THE MOBHHgQ PRBGOfflAN. SATURDAY. MAY. 13, 2905. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Or., at .second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION' KATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) Dally and Sunday, per year.. ...-f9.00 Dally and Sunday, six months.......-- 5.00 Dally and Sunday, three months....... 2.53 Dally and Sunday, per month. ......... .S5 Dally without Sunday, per year 7.30 Daily without Sunday, six months...... 3.90 Dally -without Sunday, three months... 1.85 Dally without Sunday," per month.. C5 Sunday, per year 2.00 Sunday, six months 1-00 Sunday, three months 60 BT CARRIER. Dally without Sunday, per week .13 Dally, per week, Sunday Included .20 THE -WEEKLY OREGONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) "Weekly, per year 3-50 Weekly, six months...... - .75 Weekly, three months .50 HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamps, coin jor currency are at the sender's risk. ' EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 8. C. Beckwith Special Agency New York; Rooms 43-50 Tribune building. Chi cago; Rooms 510-312 Tribune building. The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to it without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. Postofflce News Co., 178 Dearborn street Dallas, Tex. Globe News Depot. 260 Main etreet. Dearer Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rick, 806-912 Seventeenth street, and Frue nuff Bros.. COS Sixteenth street. Des Moines, la. Moses Jacobs. 309 Fifth street. GeldSeld, Nev. C. Malone. Kaasas City. Mo. Ricksecker Clear Co., Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles Harry Drapkln; B. E. Amos, 314 West Seventh street. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; L. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue South. New York City I. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland. Cal. TV. H. Johnston, Four teenth and Franklin streets. Ogdea F, R. Godard and Meyer & Har top, D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnham; Maseath Stationery Co., 1306 Farnham; McLaughlin Bros.. 246 South 14th. Phoenix, Ariz. The Berryhill New Co. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 429 IC street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 "West Second street South. Santa. Barbara. Cal. S. Smith. Saa Diego. Cal. J. DUlard. San FraacUco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 746 Market street; Foster & Crear. Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter: L. E. tee. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. "W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott, SO Ellis: N. "Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and JCearney utreets; Hotel St. Francis News Stand. St. Louis. Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company, S06 Olive street. Washington. D. C. Ebblt House News Stand. PORTLAND. HOU?, MAT If, 1905. T" tTUDGE BELLINGER. If the late Judge Bellinger had been asked to express a wish as to the form any eulogy of his life and public ser vices might take, it would doubtless have been -that all ostentation "be avoid ed. He perfectly realized the Simple Iilfe. Modesty was a leading trait in a character finely matured and altogether admirable. He conducted himself in his public duties with the same unassum ing and dignified demeanor that marked all his acts in private station. He shirked no duty. He sought no notori ety. He had e splendid sense of his re sponsibilities to the state, to his family, to Tiis friends, and to all his fellows. He was extremely jealous of the honor of the bench, though his attitude toward, lawyers and litigants was at all times courteous and considerate. But If any presuming practitioner thought from the gracious and easy manner of the Judge that he might take liberties in his court and none ever did unless he might be an utter stranger he was quickly apprised of his error. Judge Bellinger knew the law and in terpreted it Intelligently, and with a lucidity and felicity of expression that bespoke both the trained writer and the learned jurist He hated wrong in all its many forms and disguises. He never compromised with error, and he had no illusions that swerved him from the straight path of conscious rectitude. He had during his life more than the usual number of sorrows that are the common lot, but he bore them silently and patiently.. On his purely personal side, Judge Bellinger's amiable humor and bright wit were widely known. He was gifted with a singularly genial disposition. He was much admired, much liked, and much respected by many men, and his companionship greatly sought. He was tenacious in his friendships, and would do much for his friends. His charities and benevolences were numerous. His name is identified with more than one deserving cause. The destitute widow, the homeless orphan who needed a friend, always found him In Charles B. Bellinger. It is not too high praise to say that Judge Bellinger's was at this time the most valuable life in Oregon. His death is a most grievous public misfor tune. He had lived in this state since he was eight years of age. He had risen to his high eminence through no special circumstance of fortune, but tie cause he was fitted for the peculiar and responsible duties he was called upon to discharge. His career was from the first under the eyes of people who be lieved In him and continued to believe In him all his life. These friends, the friends of his youth and early man hood, are all those who survive among- the heartbroken mourners of .his melancholy demise, when he was in the run maturity or his powers and useful ness. But they do not grieve more deeply than do the friends of later years who knew him not less well, If less long. Mr. Bellinger had been Federal Judge for twelve years. He had earned, and he deserved, the complete confidence of every lawyer who appeared before him; and no litigant ever had cause to fear that he would not get complete Justice in his court. Many important and In tricate problems were submitted to his judgment; and he rarely erred In his decisions. It became his duty To pre side in the land-fraud cases, wherein Issues of profound moment to the pub lic and to certain prominent men of Oregon are to "be determined. He ap proached this diflicult and unwelcome task "with the same calm purpose to do justice to all that has marked his whole career; and that he would have done it Is the unlvwsal sentiment of all imme diately concerned, and of the public at large, which, has scarcely a less direct interest in these weighty cases. Indeed, the common feeling is that none other is, or can be, go well equipped to sit In these trials. The death of Judge Bel linger teas thrown saany matters into confusion, from, which it may at best be hoped they will be satisfactorily ex tricated by some other Judge not less upright, courageous, experienced and impartial. To Ids fa rally; t&e death .m Judge Bel linger is. of course, a tragedy; to his wide circle of friends it is a heavy sorrow; and to the public it is a" real calamity. REFER END USC AND NORMAL SCHOOLS. The million-tdollar appropriation bill passed by the late legislature is to be submitted to referendum of the voters. The Yamhill County promotion bureau has obtained more than enough signa tures to its petitions. It has obstinately pursued Its work in face of warnings that it was doing great injury to the state. Imposing much hardship and In convenience upon the great army of the state's employes, and otherwise making mischief for the public serviced The committee has cheerfully accepted this responsibility because it has thought it had both a duty to perform and a les son to teach. We may not be so sure about the duty, but every thoughtful and disinterested citizen will agree as to the value and necessity of the lesson. Normal schools of Oregon, through their representatives at Salem, entered Into a conspiracy to "shake down" the state treasury. They were not willing' that each normal school should stand before the Legislature on its merits. If they had any merits, but they distinctly feared that If appropriations were to be asked for the sole reason that they were deserved they would not be ob tained. Everything had to give way before the normal school combine. All other legislation and every plan, every scheme, every object, worthy or un worthy, that was in the mind of any other legislator had either to make terms with the combine orto keep out of Its way. The ' normal schools ran things. They bulldozed everybody ex cept the Governor, and a plan to In timidate Tiim failed only because of a well-grounded fear of an -executive veto. Now we behold the fruits of this de liberate policy to make the normal school interests paramount. Appropri ations for the state, educational and eleemosynary Institutions are to be held up until June, 1906. "Whether the ap propriations are voted up or voted down, the state must get along the best it can. Public employes must discount their warrants. Dealers in supplies must get their money in the best way they can. Inmates of the Insane Asy lum, Blind School. Deaf Mute School. Reform School and Soldiers' Home will find something to eat and have some thing to wear because means must be found to provide it for them. But all plans for the Improvement of these In stitutions and for the enlargement of their facilities must, for the present, be entirely abandoned. It Is a great hard ship on all, but perhaps there is no other way to instruct a State Legisla ture as to the proper performance of its duties. 31eanwhlle, the normal schools will have a hard struggle for existence. It is impossible to avoid a word of sympa thy for the members of their various faculties, who are for the most part unselfish and deserving men and women, thoroughly interested in their work, and desirous of improving both the moral and educational standard of the public school teachers. It Is un fortunate for them that politicians took charge of their proposed appropriations and made deals with other politicians to secure them. If they had all been content to submit their claims and thoir merits to the Legislature for what they were worth, results might have been different. THE ritOMUSING 31 It. 1IAKHIMAN. Advices from New York indicate that Mr. Harriman, who promised to build a line Into the Clearwater country: promised to open up Central Oregon; promised to go into the Wallowa coun try, and promised to give us an ade quate steamship service to the Orient, has. to use a figure of speech, been "knocked down and dragged out" by the friends of Mr. James J. Hill, a rail road man who has always been short on promises and long on performances. Mr. Harriman has fought long and hard to prevent other roads from mak ing breaches in the'Chlnese wall which he has built around the State of Cali fornia. He has sacrificed all of Central and Southeastern Oregon, all of the rich Clearwater country, and a goodly por tion of Eastern Washington, In order to appease the powers, and yet every sop that he has thrown to his enemies has made them hungry for more. From every tussle In which he has engaged, this evil genius for Portland and Oregon has emerged the under dog in the fight, and through it all he has won and held but small sympathy from the Oregonlans. who supply the most profitable traffic handled on any portion of the Harrlman ssytcm. It is, per haps, too late for Portland and Oregon now to expect anything from the hands of Mr. Harrlman, who has apparently passed the zenith of his power as a rail road genius, and. in view of the treat ment we have received while he had the power to help us. there will be no re grets at his passing. We can do no worse, and accordingly there Is a chance that we may do better. Mr Harrlman has the trade of California bottled up good and tight, and for thu immediate present he may be permit ted to enjoy his little monopoly; out sooner or later the big roads which have commanded him to keep out of the Clearwater, out of Central Oregon, out of the Nehalem, out of the Wal lowa and out of the Oriental steamshtn trade from Portland will demand a slice of the trade where he is now alone in his glory. When that time comes, it will be too late for the Union Pacific magnate, who has been retarding the growth of Ore gon for so many years, to replace his disappearing trade field in California with the rich fields in the Pacific North west which once were his for the ask ing. The great trouble with Mr. Harri man seems to be that, when he ac quired the old Huntington property, the Southern Pacific, he also received with It the Huntington policies, which" were all right when the late Collis P. was robbing the public a. number of years ago, but which" are all wrong in this present day and age. No legiti mate excuses can be offered for the failure of Mn Harrlman to build into the Clearwater country, for he is on record on more than one occasion as favoring the plan and asserting that he would build Immediately. No fault whatever was found with the outlook' for business In Central Ore gon. Mr. Harriman not only stated that he would build the road, but his chief lieutenant, Mr. Stubbs. when chlded for hs dilatory tactics regard ing the project, admitted that, the mo ment any independent line started to build into Central Oregon, It would be paralleled by a Harriman road. A few years ago, when the outlook was quite brilht for as iadep-eadent read ia-to the Nehalem, both the Northern Pacific and the Harrlman system threw large corps of engineers into the field, and were .so energetic in their movements and so positive in their assertions that they would open up that country that the independent line was "bluffed" out of business In short order. ,Mr. Harrlman also promised to give Portland an Oriental steamship line adequate to the requirements of the port, and yet Portland exporters are unable to secure half the freight space needed on the Harrlman liners, and In the past sixty days have dispatched four outside steamers which they were forced to charter themselves, while the Harrlman line was dispatching two. These are a few of the. grievances which have resulted in creating an anti-Harriman sentiment throughout the Pacific Northwest that may some day culminate in drastic state legisla tion. The railroads have made Washington and. have done nothing for Oregon, and yet every reduction that has been made in rates has had Its initiative in Wash ington, while nothing has been - at tempted in Oregon. The olive branch of peace has been a failure In securing for Oregon that to which she was entitled. Perhaps a club might prove more- effective. A KACE FOR, HEAL YACHTS. Interest in the ocean yacht race, for the German Emperor's prize continues to increase as the time of the contest draws near The event will not stir the public as would another duel for. the America's cup, but, nevertheless, fmany will eagerly await the reports, of the racing vessels as they near the Lizard. In a trans-Atlantic race the .competing yachts must be seaworthy and staunch, whereas the America's Cup Is chal lenged for and defended by craft that are anything but cruisers. The provis ion that the challenger must cross the Atlantic on Its own bottom Is largely nullified by the towing done by the con voying steamer, and Shamrock and Re liance alike would be unfit for entry In such a race as that in which eleven yachts will start this month. At one time ocean racing was the most popu lar form of the sport, and the present contest Is a sign of reversion to the healthy and seamanlike style. Perhaps the only objection to a trans Atlantic race is that the distance to be traversed is so great that too much room is left for accident and chances of various kinds, although it is won derful how sailing vessels often race nip and tuck from one side of the world to the other. It Is only a few days ago that two ship from Portland to Cape Town made almost identical time, sail ing a day apart. However, the race on the other hand offers greater opportu nities for the display, of seamanship and Judgment. In the forthcoming contest eight 6f the yachts are Ameri-. can. two English, and one is German. This makes it likely that an American will become entitled to appear at Kiel when the trophy will be presented by Emperor William. To the two English entries, the Valhalla and the Sunbeam, particular interest attaches. The Val halla Is A full-rigged ship, the only ves sel of the kind In the race, and In heavy weather, with fair winds, is regarded as a probable winner. The other yacht, the Sunbeam, ie perhaps the most fa mous cruising pleasure craft a noit I owing to the publication of "The Log or j the Sunbeam." when Lord and Lady Brassey made a voyage around the world. The Sunbeam. .commanded by Lord Brassey. who is 70 years of age. arrived in New York last week. Lord Brassey admitted that he had no chance of winning the race, but said that he Imd entered solely to encourage the sport of ocean sailing, which he considered far ahead of the mere racing game. Few of the American yachts earrv anv hut fnrn-arnl.aft u i --- i .i j in the event of easterly winds, are al most certain to furnish the winner. The German Emperor 'has done a great deal for ocean racing, and he has succeeded in stimulating American in terest in this branch of the sport. A victory In this race will do much to establish American reputation as build ers of the best vessels of every type, from "racing machines" to fast cruis ers and from motor boats to battle ships. THE .MKKITS OF THE SMALL COLLEGE. An editorial, brief and tothe point, appears In a late number of the Satur day Evening Post upon the, endow ment of small colleges undertaken by Andrew Carnegie. It Is assumed that the small college's need money not too much money, or they will become taint ed with the diseases of arrogance and social snobbishness that are eating' at the core of our big institutions of learn ing, seriously threatening their use fulness. But they need enough money, in the words of the thrifty housewife, to get along with comfortably, and they need the support of the great mass of well-to-do Americans whose sons and daughters later on will have the desti nies of the Nation In their keeping. The Post states a literal fact, the proof of which exists In the .disap pointment of many parents at the out come of the money spent arid hopes lavished upon their sons In college when it says: A college education Is In ltelf a dangerous enough temptation to the average youth, with all youth' tendency to exaggerate the im portance of things academic, and to dis parage the Importance of things practical. If while getting the education the youth gets also snobbishness, he or she gos forth the worse for college and a force for evil. And It la In some of our big colleges, especially In the East, that the spirit of social and educa tional snobbishness has beconw so strong ax to make sensible parente hfsitate to rend their sons to reboot there. There Is no question but the "public school and the small college together are the best educators for American youth today. This is especially true when the education follows purely lit erary and classical lines, and embraces the sciences that are In close "touch with these. For technical instruction and development In mechanics the col lege with an equipment looking to these ends is necessary, and small colleges without ample endowment cannot fur nish this. Otherwise the statement of the journal above quoted tha't the pub lic school boy or girl who graduates from the small college has the best chance in the activities of American life today may be accepted. He or she will not learn as much in ways, but there will be less to unlearn In the demo cratic struggle for a place In the world after college days are over. By call ing atteution to these conditions An drew Carnegie has done a good work over and beyond the substantial aid that he .proposes to give to colleges of this class. . The GernVaa Ambassador in his spcecfa-af-ta-e Americas Railway cwf- gress at Washington was not very en thusiastic over the National ownership of railroads. He said: "We do not recommend that you follow our example. We ftmply say we will be glad to contribute to your knowledge on this subject by opening our 'doors to your inspection. Europe constructed her roads- to provide bet ter facilities for transportation for traffic which had existed since the dark ages. Ameri can roads, on the contrary, were mostly built to create, traffic. 'With such a radical difference in the economic conditions under which the railroads of this country were built, as compared with those of the Old World. It is quite obvious that what might prove successful abroad would be a failure here, and vice versa. The Ger man government holds Its corporations as well as its subjects with a pretty tight rein tighter perhaps than the Americans would submit to. For that reason it Is not apparent that much can be learned regarding the feasibility of government ownership of the roads by studying the results obtained in Germany. A case of special interest before the Probate Court of this county is that which Involves the bequest of Amanda "W., widow of Simeon G. Reed, both late of this city. The foundation of the Reed wealth was laid in Portland, and indeed the greater part of it was ac quired here. Loyalty to and Ioe for the city that was In the truest sense home to her, and a desire to honor the memory of her husband In the place where the accumulative years of his life were spent, induced the bequests of Mrs. Reed, which are now contested by certain of her helrs-at-law, who. how ever, were generously remembered In her will. The decision in this case means much to Portland, as upon it hangs the establishment of the Reed Institute for Literature, Art and Sci ence, intended as a memorial to the husband of the testatrix, that was des ignated by her as residuary legatee of her large fortune. Whatever the legal decision in the case may be, Mrs. Reed's loyalty to and affection for Portland and her interest In Its local benevolent institutions are amply at tested by the provisions of her will. Another attempt to regulate personal habits by law has failed this time in Indiana. An anti-cigarette law was passed by the Legislature of that state a few months ago, which was exceed ingly drastic In its provisions. It for bade any one to be concerned In any way In owning or keeping cigarette paper or wrappers about his person or premises. A man. not a dealer in to bacco, was arrested" and charged with violating the law by having the "mak ings" of cigarettes upon his person. He did not deny the charge but made answer that the law did not apply to him. He was haled before the court and acquitted, the decision being that the provision under which he was ar rested applied only to dealers. Laws of this kind are stumbling blocks In the way of legitimate legislation In the in terest of morality and public decency. They make It harder than It would , otherwise be to pass measures of merit ! the terms or restrictions of which could I be enforced. Nan Patterson is at liberty. Caesar Young is dead. The testimony in the long-drawn-out case does not make It exactly clear that Nan was innocent. It did. however, have a strong tend ency toward proving that Young got what he deserved. Perhaps the re moval of such a man from earth and the year of agony she has since suf fered, if credited on the punishment which the law sought to Inflict on her. maj- come very near to evening the score. The contemplation of what the showgirl has pad through since that fatal dny Jr-i June certainly ought to cause others of her kind to think twice berore thy place themselves in a sim ilar position. Wasco County Is out of debt for the first time In many years. Warrants aggregating over $51,000 were called In and canceled last month, and there Is still money in the county treasury. This condition of affairs is only a mat ter of congratulation when no legiti mate interest of the county "has been neglected liy the determination to "gqt out of debt." To be oil: of debt is not always a sign of prosperity or. of intel ligent financiering. In this case, how ever. It Is held to show the exercise of economy without parsimony in the management of counts funds and af fairs. Mr. Alexandrovsky, who, as his name indicates, is a Russian, has challenged Baron Tiezenhausen and Count Massin puskin to fight duels unless they re tract some statements 'derogatory to the Alexandrovsky administration of Red Cross affairs In the field. The two noblemen with the Muscovltish names have very properly declined to accept the challenge. This is as it should be. The Japs are reducing the Russian cen sus at a sufficiently rapid-.gait, without the necessity of Interference or-aid on the part of home talent. If Portland does, not fully establish her claim to the title of the "Rose City," it will not be the fault of her loyal women. Every citizen,, as far as possible, is to be pledged to wear a rose every day from the opening to the close of the Fair, while committees Tiave been appointed whose duty It Is' to sec that the choicest of roses of the city are placed each day during the Exposition in the Forestry building. "The effect will be charming, and the device is an ingenious one. The famous Hyde ball continues to be one of the most prominent stage set tings of the great Equitably farce.com edy and tragedy which is now holding the boards. The latest reports, are- to the effect that no Equitable money was spent at the famous ball, and that there was no unseemly action on the part of those present. If the situation continues strained, as it is at present, we may eventually discover that Jimmy had no ball, except perhaps a high one. However faulty the estimate of -Dr. Osier in regard to the total Ineffect iveness of old age, his estimate that "a man is physically sound at twenty, mentally sound at thirty, morally sound at forty and spiritually sound at fifty or not at all." is not. exaggeration, but a simple statement of fact. There are, or may be, exceptions to this rule, but they are few and do not militate against the actual facts of existence as they are known to all observant men. The news accounts are silent as to whether the Prosecutlag Atorney was considerate enough ts return Nan Pat terson's pistol to her; She may need it far Tjt &xt CasswIstiMf. NOTE ANDCOMMENL The death rate among Innocent by standers In Chicago Is now 976 per 1C00. "Fat men make the beat husbands" says one of those writers whose advice to girls ranges from the best kind of shoe laces to the best hundred books in the world's literature. This assertion maybe true. If a husband Is a good thing, nat urally much husband Is better than little. Just -as a fat chicken is better than aJean. Perhaps the worth of husbands may some day be estimated In pounds, and the man anxious to marry will have to go. through a course of fat-producing dinners. "Life, liberty and the pursuit of non union men" Is all that's wanted by the Chicago teamsters. In the columns of a Missouri paper we come across - the name Alfonse Doolcy. which ends up In a different way from its beginning. A meteor is reported from Tacoma. It passed over the city at 10:20 P. M.. so It was probably observed by the night watchman. More about the crinoline. John Strange Winter, whose real name is Mrs. Arthur Stannard, is the leader of the opposition in England to the proposed fashion. Mrs. Stannard says that she prevented a re vival of the crinoline on a former occa sion by getting 21,000 women to write pos tals pledging themselves not to wear the detestable hoops, and now she wants 12. 000 women to Join a noncrinollne league. It might be a good plan to have the anti crlnollnlsts wear distinctive buttons with the legend. "No hoop the hoop for mine," or something to that effect. "Learn to forget," advises an exchange. But It's so much easier to forget to learn. Now that churches are conducted on systematic business lines, there is one improvement that should have been Intro duced long ago. Instead of the unmethod ical collection-box or plate that Is handed round haphazard, why should not the ex ample of all other houses be followed and cash registers be installed? One man with a good cash register could do the work of ten with plates, and besides have his accounts In perfect order. The eleemosy nary church members could flic past the register at the door as they entered the church, and the accountant could, if de sired, hand each contributor a slip show ing the amount of his gift. When a mem ber had collected, say. a hundred pink checks he might exchange them for a book of trading stimp. good for hymn or prayer books-but this merely a suggostlop. According to the New York Sun, men may now buy "holeproof" eocks. a six months guarantee accompanying each pair. Presumably at the end of that time the socks go to pieces all at once. like the one-hess shay. James H. Hyde wc promised to pay a cent fine If his name appeared In this col umn, but here goes, quite regardless is not allowing himself to mope over any little troubles he may have, for he has just organized a company which will con duct a theater In New York next season for the sole purpose of presenting French plays. That's a great deal better than worrying over trifling insurance matters. The most ornate letterhead that a busi ness house ever used would appear tamely formal when compared with the most simple one used by a vaudeville perform er. Usually the clubswlnger. buck-and-wlng dancer, coons houtcr or whatever specialist may be represented, has a iet-ter-hcHd printed in all the colors of the rainoow. with at least two photographs of himself, much Intricate scrollwork and a few legends. uch as "Peerless Provider of Popular Pleasure." It is the fashion In vaudeville circles. In Russia when Christians kill Jews it Is a riot: when Jews kill Christians it is a massacre. An Eastern paper points out that the cSl-talnted dollar also bears the motto, "In God We Trust." Just what influence this important discovery will have upon future controversies It Is difficult to pre dict. It might be well to coin dollars especially for the use of Standard OH men. The motto might be changed to "In the Trust We Trust." A New York Italian shot and killed a man who persisted In playing an accor d!on in front of his house. The man de served to be punctured, and wc hope the accoraion was fatally wounded as well. Hot Water, a Yuma Indian, has been awarded 525 damages for the forcible cut ting of his -hair under the order of the Indian Bureau. The court decided that the Indian had a perfect right to wear his hair a fathom long If he pleased, and white men generally will agree. Suppose the Indians became bosses of the country once more, and the Anglo-Saxon Bureau at Washington issued an order that whito men must wear their hair at least six inches long, except in the cases of bald heads. Wouldn't there be a howl! In Seattle, a woman Is advertising for fierce dogs, which she will chain around her house In the hope of keeping her hus band off the premises. A good dog Is as much of a protector as a husband, any way, and costs much less, to keep, so the Seattle woman is economically right. WEX J. A Good Majority. Medical Age. A well-known English surgeon was imparting some clinical instructions to half a dozen students. Pausing at the bedside of a doubtful case, he said: "-Vow, gentlemen, do you think this Is or Is not a case for operation?" One by one each student made his diagnosis, and all of them answered in the negative. "Well, gentlemen, you are all wrong," said the wielder of the scalpel, "and I shall operate tomorrow." "No you won't," said the patient, and he roso In his bed; "six to -one is a good majority: gimme my clothes," Was She Right or "Wrong? New York Examiner. , A friend of our, a Christian lady of singular sensitiveness in matters of con science, was engaged in a beautiful out door Sunday afternoon work for children on the upper West Side, two or- three .Summers ago. Among those who came within the circle ef her gracious lnfluesce were the children of a llquerdealer. The father was so deeply toacaea by the bene fit derived by bJ chUdrea from, our friend's lnstractlen that, although he was a Roman Cathellc and she a Protestant and a Strang advocate of temperance, he offered to contribute liberally to the nec essary expenses of the work. Was sbe rigat or wroogr in accepting hia offer? A 'FRIEND'S APPRECIATION. "The long day's task is done," Judge Bellinger !s ;Jead. The good man is face to face with the good God whom he has. served these many years In all fealty; the just judge stands now before the Just God and answers unafraid for the life" he lived on earth; a true friend, a kindly father, a tender husband he Is gone whither our love and regret cannot for a while, follow him. and whatsoever of the eternal mystery a man may know so much he has learned. He died as he Jived, brave, serene, ra tional. The baffling symptoms of his Illness he learned and calmly discussed with his physicians, seeking all available remedies with a wise man's love of life, but with no fear of death; and when hope at last failed he took his measures for the great accounting with no tremors but fo"r those' who could not go with him into the chamber where the books; are opened. Of the conventional consolations of religion. Judge Bellinger had few, or none. His faith was independent of for mulas' and transcended creeds. Concern ing the unseen world he did not dogma tize. The belief 1n God which Is common among men of his intellectual station he shared, but all positive assertions about the supernatural he had come to replace by that "larger hope" which does not seek to limit the destiny of man or cir cumscribe the beneficence' of God. His every-day, working faith was in mankind. It was one of his favorite say ings that most men preferred to be good rather than bad, and that evil was forced upon them by circumstances instead of coming from their hearts. His sympathy for people In distress was easy to awaken, his kindness was untiring. Portland Is full of people who will mourn for Judge Bellinger as their best friend. Never a rich roan, he gave freely of his professional advice. The distressed, the wronged, the widow, had his wisest counsel. He would listen patiently to a tale of wrong when his own brain was weary with his enormous toll; he. would lighten another's burden of care when his own heart was breaking under the strain of his work. He gave his time and his thought lavish ly, too lavishly, up to the moment of his fatal attack. Of a character fundamentally serious, with a grave, masterly, judicial Intellect, Judge Bellinger, like the great father of English philosophy whom he so excelled In professional honor, was a wit: but one who has known him intimately for many years remarks that he never heard Judge Bellinger utter a sneer or cynicism. The experience of lawyers does not greatly foster optimistic opinions about mankind, but in the sunshine of his character everything turned to gold. He loved to sit by his fireside of an evening with a friend or two and pass the time In quiet talk. From his endless store of anecdotes he would tell one after another by the hour, voice, eye. gesture, all active and all charming. He knew hundreds of stories about the pjoneers and 6arly public af fairs In Oregon which it Is a pity to have lost, some tragic, but most of .them pure fun. His delight In these stories recalls Abraham Lincoln's love of anecdotes. It did not displease Judge Bellinger to be called a bibliophile by his friends. More and more as the years passed and cares weighed heavier he Interested him self in accumulating rare books and sumptuous editions'. At the time of his death he was negotiating for a rare Mon taigne, which now. alas! he will never see. He was a great reader of Turgeneff and was for years lover, of Balzac. The weird Imagination of the Orient charmed him. He would spend an afternoon over the Arabian Nights; he delighted in the Koran and the poc philosophers of the Immemorial East. Of Judge Bellinger's ability as a law yer, of his vast legal attainments, of his absolute fearlessness and integrity on the bench his professional brethren will make timely record; let' It suffice here to commemorate him as a man and a friend of man who lived his lhe wisely and well, who me. his death with patient courage, and who will be mourned in this city and state deeply and long. C. H. chapman!. Woman's Safe Depository. Philadelphia Record. A Germantown householder who had given various valuable papere to his wife to take care of recently hunted all over the house for tho Insurance policy on his furniture and could not find It. W'hcn the wife came home from a tea he told her his trouble with considerable perturbation, lest the document should have been lost. "Is that all?" said the wife, looking with disgust at her very much disturbed desk, where the husband had been rum maging. "Why didn't ypu ask me?" and going to a picture on the wall she pulled the policy from behind It. "And where," Inquired the husband, after he had recovered from his surprise, "do those shares In the Pullaback Valley Railroad &. Timber Development Company happen to be?" "They're safe enough." was the answer. "They're In the cloeet under the stairs behind the grape juice." "And the deed to the house?" "That's upstairs In the spare room packed away under your Summer suit." By diligent cross-examination the hus band found tho locations, scattered from cellar to roof, of numerous other docu ments of value. "And now," said he. "what's the answer?" "Why," said the wife, who was1 used to his slang. "I don't mean that any robber shall ever come In and clean us out In a one hour search. He'd never think of the places I've chosen, and If he did he would be heard cobu. up and down stairs and knocking over bottles." Great Fame of Lewis Clark. Freewater Times. The other day two old sheepherders were sitting in the Louvre saloon conversing about different topics, when one of them asked the other: "Who Is thait feller Lewis Clark the pa pers Is alius talkhV about?" "Why, that's a feller that lives down tew Portland," answered his companion. "D'ye know him?" "Yaas, I know him well. He's the feller that runs the Log Cabin saloon. He's got a Russian bartender by the name o Sas cajewea. I think he's the feller that's gettln' up this big circu3 they're all talk in' about." A Prayer for Sad Pilgrims. Emery Pottle in the Century. Lord God. I have not'overvexed thine ears With meek requirements, nor with wild. . weak tears; I have not beat upon thy listening gates To save mine argostes with precious freights; Nay. surely, my petitions have not stirred Upon .thy patient Hps oae weary word. The trivial thorns that stlag my naked feet. The pool of Xarah that I .dreamed, waa sweet. The goMea day I touchedv and touching, lost. Lord God, It were not meet that thou the cot Of these ay sorrows recompense again. X would sot burden thee with prayers at pain, Strange, then, my scanty confidence today; X kneel beside this dreary, dusty way To ask not where my troublous paths do tread, Ner wha ray sorry pilgrimages end; Grant ut sock wartfde hjp4Ke4 . to , Lord God, as I discern la taiae owa. Ida, VITAL QUESTION IH CHICAGO ' w , V The strike situation is Interesting rather than particularly exciting. " There is local' excitement occasionally. -Kit 1 1- to looo f,.dn,,anf .1 T..-n -,..,. 1 than might be supposed from the ac counts submitted. The strike Is now at the close of its fourth week. A death reported on Tuesday made the third which has been caused by "riots"' and "civil war." ' It is true there have been many cuts and bruises. Tues day's list of injured included more than 60 names. But that was a record breaker, and the casualties were at tributable in the greater number of cases to assaults made upon the newly arrived crews of strikebreakers. In some cases the strikebreakers appear to have been the-aggressors, if not the actual assailants. More than 20 of the Injured were negroes and nine wer policemen. A few were bystanders. The strike is a mistake and It will be a failure. Public opinion Is strong ly against the strikers. On December 15, 1904. 19 garment-workers employed by Montgomery Ward & Co. disagreed with their employers and quit their jobs, as they had every right to do. Four months later, on April 6. the teamsters employed by that -firm struck because the house refused to arbitrate the case of the garment workers. The strike of today Is based on the offensive and untenable union ist policy of the sympathetic strike. Nominally, grounded in the loyalty of class to class, and actually based upon a false conception of brotherhood, it Is at best ho more than a club used by a group for the purpose of striking the community. The refusal of the employers to arbitrate the claims of the garmentworkers on the demand of the teamsters led to the second false step. This brought into the case the even more offensive and more ques tionable policy of the boycott. It was declared that no goods should be d livered to Montgomery Ward & Co. and that no goods should be delivered by them. For a few days tho fire smoldernd. then it spread and burst into flame. The Employers' Association took cog-: nlzance of it. and seeing in the situa tion a principle for which they knew they must light, sooner or later, they decided to meet the issue squarely and fight It out. It is doubtful if any other group of wage-earners holds such power as do the teamsters and the drivers of delivery wagons to throttle a city's industry. They can empty .coal bins and close down every shop and factory. The can almost lit erally prohibit distribution to or from establishments through which th public does and must obtain its. daily supplies. The Chicago teamsters, in cited by their leaders, have grown ar rogant. Minor contests have occurred In the city from time to time, and tho Teamsters' Union has been rapidly acquiring an undue belief In Its power. The merchants of the city lived at all times under a menace. The commer cial and Industrial wellbeing of tho city was threatened by a small minor ity of men subject to the orders of the officials of their union. This was the situation . faced a few days ago by the Employers' Associa tion. The question was not general: it was specific Do the streets of a city belong to the citizens or to a labor union? If the union could at any time suspend traffic, the union is the master of the streets as a result of its power to say that they shall not be used for purposes of transportation except by consent of the union. The Employers'. Association holds that the streets- shall be ooen to all. freely and without re striction. It faced the situation. Act ing as individual firms pr corpora tions, the boycotted concerns would doubtless have settled their own-cases after the usual manner, by yielding to the demands made upon them or by compromise. As individuals they were quite at the mercy of the unions. The Employers Association seeks the es tablishment of a prjnclplc. It at tempted the transportation of the merchandise of the boycotted concerns in wagons under its own control, and called on the authorities for police protection. Th'is. -in a way. creates an artificial sit uation, forced for the purpose of reaching a definite end. The association is .disposed to go a step further and at any time may take that stop. Declaring the present protection Inadequate, as shown and proved by the reported assaults and riots and by the casualty list, it may peremp torily ucmana uie railing uui uj. swk troops and perhaps the Federal troop3. The state troops arc in readiness, and their commander says that he can put 3000 armed men on the streets at two or three hours notice. This, then, is the situation In Chicago. A powerful organization of the commer cial and industrial leaders of the city de clares that merchandise shall bo carried through the streets and delivered any where without molestation under the charge of drivers who do not belong to the Teamster's Union as well as of those who do. They feel that the merchants must fight and fight now. or go on with their business at all times liable to Inter ruption or stoppage uy Lite iihl ui a leader. They are clearly within their legal and their moral rights, and labor union ism can find no surer way to cut its own throat than that of opposing the move ment by force, and violence. The strike, as a stike. Is already a faiN ure. and the Teamsters Union must per ceive that society Is its master. Its only resource is the general strike and the pre cipitation of a state of widespread an archy which would mean the death of all labor organizations, the destruction of all that has thus far been achieved. For that unionism Is not yet ready, and whether It be this week or next week, or next month, the Employers Association will have established the principal of the open street in Chicago, and will have added .one more tally to Its list of -victories for the open shop. It cannot now turn backward or swerve from its course. Such strength as the Chicago strike has shown Is due less to the power of the strikers and their leaders than to the weakness of the Chicago authorities. A ringing proclamation by the Mayor when, about April 29. the signs of disorder and lawlessness assumed menacing propor tions would have had a powerful influence. A week passed, during which the prom inent business men of the city clamored, for police protection in the processes of their business and the daily press pub lished lists of more than 300 casualties resulting from rioting and disorder. The police force was Increased, but not as It should have been. A clear-cut announce ment by Mayor Dunne, at the very begin- ning. that violence would be suppressed and full protection given to all in need of; It, and a swift summoning of an ample force to make the terms of the proclama tion effective, would, in all probability, have led td the termination of the trouble within 48 hours. The Employers' Association opened the way for municipal action. It made no light against organized labor. Its battle was waged for the rights of society.' It stood ready to teach labor that lesson which It must some day learn that so-t ciety has rights which unionism cannot override by unreasoaable and tyrannical, methods backed by violence. Unionism has gained nothing and will gain nothlng by the Chicago experieace. Oh the con trary, it has. rest much. Society is mere than ever distrastfal of it. an4 the oppo- ' s4tion to thaee methadz which it regard . as its. most pawerftd. weapoas,, has strengthened and become mors cGimeat.