THE XOKSEvG OREGOXIAX, THTKSDAX, JTJJfE t, ItOC. Entered t the Potoffiee at Portland.- Or.. m second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLY IX ADVANCE. (By Mali or Expreaa.) Dt.llr and Sunday, per year, the tyrant down and put some sense into their heads -when they get him down. .19.00 Tt.liv nnil Kunriav. six months. ........ 5.00 Sally and Sunday, three month 25 Pally and Sunday, per month .85 Dally -without Sunday, per year 7.30 Dally without Sunday, six months 3.80 Dally without Sunday, three months... 1.85 Dally without Sunday, per month .63 Eunday. per year -.00 Sunday, six months. ................... J-OjJ Sunday, three months. ...... . .CO BT CARRIER. Dally without Eunday. per week....... .13 Dally, per week. Sunday Included..... . .20 THE WEEKLY OREGONIAK. (Issued Every Thursday.) Weekly, per year.... 1-30 Weekly, dx months. ........ .75 Weekly, three months......... -30 HOW TO REMIT Send poatolflce money crder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency &r at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Acta cy New Tork; rooms 43-SO Tribune building. CM caco, rooms 310-312 Tribune building. KEFX OX SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. Portofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex-Globe News Depot, 260 Main street. San Antonio, Tex. Louis Book and Clear Co., 521 East Houston street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rick, 906-812 Seventeenth street; Harry D. Oti. 1663 Broadway; Pratt Bosk Store. LI Eliteentfa etreet. Colorado (springs, Colo. Howard H. Bell. Dec Hohice, la. Moses Jacobs, 309 Pitta street. , Dulutb, la. Q. Blackburn. 215 West Su perior street- Goldfleld, ev. C M alone. Kansas City, 22o Ilieksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles Barry Drapkln; B. E. Ames, C14 West Seventh street. Minneapolis M. Jr Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; 1. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue Rnnth. Clereland, O James Pushaw, S07 Superior treet. ' . Vew TorU Cltr-Lu Jones & Co., Aster House. Oakland. Cal. W. H. Johnston. Four teenth and Franklin streets. Ogden F. B, Godard and Meyers ii Har- ton. TV T. Bovle. USUOa DUKUOW UIUi " Mageath Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam; Jtc XAUghlln Bros., 240 South 14tb; McLaughMn & Holtz. 1510 rarnam. Sacramento. Cat. Sacramento News Co.. 5B V treet Rait Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West KersnA strrot South: Frank Hutchison. Yellowstone Park. Wyo. Canyon Hotel. Lake Hotel. Yellowstone Park Assn. Lonr Beach B. E. Amos. San Francisco J. X. Cooper & Co., 740 Market street; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter: L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand: F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott, SO Ellis: N. Wheatlev Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; Foster tt Orear, Ferry News Stand fit. Txtnla. Mo. E. T. Jett Book tt News Comranv. S0G Olive street. Wn&hlnrtnn. D. C. P. D. Morrison. 2132 Pennsylvania avenue. PORTLAND. THTJRSDAY. JUNE 29. 1805 PROBLEMS OF PCBLIC OWNERSHIP. Mr. James Dalrymple, of Glasgow, di rector of the tramways or car lines of that city, operated tinder public owner ship, who has been looking over the conditions existing in Chicago, Cleve land and other cities- of the United States, has explained at some length "what It would be necessary. In his opin ion, to do, la order to make public own ership successful In our cities. First of all. entire separation of the street rail way business from politics which, un der our system, would be a difficult task. Yet it ought not to be an Impos sible one. But the statement ot differ ences between the Glasgow system and our own, presented by Mr. Dalrymple at Cleveland, presents considerations of another kind, of highest practical interest. Speaking of our system of 5 -cent fares for all trips, short or long. with transfers, when called for. and contrasting it with the system In op eration at Glasgow, he said: I xut teU J' em plainly that It yen have traBXers you canne-t eperrle under S cots. My experience has taught me tbst tranff'rs ought ne-t to be Issues, and then the propo sition of cheapening the fare won id be greatly eiropMfled. Is Gtargow w have stages. se-cattetf. Yob can ride Me stage fer cent; two 4gei e-r abet 2i retire imc - cents. 0r tensest rMe la from 14 te 15 mHfP. and this easts 8 cents. Te ae it seems that 5-cent Tares with transfers and our sys tem produce ahewt the me resvtt. except for the fact that we carry a great many nvo-re peple. Here if a man wanta to ride 104 yards he has t say S cents, er about 309 per cent too much. If a man wants ! rMe 16 miles he still pays S cents, but at an ln Justice to the railway company. One tiding Is certain, and that in you can never have cheap fare with traatfers. Our people would newer listen to your jtystein. Evidently the Glasgow system Is the juster one. But would our people have it? After a time they might come to it; and probably under public ownership they -would find It necessary to do so. It is admitted that Glasgow does make her municipalization of public utilities successful and effective. But can we. unless we adopt her methods, or similar ones? Chicago is to be the pioneer In this effort in the United States. The newly elected Mayor (Dunne) asserts that the city will go ahead with it. In spite of all apparent obstacles. from the relations of the United States j to the Canal Zone and. its cities. Min isters to Panama and Governors of the Zone are probably what the Scotch call .-kittle cattle." . Dignities must be kept up and precedents observed. So a etate of affairs Is liable, to arise very obnoxious to a Chief Engineer, to whom the Canal Itself is all but a deity, to which every other entity must bow. Then further diffi culties crop up. based on the fact of this being a Governmental work, with abundant officials in Washington, each with his little coil of red tape which he waits to apply wherever the chance comes. One thing. Is certain that a really great man one of the modern type of American doers of things vigorous, successful, proud, nervous, absolute, self-reliant, untiring, will not cannot give out the best service that is in him without a free hand. Such an one must be backed up by the full confi dence and support of his employer. With that he will work till he drops. He may make mistakes and be a thorn in the side to all red-tapists, but the work will be done. If this great, world changing enterprise were committed to private contractors we all know that America would be eearched by them to find, not men, but a- man. Such an one would be watched and tested most strictly, especially at first but this would be so quietly done that he would neither feel nor resent it. If he could not stand -up to the- work he would go at the shortest of short notice. If he made good everything would be moved out of his way. The President knows this Just as well as his observ ers. Doubtless he is cogitating how far he can go in this direction in this most annoying condition evidenced by the resignation of Mr. Wallace. It is no light or trivial matter which has caused such a man to let go of reins and handles just as he had started on his furrows. He must Justify him self for quitting not only In his own eyes but In those of his friends, and. above all. of tro Nation which approved his selection for the hardest task in the gift of the Nation today. amination may be improved. Whether there has been favoritism under circum stances of that kind it is not necessary to consider. For the same reason that man who becomes a Judge S not be permitted to sit in the trial of a case in which he was formerly an attorney. County School Superintendent should not participate in the examination of persons whom he has prepared for that examination. The two positions are as Inconsistent as for a public purchasing gent to buy from himself. POLAND. "And Freedom shrieked when Kosci usko fell." So sang the poet beloved of school boy orators, but his song is not true, Freedom never shrieked in Poland, for she never visited that distracted realm Even when Poland was an Independent nation its Inhabitants had nothing like liberty. The nobles led a sort of Kll kenny cat existence, tearing each other and their country to pieces. There was no middle class, business being carried on by the Jews; and the rural popula tion lived in slavery, having no rights under the law and going from owner to owner with the land. There was no court of general Jurisdiction. Every noble, palatines they were called, had the power of life and death in his own dominions: and he was answerable only to the Diet a distracted caricature of a Parliament which any member could adjourn at any time by saying "NIe pozwalam." It was so adjourned thir teen times while Poland was a nation. This queer Diet elected what they called their King, who reigned but had no authority except over the army. One native Pole of genius was made King. This was John Sobieskl. who defeated the Turks at Vienna and saved Europe from Mohammedanism If it was sav ing. Gibbon doubts it. Usually the later Polish Kings Were foreigners. They came from France, Sweden, Aus tria. Germany, everywhere. The most famous was Augustus the Strong, who had 364 children. Talk of Brigham .Young! Since alU the royal families had reigned in Poland, they all felt as if they owned it. They perpetually In trigued for the throne; they dragged the nation into their quarrels: they made factions among its proud, high-tempered, hysterical.'seml-clvillzed nobles. Poland had plenty of natural enemies, too, bo it was always fighting and gen erally beaten. The Mongols plundered it; In the great Cossack revolt under Bogdan. which Slenklewlcz describes, the country was harried fiendishly. The Turks swept jover. it. Charles XII of Sweden -conquered it. The Russians were always biting pieces from the eastern frontier, which once passed Just this side of Moscow. Polish history is a thousand years of hysteria, folly, woe and blood. There were also religious troubles. Poland proper was converted by Saint Adalbert, but. unhappily, to the heret ical Roman sect, while Lithuania, the eastern half of the nation, was ortho dox or Greek. Add to this that many nobles became Protestants and the foeautv of the situation is complete. A country full of hotheaded nobles, all j pious, all zealous, all eager to be and to make martyrs! No wonder Sarmatia fell. During the entire seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Poland, poetically Sarmatia, was a roaring pit full of wild cats. Meanwhile three sovereigns of genius had appeared in her three next neighbor nations, consolidated them, fixed their institutions and headed them toward greatness. Peter the Great In Russia, Frederick in Prussia, Maria Theresa in Austria. Poland lay in the middle of the three like a buzzing wasp nest, or a ripe watermelon. It had no definite frontiers, no responsible gov ernment, no policy, no power of resist ance. Its part was a warning, its fu ture a menace. Russia, Prussia and Austria- carved it up and devoured it. The Prussian and Austrian morsels have been pretty well digested. That of Russia, like Mrs. Gamp's pint of porter, "settled heavy on the chest." Freedom has always been shrieking there, and with good reason. Russian "brutality, bigotry, savagery, have lost no chance to strike the Poles, Russian Poland has been a shambles for more than a hundred years. Now the star blazes in the east. Hope flames wp again in the land of Sobleski, Kosciusko and Pulaski. Blood flows like water in Lodz and Warsaw. Let it flow and may it not flow vainly. God speed the Poles! God nerve their arms to strike WRITING GOOD ENGLISH. PresldentWoodrow Wilson, of Prince ton. stated a well-known truth in s forceful manner when he said that It is one of the reproaches of our American colleges and universities that their graduates are not trained In the use of their mother tongue. In his opinion the inability of so many graduates to ex press themselves accurately and ele gantly Is due to the adoption of wrong methods in training. Jn theme writing. by means of which the student eecures his practice in English composition. "style" is the principal end in view. whereas the chief object in the use of language should be the transmission of ideas. Educational methods are to be changed at Princeton so that the effort of the student will be centered upon telling what he knows, while the man ner of telling it will be a secondary consideration. There will be less writ ing for the sake of style and more writ ing for the purpose of expressing ideas which the student wishes to convey. In this connection it seems appropri ate to suggest that the one reason why so many of the young men and women are poor masters of English may be found In the decadence of letter-writ ing. Before the day of railroads and daily newspapers, the only available means of exchanging news was by means of personal letters. Postage was high and communication infre quent, so that long letters were the rule. Parents took pains to Instruct their children in letter-writing and in the use of correct language. Letters were written because there was some thing to tell and a desire to tell it In an entertaining manner. Today conditions are different and the long, formal letter has given place to a brief. Informal note which makes no pretense to ac curacy In the use of English. Cheap postage, two or three mall trains a day, and long-distance telephones, have made letter-writing almost a lost art. Go through any old family trunk and read the letters your grandfathers and grandmothers wrote in their younger days, and it will at once be apparent that there is a reason for the general decline in the ability of young people to write good English. There ha been in recent years a lack of practice. Recently someone raised a grjtat hue and cry over the danger of the trans mission of disease by means of 'the use of soap in lavatories of hotels and other public places. The alarmist pictured all sorts of germs on every piece of soap in use by the general public. Like many other alarms of the kind, this proved to be Ill-founded. An expert chemist made a collection of cakes of soap from public wash rooms and after a diligent search was unable to And disease germs on any of them. To make a more certain test. he tried to make the disease germs live, on soap and found that they wouldn't live on that kind of pasturage. Four hours was the longest any of them would thrive. He found that the cheapest soap, such as is used- for laundry purpose?, was the most deadly to the germ, because it contained the most alkalaL The least injurious to the disease germ was a high-priced toilet soap. PANAMA CANAL AGAIN. In the time of the French Company It was said that the Panama Canal was the grave of many men's reputa tions. This saying had special refer ence to the grafting and corruption that were believed to prevail. When the United States undertook the work at Panama, full confidence was felt that these evils would be ended. There is. happily, no reason to believe other wise. But storms of other troubles have been developed. Men and methods have been changed again and yet again. It-is true that each appeared to be in the di rections of simplicity, and of concentra tion of power in fewer hands. Presi dent Roosevelt's resolve was made plain to reach results, whether the Senate said yes or no. In this he had the unquestionable support of the Nation. and has it still. How is it, then, that once more the most important officer resigns, and takes this action hurriedly, decisively, and. as ft is reported, "in a huff?" Possibly in the natural anxiety to get the great work started there has been too much haste, and that, therefore, speed is lost- The functions of the Chief Engineer of an immense public work are two-fold. First, he is an adviser on the scope, possibilities, methods, and cost of. the enterprise proposed. In this he not only may have, hut, if he be a wise and broad man. he will welcome con sultation with men of corresponding at tainments, and certainly of specialists in various branches. No man is. and no sensible man believes himself to be. equally good ail round. To require and te act- on the results of suoh consultative action is the privi lege, and in such a case as the Pan ami Canal, is the duty of the employer. So far there is. with reasonable men. no ground far friction. There is no reason to believe that trouble has so arisen in this case. But, if the em ployer be wise, the more difficult and touchy questions of departmental con trol of construction are thorougbly thought out and determined before actual work is begun. In the very inception of construction is the danger point and apparently the President is finding this out. Of course, the Panama work is com plicated by political quesdons arising FRANCE AND MOROCCO. White the pending dispute between Germany and France on the subject of Morocco has not reached the acut stage, yet it is causing great uneasi ness. even beyond the nations primarily concerned. It cannot be disputed that France has the preponderance of inter est in this wild and half-clvllized sfate. The Berber tribes of the Interior are al ways in condition of unrest. The bor derland between Morocco and Algeria extends for several hundred miles (no one seems to know just how far). Boundaries are artificial purely, and small insurrections break out without notice on the Moroccan side, and the inhabitants of Algeria are invaded. at will. So that France is within her rights In insisting that peace be kept by her neighbor, and that she shall not only Insist on but enforce It. The rights of Germany are commercial in origin and extent, based on her trade with the mixed inhabitants of the Mediterranean ports. Doubtless, on modern principles Germany has right to the open door. and to protect her traders and mer chants. Whether she has, or rather whether the Kaiser has, any undis closed designs, time alone can show The Russo-Japanese war has proved the need and value of coaling stations all over the world, and especially along the great sea routes. The Moroccan coast extends for many hundred miles with a seaboard to the Atlantic It is true that harbors are few and unde veloped. French geographers report only three on the western coast of any prospective value Walldlya, Mogadoe. and Agadlr. The most recent account of the first named describes It as need lng but a small expenditure on dredg lng to make it both accessible and safe, It might prove to Germany of most ma terial use to have a fortified harbor for refuge and coaling accessible to the At lantic France, therefore, may hav strong reasons for avoiding or reducing German influence in Morocco. Such half-civilized and weak nations may be Induced sometimes to give a powerful friend what it may prove to others most inconvenient for that powerful friend to accept and develop. If such a la mentable event were to occur as that these great nations come to blows. must not be forgotten that, on paper at any rate, the French navy far outnum bers and outranks the German which latter is of recent creation. The contin gency of such a war is too serious to consider lightly. It Is certain that re publican France, with an enormous and well-drilled arm, and an aroused na tional enthusiasm behind It, would be a vastly different adversary from France of the empire that crashed down to an humiliating fall in 1S79. So well is this known In the German general staff of fice that the world can rely on a very serious and demonstrable casus belli being required ere the German armies were set in motion. So far this, in the affair of Morocco, is not in sight. The war party in Germany includes 70.000 officers, burning for the excitement and distinction of a real war. The peace party is the sober thinking and serious nation, to whose families war, with whatever outcome, means desolated and mourning homes, and the upset of the whole structure of civilized life. 0REG0N0Z0NE. When the Igorrcte coms. With a basket for a hat. We may look for higher prices For the four-in-hand cravat; But of this we, may be sure That his coming won't enhance Or affect in any manner The prevailing price of pants. GRAFTERS AND THE RUSH FOR WEALTH XeaarkaM AMrm fcy a Corporation Lawyer osr 3taarr XvUo X-e at Good Mem at M'mmm t Make Criem Csfeafeaal 4 Graft a4 FTawd a SfaHcrace. OBBRXJN. O.. Jane 23. 190S. James Institution. Such a man. is dangerous B. Dill, the corporation lawyr of New M the community. His position is so high York, in the course of a noteworthy J fa of srart is so msiaious ,r-- tA tfc -rntn- t! of I that its existence oftUiaea is not sus- A learned physician, tells us that with- Oberlln Colelge today, delivered a j J?', h v"P,tv the nosePlTf?would not be worth liv- .cathlng rebuke t. men who, misuse . ? g Tuuuioni 11 1 nonar ana ini3L iar uui - out lng. The chances are that the doctor never lived in the neighborhood of a glue factory or a Summer hotel kitchen la dog days. In Alaska the geography shows a place called Tea Bay. That ought to make a -fine resort for the Summer girl, but the unromantic government has made use of it for a salmon hatchery. A Texas negro has been sentenced to the state penitentiary tor a tnousana years. Even if he is good and gets out on three-fourths time he will not have to worry about his livelihood for the re man and his poses of personal gain, la urging his j pSSwV,OI1 oul 100 . bearers to go BacK to BegiaaiRgs. 1 . , tmii , -.f ! directs its affairs from the viewpoint which was foreign to the true Amerl- j ef nls owa Pcet rather than from tha can character, had been developed by standpoint of tn stockholders inter our mad rush for wealth and tae tec- ! eat altaoaga he may not be Indicted ocnitlon of false- standards bv educat- ! Y a sraja Jury, is none the less a so- ed men in the competitive struggle for i elal highwayman." as to tae mucn-taiKed-or abase or "dummy directors." Mr. DiH said: The dummy director of a great company wao cummyizes nimseit for pay. business Doner and social prominence. without mentioning names. Mr. Dill referred to the connection of respect able financial institutions with Indus trial promotions that are calculated to J whether by the year or by the Job, mislead the public. He said; "A large part of oar modern prosperity is to a perilously large extent bottomed upon an over production of fraud and sham. The malnder of his life, for he can go Into a I crisis Is acute. A feeling of distrust sideshow as the modern Methuselah and make 00 a week. Vanderbllt University students who have invaded Kansas to earn Pin money at binding wheat emit this harvest yell: "Wahoo! Hullabaloo! 7 ll-2? Muscle and meat! Tell with the heat! Show u tie -wheat! the wheat!! the wheat!!! If those boys make the mistake of stop- Fortunately, the first bathing mishap I ping close to the Missouri border, they of the season at Seaside ended in a thrilling story of rescue. More strength to the arms of the brave North Dako- tans. But men willing to risk their lives are not always present. Common prudence demands that lifelines should be stretched wherever bathers congre gate. Men and women take their dally dip in flocks; ao a few ropes are suffi cient. The cost is trifling and no ex pense of maintenance is attached. It is the duly of hotels to provide lifelines or guests. That the same duty applies to cottagers is manifest. Considering the immense numbers who go into the ocean, the loss of life in past years has been Indeed very small, and slight fear of danger exists among the multitude; still, under certain conditions which do not make themselves known, there Is occasionally an undertow that takes people off their feet. If you have hold of a lifeline, you cannot drown. John V. Farwell. leader of the Chi cago Employers' Association, which, is conducting the campaign against union labor, says "the strike has ceased to be a strike, but is rather an annoyance. It no longer has any effect on busi ness." If this be true, union labor has met with one of Its most crushing de feats, for Chicago has for years been pretty effectually under the domination of the walking delegate and bribetaking labor boss. The failure- of the strike will hardly work a serious disadvantage on the best men in the unions, but it may be attended with some hardship for the Inferior workers which union- Ism always carries along with It. The state has been receiving Zi cents an hour for the labor of convicts em ployed In the prison stove foundry. Bids were recently opened for the leas ing of convict labor for another term of ten years, and the present contract ors made an offer of 4.1 cents an hour. Even this advance is of some conse quence, but the figure given Is not a reasonable return for the labor of the convicts. It may be all the stove foun dry proprietors can afford to pay, but it is not as much as the state should realize. A deserter from the cruiser Boston surrendered himself to the Salem police and asked to be returned to his ship. Working tn Valley hopyards and hay- fields is not an easy way of gaining dally bread not near so easy as serv ing on board a United States cruiser However, it Is far more profitable in the end. and farmer boys are wise in not giving up the freedom of an Oregon farm for the confinement of service on a warship. A favorable season has made good hay crops In the Willamette Valley and feed will be plentiful this Fall. Livestock will be kept In good condi tion, thus adding to the appearance of prosperity which the Valley usually possesses. Thin livestock will do more than anything else to make a country look destitute. may nna some tarmers wno win aaow them the wheat and set them such pace that "Blest Be the Tie That Binds" will be a tabooed hymn when they re turn to home influences. The Bronze Bird-Woman. Ob. Sac-a-Ja-we-a Is back again. Out over the overland track again Sac-a-Jaw-breaker is back: But where is the little pappooae that came fAnd couldn't remember his mamma's name) On Sac-a-Ja-we-a'a back? Prevented a Wreck. Jlmson You're awfully awkward. Why did you step on that ladys train last night? Bimpson Why, to keep it from running off, of course. Stag Dinner Defined. Willie Boy Papa, why do they call dinner with only men present a 'stag dinner?" Papa I don't know for sure, but it may be because the men present get several horns each before they go home. Not a Bigamist Either. . There Is a man In our town." remarked the nromlnent citizen from Prineville. who has married 1 wives." "Heavens:" ejaculated the Portland hotel clerk; "and do you mean to say that he has buried 13 .of them? "No: they are alt living." "What divorced, then?" "No all living happily." Then he's a wholesale bigamist! Why don't they Jail him" "Oh. he's all right; he's the Methodist preacher." - The Editors. The editors are with us now. They came on "Standard" time To "Register" and tarry. And they're worth a merry rhyme. We trust the "Sun" will shine for them And every "Star" be bright. And every "Breeze" blow gently And their hearts be gay and light. We give them perfect freedom To "Express" their varied views And "Advocate" their hobbles. - For it's all Important "News." They never are behind the 'Times." These editorial "we's." Who strive to keep their "Record" bright And always try to please. Sometimes they "Herald" things to come. And now and then they print Some public secrets in "Advance" When some one gives the hint. But, "Mall" and female, all In all. They are a hearty class. Who never fall to heed the "Call" To travel en a pass. ROBERTUS LOVE. Is growing throughout the oountry. , Many branches of financial business have been in one way or another taken possesion of by the unscrupulous for the purpose of deceiving- the URwary. Trust companies have been made the mediums of the notation ef speeious and fraudulent promotions. "Some companies in the field of life insurance, the highest and in a sense sacred form of investment, are. as we all Know now. conduits tarougn which the savings of the polley-aold-ers are diverted into operations for speculative purposes. 'Credit and good raith, not money. are the oasis 01 Business, uooa er bad. our modern prosperity is founded on public confidence. Taka that away and the whole fabric falls. The fact Is that the unprecedented material growth of the country, the resulting creation of immense private fortunes, the massing of great aggre gations of corporate capital, indus trial combinations and railroad mer gers, all have tended to concentrate the attention of the people upon great financial achievements and to establish tn the highest place in the popular es timation the captains of industry and the powerful financiers, little regard being paid, in making up the Judg ment, to the fundamental virtues ef pri vate Individual life. Continuing. Mr. Dill said that the desire to secure unearned wealth was sidetracking educated men and women from their real careers, saying that the essential element of "graft" was a breach of trust- Mr. Dill added: "Graft is the ad vanced stage of the craze for unearned money. It is not only the desire to get something for nothing, but it ia an at tempt to get something in eoasldera tion of the grafter's parting with something that really doe3 not belong to him. It is a wrong greater than that of the counterfeiter, who merely makes and passes counterfeit coin. The grafter is a man who rebs the counterfeiter, who made the coin; the grafter, then, passes the spurious eoin to the public as genuine. "Another graft is that of the bank official, who Is influenced in the use of his institution's funds by any con sideration other than the good of the wit) uses his position to control the use and disposition of ether people's mosey for personal gain, fc in ao position, to criticise the clerk who falsifies his ac counts, or the employe who embezzler. Tet we all know ef instances of men who have stolen a million aaving- sent to Jail employes who had taken only hundreds of thousands of dollars. "Now -whose fault is this? It is ears. It is the fault of public opinion, and public opinion is our opinion, yours aRd mine yours of me. xstae of you. ours of all the rest. We have to leant o recognize graft and the grafters, however respectable their dlssulse and to punish them, not alone by Im prisonment and fine, but with all the might ef th- terrible scorn of society We have to recognize that the seeds of socialism, revolution and anarchy are toirn hv lha man nf awn plfl9 an.l ! kind who pretends to be what he Is not; these seeds are cultivated by the grafting bank, officer, insurance officer man In power in financial organiza tions. In short, by every, grafter who In a is dealings with the public departs openly or secretly from old-fashioned Ten-Commandment honesty. "Many men of education, at power, financial and political, seem to develop a two-faced conscience, one for busi ness use and another for the individual life. This is fraud." "Don't pose, don't be frauds. Be gen uine. Be true to yourselves. Be your selves. Seek what you really want. Take no course in life simply because ethers take it. Put on no man's coat because it is becoming to him. 4 Make your point of view your standpoint. Don't proclaim it as the bub of the universe; it is only a firing- line, but stand on it and fire." "Don't chase the easy dollasv Money is good, but money will come if you do your work well. Give the world full value, and the world will prize and pay you for the character your honeJt efforts will have developed. "In a free demoaratic nation such as ours we you who are at your com mencement and I who have came back here to the beginnings I tell you that we need men and women who not only will not lie. or steal, or cheat, or bribe, but will make crimes criminal and fraud and graft a disgrace, even though the perpetrators have achieved financial success, even though the wrongdoers live next door, belong to our club, go to our church." THE KLONDIKE OF TO-DAY. Epic Period Has Passed, but the Field Is Still Productive. Six years ago no portion of the earth CHEAPER AUJOMOBILES, Wide Demand for -Moderate-Priced and Serviceable Machines. St. Louis Republican. was more talked about than the Klon-1 Announcement Is made that a cheap dike region of the Tukon Vaftey. From I J tonfc,lSS Its golden gravels, yielding by the most j00 eomptete. It is supposed, there- primitive methods over J10O.MO.0Q ia fore, that everybody who can afford to about three years, came some ample 1 own and maintain a horse and buggy fortunes, hundreds ot modest compe- I ucuct ouuiu 10 owa mu. owiauun an auio. a 1113 is a. logical iaea; oiaerwise, no company would be organized to make tencles, and an epic experience of life or death for thousands. Lately little has been heard of the Klondike. It no longer seems to offer the chance of quick fortune or a sud den end of life to adventurous souls. Probably nine men out of ten, when asked about It, would be of the impres sion that ltc golden stores have been a cheap machine. Improvements to the automobile, sim plifying the mechanism and rerucing the cost ef repairs and maintenance, have brought ft into decided favor. To the 50 machines which were seen anywhere two or three years ago there are now hundreds. The popularity of the na- practicaity exnaustea. ana mat tc aw , , fa t to clty- even in become Nmerely another of the many country towns automobiles are rather gold diggings wnich have "played out, numerous. They ustd !or business. According to C. M. W COdwertn. in the for convenience and Treasure. Canadian Magazine, that Impression j xha. th ai,tmohlle ha so ouleklv would be far from correct. The time ' favor aealnst the, ImDediments of has passed In the Klondike when the ; eomDarativelv hlch cost and of some me. Individual adventurer, wltn his own J chanfcal deficiencies gives flattermg hanJs and the simplest tools, might promise that a cheaper machine or ma win enough gold to put him. if he could t chines, if well made and serviceable, keep it. beyond need to work again, or ( 3h0Uid have a large and wide sale. The at least enouga to lay the foundations j machine has been so much improved, of a competence. But the Klondike is ana has so conclusively shown its gen- TAXATION OF FRANCHISES. eral usefulness, that it has become a standard vehicle. There is no proba bility that It will go out of use: on. the contrary, there Is every Indication that Ex-SenatorThurston advises the young man to keep out of politics. Everybody1 that has ever been in politics tells everybody else to stay out. Tet no one takes the advice, possibly because the I Court declaring . that franchises old men who want the young men to I property which can be assessed keeD out remain In themselves, until somebody else keeps them out. - London Is complaining of an invasion by American card sharps and confi dence men. Picking is poor in Wall street during dog days, so these crooks have chosen the next best place. Re ports of early arrests discouraged them from coming to Portland, far from exhausted of Its treasures. Al most beyond question there is still five or six times as much gold in its gravels as has been taken out. With the methods which It was pos-1 it wni steadily become more common and sible to use during the great rush of 1 more popular. lBaii-39 claims paying less than IS to, in course of time, when chauffeurs the cubic yard could not be worked . learn to be considerate and discreet, the and were abandoned. But conditions j public aspect of ill-will will change for have chanced with methods, and claims one whollv friendlr. The Dubllc has had The recent decision of the Supreme averaging $3.25 per cubic yard are now j sufficient cause for criticism and com- prouiai'ie. n nue unit uraitu& piauii. auu il is uuyra wai. wiut uiout that would not be abandoned If tho pay t will eomo soon. For. as good streets streak were regular and not too thin, j and roads tend to increase the number Witn the dredge's and steam shovels of automobiles, so automobiles tend to now coming into use hydraulic work- j the construction ot the best city thor Ings yielding 50 cents per yard are 1 oughfares and the be3t rural highways found profitable. ! and roads. Latter Sold as Property by Their Holders Oakland (Cal.) Tribune. are I and PRIVATE AND PUBLIC INTERESTS. It has always been against public pol icy to permit public officers to transact official business in which they have a private Interest. The man who acts as purchasing agent for the public should not at the same time occupy the posi tion of seller to the public. The Judge should never sit in the trial of his own cause, nor a public inspector pass upon j the merits of articles which he has supplied in fulfillment of a contract. No man who has regard for his own reputation will put himself in a -position where his private Interests conflict with his public duty, nor will a careful con stituency permit such a conflict long to exist. A practice which has been growing la Oregon, and which is open to criti cism, is that of County School Superin tendents conducting Summer schools for the preparation of teachers for the county examinations. The County School Superintendent presides over the teachers' examination, and in that ca pacity is the guardian of public educa tional Interests. As the instructor of persons who are seeking teachers'-certificates, he quite naturally would like to see the efficiency of his work proven by the success of the applicant at the examination. Whatever may be the de sire of the Summer school instructor, there is quite likely to be a feeling among teachers that if they take a course of instruction at that particular school their chances of pawing the. ex- No small number of practical men will forgive Engineer Wallace for throwing up a 520.000 Government Job involving friction and accepting straight business employment that is congenial and pays twice the money. . President Roosevelt is to be felici tated over the rare privilege of private citizenship for one day. Communion with former fellow-students at Harvard Is quite as good a mental tonic as asso ciation with bears In Colorado. Norway is still looking for a general manager of her affairs. By singular coincidence. William J. Bryan, of Ne braska, is where he can easily be com municated with on the subject. After all the midwinter and early Spring talk concerning reform, we are still going to have the Insane and un safe sort of Fourth of July celebration. Portland drug stores are not advertis ing witch hazel, sticking plaster, arnica and absorbent cotton as bargains in anticipation. Unless some one starts a new commo tion. Big Bill Taft won't have to .sit on the lid when he reaches Manila. The Good Roads convention has patched, up a peace. Good roads are not built by bad language. There is this consolation: When it is all over, Linievitch. wfll cot 50 on the stage. . taxed as tangible property is assessed and taxed settles a question which has been tentatively raised and discussed many time, but which has never be fore been authoritatively settled by the Supreme Court. It often happens that the franchises ot a public service cor poration a street railroad company, for Instance are Its mostvaluable as set. It not infrequently occurs that the franchise are worth more than the real and personal property of the com nanv. Thev are eaoltalized and livid ends are collected on an enormous val-! working uatlon for tnem. But the corporation attorney and magnates are wont to claim that, franchises, being mere priv ileges granted for the better accommo dation of the public, cannot be classed as property and taxed as such. Never theless franchises can be sold as prop erty by their holders. When bonds are sold it Is with a lien on the franchise. Stock Is Issued and sold by a corpora tion having franchises for its largest 'asset. If franchises have an earning capacity for dividend purposes and can be KOld as property there Is no reason why they should not pay taxes In pro portion to their value or earning capa city. A street railroad having a physi cal property worth J2.000.000 or 33.300. 000 perhaps will be capitalized fqr 312.000.0J3 maybe, and pa) a net in come over and above operating ex penses on that sum. Its bonds and stock sell In the market on the basis of tnat valuation. Why. then should not franchises pay taxes in proportion to their ratio of the whole valuation? The Federal Supreme Court says they are taxable property. If it be lawful to tax them at all It is not only lawful but right to tax them to their full value. In California and eisewnere ay- j draullc gold mining woras have seen made to pay where the ground yielded less than 10 cents a cubic yard. Mr. Woodworth does not believe that rec ord can fver be equaled in "the Klon dike. Too much of the gravel Is frozen, and there are other items of expense which will keep the limit of profitable considerably higher. Mr. CAN THE FOURTH BE REFORMED? Joke on the Inquisitor. During the South African War the cen sorship of soldiers' letters home was very strict. One soldier, who always sent an account of the doings of the regiment, which account was always blotted out by the censor, laid a plan for revenge. At the foot of bis .next let ter ha wrote. "Look under the stamp." The censor did so, after spending con siderable time In steaming the stamp from the envelope. And h found theee words: "Was.lt bard w get eV Troy (N. T.) Times. The "glorious Fourth" is at hand, and of course every truly patriotic American believes In appropriately celebrating it. But is there any good reason why it Bhould be turned into an occasion for Woodworth believes, however, that in j offering up a mighty sacrifice of life and the near future gravels paying 25 j property, to say nothing of the maimed 'cents a yard can be worked at a J bodies that remain as living though pain good profit. j ful witnesses of over-strenuosity. to call Within 180, miles east of Dawson j it by no stronger name? The Chicago there are believed to be more than 5) I Tribune, which keeps a careful record of square miles of auriferous gravel de- these and other matters, has testified that posits from 25 to 125 feet thick which I in 10 years in 10 of the prominent cities will yield an average of mere than 25 j of the country not less than 1100 persons cents a yard. Twenty square miles in the Klondike basin are much richer. There is good evidence that one square mile on Hunker Creek will produce 250,000.000. Altogether It Is believed that tbe Klondike basin is capable, with modem processes and machinery, of yielding more than J80.003.000. So it will be seen that the Klondike is far from "played out." Its epic era the days of single-handed striving with the elements for wealth has gone or is rapidly going. Successful .industry must now be organized and co-operative and ober Those woo made the Klondike's epic, history have trans formed It. The kind of chance they had will never be there again. Fifty yean hence men will doubtless look, at the Klondiker of 'S3 as we now look at the Argonaut of '49, with a certain en vious wonder If It will ever be their lot to live as he lived, transforming the face of the earth in few months with their own hands. No Insurance in Panama. Leslie's Monthly. Under a high enough Hen you may Insure your life In any country but one. The one excepted -country Is our new ally, the Republic of Panama. No pre mium can be made exorbitant enough to express a whlteman's chances of occu pying permanently six feet of that inter estizg region were killed and 5333 injured more or less seriously, while J3.633.0C0 worth of prop pety was burned on Independence Day. And other localities make a scarcely less tragical showing. It is well known that on the Fourth the surgeons, the ambu lances, the hospitals and the firemen are kept particularly busy, and it has come to be so well understood that the fact is regarded with a large degree ot public Indifference. There Is no danger of the occasion being forgotten or ot the "spirit of TS" disap pearing from our midst. Young America at least will always take care of that. But if the zeal for celebrating with en thusiasm and patriotic earnestness con be tempered with a little discretion so that the list of dead and wounded will be shortened and the aggregate fire loss diminished, the result will be cause for congratulation and the liberties of the people will be In no degree curtailed. "Why not work to such an end? Which Brand Is Yours? All gold Is not alike when refined. Aus tralian gold is distinctly redder than that taken in California. Moreover, placer gold is mors yellow than that which is taken from quartz. This is one ot ths mysteries of metallurgy, because gold in placers comes from that which Is in quartz. Gold taken from different placers will vary in color. The gold In the TJral mountains is the reddest la the world.