature to bag pipes. Punch. Another Crime. Struckoyle (sHowlng his qrt colectlon) Ain't that bull-flght picture a beaut? T paid an artist $2300 to paint that for me, to order. Cutting Well! Well! It Is sur prising what some men will do for money. Isn't It? Puck. Politely Put. Biggs Is Wlndig a man whoso word one can depend upon? Dlggs Well. I wouldn't care to say anything against him, but in the language of the poet It might b. safe to remark that to him "truth Is stranger than fiction." Chicago Daily News. Elngo I'm going to bring my wife round to call on you tonight. WInterby That's right; but do me a favor, old man. Don't let her wear her new sealskin cloak. I don't want my wife to see it Just now. Bingo (grimlj) Why, that's what we are coming for. Tlt-Blts. For Outside Consumption. Constituent .What's the use of those long debates of yours in the Senate on the Philippine question? Hav8 you succeeded in changing a single vote by them? Eminent Statesman Well, of course, wo can't tell about that until after the Fall elections. Chicago Trlbun