THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1906. Entered at the Postofrlce at Portland. Or.. as Becond-CIass Matter. BCBSCBIPTION BATES. f - TTT INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. XI (By Mall or Express.) DAILY. SUNDAY INCLUDED. Twelve montha i $8.00 Six months ..... 4.25 Three montha 2.25 One month .' .75 l-)elivered hy carrier, per year......... 0.00 Delivered by carrier, per month. . i .... . .75 Less time, per week ,20 Sunday, one year 2.50 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday). 1.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year 3.50 HOW To REMIT Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The a. C. Beckwith Special Agency New York, rooms 43-50. Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON BALE. Chlcairo Auditorium Annex, Postofflce News Co.. 17S Dearborn street. Ht. Paul. Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton A Kendrlck, 806-912 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 121 Fifteenth street; I. Welnsteln. ftoldfleld. Not. Frank Sandstrom. Kansas City. Mo. Klcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third. Cleveland, O James Pushaw, 307 Superior street. New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley. Oaden D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1614 Farnam; Mageath Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam: 246 feouth Fourteenth. Katrajiiento, Cal. Sacramento News Co., 430 K street. rialt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second street South; Miss L. Levin. 24 Church street. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons; Berl News Co., 326, South Broadway. Mln lleiro B. E. Amos. Pasadena, Cal. Berl News Co. San . Francisco Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand. Washington. D. C. Ebbltt House. Penn sylvania avenue. rOBTLAND; BATTBDAY, JUNE 28, 1006. EVOLUTION, SAFETY AND SANITY. A Democratic paper tells us that: "Colonel Bryan appears to be regarded cls entirely safe and sane now, although he has not changed his views as to what constitutes true Democracy. The country has simply 'evoluted' up to his breadth of statesmanship." Cefonel Bryan Is on a Journey around -km. world. Tru -world, swmo In him much larger than he had supposed. He finds it contains) many power ful nations, and that the United States is only one of many. The dfcsccvery appears to have affected his thinking, greatly. He says the sil question, which a few years ago lie held paramount to all others, is "a Cead horse." That Is his own expres sion, adopted since he began to travel, and became safe and sane. He finds the world so much bigger than he sup- . posed that he concludes the United States could not maintain gold and sil ver under free coinage at a fixed ratio made by the United States. To main tain this dogma was, however, the sole Issue made by him in his two contests for the Presidency. He stood by that proposition and fell by It. But the coun try has not "evoluted" up to that "breadth of statesmanship." Mr. Bryan has changed his views, therefore, as to -hnt i.nnat!(iitAa "tnia namruipann He, or it, is no longer for free coinage ..rjuilver. jfhe excuse everywhere attempted by apologists Is that the purpose of Mr. Bryan and his followers was to supply the deficiency of gold by free coinage of silver. In the first place, there was '' no deficiency of gold; and In the next place free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 would have expelled all gold and made money scarcer, at the same time debasing It. The proofs from history and experience, as well as from com mon sense, were absolute. Indeed the proposition was so self-evident that no proof was needed. There was no scarcity of gold in the world at large, but a fatuous policy was making gold scarce in the United States. Coinage of silver at a rapid rate and issue of silver paper during many years sent gold In Immense sums to foreign countries, or caused it to be hidden away. The cry that gold was scarce in the United States therefore was Irrational. We had made It scarce. But there was no complaint In other countries of scarcity of gold. Kvery civilized country except our own had gold enough for all the purposes of business and credit. But Bryan and his followers, refused to believe that there was any other country than our own; or at least professed to believe that our country could alone control the ratlosof gold and silver, usedas money, for the whole world. This they made the fun damental principle of their party. It was what "constituted true Democ racy." They had no Idea whatever that the world was as big as Mr. Bryan now finds it. As to increase of gold, now given as excuse for abandonment of silver, the truth is that the gold supply of the world, for ten years prior to 1S96, had increased, as tables of all nations show, at a more rapid rate than it has increased during the ten years since 1896. The world's product increased from $106,163,900 in 1886 to $202,251,600 in 1896, or over 90 per cent. It Is esti mated for this year (1906), on the basis of last year's output, at $350,000,000, or about 73 per cent. Gold, abundant enough everywhere else, ten years ago, had been made scarce in our country by pressing the delusion and folly that culminated in the Bryan campaign of 1896, repeated four years later. If It be said that all this is an old story, like the contents of last year's almanacs, the ready answer is that old stories are mighty good for warning, Instruction, reproof and doctrine, and that among the most valuable things in all archives are the contents of old almanacs. Mr. Bryan and his party will now try to shift the basis of "true democracy" from the silver craze of his former campaigns to an effort to get on the ground taken by President Roosevelt, for regulation of the trusts and con trol of monopolies. Probably, however, there are a great many who will re member Bryan's former campaigns, and entertain a reasonable doubt whether the prophet of the crown of thorns and cross of gold can be a safe and sane man for the Presidency, on any platform. Yet of course, having eeen something of the world, and found out that there are other countries than our own, he has grown broader in his views, and wouldn't now have a plat form based on "the eternal verities" he saw in silver a few years ago. The marvelous thing about the Colfax hearing Is that the Seattle and Tacoma millers and their allies claim that they pay more for wheat than Portland, and yet they can't get it in competition with -Portland. The producer, through some unaccountable perversity, persists et the expense of his own pocket in filing to Portland. The cure for this jtapsy-turvy industrial and financial paradox Is the "Joint rate,' a device by which the O. R. & N. surrenders the largest part of the haul to its competi tors, the Northern Pacific and Great Northern, and permits the Seattle buyer to get Into exclusive O. B. & N. territory at the expense of the O. R. & N. Tet suppose the Joint rate sgoes Into effect, and the O. R. & N., in order to keep the business, cuts rates, for all its Eastern Washington business, in both exclusive and competitive terrl tory; where will Seattle and Tacoma come out? MB. M'CABTNEY'B HEART. The prayer for a clean heart seems to have been answered literally in the case of Mr. McCartney, of Pasadena, though, of course, through human agency. Having inadvertently punc tured himself with a rake tooth and dis tributed some grains of sand over his heart through the wound, he resorted to the surgeons for relief. These learned and skillful artists made a neat in cision in Mr. McCartney's chest about where the historic rib was taken out for Eve's benefit, pulled his heart through the opening, gave it a thorough scrubbing and replaced it. During the operation Mr. McCartney's heart con tinued. to beat its funeral march to the grave without the least interrup tion, and, by all accounts, it will con tinue to beat quite as if it had never seen the light of day. All this puts some strain upon one's credulity, but it is by no means im possible. Modern surgery has done things even more wonderful. After the heart has ceased to beat, for exam pie, its pulsations have been revived by massage and the patient restored to life. The surgeon inserts his hand through an opening made for the pur pose, grasps the organ and imitates its natural rhythmic motion. After a time the hand is withdrawn and the beats continue unaided. This operation has been done more than once. It may be come .of prime importance in cases of so-called heart failure, which are so frequent In modern times. Everybody knows that the latter-day surgeon has not the least difficulty in removing a man s stomach. The vacancy where it was i filled by stretching and splicing the alimentary canal, and the patient passes the remainder of his life happily immune from the possibility of dyspep sia. That remainder Is usually brief, but it makes up in quality what it lacks In quantity. Think of the Joy of eating cucumbers in endless numbers with no fear of cramps. To cut out a piece of the intestine and splice what is left Is an easy Job for the surgeon. He can manufacture a new nose without the least difficulty and make an eye which looks better than the natural one; but there are limits to his art. He cannot cure a cancer; neither can he make hair grow on a bald head. THE POISON INDUSTBY. It required seventeen years of agita tion to pass the Heyburn pure-food bill through the United States Senate. The welfare of the consumer gains the at tention of Congress only after every thing else has been provided for, and then but half-heartedly, with many a timid glance from the members to their masters to see how much they may safely concede to popular clamor. Very likely, however, the consumer gets all the consideration from his representa tive that he deserves, for he is a fear ful, long-suffering creature, created ap parently to be shorn and swindled. He eats what the trusts set before him and asks no questions. He takes tu berculosis in his beef with sweet resig nation and devours tapioca and lamp black for pepper with a humble and contrite heart. Like Mithrldates, King of Pontus, the American consumer has learned to feed on poisons and no doubt he finds in them a kind of nutriment as the sad creatures of the expiring world did in Byron's "Dream." The learned and pious Dr. Day, of Mr. Arch-1 hold's university at Syracuse, says that If all the stories told about our food and drink were true everybody would have been dead long ago. Dr. Day for gets that a goodly portion of us are al ready dead. The multitude of those who have passed over far outnumbers all the living, while a great many more are dying. It is, in fact, a dying world, and who shall say how much the speed of our general demise is accelerated by the poisons which are served up to us in our meat and drink? Nay, even our medicines are not exempt from lethal drugs. When we have a headache they administer to us acetanelld, which para-lj-zes the heart; whereas most people would prefer a good heart to a good head any day. To have too good a head smacks rather of conceit and ac quisitiveness, but who could have too good a heart? Defend us, therefore. UCrom acetanelld in all its sinuous as hwcts, and give us an honest headache instead. Defend us, too, from opium in our toddy. What blacker treachery could be committed against a man than to put opium in his morning bitters "unbe knowst" to him, and by insidious stages and slow degrees make an opium fiend of him? Yet this, according to Congressman Mann, of Illinois, is ex actly what some of our purveyors of soothing and stimulating draughts sys tematically do. The trick of Hamlet's uncle, who stole upon his father sleep ing of an afternoon under an apple tree and poured Juice of cursed hebenon in the porches of his ear, could not com pare in miqiuty with the deed of the man. who sells us laudanum for stom ach bitters. Nor is this the worst of it. A grown man is suposed to be able to look out for himself; the babies,, are helpless. The dopes, the poisons, the devilish potions which are administered by ignorant parents and nurses to keep Infants sttll at night and hush their howls by day they have to swallow and take the consequences. And those con sequences, as the records of number less Coroners Juries show, are death, notwithstanding Dr. Day. The Heyburn bill as it passed the Senate was satisfactory to the friends of pure-food legislation, but, like the Beverldge hill for meat inspection, it did not, for some mysterious reason, satisfy the House. A substitute meas ure wa there prepared which left out most of the vital features of the Hey burn bill, but which retained provisions for making the labels on bottles and packages state the quantity of poison In their contents and for compelling manufacturers to mark canned goods and the like with their correct weight. This Is the bill now before the House, and Mr. Mann delivered a speech the other day In favor of'lt which he illus trated with enough adulterated and poisoned goods to stock a corner gro cery. With the report of Mr. Mann's speech comes the suspicious statement that now the enemies of pure-food leg islation are fighting for the Heyburn bill. Why are they doing so? The Heyburn bill is incomparably worse for the poison industry than the House substitute. Why should those - who profit by doping the public with filth and disease in the form of food and drink now favor the measure which they formerly opposed and oppose the measure which they then favored? Have they experienced a change of heart? Do they perceive the inquity of their huslness at last and wish to unite in its destruction? Not .at all. Their project is to play fast and loose. They purpose to turn their powerful lobby against whatever measure may be un der Immediate consideration. Their game is perpetually to urge the substi tution of something else for the 'thing in hand, and thus forever prevent pure food legislation. What honest manufacturer, either of food or medicines, could object to stat ing in the labels the exact amount of arsenic, opium or other poison which they contain? This is all that the House bill requires, and the require ment is certainly reasonable. What honest man could object to marking his parcels with their correct weight? If the consumer is to get only half pounds when he buys pounds, , why should he not pay half dollars ana call them dollars? The goose and the gan der ought to fare alike In this business. If the consumer Is to be forever bun coed he must assert his inalienable right to bunco in return. If we are to have no legislation in favor of fair dealing, we must resort to the primal lex tallonis. He that poisons his fel low-man shall himself drink poison, and he that gives short weight shall re ceive short pay. The worst feature of the filth and fcunco industries is that they put the dealer who wishes td be honest at an enormous disadvantage. How can he sell pure goods in competition with those who deal out dope and dirt? How can pure sugar compete with sand? What show has cider vinegar in the market against vitriol? The demand for pure food Is really part of the fight agralnst graft. So long as the public submit to be swindled there will be plenty to swindle them. So long as they look on meekly while the poison lobby manipulates Congress, Just so long will there be inaction. A clamor as loud and insistent as that for rate regulation would 6ena the pure-food bill through Congress like an arrow to its mark. THE WAR ON PRIVILEGE. The American Nation is today under going a revolution the full extent and importance of which will not be unfler stood or appreciated until it shall be viewed from the distance of a half cen tury or more, after its ends shall have been accomplished. There is now in full sway in this entire country an up rising of the unprivileged classes against the privileged classes, and the movement will not stop until we have achieved the realization of that funda mental principle of our Government that all men are created equal, and that they are endowed with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberfy and the pursuit of happi ness. Steadily we have been drifting away from that principle in practical application, but now, with a short turn, we are coming back to it, swiftly and surely. As was very clearly Bhown by Shailer Mathews in the opening chapters of his history of the French Revolution, that conflict was not a revolt against abso lutism, not an uprising against mon archy, but a revolt against inequalities, abuses and special privileges. In France the nobility were practically exempt from the payment of taxes, but lived upon exactions from the common ers. To the nobility and the wealthy commoners were granted special privi leges of various kinds which they en- Joyed at expense of the peasants. Every head of a family was compelled to purchase annually, at a price fixed by the Government, seven pounds of salt for evry person in his family above the age of seven years. He was not permitted to buy the salt In an open market at competitive prices. There were taxes on food products, a monop oly of which was held by privileged persons, sometimes including the King himself. Favored persons of the nobil ity or wealthy commoners were ap pointed to sinecures, receiving high sal aries without performing any service to the people who paid the taxes. Alto gether, it is said, from 177 to 1789, $16,000,000 had been given to members of the royal family. The nobility claimed and enjoyed the right to hunt over the fields of the peasants, and this they did regardless of injury to growing crops. However great damage the deer and pigeons might be doing the crops, the farmer could not kill them. The nobil ity lived In the city, away from their estates and as far a posslhle from contact with the despised commoners. And we have conditions not so very different in this country today. The taxes which the working people, the producers, pay to the Government are not exorbitant, but the same cannot be said of the taxes paid to the holders of special privileges, who have been granted by the Government the power to exact taxes from the people. What! It isn't true? Then what are the exor bitant prices of the tariff-protected trusts but taxes? When the dukes and lords of the steel trust and a hundred other trusts are permitted to charge prices that make them multi-million- J aires in a few short years, under formally-enacted laws prices which they could -not exact without the aid of such laws what is it but a transfer of the ' taxing power from the Government to the American nobility? When special privileges are bestowed upon certain residents of Portland which enable them to sell for $6,000,000 a property in which they have a tangible investment of only $2,000,000, what is it but a giv ing away of the taxing power when the holders of those special privileges can exact from tHe people of Portland fares large enough to pay a high rate of Interest on the $6,000,000? The com moners of Portland pay .a tax which the nobility of Portland are permitted to collect and put in their own pockets. It is a condition true not only of Port land, but of the entire country, and every thinking, every observing, man knows it. But these conditions are not to last forever. The unprivileged have risen up against the privileged and the war will not cease until equality before the law has been reached. It is a war, not of bullets and bloodshed, but a war no less earnest and uncompromising. The Insurance lords have already been shorn of their power to live in luxury and wanton extravagance upon the earn ings of the tolling masses- The beef trust lqrds, who have compelled the working people of this country to buy diseased food at prices fixed by them, are being brought to Justice. The pro test of the people of France against a system which permitted the gift of $16, 000,000 to the royalty of France was no more effective than will be the pro test of the people of Portland and of Oregon against the system which per mitted the gift of $4,000,000 to the no bility of Portland. The revolution is on and special privileges must go. Here in Oregon there has already been a revolution in state government. The adoption of the initiative and refer endum four years ago was a transfor mation of this state from a purely rep resentative form 'of government to a mixture of the representative and the pure democracy. It was a revolution which the people .did not seek. Oregon did not want the initiative and refer endum. It was forced upon the state by corporate greed, whose representa- tives in the State Legislature betrayed the people and added to the powers and prlvilges of the nobility. The people reluctantly adopted this amendment to the constitution, but did it because there Was no other apparent method f curbing the power of the privileged classes. The people did not want the direct primary, but it was forced upon them by the nobility, who, through their political bosses, controlled con ventions, named the candidates, and thus made themselves secure in the control of State government. Repre sentatives of the holders of privileges were able to defeat legislation which was Intended to make the nobility of Oregon pay taxes in the same propor- tion that the commoners paid, and by so doing they compelled the common ers to adopt the initiative and referen dum. If the nobility of the United States succeeds in defeating the efforts of President Roosevelt to establish a system of equal rights for all and spe cial privileges Tor none, we may expect some kind of National initiative and referendum, with all its attendant dan gers of excess and extreme. If the royalty and nobility of Amer ica must proceed In accordance with the policy of that French monarch who said "After us the deluge," why, then, the deluge will .come. I "Well-nigh desperate" is the situation of the American life insurance compa nies in Austria-Hungary, according to a correspondent of the London Econo mist. The majority of the healthy per sons insured are withdrawing and ef fecting insurance with Austrian com panies, and the result is likely to be the retention by the American companies doing business there of only the un sound lives which will disastrously ad vance the mortality rate. If as a result of recent exposures American compa nies shall be compelled to abandon for eign fields. It may be a benefit to them. The expense of getting and holding huslness abroad has been very heavy. The effort to build big and bigger steamships hasn't yet reached the limit. The Hamburg - American Steamship Company announces that it is about to construct an Atlantic liner which will be 800 feet in length, with a ninety foot beam and a tonnage of 35,000. The new Ounarder now building is 760 feet in length, with a tonnage of 25,000. The new Hamburg-American vessel will have a tonnage of 16,000 in excess of any ship now actually afloat. New England is beginning again-to discover the "Oregon Country." Last Sunday's issue Of the Springfield Re publican devotes the whole of a front page to its resources. More than a generation ago the present editor's grandfather, the elder Sam Bowles, vis ited Oregon and devoted columns from his own pen to telling the truth about the land a gracious and generous ser vice that is still remembered by old timers. If there were ever any persons who labored under the delusion that the Washington Railroad Commission was sitting up nights to devise ways and means to help 'out the Portland Jobber, they have been disillusioned. But whom is the Commission helping, except, of course, the enterprising and conserva tive statesmen who are drawing the salaries? There are worse things on the streets than boys playing ball. There are au tomobiles that give grown folks palpi tation of the heart and street-cars that malm infants. Healthy lads are not to be nailed down these fine evenings. Very likely if they had added to the bill for the President's traveling ex penses a proviso that he should devote his time exclusively to Its expenditure while Congress was In session it would have gone through a-whooping.. i Another season of degree fests in the colleges of the country Is fast drawing to a close. -Mr. Bryan thus far has es caped. The only prominent American who needs no vaccination against tak ing degrees Is John D. Rockefeller. Just for the sake of variety, Mr. Ste vens loses a few votes on the recount. and Mr. Word again has hopes of nos ing out. May the longest nose win. Mr. Schwab vigorously denies that he is a candidate for the United States Senate from Nevada. That will be a great shock to Nevada. Does Mr. Bryan really think he is making a hit with the Swedish vote by occupying an orchestra seat at King Haakon's coronation? 1 Possibly the Portland anarchists did not reflect that, if they should put Roosevelt out of the way, the Big Stick would be President. i The great problem as to a lock canal or a sea-level canal has been solved. All that remains now is to dig the canal. There are people who still think that the food of our daddies is good enough for them. If they can get it. i r After all, it isn't so much a question about what to eat as what not to eat. This is truly the month when matri mony becomes epidemic. Wet, Town and the Normal School. Nevberg Graphic. Prior to the election the Mayor and Council of the town of Weston Issued a circular calling on the people to vote for the licensing of saloons and arguing that the license money was needed to defray the running expenses of the town. The admonition was heeded and Weston went wet. This is where one of our so-called normal schools is located, and a great place it is to send young teachers to get high ideas of life. How would it do to ask the Mayor to furnish the school a text book on "Political Economy"? People's Choice Mast Be Ratified. Lebanon Criterion. Some seem to think Jonathan Bourne will not make the election to the United States Senate before the next Oregon Legislature. We believe in this they are mistaken. No man who signed Statement No. 1 can avoid supporting him all the time and live politically. And those who did not sign will find that the people will not approve the people's choice being Ignored or turned down, even though they do cot like Mr. Bourne. WILLIAM H. WALLACE. Historical Figure In the History of Washington. 1 Leslie's Weekly. The grave of Colonel William H. Wallace, who played an interesting part in the early histories of Iowa, Washington and Idaho, was a personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, and acted as a pallbearer at the funeral of the great emancipator, has lately been dis covered In the old Fort Steilacoom Cemetery, near Tacoma, Wash. The ter ritorial pioneers of Pierce County, of which Tacoma is the seat, will take the matter up, with the purpose of having the grave not only preserved, but properly marked. The cemetery in which lie the re mains of Colonel Wallace and his wife is in a state of desecration, and for a number of years no effort has been made to maintain It- It is a plat of ground about half an acre in extent. The old Fort Steilacoom grounds are now devoted to the state hospital for the insane, and the cemetery is imme diately behind one of the main build ings. The lettering on some of the old headboards can still be deciphered, and they show a large number of burials in the '60's and '69's. There have been but few since Colonel Wallace was burled there in 1879. The cemetery was established in 1848 by Company M, of the First Artillery, which was sent out from New York In November, leav ing on the same day that Taylor was elected President. Frederick Myer, 80 years of age, and living near the old fort grounds, is the only survivor of this company of 108 men. Colonel Wallace was born at Tryo, Miami County, Ohio, July 19, 1311. He was admitted to the bar in Indiana, and in 1835 moved to Iowa, where he was elected a member of the first Leg islature, and served as Speaker of the first House. By President Taylor he was appointed receiver of public moneys at Fairfield, la. He moved to Washington Territory in 1853, and served for a number of years in the territorial Legislature. In 1861 Presi dent Lincoln appointed him Governor of the territory, and Colonel Wallace was later elected delegate to the 37th Congress. Before his term expired the Territory of Idaho was set off from Washington, and Lincoln appointed him its first Governor. Upon his arrival there, pending the first election, he was nominated by the Republicans and elected the first delegate tfc Congress from the territory. Colonel and Mrs. Wallace were In the city of Washing ton at the time the new territory was named, and while a Congressional committee was trying to agree upon some fitting name, Mrs. Wallace sug gested Idaho. Colonel Wallace later returned to Pierce County, and at the time of his death was Judge of Pro bate. During the Indian wars in Wash ington he served as Captain of a vol unteer company. Mrs. Wallace was Miss Suzanna Brazelton, of Guilford County, North Carolina. Her father was General Braselton. Colonel Wallace died February 7, 1879, and his wife a number of years later. The only known portrait of him a painting Is one of the treasured exhibits In the Ferry Mu seum at Tacoma, as la also a tall hat of ancient style, and a good deal the worse for hard usage, which the Col onel wore while he was In attendance at the Lincoln obsequies. Both these attract the attention of all visitors to the museum. It's Mr. "Bose-'n-fell." W. Y. C. In New York World. ' ' n my rounds of the country I have heard probably as many as 50 different ways of pronouncing the President's name as many, I mean, from lips of native born. English-speaking persons. The in closed rhyme shows the negro "twist" in many parts of the South. It conveys, too, a very good idea in a single word of the up and down in popular expectancy of the Presidents political thermometer. Just now, according to the rhyme, the mercury is so well up that many who are moved by It are seeking the shady and sequestered places: Mlstah Rose-'n-fell, Mlstah Rose-'n-fell, He don' rose ergin. How com' now Mlstah Rockyfell, You dem wit dat Chercargo smell. An' all yer railroad men, up 'n tell Et de name wit er funny spell Ain' don' rose errjn? Pioneers and Portland. Woodburn Independent. The pioneers who visited Portland last week looked upon that magnificent and growing city, then naturally gave them selves due credit for blazing the way. They were the ones who did the real work and made all things possible. Those who came later with money and de veloped, can thank those men who had the endurance and underwent-great hard ships to lay such a solid foundation. All praise to the pioneers, of whom one by one is passing away. Be Was a Poor Speller. Chicago Chronicle. The spelling reform brethren now claim William Shakespeare as one of their confraternity and they are right. A man who consistently refused to pell his own name the same way twice in succession certainly must be credited with latitudinarian views in the matter of orthography. He Never Sleeps. The Dalles Optimist. It is said that the U'Ren amendment factory up at the falls of the Willamette, is running night and day grinding out new conundrums to puzzle and befog the vot ers at our next election, in June. 1908. FORESTRY IN THE i mi 'iiHir'fail.hii,1,ffr,( ILmmibkibiiki YUA&S C3SKISB BOOTH-TUCKER TO MARRY. Colonel Emma Reld, of Ireland ex Commander's Fiancee. I Minneapolis (Minn.) Despatch. The engagement of ex-Commander Booth-Tucker, of London, international secretary of the Salvation Army, to Colonel Emma Reld, at present in charge of the Salvation Army forces in Ireland, was announced here today. The wedding will be in London and will be private. The date has not yet been settled. The announcement was made by Major Merrlwether, of the Salvation Army here, a special friend of ex-Commander Booth-Tucker. Mr. Booth-Tucker came to America in 1896 to take up S alvation Army work. He stayed in this country eight ana a half years, in wnich time he saw the work of the Army in America grow until more than $900,000 was col lected annually by the Salvation Army wnen he returned to England In 1904. in England, Booth-Tucker became In ternational secretary of the Salvation Army. Mrs. Emma Booth-Tucker, the first wife of Booth-Tucker, was killed in railroad wreck near Marceline, Mo., ucioDer zs, isos. she was the daugh ter of General Ballington Booth. Booth Tucker's real name is F. de la Tom Tucker. At his marriage he adopted tne Hyphenated form. Four of hi seven children are living. Men Only for Asphalt Trust. Chicago Dispatch in Philadelphia rxorth American. No woman wanted after July 1. This is the general order that has startled the employes of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company, the great corporation interested in the asphalt paving Indus try throughout the United States. Every girl, and there are thousands employed by the company, which has offices in all cities of Importance in the country, will be discharged next month. The reason assigned, although satisfactory to business men, has aroused champions of the "business woman. The cause of the order was ex plained today by an officer of the com pany. "Women may be all right at home; but they are not 'fit' when it comes down to working for a big corpora tton," said the officer. "Their capacity is limited. They are all right at making worsted slippers and sofa pillows, and they can chew gum and write shorthand at the same time, but they can't boss a street-paving gang nor figure out how much asphalt it will take to fix a street." Getting Used to Being Indicted. Washington (D. C.) Cor. New York World. Arthur Evans, general counsel for Swift & Co., the meat packers, blew along Pennsylvania avenue. "Hi, there. Arthur!" shouted a friend. "Where have you been?" "Oh!" said Evans, "I've been down in Nashville getting indicted with the Fertilizer Trust. Got to be a habit with me now. Every town I drop into I find the hospitable citizens waiting to indict me. All the rage." Punishing a Slow Motorist. New York Sun. An automobile driver was arrested re cently while driving slowly through a vil lage and fined $5. He demanded why he had been so treated, as he had not- vlo lated any speed ordinance, but could get no satisfaction. Later a court officer ex plained the whole matter by saying: "We held a meeting last night and decided that this speeding must stop. This man was the first to come along slow enough for us to catch, so we arrested him." They Voted First. Umpqua Valley News. Here's some sarcasm from the pen of Editor Newport, of the Lebanon Criterion: "One of the very strange things about the election of Mr. Chamberlain for Governor is that many Republicans who claim to be ardent temperance workers supported him. One of the Injunctions of the tem perance workers was 'vote as you pray. These, however, must have voted' and then prayed. Sons In Kansas. Kansas City Journal. Here is one of the little things that make trouble for the Postmaster at Llndsborg: There are 246 Johnsons, 134 Andersons, 87 Swensons, and 99 Petersons who get mail at his office. Think of a line of school children rushing in there 16 feet deep and all yelling at once. "Any mail for John sons?" "Any mail for Andersons?" "Any mall for Petersons?" "Any mall for Swensons?" Best Shot In the United States Army. Baltimore News. The complete records of rifle, pistol and carbine firing of the United States Army for 1905, Just published, show Abraham Hill, a Sergeant In the Twenty-fourth In fantry, stationed In the Department of Dakota, to be the best shot in the Army. The percentage of possible shots made by him on slow fire, timed fire and skirmlBh fire was 86.33. As to Georare C, Is He So Very Dead' St. Helens Mist. The Oregon City Enterprise is devoting a great deal of space to funeral sermon ettes over the political remains of George C. Brownell, who it reiterates is dead, dead. dead. If he is so very dead, would it not be well to quit stamping on the remains? MIDDLE NORTHWEST From the St. Paul Pioneer-Press. t l.-i H VV::;. t ,v SOME FEATURES OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN First and foremost, all the world's news by Associated Press, special correspondent and members of The Oregonian staff, making the fullest and most complete record of any Pacific Coast newspaper. a THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN EUROPE Lina Cavalieri she is once a muslo hall singer, now a grand opera star whose ambition was aroused by an old maid sister. She is one of the celebrities of Paris Several striking photographs accompanying the sketch. CATCHING THE TOOTHSOME OREGON CRAWFISH The season for 1906 is fairly on, and an illustrated story tells how and where the delicious crustaceans are caught for the Portland mar ket, and of creeks near town which furnish good sport for fishing par ties. CAUSES OF THE GREAT CALIFORNIA EARTHQUAKE Compilation of facts and theories concerning the disturbance of the earth's surface, which covers the scientific phase of the disaster. The subject is treated with the view of making"" the matter clear to the average reader and Is free from technicalities. Illustrations add to its clearness and human in terest. A TILLAMOOK COUNTY BEAR HUNT- A story by an Oregonian who went after the bear himself, not a news paper man's yarn. There is a lot of readable incidental matter re lating to an early morning chase that ended successfully. PORTLAND AS A VAST SUMMER KINDERGARTEN An appreciative woman points out wherein Portland as a city and In Its environment offers an incom parable field for kindergartening and calls on every mother to en gage in the work and delights of nature study. HOW TO RID THE COUNTRY OF ANARCHISTS Our Government is committed to the policy of confining Imported murderous reformers. A Washing ton correspondent tells of methods of elimination proposed by crime experts. MOST ACCOMPLISHED UARS IN CHRISTENDOM A. H. Ballard writes the first of a series of sketches on nabobs in New York, whom he has inter viewed. His initial subject is Will iam H. Vanderbilt. MICHAEL DAVITT, IRELAND'S GREAT BENEFACTOR P. A. O'Faxrell, a Pacific Coast man, writes from Dublin, paying a tribute to the work of this useful man, and presenting a resume of conditions in Ireland today that bespeak the rising of freedom's sun. WHAT THEY EAT AT THE WHITE HOUSE The steward in the President's home furnishes the story, which contains facts, not Inventions. Mr. Roosevelt and his family are "good eaters" and demand the best that the market affords. Bills of fare are given for one day's meals, which are representative of what Is provided at the White House at this season of the year. PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF GEORGE H. WILLIAMS There was a time In this Nation's . history when the Chief Executive never thought of vetoing a bill un less he believed it to be unconsti tutional. Judge Williams points out the rise and growth of the veto power and the changes in public opinion on this subject. THE ROOSEVELT BEARS AT A SUMMER RESORT They go to Atlantic City, have a plunge In the ocean, then do the promenade act and take in the side shows. BOOK REVIEWS AND NEWS OF LITERARY FIELD The Oregonlan's book page con tains reviews of the newest books, as well as news and gossip con cerning personages in the world of letters. Among this week's book reviews: "In Cure of Her Soul," by Frederic Jesup Stlmson; "Bal zac, a Critical Study," by Hlppolyte Adolphe Talne; "The Mystery of the Lost Dauphin," by Senora Emilia Pardo Bazan; "Extra Dry Being Further Adventures of tile Water Wagon," by Bert Leston Taylor and W. C. Gibson; "Susan Clegg and Her Neighbors' Affairs," by Anne Warner; "The Building of the Organ," by Nathan Haskell Dole; "Our Little Scotch Cousin." by Blanche MeManus; "The Story of Paul Jones," by Alfred Henry Lewis; "Stand Pat," by David A. Curtis; "Larry Hudson's Ambi tion." by James Otis; "The Tracer of Lost Persons," by Robert W. - Chambers; "The Girl With the Blue Sailor," by Burton E. Steven son; "The Cruise of the Yacht Dido," by' Charles G. D. Roberts; "Alpatok, the Story of an Eskimo Dog." by Marshall Saunders, and "Sandy, From the Sierras," by Richard Barry. COMPLETE REVIEW OF THE SPORTING WORLD Owing to its unequaled facilities for both telegraphic and local news The Oregonian is able to give its readers a more complete and ac tive sporting department than any other paper in the Northwest. Sev eral pages of tdmtfrrow's paper will be devoted to articles thoroughly covering this field. Athletic events in all parts of the world are chron icled In the Associated Press dis patches, and the latest local hap penings are handled in breezy ar ticles by staff -writers. This service is supplemented by special letters to The Oregonian. All will be in terested in reading a resume of th California situation from the pen of Harry B. Smith. SOCIETY, MUSIC AND THE DRAMA Nothing which comes under these departments is omitted in the Sun day Oregonian. All of the activity of the past week Is recorded in very interesting articles, and an nouncements for the coming week are given. The latest in local the atricals and music and practically everything of a social nature is presented. Several of the most im portant June weddings are de scribed in tomorrow's paper. Pho - tographa and sketches by staff ar tists are a feature of these pages. COMMENCEMENT DAYS AT WEST POINT Nowhere in the country is more importance attached to the festivi ties of graduation time than at West Point, where Uncle Sam's army officers receive their com mission. The brilliant gathering and Impressive ceremonies are graphically described this week in the New York letter from Emile Frances Bauer. The graduation parade is the greatest event of the year at West Point.