fWz "" THE MOBNING OREGONIAK, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1904. 9fj? r0mm Entered at the Postofflce at Forilxaa, Or as second-class matter. REVISED EUBSCP.IPTION BATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month ...... $0.83 Dally, -with Sunday excepted, per year 7-30 D&ilj.. with Sunday, per year ......... 9.00 Sunday, per year ... ............... 2.00 The "Weekly, per year .. ...... ........ 1.B0 The Weekly, 3 months SO Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted ............ 15c Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday to eluded 20o POSTAGE KATES. United States. Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper ..le 16 to 30-page paper ............. ......2o 22 to 44-page paper ...............3 Foreign rates double. The Oregonian docs sot buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be In closed for this purpose. EASTEKN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The 8. C. Becltwith Special Agency) New York: Booms 43-49, Tribune Building. Chicago: Boomi e 10-5 12 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium annex; Postofflce News Co 217 Dearborn streeL Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rlck. 900-912 Seventeenth street. Kansas City Rlcksecker Cigar Co, Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 259 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 60 South Third; I Regelsbuger. S17 First Avenue Bouth. New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden F. B. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros.. 210 South 14th;.Megeath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam. Oklahoma City J. Frank Rice, 105 Broad way. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co., Lousl ona News Co., and Joseph Copelaad. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 745 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros , 230 Sut ter; L. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1006 Market: Frank Scott, 80 Ellis; N. Wheatley, S3 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. ( Washington, I). C. Ed Brlnkman. Fourth and Paciflc Ave. N. W.: Ebbltt House News Stand. TESTERDAVS WEATHER Maximum tern, perature, 70 deg.; minimum, 45. Precipitation, none. ' TODAY'S WEATHER Fair; northerly winds. tOBTXAND, THURSDAY, MAY 20, IBM. SHE ARGUMENT FOR THE "STRAIGHT TICKET." Party can be maintained only through fidelity of its members to each other, and through their joint or combined fidelity to the principles of party ac tion. It is only through party action that anything can be accomplished in polit ical affairs. The members of a party owe fidelity to each other and to the common cause they are engaged In. Only so can they accomplish anything In their common cause. "What is party? Take this definition: "Party is a body of men united for pro moting by their joint endeavors the Na tional Interest upon some particular principle In which they are all agreed. Therefore every honorable connection will avow it is their first purpose to pursue every just method to put the men who hold their opinions Into such a. condition as may enable them to carry their common plans Into execu tion, with all the power and authority of the state. As this power Is attached to certain situations, it is their duty to contend for these situations. "Without proscription of others, they are bound to give their own party preference in all things; and by no means, for pri vate considerations, to accept any offers of power in which the whole body is not included; nor to suffer themselves to be led, or to be controlled, or to be overbalanced, in office or in council, by those who contradict the very fun damental principles on which their party is formed, and even those upon which every just connection must stand." Here, then, Is a definition of party, and of party obligations. It Is not put forward as The Ore,gonIans own. To the universal reader It Is familiar. He knows where to find It. No other ap peal so powerful ever was made, to stand by your party and to vote Its "straight ticket." as this by Edmund Burke. It Is instinct with the genius of reason, of argument, of eloquence and of common sense. You can sustain your party and Its principles only by supporting those who, for the time, may be named to uphold the one and the other. For it you believe in your own politics, or think them of any weight, you cannot, in reason, refuse to adopt the means of having them reduced Into practice. You cannot act a desultory and discon nected part. In short, If you wish your party to succeed, jou should and you will support its candidates. On this great text, quoted from the works of the greatest of political phil osophers and thinkers, and the great est .of the authors of maxims of political action. The Oregonian makes appeal to the Republicans of Oregon to stand for the candi dates of their party, throughout. For the principles for which you stand noth ing is to be gained by voting for oppo nents, een for minor offices. On the contrary, much may be lost; for you discourage thereby some of the best of your ov n party associates and give the opponents of your party an advantage by putting a certain degree of power in their hands. Affected derision of the argument that support of 5 our party's candidates for Sheriff and District Attorney is necessary for support of President Roosevelt does not In the least alter the fact that the argument is sound and true. In order to enforce your princi ples you are bound to give your own parts' preference in all things. Of ( course it is assumed that' your candi dates are worthy men. Then personal objection or private pique can, justly, have no weight at all. Then do not allow the flippant argu ment, or assertion, that It is not good sense to vote the straight ticket. There is greatest good sense In it; no good sense In any other line of action if you believe in your own politics. If you wish your principles carried into prac tice there is but one way stand by your party. The reason why there Is so much Jying accusation against Blnger Her mann Is that certain persons have con ceived the notion that It is possible to boat him by lying accusation. They "base this notion on the fact that his majority last year on the small vote cost In the special election was not up to Republican high-water mark In the district. But the conclusion is false. There will be a very full vote this year, and Hermann's majority will go high. There would be an equal, amount of Jylng accusation against Representa- live "Williamson, by the same parties, were it thought possible to heat him. However, It will be found that the one will be elected by about as bis a ma jority as the other. UNDULATIONS OF MUNICIPAL REFORM. The demand of citizens of St. Paul for the abandonment of separate municipal elections for consolidated, elections Is not the only exhibit In the perplexity and variation with which all municipal reforms proceed. It is only a little while since every municipal theorist recognized one-man power In a Mayor as the very first principle of reform. And yet the other day a professional municipal mformer. In Portland on an official tour of the cities of the West, assured us that the true path of reform lies through government by the Council. Goodness and purity, which were wont toMwell in a "Whole Thing Mayor, now abide In a "Whole Thing CpunclL How It will be next year we forbear to prophesy. The City of New York haB been pur suing Its painful and strenuous way un der a city charter devisd by one of those sacred and divinely inspired in stitutions a charter commission. Con cerning these lieglslatlve" commissions we have the word of Mr.. Thomas C. Devlin, now Auditor of Portland That every city where legislative appointed commissions have had charge of municipal work, or managed municipal enterprises, has had the earns story of extravagance and in efficiency. As. stated by the Hon. Seth Low, "A state commission for any purpose other than Inquiry is one of the most dangerous of bodlw, for the reason that it exercises au thority unchecked by any effective respons ibility." (Municipal Reform In the United States, G. P. Putnam's Sons. Chap. rv. pp. 75-76) The City of New York, as we have eald, has been working under a char ter made by a charte commission, al though If memory-serves the New York commission was elected by the people and had that point in its favor; but in either case the charter is so good that it Is revised at every recurring opportu nity. As to the City Council, for ex ample, the commission proceeded on the theory that the bestowal of large pow ers and responsibilities would either elevate the character of tHe prevailing type of Aldermen or entice a higher type of men Into the board, and it ac cordingly created a double-chambered Legislature, with important functions to disoharg- in connection with city government, with the result, as we learn from the New York Globe, that both branches of this new legislative body were tuffed with the same old brand of local statesmen. The results were so disastrous In every way that when the chatter came to be revised, after three years of trial, one chamber was abolished, and the activities of local legislative talent were confined, under some restrictions, to a single body, the old Board xf Aldermen. There Is one more illustration worth notice. In the Issue pf Good Govern ment (organ of the National Civil Ser vice Reform League) that came yester day we find an article by the noted re former, Colonel Silas "W". Burt, who Is examining, in the hope of its ameliora tion, a defect he sees in the civil service reform principle as applied to adminis trative rather than subordinate posi tions. Civil service systems, as we have come loosely to describe them, do not give us administrators. The rank and file of subordinates are not am bitious to start with, and. In entering minor places they "disassociate them selves from all private business mat ters, and, content to follow the dry trau dltlons of the, service, as they ascend more or less slowly, lose or impair their faculty of Initiative, If they ever had it, as well as their intelhjent and active in terest in official concerns not immedi ately In contact with their dally work." In order to get the good material, there fore, we must go outside into, business life for "those who, conscious of their ability, disdain the commonplace duties of those grades and the slow progress of promotion," and whose experience In the world has endowed them with 'tact, discretion, courtesy, a knowledge of men In the mass, the value of all being enhanced by what Is termed personal address." The object we have In reciting these somewhat tedious and dispiriting exhib its in reform work Is to show that civic Improvement does not He In written laws nor In patent devices of reform. Civil service reform, for example,, re strains the corrupt head of a depart ment from putting out efficients; but equally restrains the honest and vigor ous head of a department from putting out lnefilcients. If you have a good Mayor and a bad Council, you are for all power In the Maybr; vice versa, you are sure that the Council should be the main thing. The reformer is apt to de generate into a vacillating and queru lous creature who stamps with approval all who favor his amendment to the charter, but TegardB all who distrust his and favor their own as public enemies. It Is well for him to rofiect at times on the checkered career which reform has to follow and treat the Infamy of today with caution, reflecting that In the whirligig of municipal philosophy It may be the reform of tomorrow. TinXGS ANACHRONISTIC. A man like Dr. Edgar P. Hill is a survival and an anachronism. He ought to have lived centuries ago. And yet he ought not to have lived cen turies ago; for had he lived then he would have been a conspicuous figure or perhaps only a humble Instrument In making earth the hell from which it was rescued only through the blood of martyrs and through the heroes of rev olutions. Dr. Hill wants the state to control the conduct of the Individual, In accord with his own peculiar theological and theocratlcal ideas. Only such as our prophetic brother are fit to tell the peo ple what the rules of their conduct should be; what beliefs they should entertain, or what practice they should follow, as to amusements, meat and drink, and "Sabbath observance"; and he would have the state, under direc tion of holy men like himself, of whom, however, he would be chief, join with the church and use the power of the church to enforce these precepts and the prescribed practices. And, In the last resort, following the Idea of an cient Israel, which, under direction of the prophets, insisted that the worship, to be kept pure, should be concentrated at Jerusalem, and that the "groves" and the "high places" should be elimi nated, all worship should be centered at the corner of Twelfth and Alder, un der direction of Dr. Hill as high priest and prophet. Then, indeed, you will get the pure religion! Then, Indeed, you will get the precepts of right conduct! Effort was made In Europe, both in the British Islands and on the Conti nent, to enforce Ideas like these, or kindred to them. Followed the civil and religious wars. In. all the counries of Europe. In France and Spain it went too far in one direction; in Eng- J land too far In another. But in all was the Idea that the priest should rule the people, through church as well as state, and that the ecclesiastical creed, as de livered by the priest in the name of the church, was infallible, as a rule alike of indiyldual, social, political and religious- life. A relic of this system in Portland Is Dr. Edgar P. HUL Since those terrors have passed, people laugh at him. MISPLACED FRIENDSHIP. A number of the "Washington papers have been expressing undue satisfac tion over the occasional reverses which Mr. Harriman has suffered in his big. fight for control of the Northern Pa cific. It has always seemed to The Ore gonian that after the Northern Securi ties was declared an illegal organization the men who supplied the stock from which the merger was formed were en titled to a return of that stock. The contrary belief is expressed by Mr. Hill and his friends, but even this difference of opinion should not account for all of the hostility which the Evergreen State seems to show for Mr. Harriman. This feeling Is all the more remarkable when It is remembered that it was Mr. Hill, and not Mr. Harriman, who made the 40-cent rate on flour from Minneapolis to the Orient, thus attempting to cut the Puget Sound millers out of a trade which was theirs not only by right of exploitation, but by the advantage of geographical location. In giving the Minnesota and Dakota millers and incidentally the farmers of those states this cheap access to the Oriental markets, Mr. Hill was in effect paying them a bonus to run opposition to "Washington farmers and millers, who were forced to pay aa much for a short haul across the state to tidewater as the Eastern men paid for a haul 1500 miles longer. By no possible construc tion of the 40-cent rate can the millers and farmers of "Washington-find any thing in it that warrants them in ex pressing friendliness for Mr. Hill, and Mr. Harrlman's action In fighting against the establishment of such a ru inous rate certainly entitled him to more kindly consideration than he has received from our neighbors on the north. This unfriendliness toward Mr. Har riman might be more easily accounted for if the Puget Sound papers had ever admitted for a moment that the ports served by the Harriman lines were In any sense rivals of the "Washington ports. This they have never acknowl edged, but, on the contrary, have al ways insisted that Mr. Harriman would never beJn a proper position to do busi ness to advantage until he had a termi nal point on Puget Sound. As a matter of fact, the control of the Northern Pa clfio by Mr. Harriman would probably result in a large portion of the Eastern "Washington wheat which Is now lifted over the Cascade Mountains following the water-level route to the sea. Mr. Harrlman's rise In the railroad world has been meteoric, and his wonderful success has' been directly due to his marvelous ability in reducing grades, straightening curves and otherwise lessening the cost of moving freight. With that end in view he has spent large sums of money in Oregon and "Washington, and the traffic originating in these states will some day pay ln creased dividends to Its producers by xeason of these facilities for economical J transportation. Harriman ownership of the Northern Pacific would not necessarily mean hos tility to the Puget Sound cities, but It would mean that all traffic produced In the Northern Paciflc territory in the State of Washington and bound for foreign-markets would follow the easiest and most natural route to the high seas. The closing of the Wallula gateway a few years ago deprived a portion of the traffic of Eastern Washington of such a route to market, but with Harriman in control of the lines on both sides of that gateway it would soon swing open and in the end the rate made over this route would be the rate that Mr. Hill would be obliged to meet In order to protect his Big Bend Wheat business from going over to the enemy. THE PARTY OF LEGATION. There Is something extraordinary In the fact that the political party that Jefferson created should have an or ganic life today. The so-called Demo cratic party has been on the brink of destruction more than once since the retirement of Andrew Jackson from the Presidency in 1837i It was beaten, horse, foot and dragoons, in the cam paign of 1S40 and beaten by the Whig party under the leadership of a vain, silly old man, General Harrison. The death of Harrison, the apostasy of Ty ler, the political treachery of Polk In 1844, seemed to have saved the Democ-t racy from a succession of defeats. In 1818 the Democracy ought to have won, for Polk's administration had forced the Mexican War to a brilliantly suc cessful conclusion, and as a rule In poli tics the party that is in power In war time Is perpetuated In peace If It Is not beaten In war. The War of 1812-14 per petuated Democratic rule and wrecked the Federalists. The war of 1861-64 forced the renoml natlon and re-election of Lincoln and kept the Republican party In power for twenty years. The defeat of the De mocracy In 1S48 was due to the factional quarrel between Cass and Van Buren, which dated back to Van Buren's de feat for the Democratic nomination In 1844. The defeat of the Democracy In 1848 turned not upon a question of prin ciple, but of men, and for this reason the Democracy were easily able In 1853 to sweep the country, because the great pro-slavery struggle of 1850 had made it a question of principles, not of men. The Democracy of the North and South were a pro-slavery unit and the Whig party was suspected of anti-slavery af filiations; it was believed to sympa thize more with Seward than it did with Webster. Under ordinary circumstances the Democratic party would scarcely have survived Its record during the Civil War, but questions of reconstruction and questions of finance divided the Republicans among themselves, so that by 1S76 the Republican party had fully exhausted Its welcome. It was saved for the time by the bayonet government of the South, but It obtained the defeat in 1884 that was logically its due In 1876. The Democratic party lives today sim ply because two great political parties are a necessity of our National life. It meets a want of our political system It could not be desroyed, even If Its leaders sought to destroy It. The South is solid because off the race question, but even if there were no race ques tion the South would be Democratic be cause of old-time political sympathies and experience. The Bryans and the Hearsts stay with the Democratic party because there is more ignorance, more crude thought, In the Democracy than in the Republican party, and the Ie-1 mocracy has always ieen a. kind of a "sailors snug harbtr" for cranks and doctrinaires and demagogues -of all sorts. The Democracy- of today has been happily described as "-a whirlpool of radicalism with a solid rock of conserv atism in the middle." The Eastern De mocracy represents a conservative "money power"; the South, too, has a large element of conservatism based on the aristocracy of race caste. With the South's rapid growth in wealth this conservative element Is likely to grow stronger. Will Democracy soon return to power? That will' depend upon the character of the element that is domi nant In the Democratic ranks. In 1876, In 1884 and In 1892 the people were clearly not afraid of the Democracy under the conservative leadership of Tllden and Cleveland, but the people promptly repudiated the Democracy in 1896 and 1900. The Democratic party Is tenacious of life, even under severe de feat, and this Is because two great par ties are a necessity of our political sys tem. Defeat will never destroy a great party, although It' may discipline and reform It. The boundary line Is the frequent cause of bitterness, rancor and hatred among settlers on the border. It has often led to murder, being in fact one of the most frequent causes of homicide and the sad and distressing conse quences that follow thjs crime. The en counter In Lane County a few days ago, m which an aged man lost his life and because of which the life of his slayer is now in jeopardy, shows that this fruitful cause of- feud between neigh bors Is not confined to the newer settle ments, In which a careful survey of lands has not been made. The scene of this latest boundary-line murder Is in one of the oldest agricultural sections of the state. ' An accurate survey of the land should long ago have settled the question In dispute. It is idle to exnect two interested ranchers to come to an amicable agreement about a strip of land which, they both claim. The ag gravating things that each does to the other m the attempt to "get even" are almost certain steps that lead to the gravest of all crimes. The County Sur veyor should be called upon to settle differences of opinion in regard to boundary lines of a blind or Inaccurate survey, making such decision in the matter as the equities in the case de mand. If this is not strictly In the line of his duty, It would be well in the in terest of justice, neighborly harmony and the peace and dignity of the com m0nwealthJo make it so. Such an oc currence as that near Cresswell a few days ago is a disgrace to a civilized community, and is as unnecessary as disgraceful. Trouble of this kind Is not brewed In a night. It is usually a sub ject of comment In the neighborhood for months before the acute stage is reached and murder is done. It Is clearly the duty of the proper authority on boundary lines to take cognizance of and settle the dispute which could only have arisen through a blunder in sur veying. "Aloes, cHret, myrrh and Incense" are the fascinating subjects discussed In a report from Consul Masterson at Aden. It seems strange that such things should be regarded as mere articles' of commerce, but so It id. Mr. Masterson says that Aden Is the export market of these four substances, and that no other port can ever oust It Of aloes Aden last year exported 31,696 pounds, nearly all of It going to London. Civet, which Is one of the essential ingredients of nearly" every high-grade perfume made, is taken from the pouch of the civet cat, an animal found In Abyssinia. The annual production of civet ranges from 250 to 200 pounds, and about half of this amount Is shipped to New York. The price at Aden is from $1.60 to $3.24 an ounce, according to purity. Myrrh Is principally used as an ingredient in in cense, and the amount annually ex ported from Aden Is about 1,344,000 pounds. A strange use of myrrh is made by the Abyssinian hunters, who smear their bodies with it before hunt ing elephants, in. the belief that their quarry will not attack them on account of the smell. Incense, Mr. Masterson explains, is a prepared article, and the word frankincense applies to a particu lar gum that is the principal component of Incense. Commercially, however, In cense is used to designate a "tear- shaped gum that exudes from a tree that is found in considerable quantities in British Somaliland." The crop of in cense varies from 2,240,000 to 3,360,000 pounds, and the price Is from 4 to 12 cents a pound. About half the Incense exported from Aden goes to Bombay, the remainder being taken principally to Marseilles and Trieste. Opponents of the Republican party are making every possible effort to pull down the Republican vote and Repub lican majorities, not only on the gen eral ticket, but for the local candidates. If they could meet with some degree of success they would quickly point to the result as a blow delivered to Presi dent Roosevelt They now say to Re publicans, "It don't make any differ ence how you vote now, so vote for our men; you can vote for Roosevelt In No vember." But If this game should have any success, they would exclaim, next day, "See how weak Roosevelt Is I We told you so!" There Is a combination in Portland, on the one hand composed of selfish and vicious politicians, on the other of hys terical religionists, which Is and long time has been, defaming Portland. One of these days these slanderers, who draw their support from the business and industry of the city which they de fame, and warn people away from, may get the hint, and a broad one, that their occupation, so pleasing to themselves, Is not pleasing to- the responsible citi zenship of Portland. It may just as well be understood now, and better now than later, that the defamers of Portland, those who long time have been denouncing Port land as a place of Infamy, a place to be shunned and avoided, a veritable Sodom, have got to "shut up." Port land is a great deal better than they are, and they would better learn it soon. Only to a certain point will the people of Portland tolerate her defamers; and that point is nearly reached. It would seem Indeed that the man who offers himself for Sheriff of Mult nomah County ought to be Identified In some permanent way with the business aVid affairs of the county; that he ought to be a property-owner and tax payer, if only on a small scale; that he should be something other or more than a temporary squatter, working here for interests centered elsewhere, and liable J at any time to leave or be called away. 1 A "STAMPEDE" BY BRYAN. New York Times. There are interesting rumors about Mr. Bryan. Some of his friends say that he has already made his plans for St. Louis. He will try to stampede the convention. 1 There will be apparently no delegates In structed for Bryan, and those instructed for Mr. Hearst will not be sufficiently numerous even for obstruction. But fix Ins his eye upon the Hearst delegates and the large number of unlnstructed dele gates, and modulating the tones of his voice to their emotional range and key, Mr. Bryan will attempt to sweep the con vention off Its feet toy the sheer power and charm of his oratory. The name of the candidate in whose behalf this feat is to be accomplished has- not transpired, but we presume that If Mr. Bryan should get the convention well In hand the best Mr. Hearst could hope for would be an offer of the second place. If Mr. Bryan Is really planning an ora torical stampede It Is unfortunate for him that his friends have been so Indiscreet as td make this premature disclosure, for now he sets his snare In the sight of his bird. Foreknowledge of the hypnotist's design is usually or often a protection against him. Moreover, while Mr. Bryan may have the reputation of a stampeder, those who know the history of their coun try are aware that no achievement In that line has ever been put to his -credit. The careless and the unobservant have been accustomed to say or to believe that he stampeded the Chicago Convention of 1SS6, and brought about his own nomination by his cross of gold and crown of thorns speech. There, never was the slightest foundation for that v yarn. The bedevtl ment cf the Democratic Convention of 1S96 and the nomination of Mr. Bryan were prearranged by the Republican silver men who had been paying Mr. Bryan for his lectures. His speech In the conven tion was an old one, and while It pleased his audience and evoked their tumultu ous applause, It was not a factor In bring ing about his nomination. There Is no appreciable danger that the St. Louis Convention this year will be s'tampeded by Mr. W. J. Bryan. The par ty has turned away from him. It Is sick to death of him. A very great majority of the delegates to St. Louis will go there with an Immovable prejudice against him as on enemy. They look upon him as one to whose counsels the Democratic party can no longer listen. He will have about as good a chance of stampeding the con vention to Populism as Governor Cum mins would have of stampeding the Re publican Convention to tariff reform. Still, since Mr. Bryan will destroy himself if he bolts, the stampede plan may be his only hope. If so, It Is a delusive one. The judgment of history upon Mr. Bryan has been recorded and the appropriate dis position to be made of him pointed out in tuneful verse by Mr. Norrls Bull, from whose poetical observations upon the pres ent situation of the Democracy, as they appear in the last issue of Harper's Week ly, wo quote the following stanza: Bryan's usefulness is over, his friends are forced to say. And the issue that he represnts Is dead; Underneath the golden daisies Let us bury him, and raise bis , Cross of Gold in retribution at his head. The State and the Fair. Albany Herald. If the State of Oregon wanted the Lewis and Clark Fair at all. It was up to the state to make a decent appropria tion. The $500,000 state appropriation la but a small part of the total amount to be distributed, almost entirely In Oregon. With the appropriations of the Federal Government and the other states, the amount to be distributed directly by the Fair In Oregon Is so much that the tax will be returned many times over in Im mediate benefit and profit to Oregonlans. This without taking Into account the largo sums that must be paid out by visitors, and wnlch will at once go into circulation In Oregon. The undeveloped resources of the state, calling as they do for more settlers and more capital, will receive prompt and permanent atten tion because of the Lewis and Clark Fair. The whole state wanted It The Gov ernor and Legislature favored the half million appropriation. The really con servative element In the State of Oregon Is behind the Fair. It promises to be a success. If It Is, none will be louder In claiming title for the ensuing praise than some who for political effect at present shout "extravagance" In this connection. Investment Is not always extravagance. What produces a fair return for invest ment Is In no way allied to extravagance. The display of more sincerity and less humbug In the arguments of the antl falr people will be just as well. It is rather late In the day to stop the enter prise. Lincoln Honored in the South. Leslie's Weekly. A little sidelight on the decline of sec tionalism In the South and the growth of a mote tolerant and fraternal spirit in all matters affecting our National life wa3 afforded the other day In the action of the Mississippi Legislature In voting down by a decisive majority a proposition to change the name, of a county from Lin coln to Jeff Davis. Among those who.vot ed against the change were a number of Confederate veterans. That these Legis lators were not averse -at the same time to do honor In some other way to the leader of the Confederacy was shown by their action at tho same session In mak ing the birthday of Jefferson Davis a pub lic holiday In that state. The Cad and His Camera. Boston Transcript May a cad photograph a President's daughter without her permission? Miss Alice Roosevelt has been so annoyed late ly by the attentions of the snapshot ar tists that she refused to alight In Phila delphia the other day until assured that no camera fiends were lurking in readi ness to capture her likeness for the Sun day newspapers. The worst of this photo annoyance Is that It seemingly Is one which cannot be touched by legislation; the only remedy In sight Is for prominent people who are subjected to It to provide themselves with stout walking sticks and smash the cameras of offensive photog raphers. Opportunities Still Plentiful. Savannah (Ga.) News. Young men nowadays are Inclined to the opinion that the opportunities for making fortunes are not as great as they were a half or even a quarter of a century ago. As a matter of fact there Is plenty of evi dence that the avenues to fortunes are as unobstructed now as they ever Were. Indeed, the demand for men who are ca pable and reliable Is now greater than ever before, and where there Is such a demand there are opportunities for mak ing fortunes. Uncle Sam in Action. Philadelphia Inquirer. A New York man who stole a letter" on Saturday was arrested, tried and sent to prison within 24 hours after he committed the offense. If he had stolen a railroad the process would have taken at least as many years, and most probably he would never have been tried at all Cupid and Campaspe. John Lyly. Cupid and my Campaspe playd At cards for kisses; Cupid paid: He stakes his quiver, bow and arrows. His mother's doves, and team of sparrows; Loses them too; then down he throws The coral of his Up, the rose Growing on's cheek (but none knows how); With these, the crystal of his brow. And then the dimple on his chin; All these did my Campaspe win: And last he set her both his eyes She won. and Cupid blind did rise. O Lore! has she. dona this to ihee7 What shall, alas! become of me? ALTRUISM AND JTBE BIRTH RATE. Baltimore Sun. The race-suicide scare has extended to England, and the Bishop of London, who Is a. bachelor, has taken up the cry. The English birth rate has declined 17 per cent in the last 20 years. "The weekly birth rate cf London," says a doctor of that city, "has declined by nearly 400 births as compared with the average of the past ten years. This meAns that Lon don is losing a natural Increase of 20, 000 children a year, which wllj mean prob ably 250,000 during the next ten years. I expect that the decline will be even more marked, for I find that the Idea that children are a luxury to be avoided is rapidly spreading among the working people. Twenty years ago the danger arose among the aristocracy; ten years ago It began to spread among the middle classes; now the worklngman is .saying the same thing: TVe are not going to bo bothered with children. We've got enough to do to keeD ourselves." " The British patriot Is much distressed at this species of strike, but some con solation is found in the diminished death rate. Sanitation has become a sort of atato religion, with the result mat most varieties of disease show decreases. New scientific remedies, improved skill in surgery and better hospitals save hun dreds of lives daily, so that when all Is told population continues to increase. though at diminished rate. If fewer children are born, those which are born are better cared for and a larger per centage of them reach the adult stage. Modern science prolongs the lives of the unfit as well as the fit but upon the whole there la Increased comfort and dignity of life. The subject has Its political aspect "In a really well-ordered state," says a jingo London doctor, "premiums would be offered to the patriotic par ent who brought up his children to bo good citizens. Why should the par ent bringing up a child to adult per fection be treated in the same way as the selfish bachelor who contributes no effective units toward the continu ance of the empire?" France led the way In taking what may be called the selfish Ylew of size of family, but it is now general in the highly civilized countries and prevails even In far-off Australia. A. practical Australian, af ter noting that the birth rate In New South Wales has fallen off 30 per cent in 20 years, adds: "Give us employ ment, constant employment, and I for one will marry, become a patriot and attempt to remedy the falling birth rate." But this expedient would be useless In countries In which, as in the United States, the birth rate declines in the presence of great industrial activity,. Mr. Goldwin Smith, In a recent maga zine article on-the topic of the rapidly extending agnosticism of the present day, ventured the opinion that the ces sation of belief in the Immortality of the soul would- paralyze many activi ties, causing men to be unwilling to did for any cause and thus bringing War to an end. If they will not die for a cause, neither will they live for It The future of the race becomes a mat ter of Indifference to those who expect no future for themselves, but must try to 'get all they can out of the only life in which they believe. Duty to the race is undoubtedly a less effective sentiment now than formerly. Power of the Cattle Barons. Johnstown (Pa,) Democrat The organization of the Western cattle barons to fight the beef com bine is an anomaly, as both are after tho same game of plundering the pub lic The barons have banded them selves together Into what might be termed the grass trust, and are trying to get the farmers of the Western states to help them fight the beef trust The cattle barons are even worse rob bers than the beef barons, in that they monopolize all the valuable Govern, ment land and thrpugh their retainers prevent, by force Of arms. If necessary, any owner -of. a small herd or a settler from Intruding at the peril ofT his life. To show the power of these cattle baronsi they have succeeded In forcing President Roosevelt to give up his ln tentldn, of removing the barbed-wire fences with which the barons have un lawfully Inclosed about all the Gov ernment land on the Western plains. Politically both these combines are Republican and liberal contributors to the campaign - fund of that party, which probably accounts for their im munity from punishment by the Ad ministration. See the Lord Mayor and the "Times." Victor Smith In New York Press. Everybody In England, so to speak. Is Infected with the betting mania. Every body goes to the races or bets in- town. Everybody loses. Everybody complains. Everybody tries It again to recoup. Everybody In Australia bets. Everybody In South America bets. Everybody In France bets. Everybody In the Philip pines bets. Everybody In Japan bets. Everybody in China bets. Everybody in tho world bets. Now, by this "every body" I mean every person who can find a chance to make a wager makes It Farmers do not bet as a rule, because there Is no Inducement, no opportunity. What? Do not bet? Why, they will bet their last dollar on a cow race at the county fair. All races, all nationalities, all creeds, all conditions bet Just so long as men have varying opinions there will be betting. And there Is absolutely no harm in betting If you win. But be sure you win. What the reformers are trying to do Is to save the losers. Voice of Lane County. Eugene Register. At the big Republican meeting in Port land the campaign cry was, elect the' en tire Republican county ticket and carry the state by 20,000 for Roosevelt as an In dorsement of his policy toward the West, and as notice, to the country that Ore gon Is solidly for his nomination and election. Roosevelt believes In and advocates maintenance of party organization and election of party nominees from top to bottom. Lane County Republicans will place the seal of indorsement upon that sound principle of Republicanism this year by electing every man on the ticket, first because the principle la right and second because the Republican ticket from top to bottom 13 the best ticket In tho field and the best named by the Re publicans In years. ' Another Jap Victory. Washington Star. The Czar Is said to be so much grieved by the Russian reverses that he Is think ing rtf nVinnrlnniritr "hi flesnotie authority rand giving his country a constitution. The Japanese would be justified In regarding such a step as a fine tribute to their prow ess as promoters of civilization- That Time of Year. William Shakespeare. That time of year thou mayst in me behold When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hong Upon those boughs which shake against the cold. Bora ruln'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang: In me thou see'st the twilight of such day As after sunset fadeth in the West Which by and by black night doth take away, Death's second self, that seals up all In rest: in me thou see'st the glowing of such Are, That on the ashes of his youth doth lie As the death-bed, whereon it must expire. Consumed with that which it was nourlsh'd by: This thou percelVst, which makes thy - love more strong, To love that well which thou must leave ere Jong. .' X0TS AKD COMMHtT. , ftflttw The man who would a&etiak vJ fetat his mouth. People that talk about ike lMfttMr. The man that rocks the boat, aad The girl that would go out with hbau At last the season permits us to switch from rhubarb to strawberries A whale entered Tacoma harbor and. had half the population blubbering'. 1 A Turner girl eloped In a baseball suit She Is evidently fast enough for a bigger league than the matrimonial While the tunnel Is being constructed Seattle la settling down. When it's com pleted the Great Northern will be settling up. Photographs of candidates for queenly honors at the carnival Indicate that the pomp of the pompadour has not yet passed. Referring to Queen Victoria, one of the speakers at the Armory on Tuesday 6ven- 1 lng said It was right ''that we should memory her-honor." According to "G. B. S." Shakespeare wrote in verse because he was In too much of a hurry to use the more difficult me dium of prose. And tfrere is a bunch ot moderns of whom the quip might be truth fully used. The British Admiralty gazetted a dead man as chaplain of the Mersey Naval Vol unteers. Familiar with naval chapjatns, the Admiralty possibly concluded that a dead man would do as much good as a live one and be less In the way. The Creation Is reproduced on the Pike at St Louis. Light appears at command, the dry land Is seen when the waters roll away as ordered; and finally Adam and Eve appear on the scene. Thl3 shows the public estimation of the higher criticism. President Baer Is throwing more trouble on the Lord, who, according to the Reading magnate, Is responsible for car shortages. If the accusation Is true, we expect that when Mr. Baer Is about to leave for heaven the Lord will bring about a complete blockade of celestial traffic. ' In tho past few days we have been read ing dispatches from Billings, Mont, re garding a thief who was said to have swallowed a diamond, and was being sub jected to examination by X-raya In the hope of the Btone's exact position being discovered. By the latest reports the pho tographs hadall failed to show the dia mond. A curious point In this connection is made by a writer in the New York Times. A similar story came from Texas ten days ago. In that case the stone was discovered, and an operation was to be performed on the thief to uncover and recover the stolen property. The Times' authority pointed out a discrepancy in the Texas version. A genuine diamond Is transparent to X-rays, so that the object discovered in the thief's "insldes" must be of paste, and not worth the expense of an operation. The failure of the Bluings photographs to reVeal the stone has been taken as an indication that the man did not swallow it, whereas, it may merely be an Indication that the diamond Is genuine. Provpklngly short la the dispatch from Weston telling of, a "spat" In the social circles- of that small but cultured, commu nity. So far as one may gather the facts from the correspondent's brief message, It appears that President French of the Normal School, In the course of some dis cussion, stated that none "but hobos worked In a brickyard. It is evident on the face of It that Mr. French spoke In the heat of argument for a moment's thought would have prevented him from making so egregious a blunder as to talk of hobos working, and especially In a brickyard, where the labor Is labor and no mistake. The laborers in the neighbor ing brickyard, it appears, accepted the re mark as Mr. French's mature opinion of their social status and, to show their own dissent therefrom, pelted him with eggs, that are courteously described as being oi "venerable age." And there the matter rests, or at least simmers, for the people of Weston are said to be split into two so cial factions, the one pro-brickyard and the other pro-professor. Rash would ba the person daring to comment upon a neighborhood quarrel, but there Is one point upon which we cannot refrain from dwelling. Whence, in a well-ordered com munity, come the eggs of "venerable age" that seem to be always available for the reproof of the obnoxious? Venerable eggi are not things to be found on the pantry shelves of the people. The housewife does not treasure them. They cannot be bought In the stores not under that description, anyway. Where do they come from, thenl Is It possible that some dread mystery ol cooking would be exposed by pressing the question to a solution? WEX. J. ' OUT OF THE GINGER JAft. Nell Mr. Tawker is such a flatterer. Belle Has he been flattering you? Nell Oh, yes; hi told me today that I'm not at all likt son tfther girls. Philadelphia Ledger. "That man has studied political economy." "Maybe so," eald Senator Sorghum, "but thi injudicious way he spends his money at ar election looks to me like political extrava gance." "ft ashlngtcn Star. Teacher Can any little boy tell me how II Was that David prevailed against the glani Goliath? Pupil My pa says brute etrengtt never Is In It with the feller with a pocketful of rocks. Boston Transcript. Kwoter After all, "Truth Is stranger- thai fiction," jou know. Newltt It may be stranger, but it isn't as successful. Tou never heir oi truth going into "Its twentieth edition in sla months." Philadelphia Press. . Kitty Oh, Auntie, I atn so happy! Horaci sais there's nobody In all tha world like ma Aunt Jane Nonsense? You're not so eccentric as all that although there'a no denying yoi are a bit odd. Boston Transcript Husband Tou say this la venison? What In duced you to buy it? Wife Well, the butchei said it was cheap and Husband If he ha told you It wasn't deer he would have bees nearer the truth. Philadelphia Ledger. Citlman Tou look particularly happy today Subbubs I am. I've Just succeeded In getting our leading lady to sign for another eeason. Cltiman I didn't know you were In the the atrical business. Subbubs I'm not I refei to our cook. "Things are terribly catching down at th boathouse." "What do yon mean?" "Why, first you catch onto the stroke, then you catd cold, then you catch & crab, and then you catch the deuce from the coach." Harvard Lampoon. "I suppose you had a perfectly issrelr tlm at Wexford's house party?" "No; It waa a fizzle. Mrs. Wexford has to little tact. Sh was always arranging it so that, the men would bae to pair off with their own. wives." Chicago Becord-Herald. "It's a lucky thing for-me I ain't in th box," said the great baseball twlrler, an,: h paraded up and down the bedroom floor with his tooth-cutting son and heir. "Why," asked his wife, sleepily. "Because," he answered, "I don't seem to have aov control of tbi J bawl." Chicago-Bally New - -J, iuT i-iai-. .. j-j. j-.- -.- g. je -gfcjaftfrg.