THJE MOKNXNlx OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1905. Entered at the rostoffice at Portland, Or., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIiTION RATES. INVARIABLT IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) Daily and Sunday, per year.. .v 59.00 Dally and Sunday, six months 5.00 Dally and Sunday, three months -j Dally and Sunday, per month..... Dally without Sunday, per year .30 Dally -without Sunday, six months 8.00 Dally without Sunday, three months... 1.05 Daily without Sunday, per month .Oj Sunday, per year -"J Sunday, six months i.oo Sunday, three months.- , -00 BY CARRIER. Dally without Sunday, per week. .. .15 Dally, per week, Sunday Included..... 0 THE WEEKLY OREOONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) Weekly, per year --- l-J0. Weekly, six months. - Weekly, three months -DO HOW TO REMIT Sen d postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at tho sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. Tho 8. C Beckwlth Special Agency New York, rooms 4S-30 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. and the story of his magical rise from poverty to the possession of millions was on every Hp, his success was the means of dragging down Into the gam bling maelstrom thousands of good men, many of whom have since exchanged comfortable homes and a fair compe tence for convict stripes and a future without hope. The wave of prosperity which swept Sully Into the possession of millions dragged Price, another cot ton gambler, into the depths from which he Is now emerging, although all of the Sully millions have since been swept away. These shining examples of "gambler 3om" are mentioned at this time" be cause it has been less than a fortnight since Price "cleaned up" $750,000 on a single turn of the cotton market. The wish o prolong a war which can bring nothing but misery to his people and ruin to himself, or why he should have vacillated over sending M. Wltte. his best man for the place, as envoy. If we were less acquainted with his character. But he has never held steadfastly to any line of policy, so far. and it is not likely that he ever will. His disposition is reactlorfary. He promises liberal concessions one day and retracts or nullifies them the next. He dreads, and probably hates, the liberal leaders. II. Wltte is the leading liberal of Russia. His final appointment shows how ex- barred from marriage or by scientific sterilization from parentage. And this Is but a sample of what Is being urged upon public attention elsewhere. Thus It has come that the discussion of race suicide has been succeeded by that of race improvement. It Is a great thing indeed a glorious thing to belong to what Galton calls a "thriving family" i. e.. one In which the children have gained distinctly superior positions to those who were their classmates in early life," and to be the progenitor of a "large family" I. e., "one that con tains no less than three adult male chll- ceedingly strong the pressure of rising dren" providing that the large family Russia has become. and the thriving family are one and Up to a certain point In times of pub- the same. But no access of numbers li. imrKi nncAosIon naelfies the tur- can conmensate the state for lack of the I vminnt siomonts. When that point is elements of Intelligence, moral and ma- Eastern press in a congratulatory tone I past, concession adds to tneir iury. xeriai growtn in tne ramus . iveacmng mentions, the fact as being due to the Unless all signs fall it is past in nus- mis point, we nave come to a conciu- unflagglng industry of Mr. Price, who. sia now. and M. W Itte's appointment, sion tnat it would oe wen to aoiae oy by his thrifty habits and attention to will demonstrate the czars weakness since it is ot more reai vaiue 10 me "business." has within less than three without gaining him friends, it is aiso race and the nation tnan an or ine years been able to pay off about 51.000,- I worth noting that peace is not iiKejy to loose statements tnat nave oeen made strengthen Nicholas at home, tie must in recent years upon "race suicide. make enormous concessions to the Jap aiipso. nf course, and that Is bad: but to hnvA the hundreds of thousands of Judge Frazer Is taking hold of mat- 000 in debts Incurred in the previous failure and at the same time accumu late another million or more. As a matter of coldblooded fact. Price is no Chicago Auditorium Annex, v.tr. r.n 178 Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex-Globe News Depot, 260 Main .street. Baa Antonio, Tex. Louis Book and Cigar Co.. 521 East Houston street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rlck. 903-912 Seventeenth street; Harry D. Ott. 1563 Broadway; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Plfteenth street. Colorado Springs, Colo. Howard H. Bell. Des Moines. Io. Moses Jacobs, S09 Firth street. Dulnth. Minn. G. Blackburn. 215 West Su perior street. Goldfleld, Ncv. C. Malone. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles Harry Drapkin; B. E. Amos, 514 West Seventh street. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; L. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue South. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, SO" Superior fctreeU New York City I. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston. Fourteenth nnd Franklin streets. Ogden F. R. Godard and Meyers & Har top. D L.. Boyle. Omaha Barttalow Bros., 1C12 Farnam: Magcath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam; Mc Laughlin Bros.. 21C South 14th; McLaughlin & Holtz. 1515 Farnam. Sacramento. Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 429 K street. Salt Lako Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second street South; Frank Hutchison. Yellowstone. Tark, Wyo. Canyon Hotel. Lake Hotel. Yellowstone Park Assn. Long Beach B. E. Amos. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co., 740 Market street; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter;" L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand: F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market: Frank Scott. 80 Ellis; N. Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand. St. Louis, Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company, 800 Olive street. Washington, D. C. P. D. Morrison. 2132 Pennsylvania avenue. PORTLAND, SATURDAY, JULY 15. 1905. LET THERE BE ACCURATE STATE MENT. The Oregonlan has not wished to comment on Senator Mitchell's case. It feels now however, that it may say a word, by way of remark on an arti cle that appears In the Roseburg Plain dealer. That paper has continually op posed judicial Inquiry Into the matters Before the United States Court at Port land at the present term. It now gays of Senator Mitchell: What. then, did the old leader do that the wolf pack tore him to pieces? The. wolves pay. "He expedited thoc claims." Is "expe diting" a claim, that if, having it advanced more entitled to credit for his oerform- disloyal, or. at least not very loyal, sol- ters pertaining to or growing out of the Pfwtnfflee 41 .v. , (. I iAr rotnminr to loin the revolutionary 1 estaoiishment of a Juvenile Court in 1 xtii.c man lb iiic liiiu umin. iiiuiiiciui 1 -.. who skins his victims out of enough money to swell his own bank roll into phenomenal proportions. This practice of applying the legiti mate term "business" to the illegiti mate calling of the gambler is most pernicious, and has a tendency to give the latter a standing to which his call ing does not entitle him. Not nil of the tainted money bears the odor of kero sene, and a man who takes money from others without rendering them an equivalent is a gambler, regardless of whether his name is Lawson, Canfleld, Gates. Price or Sully. movement, would be worse. History presents few Instances of rulers con fronted with problems more dangerous than the Czar's. It Is unfortunate for himself and doubly unfortunate for his this city in a manner that indicates personal interest In the work. His In quiry into the work' as pursued during his late visit to Denver has already developed a satisfactory solution of the country that he is not better equipped old question. "What shall be done with to solve them. CHARITIES AND CORRECTIONS. Ldke many very large things, the National Conference of Charities and Corrections had a small beginning. In May. 1872. representatives from Wis consin. Illinois and Michigan met in Chicago to discuss questions about the treatment of the dependent and defect ive classes. Being mdstly state officials. they took up prison management, care of the insane In public hospitals, and similar matters. Private enterprises for social betterment, like college set' tlements. were either outside their in terest or did not then exist. The first really National meeting to discuss charities and corrections took place in New York as a section of the Ameri can Social Science Association, and It was not till 1879 that the conference held its first separate session. This was In Chicago. Since then the annual meetings have steadily grown In im portance and scope. Life Insurance, public and domestic hygiene, play grounds for schools, ward politics, re mote as they may seem from that char ity which "hopeth all things, believeth all things, endureth all thlugs," are fa miliar topics at these meetings. Charity is organized and scientific. It still hopes, with St. Paul:. but It Is far from believing all things. Charles Lamb's Injunction to "Give and ask no questions" it has rejected as a counsel of wrath. "He that giveth unto the poor lendeth," not unto the Lord, our instructed age believes, but unto the devil. Giving without inquiry is an In vestment at usurious rates In sin, mis. ery and crime. Investigation is the basis of charity. "Raking into the bowels of unwelcome truth" Is the be ginning of social betterment. Like all other scientific work, scientific charity eschews self-deception., sentimentality and illusion; and. having laid a solid OUR NEGLECTED STATE. The report of the transportation com mittee of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, printed elsewhere. Is a most thorough and comprehensive pre sentation of a subject that concerns every resident of our great state. Noth ing is misrepresented, and nothing Is overdrawn. As a matter of fact, it Is merely a summing up and compilation of a long list of indignities and griev ances under which Portland and Ore gon have labored so long that patience has been practical!' exhausted. Washington has belabored the rail roads at every session of the Legisla ture since It was admitted to state hood, and It has been rewarded by a mileage nearly double that of Oregon, a state which has permitted the railroads to do very much as they please. Taxes are lighter on railroad property In this state than In any other Pacific Coast state, and yet the railroads continue to expand their operations In Washington, and with such expansion increase the population and wealth of the state. Ef fect has followed cause so closely that there Is not an intelligent man in either state who does not know that it Is the transportation facilities afforded by the Hill roads that have given Washington her present lead over Oregon. As stat ed 1n the report, we have been for fifty years endeavoring to develop our state, and have not made the progress that has been made In other states less fa vored by Nature but more favored by the Tallroads. In permitting the rail roads to sacrifice our Interests by form ing alliances for the purpose of retard ing railroad extension In terrltoy where It Is sadly needed, we have silently agreed to the perfecting of a monopoly which has utterly failed to reciprocate. Railroad-building In Oregon has not been held up or retarded by reason of adverse railroad legislation, high taxes or lack of a productive country on which to draw for business. It has been held up because the profits of the roads already In operation were so ex travagantly large that, rather than Jeopardize them In any way, the Wall street managers of the Oregon railroads the boys?" Judge Llndsley. of Denver, who set the example In dealing with boys who come under the ban of the law. which Judge Frazer is industri ously following, will be in this city In a few days and give further aid In get ting the work of the Juvenile Court established. He will be warmly wel comed In the Interest of the future citi zenship of the state. Decimation of the ranks of youthful convicts in the state's prison will surely follow these efforts In behalf of boys who-are prone to mis chief but without criminal intent. Common sense and understanding of boy nature and love for. or at least an Interest In. boys are the essential re quirements for thus work. It Is pre ventive, not remedial, and appeals for support to all good citizens. 0REGQN0Z0NL j Special Notice. Hiram Hayneld. of Grass Valley. Or., sends word that he has matriculated in a spelling: school at Cow Creek Aca demy, to try to Improve on his ortho graphy, which has been criticised by "Constant Reader." He freely admits that his spelling has not been what might be expected of a grown man. and he hopes that a course of a week or so in the old blue-backed spelling book will benefit him and enable him to give Is views on current questions of Na tional interest in a manner that will pass muster at the annual spelling bee on Cow Creek. "I awlways strive to plees," writes HI, "and Iff yew give mee time He beat my daughter. Jane Ma rlar. necks spelling B." But he goe3 on to say that even his bad spelling Is a little more like the King's English than the following letter which he has received from a Norwegian settler whose promissory note he holds: Der air J haf revived your Later and J is orl J haf not cud mlt my nots J haf axpakting money for tva monts but have not reseved hvat haf coromen and J bag If you Pllse voa car ml one oder mont J haf one vlteplne ciam for sal and per upn kvickest J can haf the mm astlmeted eo J hops J can haf al satled In stdea of one mont. Pllse du the bast you cxn for me. A disappointed contributor to an Eastern periodical with the. sub-title of "A Journal of Information for Lit erary Workers." closes his lines with these confessions: t Into a new field I have dipped: O. who can match My lovely batcn Of harsh, soft-phrased rejection slips? The probability Is that a person wno tries to rhyme "dipped" with "slips Is not to be matched by anybody now In the literary field, no matter how lovely a oaten 01 siuii. ne may scim iu mo editors. ine colored murderer who killed a dozen people on board a vessel from UtUIa Island, off the Honduran const, has been lynched. The news of this final chapter In as bloody a tragedy as was ever recorded Is accompanied by the explanatory statement that "the laws of the Island forbid capital pun Ishment. and it was this fact that caused the lynching." There are great many places throughout the world where lynching Is engaged in not becauss the laws forbid capital punishment, but because the lawyers Interfere with Its being administered where needed. Lynching Is always brutal and repugnant to civilized peo ple, but In the case of this wholesale murderer, who has just met his fate, no other adequate punishment could be inflicted. The same good reason will excuse a great many other cases where the crime was so flagrant as to make the end justify the means. According to tradition, the manage ment of the frontier social hops always insisted that the guests who assembled to exchange good cheer were politely requested to leave their shooting-irons out In the corral. Thl was, perhaps, not Intentionally a reflection on the manners of the guests, but merely precaution against accidents. Some thing similar seems to have been over looked by Sweden when she first- ex on the calendar and taken up out of its reg- basis of fact, builds upon It. In order haw nuletlv laid down whenever rival tended the glad hand to Kaiser Will Mint nr-nfr w-mnirtorrwl 1 r r trnlr rtfrr fhA I a 1 At a a i 1 I w l 10 juvesusaie morougniy ana ouua en- romjK n-unir a club over them nnd told ,am Ior sne IS now ver mucn a,s duringly. charity organizes. tunm ,n w vitMn H9in hnnn turbed over the size of the fleet which ular order, considered to be work before the department? The claim is on the list for pat ent already, and will. In all probability, be patented when It ls reached. The claim 1, In reality, a fraudulent claim, but the old leader does -not know this- fact. His partner may know It, but his partner amurcs him it ls honest. Ho believes his partner and has the claim advanced, expedited. What has he done? He has not secured a patent to a Iraudulcnt claim; it would have been patented anyway. Then the whole crime for which the wolves have destroyed him was the fact that he asked the. Commissioner to advance the claim ahead of itn regular order. Of this sophistry The Oregonlan will say little. Unquestionably the 'claims were fraudulent Mr. Mitchell proba bly did not Inquire Into this aspect of the case: nor did the prosecution. In the course of the trial, for that was an other branch of the Inquiry, not then directly before the courL The inquiry simply was whether Senator Mitchell had or had not received money for ser vices rendered by him to individuals in relation to matters in which the United States was a party. To do this thing a Senator or Representative is specially prohibited by law, and heavy penalty is attached. Such was the prosecution. In the case against Senator Mitchell. On this point, and on this alone, the Jury' returned Its verdict. There should be no misrepresentation, nor obscuration, of the real issue. The matter is too grave. LAWSON, GAMBLER AND ORATOR. It Is not exactly a case of the splke talled sprite with the cloven hoof re buking sin when Mr. Lawson inveighs against the evils of Wall street, but There are features' of similarity in the operation. Mr. Lawson, falling to keep within the rays of the spot light as' it nvas trained on him through a monthly magazine, ls now touring the country and at one-night stands telling the peo ple of the dangers that beset them. The Boston man with the matchless vo cabulary has undoubtedlK in some re spects performed a useful mission, in exposing his former pals. Incidentally, while he was doing this he has spread over his gambling operations a glamor of respectability which has a tendency to legitimatize them in the mind of -the people. A friend came to Lawson one day and told the great plunger that he was a ruined man unless Lawson took hold of sugar and boosted the market. Law eon might have gone down to Canfield's and coppered the ace, or put his money on the high card, or even played poker with. Addlcks. and won enough to save the man from ruin. There would be nothing spectacular In a performance of that nature, so Lawson, according to his own etory. manipulated the market until he had forced prices up and saved his friend from ruin. This was gam bling in its most pernicious form, for It ls the widely-heralded success of plungers like Lawson and John W. Gates that drags into the speculative net vast hordes of "pikers" and small salaried men whose all is eoon swal lowed up by the system. It is not necessarily the particular "system" en countered by Lawson. but the system of gambling, which is making financial and moral wrecks out of thousands of men in all walks of life. When the fame of Sully, the cotton Almsgiving is not her principal work; she Is more occupied in removing the need for alms. It is well to give food to the poor widow with ten small chil dren; it is better to give her the oppor tunity and the resolution to earn her own food. It is immeasurably better to teach the ten children to depend on their own brain and muscle than to habituate them to expect to lean on somebody else. It is well to give relief to the starving family of a sick work man; it is better to give the man light for his eyes, air for his lungs, and wholesome food for his stomach, while he Is still able to work. He can then take care of his own family. Charity, therefore, studies how to light and ven tilate factories proving ultimately to the capitalist that money spent upon healthful working conditions returns to his purse multiplied. She opens cook ing schools for workmen's wives, and fights King Alcohol, with good bread and juicy steaks more effectually than prohibltlonlsm fights with votes. Char ity believes in a race eugenic and eu peptic; she begins to work for It upon the unborn child. She teaches mother hood to slatternly mothers; opens play. grounds; supports kindergartens: fights base politics, which fattens on the de struction of the poor; wars with all evil and fosters all good. Charity includes correction, but is more- In her largest and most beneficent aspect, charity is prevention. Her goddess Is Hygela; her creed Is prophylaxis. ANOTHER CHANGE. Last Monday the Czar received M. Muravieff, his peace plenipotentiary, coldly, and expressed a fear that the strain of going to Washington would be too much for his health. Wednes day evening Foreign Minister Lams dorff told a diplomatist that M. Mura vieff was going into a decline. Thurs day he fell. Herein enlightened public opinion scores another triumph. M. Muravieff lacked every qualification for a peace envoy except the Czar's favor and his reactionary prejudices The Russian newspapers believed he was certain to break off the negothv tlons. either by intention or blunder. and they have attacked him unspar ingly. The peace party, which includes all Russia outside of the small Grand Ducal clique, has insistently begged the Czar to recall his appointment and name M. Wltte. who Is a man of ad vanced Ideas, In favor of peace, and an advocate of a Japanese alliance for Russia. Twice the Czar has pointedly refused: now he yields, and M. Wltte Is to be plenipotentiary. Unless the Czar changes his mind again, this means that the negotiations for peace will be serious on Russia's part, with a disposition to concede rather than higgle. M. Wltte ls aware. no one better, of the disastrous outlook for Russia in the Orient and her Immi nent peril at home. iA'ery day new sections of the country fall into an archy; the loyal troops find It Increas Ingly difficult to suppress Insurrection and riot: the revolution Is spreading in the army Itself. In the Orient, victory is out of the question. It would be dlf Public sentiment has at times been worked up to a pitch where adverse legislation and even a boycott were not Improbable, but. as stated in the re port, trouble of this kind has for more than ten years been silenced by prom ises. Down the list from McNeil to-O'Brlen, ejvery man In charge of the O. R. & N. Interests In this state recognized the necessity for extending the mileage of the road: but their wishes have never been carried out. and. as soon as spas modic demonstrations of public senti ment were quieted by promises. Wall street lmmedlatey ceased to take any- further Interest In the rich field that was producing such enormous reve nues. Fourteen years ago Chief Engi neer Kennedy, of the O. R. & N., in one of the numberless reports that have been made on various neglected dis tricts of Oregon, said: "Within a few years after adequate transportation fa cilities are provided all the country- tributary will be occupied and devel oped." It ls less than ten years since E. E. Lytle began demonstrating the truth of Kennedy's statement, and only about eight years since A. B. Hammond put through the Astoria &. Columbia River Railroad, and. while neither of those properties runs through country as rich as much of that which ls still neglected, both of the roads mentioned have paid handsomely. The report of the committee as print ed has set forth the facts as they exist. It shows what has been accomplished In adjoining states less favored than Oregon, and It also shows the Jeopardy in which our Interests are placed by the aggression of roads coming up from the south. The question now confronting us Is too serious to admit of another ten years of promises, but inaction. If hos tile legislation. Increased taxes and the creation of a railroad commission will cause the railroads to do for us what they have done for Washington, an early start on this kind of a policy should be made. The railroad company which has taken 533,358.361 net earnings out of Portland territory In ten years should be made to expend at least a small portion of those earnings In open ing up a few of the Isolated regions which are fully as rich In possibilities as formerly were those now in the pro ducing column. is trailing along In the wake of the Kaiser's yacht. Of course Sweden glad to see the Emperor, but the rfze of the pack of war dogs which he brought with him has caused some un easiness for fear that they might break loose. SECRETARY HITCHCOCK: THREE KILLED IN TRAINWRECK The Man Who Docs His ork Quietly No Grandstand Plays. Indianapolis News. Collision Near Chicago Also Seri ously Injures Sixteen Persons. CHICAGO. July 14. A passenger train . 3 i . c-fv.on nn t chleaco & Eastern Illinois itaii- -L.UUC is saia wiesc urtju 1 r . V,. t ,ni,t,t Allen Hitchcock, secreiary asuburban traIn at gteiger. HI.. ior. uut a gooa wora ougut iu sam t today. Three persons were killed .;ana the quiet gentleman who has been work- even" injured. Some of the injured' may inir for vears to clean ud the department ji. Thn ensrlnes of both trains were de over whteh h nresldes. and to whose mnilshed. and the first coach on tha sub io i ft, ft tbat ven i iirhan train was smashed. The dead are: a United States Senator has been convict ed of violating the law for hire. When a Cabinet officer pursues his Investigations even within the doors of the United States Senate wc may be sure that he la a man of courage. Secretary Hitchcock Is not a "grand stand player." and not at all a man to make a . fuss about what he does. He talks little, refuses or neglects to take the papers Into his confidence, makes few speeches, does not hesitate to offend powerful Interests when they stand In his way, though he does not boast about having done so. and seems to be entirely willing to work without having the public eye on him. His chief anxiety Is lest the thieves may get away, be warned before the trap ls sprung, and lest the evidence may escape him. So he has been patient. though persistent, and has used the ut most care In his Investigations. The re sult Is. not only that we know that there have been gigantic land frauds, but also thnt ttb linw evorv rnn to believe that the men guilty of them no Wuter how hlshly placed will be punished. It seems to us that such services as these should be recognized as of very creat importance: Mr. Hitchcock is known to have been at work for years, occa sionally the public has had some Inkling of what was going on. but for the most part the Secretary has kept his own coun sel. He has been attacked oy some ot tne leading men of certain communities, and even the people of those communities have been severe In. their criticisms of Mr. Hitchcock. It may even be that In cer tain cases they had a grievance. But the Secretary was after big game, and his sole purpose was to serve the people by nrotectlntr the public lands, and by wrest Ing. as far as possible, from the hands of the thieves those that had already oeen JAMES LYKE. engineer of suburban train. GEORGE EPSTELN. unicago. pharles HORN. Crete. 111. The seriously injured are: John Miller, Chicago Heights, in.. one, wuku, Ferdinand Heyn. Chicago. bacK ana head Injured: James CrooKs. intcago, back Injured; Dwlght I. Wood, brakeman on suburban train. leg Droxen ana bruised: A. Gllmore. engineer on St. Louis train, shoulder dislocated and inter nal Inujrles; F. H. Ross, wirago, suuui der Injured, arm broken and Internal In juries. The cause of tne collision was . . ... . . 1 .v..itr.V train nntrt swltcn wmcn leu wie wnuuf. a siding on which the suburban train was standing. That the switch was opened by some one either carelessly or with malicious Intent is tne ineory i un cials. Search Is being made for a laborer at Steger, upon whom suspicion rests. The man disappeared soon after tho tvreck. A warrant has oeen sworn buk for his arrest. Three Killed in Wreck In Towa. MARSHALLTOWN. Ia.. July 14.-Thred men were Kiuea ana iwo piu'i 1 injured in a freight wreck on the Iowa rntrni Railroad, near Richland. Ia.. to day. The dead are: Jesse Long, engineer; William West, nreman: aamuei uuij, brakeman. The injured are: jaigineer . K. Williams and Fireman w. 1. Jic.ua hon. All the dead live at Oskaloosa, la. TOBACCO REPORTS DOUBTED Why was not Epstein, who beat his wife on a public street in this city last Monday evening In full view of a curi ous crowd, haled before the court and thence to the whlpplng-post? A better subject for the lash could hardly be imagined than this low. vulgar brute would have furnished. Instead of this, however, he Is merely to figure as de fendant (perhaps by default) In an ordi nary divorce suit, the result of which will leave him at liberty to marry. In a few months, the woman for whom he forsook and beat his wife. Here's hop ing he may yet get what Is coming to him at the whipping-post, and his ac complice what is coming to her as the result of her turn at Epstein's marital discipline. A grand sight and an inspiring one was that presented by the fleet of fine river craft, gaily decked In bunting and making the air resonant with steam whistle calling to steam whistle as It left Its moorings yesterday morning and steered toward the Columbia River with 2000 doctors aboard. The day was made to order by the powers that rule the Incomparable climate of Oregon. The mountains, with heads uncovered, gave the excursionists stately greeting as they passed: the great river gave the craft free passage, and hospitality did the rest toward making the day an en joyable and memorable one. The gift of J100 each to the 25 school teacners In Falrnaven, .Mass.. Dy Standard OH magnate, to be used for vacation purposes. Impels Leslie's Weekly to suggest that some other philanthropist should "go and do like wise Tor a group of tired and wornout preachers." This good work has ben begun already by some of the Los An geles churches, which have sent their pastors on European trips. The Rev. Robert J. Burdette. who lives In the modest mansion occupying the highest point on Orange Grove Boulevard otherwise known as "illlllonaries Mile." at Pasadena, is one of these fa vored few. Brother Burdette has start ed for Europe, and his Sunday letters en route to the Los Angeles Times snow that he Is being refreshed by the trip. If upon his return he delivers a lec ture about his vacation. In his well known style, the general public is like ly to profit still more by the generoslty of his church. Just because ex-Governor Timothy T. Geer rode In from Salem yesterday on the blind baggage, some of his polit ical opponents may insinuate that he. was saving his ticket so that he could soli out to a scalper, but the Governor declares that he got on the wrong end of the train by mistake, after It had started. He enjoyed the scenery, though he says the rear-end observa tion car is more comfortable. The Old Dipper Gourd. I've drank the rarest sparkling wines From sunny hills of France. Each bubbling bead a Hit of vines And flowers and festive dance: I've drained the richest ruddy brew From fair Italla's vales. Each eager drop reflecting true Romance and tender tales: But richer, rarer, more divine Than any draught of co3tly wine. To me that drink I once adored Cold water from the dipper gourd! Some day T may return to quaff The liquid Joy it gives. And hear the gurgling waters laugh Where endless Summer lives, ' In flowery Southland far away From weary walls of men. Beside the calm, untroubled bay Wlthln my native glen: And then I know I'll quite forget The cup that cannot kill regret. To drain that liquor once adored Cold water from the dipper gourd! Perhaps I'll find the scene Is changed And strangers dwelling there. Where once my childish footsteps ranged The meadows free and fair; Perhaps to walls the trees have turned And whirring wheels go round. Where once the robin's call I learned A song m every sound; But I can bear with anything If 1 but find the same old spring. To sip that nectar once adored Pure water from the dipper gourd! ROBERTUS LOVE. Charge Thnt Trust .lianipuitti.- Them Is Being Investigated--CT.-AST4TXOTON. July 14. Through tha stolen. The effect of his work will te receipt of numerous communications irom, good In many ways. It will make hon- tne south and statements appearing In tho esty fashionable for a time, and will 1m- press at various times that the statistics prove the tone of the whole public serv- of tne Department of Agriculture on to- Ice. Mr. Hitchcock does not. apparently, Dacco were being manipulated in tne m care for notoriety, but no man can be In- terests of the so-called tobacco trust, Sec senstble to praise for doing his duty. At retary Wilson has been making an Inquiry least appreciation 01 services renaerea i Jnto the subject, rending tne inveais. somethlng which most of us crave. Sec- I tlon te publication of the tobacco statls- retary HltchcocK nas periormeu many tlcs of tne aeveral districts win De uem Important services, and he deserves well up although the regular monthly figures of the country. bv states will be given out on Monday- There Is much to be done yet. for tne land frauds are of vast extent, and they It was stated at the department today have been going on for years. But we that speciai agents have been sent to tha thlnlc tnat tne man now inveausuuns dark tobacco districts ot uennessee iuu them will continue his war. and that Kentucky for the purpose or verifying or when he gets through the Land Office correcting the department's figures. This will be purged of corruption and of the acton jir. Hyde, the chief statistician, men guilty of It. Further than that, we gaId was jn deference to the sentiment suggest that If there are any other Whch nad been engendered that the de- mcmhors nf Coneress who have been fliir were wholly Incorrect. dickering with the land thieves, they had Mr Hyde has been given direct charge of oetter iook out for tnemseivcs. the investigation, wnicn il is expecu. m be concluded within two or three weeKs. His Brother Had Spat With Wilson vpw YORK July 13. Walter C. Hub bard, president of the New York Cotton Exchange, today sent the following com munication to T.ne ASauuau "Permit me to ask you very kindly to correct a misapprehension ot the press tn mv letter to President Roosef velt concerning the disclosures In the De- HONEST, NO DOUBT. But Though Long; on Nerve, He Was Short on History. Ellensburg (Wash.) Capital. While at Portland a few days ago James Stevenson fell In with a young stranger while lunching on the Fair fc.wn.iv.a. ..u ... -.i. ....... - -' ..-o t hovA naver ersauon tne youin, wno uiamieu iu 1 iai uucui. --o- .,v . ., ,at from Chicago, took special pains toTip written to secretary vSuu. ur" th West, and everything in it. tie That a bunch of Butte miners desired to corral a bevy of bright Illinois schoolteachers Is but another bit of evi dence that desirable wives are In de mand where the male population ' Is largely in excess of female. More than thirty years ago a cargo of eligible women were Imported into the sparsely populated Puget Sound country and se- I cured husbands within a few months. No doubt 10,000 positions as housewives are available on the Pacific Coast at this time. was heralded around the world, I ficuit to Imagine why Nicholas should FATE OF TILE UNFIT. Much is being said in these days In. relation to the practical promotion of eugenics. Medical men are strong in denunciation of the stupidity and crim inality that not only permit, but en courage, the perpetuation of the unfit. while scientists delving deep for cause of race degeneracy find and proclaim It In conditions so palpably preventable or controllable that human Intelligence stands Indicted for criminal indifference in that such conditions remain to curse the world by their fruits. Within a week two strong statements from medical sources have been deliv ered in this city upon this subject, the burden of each being that the degener ate, the insane and the criminal should be done away with promptly and painlessly, and the physically unfit be Members of the American Medical Association are to be felicitated on the last day of their official stay upon hav ing made the finest river trip In the world un'der weather conditions Incom parably fine. It Is worth noting that, contrary to the prediction of knockers, Portland's food caterers did not run up prices with the opening of the Fair. No one hears visitors complain of being robbed. Possibly It has Just occurred to the Czar that, when an unsatisfactory peace is concluded. M. Wltte will be a good choice for scapegoat. Here's to you. Captain Peary. Even if you don't find It. we hope you will return safe and sound in the good ship Roosevelt. . Disposing of the Grafters. New York Evening Post. Undoubtedly there will be great sym pathy for Mr. Mitchell In Washington He merely did what dozens of other Senators and Congressmen are doing all the time ignoring their real re sDonsibllltles until they become con vinced that their first duty is to their constituents. It Is a pity that In this case the conviction was secured on what ls rather a technical point In stead of on tho direct Issue of fact as to whether Senator Mitchell was or was not one of the land thieves Secretary Hitchcock Is prosecuting so relent lessly. None the less, the conviction will do a vast amount .of good, be sides making a dozen or more Sena tors tremble In their shoes lest the public have further reasons for seeing In the Senate a resort tor law-Dreatters as well as a "rich man's club." The snectaclo of two of their kind. Burton and Mitchell, actually convicted will cause people to rejoice the country over that grafters In high political places arc being caught up with. l-urtner more, the Mitchell trial has given most valuable insight into the attl tude of mind of such as he. It has been Impossible to convince him that he did wrong; the whole trouble was that Secretary Hitchcock had a grudge of some kind against him and that his law partner betrayed him. The Peerless 3Iulc. From the Chula. (Mo.) Stvrt. Hti nobl ears and maly nose. His itllstenlnjr coat and polished toes. . His fine straight legs and ribs of steel. His tnuiclf tense as when you feel A monster warship's Iron keel. Ills tendons of the strength It brings To twist a million cat&ut strings. He drags the battle engines forth And proud to prove on field hit worth. He dtea like one of noble birth. A faith portrayed In form and face. To divorce mountain from their base. He dlf at last a giant klnr Of all the creatures earth can bring. And leaves so child bU sralM to Jinx. declared that the people were slow, knew little of the world In general and were really hardly worth taking Into considera tion. The Exposition, he declared, was total failure, and he concluded his whlrl- . n nor t no seauei 10 uiu Hfh him ronducted by my brother. Samuel T. Hubbard, when president of the New York Cotton Excnange. My iuj was prompted simply by the recent reve lations, and had for its purpose aolely tol wind ot denunciation by saying: "I tell make a clear statement ol me you this show Is a fizzle, and Lewis and of our exchange. Clark are fakers and ought to be exposed by every honest man. Mr. Stevenson was too mucn amused to get mad. and he let the young man fin ish his harangue, when he turned to him with one of his penetrating glances and Cheatham Confers With Officials. WASHINGTON. July II. Richard Cheat ham, secretary ot ine auumc... , trtdav was in lengthy conter- slmply said for he was surprised "My J,nce wjth District Attorney Beach and dear boy. are you In earnest?' iIr j-0ran. acting chief of the Secret "Never more so. snapped tne reilow. Service Bureau, regarding tne recent -ui-"Don't you know." said Mr. Stevenson. ton investigation. Mr. Cheatham pro- In a kindly tone, that Lewis and Clark poae3 to remain here for some time, ana have been dead for many, many years. wjjj assist In the preparation of evidence and this Exposition commemorates their unon which possible criminal prosecutions famous trip to the Pacific?" "Is that true? asked the smart young man in real amazement. "It Is." said Mr. Stevenson. "My friend."' the late kicker said. "I've made an ass of myself: 1 ve learned some thing: I shut up right now, and I'm going to stny shut up. Thank you, and good day." may be based. Before and After. North Yamhill Record. The Eastern press, now that Senator Mitchell Is meeting with reverses, pounce upon him like a pack of hungry wolves upon a lamb. displaying In many Instances the rankest ig norance of the merits and demerits of the BRIEF TELEGRAPHIC NEWS Rear-Admiral Thomas has been detailed s superintendent of the naval training service. Serious disputes have arisen between Brazil and Bolivia about the demarcation of the boundary. Peru will reduce foreign postage on ron'cnnncrs IO ccnus iiiu " ... . matter to 4 cents after September 1. m.o. towi- Donnrtment will establish A school of application for the Instruction of newlv commissioned paymasters. case, all of which, however, has a tendency A bjj haa been Introduced In the Bra to prejudice the higher courts In which Mitch- rnncress offering a prize of 52.000.- ell may yet have a hearing. Had the Ore- t. .ii-rovercr of an efficacious cure would have been Just as demonstrative agalnit hLf accusers. This characteristic of the Amer ican pres Is subject for the bitterest of con. demnatlon. Roseburg Plalndealer. Just so. and you can find men right here in Oregon who have supported Mitch ell. and have taken great pains to see that men were elected to the Legislature favorable to Mitchell's election each time who now clnlm they knew him to be rascal all the time. Strange how some men can turn a double summersault and alight running the opposite direction when for tuberculosis. The committee preparing plans tor trio centennial ol ss.eu.iu "",' , . , i. In New York In 1907. has oeciuea 10 iuu Admiral Togo on his flagship. Captain Warren, a cattle rancher ana miner, aged about 70 years, was shot and Instantlv killed on Thursday evening by a Mexican halfbreed in his employ neat San Carlos. Ariz. The Younj? People's Christian Union con vention at Hartford. Conn., yesterday de nnt to make Junior unions a part .of tho Roosevelt. Hitchcock and Honey get after National and state unions, paying a tax tha heavy-weight conspirators. of 5 cents a weeK per memuer. swindler In Salt JaKe nas oeen seu- . . . , t ln th. TTIti-ii Tn- Some Wont Desert Him. IOI? ' t-. V Im hViv- Iaian rcser " tn rprpints as a land agent, and thus A Portland paper remarked that men making himself liable unuer reaerai un. whom SenatorMltchcll made politically are lcavinsr him as rats desert a sinking ship. That ls Just like the Mitchell crowd. All thev cared for the ring was tne money- there was In It. and now they are ashamed of their own colors. But there are many, about 7t. who will not desert Mitchell, for the particular reason that they arc In the same boat. The others were hut politi cians of the lower order. A Glorious Chance. Philadelphia Inquirer. If Mr. Carnegie will kindly loan Rus sia the cash to pay her Indemnity ob ligations, he will have a most glorious chance to die poor. Portland Cement Ranks High. Kansas City Star. Portland would appear to be an ap propriate place to cement the bonds ot peace between Russia and Japan. Port land cement ranks high. Sonnet to Sleep. William Wordsworth. A flock of sheep that leisurely pas? by One after one: the sound of rain and bees Murmuring; the fall of rivers, wlnda and seas; Smooth fields: white sheets of water, and pure sky 1 have thought of all by turns and yet to He Sleepless, and soon the small birds' melodic Must hear, first uttered from my orchard trees. And the first cuckoo'a melancholy cry. Even thus last night and two nights more I lay And could not win thee. Sleep, by any stealth. So do not let me wear tonight away. Without thee what la all the morning's wealth? Come. blesed barrier between day and day- Dear mother ot fresh thoughts and Jorous Tho hodv of Emmeline Schlldlosska. wife nf n Pole who was employed In a barber shop at Belmont. Mass., has been found In a gully with the neaa nearly severeu. Her husband Is believed to be on the way to California. The Navy Department will form a flo tilla of torpedo-boats to be attached to the Coast squadron. The torpedo-boat destroyers heretofore attached to tho Coast" squadron will be attached to tho battleship squadron. Samuel Plunkett. a stockgrower near the Roosevelt reservoir on Upper Salt River. Ariz., and an employe named E. A. Kennedy were murdered and robbed on Wednesday and their bodies found yes terday. Former Mexican employes are suspected. Walter Sullivan, a passenger on the steamer Manchuria, for Manila, was found to be missing on the arrival of the steamer at Honolulu. He was a gradu ate of Yale, and a son- of D. D. Sullivan, a banker of Austin. Tex., and was on his way to visit his sister, the wife ot Colo nel Clem, at Manila. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kerouac. of St. Herbert, N. Y.. who had only been mar ried a year, have been drowned together In Lac Grande Fouche by the foundering of a boat In which they wero rowing. Mrs. Dumont. a slater of Mrs. Kerouac, who" accompanied them, was picked up alive after having been In the water for two or three hours. El W. Warflcld. cashier of the St. Louis County Bank, at Clayton, a suburb of St. Louis, and one of Its wealthiest citizens, shot himself through the head yesterday, dying Instantly. Ill health Is the sup posed cause. He was 60 years old. The Administration building on tho Stony Point (N. Y.) battlefield reservation will be dedicated today, this being th 126th anniversary of the capture of Stony Point by General Anthony Wayne.