10 THE 2IORXIXG OREGOXIAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1906. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. "O By Mall. r1Iy. Sunday Included. one ylir X)ily. Sunday Included. tlx month Dally. Sunday Included, three months. Dally, Eunday Included, one month Iially, without Sunday, one year Xiaily, without Sunday, eix months rflllv. wfthMir Knr.riuv three monthS..- 4 23 2.25 .75 6.00 3.25 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month - Sunday, one year Weekly. oR, year lsued Thursday) Sunday and Weekly, one year.... BY CARRIER. rally. Sunday Included, one year liailv KunH.v in.lnripri one month... .80 2 50 1.W1 3 50 8.00 HOW TO REMIT Send posiofflce n5J order, express order or personal checa on your local bank. Stamps, coin or cjurrn":J are at the sender's risk. Give postolTtce aa drees in lull. Including county ana slate. POSTAGE BATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon Postofftce. a Second-Claaa Matter. 10 to 14 page. - - 36 to 28 pages . , e.nl SO to 44 Page 48 to 80 pages cu Foreign Postage, double ratea. -.Met.' IMI'UKTA.M-The noatal lawa are "J met. Newspapers on which postage la net tu" raid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. Tho 8. C. Brckwitta Special Agency New Tork. rooms 43-00. Tribune building. cftgo, rooms 510-012 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postornca Kewa Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. l'aui. MUm N. St. ilarie. Commercial Station. ( ulurudu Springs, Colo. Western News iSver Hamilton Kendrlck. -J2 seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, Ji Fifteenth street; L Welusteln: H. P. Han- hiansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co., JClnln and Wainut. ,w Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Thljd. , Cleveland. O. Jame- Pushaw. SOT 6a Derlor street. Atlantic City. N. J. Ell Taylor. New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor HouMe; Broadway Theater News Stand. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Four teenth and Franklin streets, N. Wheatley. Ogden D. L. Boyle: W. ' G. Kind, 114 5l h street. Omaha narkalow Bros.. 1012 Farnam: Uageath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam; 210 South Fourteenth. - Sacramento, cal. Sacramento News Co., 438 K street. Salt Luke Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second street South: Rosenfeld & Hansen. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street uugons. en Diego B. E. Amos. Long Beach, Cal. B. E. Amos. Pahadena, Cal. A. F. Horning. ban lrancii.ro Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand: Hotel St. Francis News Stand. Washington. D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Office. .PORTLAND, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1906. JAMESTOWN-SEATTLE. . ' Some of our people, here and there throughout the Mate, seem to be startled by publication of the list of undertakings that will demand atten tion and money from the Legislature at the coming session. It is, they say, and nay truly, a surprising list. The specifications call for a vast sum of money, and that means mighty taxa tion. Opening of the rivers and har bors of the state, free school books, erection of jute mills for employment of convicts and reduction of the price of grain bags, new buildings for every institution of the state, appropriation of money for the Seattle and James town Expositions, are among the speci fications, but by no means exhaust the liist. For of couree there will be more offices and more officials, and higher salaries all round; for hat?n't the cost of living increased? That is, do not of ficials desire and expect greater emolu ments, r?o as to live more luxuriously than formerly? Strange how anxiouG so many are to serve the state, when they know how much more it coste to live, and how inadequate the ealaries are. Host that can be done, in spite of all pruning, and all growls by watchdogs of the treasury, there will be an un paralleled appropriation bill. Some tilings, however, it will be necessary to omit. All demands cannot be met; all claims cannot be granted. It may be feared that the appropriations by the estate never can be equal to the wants of the people. Just here, however, The Oregonian has a suggestion to make. It knows that all demands cannot be met, that a'.l claimants can't get all they want. But it wishes to say that whatever else may be granted, or whatever elee re fused, appropriations should be made for suitable and suflicicnt representa tion of the State of Oregon at the Jamestown Kxposition of li07. and at the Seattle Alaskan-Yukon-Pacific In 'ternational Kxposition of 1009. We think J.W.OOO lioukl be appropri ated for representation of Oregon at Jamestown. That is the least sum that would or could represent Oregon there. Twice the sum would-be better. But Oregon could make a creditable exhibit from J50.000. The Virginian helped us to get the Government appropriation for the Lewis and Clark Kxposition. They took an interest that exceeded ordinary generosity. We ought to re ciprocate. We ought to help, at the Jamestown Fair. Not merely for reci-v procity, either. For Oregon ought to lio represented at Jamestown, that the people who go there may have proofs that Oregon exists, that it has attrac tions and resources and productions pe culiarly its own, by which the world will be bettered when it knows them. In the year 1909 Seattle is to have an exposition which will be a notable event and occasion in the history of the 1'acitic Northwest. It will be rich, various, elaborate. Its main purpose will be to emphasize the importance of Alaska, the relations of Seattle to the Steat country that is pouring its wealth Into her lap. and the progress of Pa cific Northwest commerce, in which Sc uttle holds so important a place. It "will be a groat exposition. Oregon must lie reprecK-nted there represented gen erously, fully, adequately. The State of Washington did the handsome thing by the Lewis and Clark Kxposition. It did not stint its effort. Oregon must not stint her effort for the Seattle Fair. It is demanded by neighborliness on the one hand ami by our own interest ui the other. Nothing less than $100, 000 can pay for the honor that Oregon is M render the State of Washington on the one hand and herself on the other. There will be need of a building nd it mut be no mean affair. There must be an exhibit, and it must ade quatcly represent the State of Oregon. AVe should not stop with J100.000. if more should be needed. And probably it will be. Though the Kxposition at Seattle is not to he held till 1909. the Legislature of Oregon, to meet in January next. must make provision for the participa tion of Oregon, because there will be no sufficient time, if it be put off till the meeting of the Iegislature two years further. The Oregon building should he undertaken a sufficient time in ad vance to assure its completion and per fection of the arrangements for the ex hibit. Provision should be made also for the social side of the work, so that Oregonians may have suitable quarters for their own use and for entertainment of friends. In short, Oregon should prepare to keep "open house" at Seat tle during the Summer of 1909. The Oregonian has no doubt that all Oregon will respond to this undertak ing; or that the Legislature, answering the wishes of the peopIe: will make the full provision required for proper repre sentation of Oregon at the Seattle Exposition. GAS IN Fl'EL TRUST. The Portland ministers who are in vestigating the fuel "trust" of course will not omit one of the largest sellers of fuel in this city, the gae company, which charges a high gas price for a low-grade gas. Some day gas in Portland will cost, instead of 95 cents, 75 and 80 and 85 cents, as in cities where the public, through obedient Councils, has forced down prices. That time will come in Portland when the city, through the aid of its Council, shall have asserted He power to regulate price and quality of gas. The Portland Council has had a chance to aid' the public in this regard for eight months past. How soon will it answer the public demand? Is the public ever to regain the pres ent gas franchise, which stands in the way of regulating gas quality and gas price? If so, how soon? Should not Portland have this power, as well as other cities? One way to foil the fuel trust is to get cheaper gas. Cord wood may be kept up in price by the cordwood "trust," slabwood prices by the slabwood "trust," and coal by the coal "trust" all acting together, not through actual agreement, but by tacit understanding not to cut prices. Allied with them is the gas "trust," which, because mo nopolizing the field, cannot be accused of conspiracy, as a lot of poor wood dealers can. But is not the effect on the purses of consumers the same?' The fuel situation in Portland seems to be this: Taking advantage of scarcity of cars and high price of la bor, the dealers are charging as much as the traffic will bear. They are not, perhaps, actually conspiring to extort from the public, but are abstaining by mutual consent from price-cutting. The gas company, which controls a large fuel supply, maintains a high price, charging up to the public dividends on w atered stock and expenses of misman agement, among them the Velguth thefts and the dredging of refuse from the harbor. The ministers have a big job on their hands. Let us all wish them success in uncovering the fuel graft, even though they may not pull down prices. THE FI'TCRE OF THE HOME. The debate in the Independent for Oc tober 4 between Charlotte Perkins Gil man and Mrs. L. H. Harris, a Southern woman, on '.'The Future of the Home," was followed in the issue for October 18 by "Another View of the Home." The latter article was written from the point of view of a man who had mar ried an intellectual woman, a physician in fact, and had lived happily with her, rearing a family. Mrs. Harris, though she writes with vJvaclty and wit, takes a characteristically Southern view of the question, and is therefore amusing without being very instructive. It is curious, indeed, how persistently the reactionary spirit of the South runs not only through its politics, but also through its religion, education and so cial thought. On the other hand, if Mrs. Gilman errs at all, it is by way of being too advanced. She is probably ahead of the age. though by no means out of the line of very apparent evolutionary ten dencies. Originally, according to her view, all those interests of mankind which were not purely selfish were cen tered in the family. There was no na tion to begin with, but only families scattered here and there over a wide territory like that of Jacob. The chil dren, the cattle and the women were the property of the patriarchal head, who was an independent potentate. He waged war. concluded peace and formed alliances at his own pleasure. The outcome of the patriarchal wars and treaties was the ultimate union of several families under a common rule. Thus tribes were formed which some times developed into nations. Mrs. Gil man makes the point that just as the family is a more valuable social factor than the individual, so the nation is more valuable than the family. To be long worthily to a nation calls for higher powers and nobler activities than to belong to a patriarchal family. The development of the nation has withdrawn a certain part of the loyalty of men and women from the family and directed it toward their fellow-country men, and this Mrs. Gilman believes to be a gain. She believes also that the process of evolution is not yet complete. It will not cease until w-e feel the same affec tion for the whole human race as for our countrymen. Our first and largest obligation will, be to the human race, our second to the country where we live, our third to the family, and the last and least to ourselves. This is un doubtedly visionary; but it is that sort of a visionary opinion which Washing ton Irving attributes to Columbus. It Is the impracticableiiess of the prophet who takes note of tendencies that have escaped the common view and an nounces their goal too early to find cre dence. Mrs. Gilman may, in fact, be a modern Cassandra. Though we are doomed not to believe her, still she per haps foretells what is fated to come true. What are some of the tendencies which more or less strongly confirm her predictions? The most notable is the loss of power by the male head of the family and the advance of the female toward equality with him. Originally the wife was ac quired by rapine or purchase and the husband owned her among his other chattels. The Roman father could sell his children or put them to death. The British husband up to very recent times owned his wife's earnings. Her per sonal property acquired before or after marriage was his. She could not tes tify against him in court: nor could she make a contract without his consent. Economically, though not legally, she was his slave. Now women have be come almost completely emancipated. A married woman can carry on busi ness independently of her husband, con tract as she pleases, hold and dispose of separate property, and the law gives her half of all that her husband ac quires, to say nothing of the freedom of divorce. Likewise the power of the male over his offspring has been abridged. He can no longer sell or put them to death. Society . deprives him of their custody w hen he is flagrantly cruel or improvi dent. It compels him to send them to school. It even begins to interfere when his discipline is defective and tries through juvenile courts and charity or ganizations to fu:fill his, neglected du ties. Thus the ancient bond which held the family together has been sadly loosened. This bond was the patriajha6 become worse. With eteers quoted potestas, the ownership by the male of I his wives and offspring. Plainly the 1 trend of evolution has been toward the destruction of the family as originally constituted and the substitution for it of a group united by affection and mu tual interest rather than the power of the male head. In the same way the ancient idea of the nation has been transformed. The bond of union among its members is no longer the power of the monarch, but their patriotic senti ment and commercial interest. Moreover, it cannot be disputed that the animosity between nations is less intense than formerly. Among great capitalists and noble families national lines have disappeared. . Money has no country. Neither has blood. Trade tends to obliterate boundaries. The la bor unions and socialist organizations more and more ignore differences of race and language. World-wide duties and .even sentiments are no longer purely imaginative. All civilized na tions, our own not less than others, ac knowledge obligations which are not limited by geography or blood. The expansion of the paesion which we call patriotism to include the whole world is something more than a mere dream at the present day, and this generation may live to see it a potent factor in advancing civilization. THE MONAGHAN MONUMENT. The monument to John R. Monaghan, which was unveiled at Spokane yester day, is a tribute to the memory of a young man w ho died nobly in the effort to save a brother officer's life in Samoa". His character, his record at school and his brief service in the Navy gave promise of a career of great distinc tion. His untimely but heroic death was mourned as a loss to his country. The monument at Spokane is a testi monial, not .only to the worth of a de parted officer, but also to the patriotism of those who have erected it. The noblest treasure of any state is the memory of its heroic dead. Record ed in books, their deeds soon fail from the common memory and are recollect ed only by students. But a monument erected in a great city which meets the eye and holds the attention of every passer-by is a perpetual reminder and an unfailing incentive to emulation. Such monuments manifest both civic patriotism and genuine appreciation of great deeds. They beautify the city where they stand and educate its citi zens to love their country and value the renown of its heroes. It is not inconceivable that the statue of Ensign Monaghan, standing forever from this day before the eyes of the youth of Spokane, may kindle in more than one soul the ambition to equal his fame and deserve "a similar tribute. The aspiration to live nobly and die a soldier's death ig more to be desired in the young than the thirst for wealth. For the latter incentives abound on every side. The palaces of the million aires, their equipages and pompous dis plays of luxury stimulate and too often pervert the desires of generous youth. But to lofty sacrifice and patriotic de votion the incentives in our commercial age are few and often insignificant. Small wonder, then, that in the race for wealth there are many rivals while the nobler prize is almost unsought. The time will come, undoubtedly, when the parks and squares of our cities will be peopled with the statues of heroes and dignified with their monuments. The cities themselves will become worthy both in architecture and civic spirit of the memories which they enshrine, and our entire public life will rise to a higher plane. On our dead selves and the memories of our dead heroes we must build the future of the human race. z THE WHIP HANI) IN TRANSPORTATION. Coal dealers in the cities of the Rocky Mountain States have a grievance against the railroads which they urge in extenuation of their inability to sup ply their clamorous customers with fuel. One of these complainants in a Montana town declares that the rail roads have confiscated his coal for weeks past and that he has been unable to get more than two or three cars through to his bins in as many weeks. His consignments were inadequate to the demands of his trade in the first place, and he is entirely unable to say when the railroads will let him have any more carloads of his own coal. It seems that there is an unwritten law, to which coal dealers are compelled to submit, by which the railroads may take a car or a score of privately con signed cars of coal in transit over trieir lines for their own use, providing their own bins are empty, for which settle ment is eventually made on a more or less equitable basis. While they chafe under this highwayman-like proceeding, dealers have no .redress, but are com pelled to lose the profits of tl'eir retail trade while the public suffers and clamors at their empty bins. This is indeed a grievance before which that suffered by the consumer who does not have more than two or three sacks out of a ton of coal confis cated by the driver of the company's fuel wagon is insignificant. StiH it is some hardship, when coal is at its pres ent price, to find a delivery of coal in the bin short by actual count two or three sacks to the ton, the driver pro ducing enough empty sacks from under the seat to prove that the full sacks under . the pile do not contain your coal. But then this is not as bad as to have the whole load confiscated by the man who holds the whip hand in transporta tion. A readable story is attached to one award in the Carnegie hero fund that did not come by telegraph. It is the case of Rufus K. Combs, of Midway, Ky., who received a medal and $1500 for saving the life of Robert Godson, a bitter rival and political enemy. God son had entered a vault to test a gas making apparatus and was overcome by the fumes. Friends and relatives were afraid to enter the vault. Combs, against the protests of bystanders who declared that he would be sacrificing his life uselessly sfnd tried to hold him back by force, broke away, went into the vault, rescued Godson and fell un conscious as he reached the door. They are now the best of friends. When asked why he had risked his life for his bitterest enemy. Combs replied: "Be cause I loe a fighter that fights fair, and Godson always fought fair." Meat-eaters tell only half the story of meat-trust extortion; meat-producers tell the other half. Consumers re cite high prices for steak and produc ers low prices for steers and cows. Be tween the two stands the trust, bear ing down the price on the hoof and boosting up tho price on the block and grabbing in between with both hands. For many yeans there has been a big discrepancy, between these two prices in Portland, and since the Swifts got control of the business here the graft at 3 to 3i cents a pound on the hoof in the local market and cows at 2 to 24 cents (these prices dictated by the trust), producers know that they are not receiving the value of their cattle. And consumers know that steaks and roast beef at the retail market are very high in price. It may be some satisfac tion to consumers to be informed that if growers of cattle should receive higher prices on the hoof, retail prices would be boosted up still further, in or der to afford the trust its accustomed increment. What is needed is some force to squeeze down this increment. Senator W. A. Clark, of Montana, has consented to "retire" from the United States Senate. Since hie term of office, mostly spent in New York and Europe, will expire next March, and it is by no means certain that he can again buy his way in, this consent is exceedingly gracious. His confidence that the next Legislature of Montana will be Demo cratic (the inference being that he could be returned to the Senate if he chose) is not by any means shared by the Republicans of that state. It is something, however, to be rid of Clark, even if another of the venal crew that has long dominated Montana's politics succeeds him, since there are degrees even in venality and political corrup tion in Montana as elsewhere. To the Los Angeles Times Postmaster-General Cortelyou has supplied a statement which shows that the poetaT business of Arizona has doubled within eight years. Receipts from sale of stamps for 1905 were $249,017.20, in com parison with $119,524.93 in 1897. Money order business was as great as that of South Dakota or Utah, and greater than that of Idaho, New Hampshire, South Carolina or Vermont. It is ar gued from these figures that Arizona will contribute her share to the stabil ity necessary to make a new state though her population is lees than that of New Mexico. It is believed that the population of the two territories now exceeds 400,000, and some think it is probably near 500,000. A jury in 1894 awarded Mr. L. A. Lewis, Mr. J. C. Flanders and others $19,200 for damages to their wharves at Burnside bridge, and said that other damages were compensated for by the "special benefits and advantages to ac crue from the building of said bridge." Now they want the public to compen sate them further, by allowing them to extend their wharves out to deep water. They could have well afforded to give the city a bounty to put the bridge at Burnside street, on account of the spe cial benefits and advantages. This is one of the many phases of high finance and grab attempted and practiced in Portland by scions of first families. Every rascal, found out, denies. You are not to expect admissions or confes sions, at least till they know they are in a corner. Our land thieves and cor ruptionists in Oregon denied every one of, them. The rascals of San Francisco begin their defense with a storm of de nials, and with threats of libel suits. If there had not been so much experi ence with patriots of this kidney you couldn't tell their simulated indigna tion from the real article. Mayor Schmitz and Abe Ruef should hire a hall and deliver a speech studied from that final pathetic effort of denial made by a Senator from Oregon. In many another place than Crook County that fiend Shepherd would have been lynched. No punishment can fit the foul crime he committed. The death sentence hanging over him, set for No vember 30, may afflict him with horror by day and nightmare in sleep and be a more terrible retribution than death at the hands of a band of lynchers. If so, the result will be better for the community than lynching and a more terrible penalty for the crime. It calls for self-restraint from men of a com munity when the law is taking its slow course in such a revolting case. "Grover Cleveland may find it hard at his age to vote for a Republican for Governor of New York," sapiently re marks the Seattle Post-Intlligeneer. He will find it harder at his age to go to Jail for trying to vote for any one for Governor of New York, when he has for ten years been a resident of New- Jersey. Three hundred chauffeurs in New York are on strike for more pay and shorter hours. It wrll be a surprise to some people to learn that the chauffeur doesn't get more money than anybody else and that he exists at any hours other than 12 P. M. to 6 A. M. Of course when The Oregonian says anything that has a tendency to ques tion the ancient pretensions and vested rights of the first families, it expects them to set its yellow dog yelping on its trail. But it's the yelp of the yellow dog; nothing more. Oregon coal consumers cannot get the cheap Washington coals that used to be abundant at $7 and $7.50 a ton. It's good time for Oregon to turn to its own undeveloped supplies. What has be come of the "mines" near Heppner and St. Helens? There seems to be good reason this time for some persons to worry them selves about what an ex-President ought to do, especially those who have their eye on Piatt's job in the United States Senate. Our own John Barrett, if elected Di rector of the Bureau of American Re publics, will restore to the bureau its former dignity, thinks the State De partment. No doubt about it. Oregon has two Supreme Courts, One sitting at Salem, the other at Oregon City. A third, at Pendleton, may re sume activity in time for the next cam paign for Governor. Ex-Boss Croker, having won his libel suit, vindicates Tammany in a glowing interview. Boss Murphy would do well to cover that convict suit with a libel suit of hit? own. Instead of trying to prove himself good material for Governor of New York, each candidate seems to be try ing to prove the other worse than him self. J. Pierpont Morgan paid? $20,000 for a real Bible. There are some things in it that ought to interest him particularly. What they need in New York, evi dently, is somebody else for Governor. Luckily the weather man is holding: out against the fuel trust. HEARSTS LIGHT AND DARK SIDES Good and Bod Methods laed Alike, to Reach Goal of His Ambition. North American Review. Certain ambitions are common to the great majority of men. One likes to be well regarded by his fellows, and to reap the oenents of social recognition by his equals and superiors. The spirit of caste is still strong in the breasts of inheritors of good names and great riches. That Mr Hearst should have deliberately set aside these advantages, we consider to have been of itself distinctly creditable. That he should have hazarded his large fortune upon an attempt to develop his aims is sufficient evidence of his daring, if not, indeed, of his moral courage. That he should now glory in the fact that his associations are practically confined to those who are in a large measure de pendent upon him, indicates an innate power of peculiar intensity. That he should have driven his adventurous en terprises to a consummation successful from the viewpoints of both commercial ism and desired notoriety speaks well for his indefatigability. That, without pro test, he should have permitted the public to infer that his achievements rest chiefly upon the mental activities of his asso ciates indicates his breadth and freedom from the curse of jealousy. That, he should never have forfeited the loyalty of a single one of his capable associates evinces a praiseworthy kindliness of dis position. That he should have held, throughout his adventures, the, essential and unswerving support of a proud, high- minded and conservative mother is a fact of which any man might well be proud. Herein we have touched upon evi dence of the possession by Mr. Hearst, the individual, of admirable qualities which make a pleasing impress upon a fair mind. But there is another and a very dark side of Hearst the force, which literally engulfs these manifestations. Desire of accomplishment, courage, generosity to one's helpers, industry, persistence, kind ness all fade into insignificance in the absence of the one supreme element of true manhood. The closest scrutiny of Mr. Brisbane's enthusiastic eulogy does not reveal a solitary reference to charac ter or methods. A single note runs through the entire eulogium success, for whatever motive, good or base, by what ever means, right or wrong success! Mr. Brisbane has caught and set down, we believe with precision, the actuating spirit. There is no reason tc doubt that an intelligent force, such as Hearst has proven himself to be, should be able to comprehend moral responsibility. We must assume, therefore, that he deliber ately spurns to recognize it. The keynote of his journalism is assault. At times the object richly deserves stern rebuke; at times, not. It matters not to Hearst. Guilty and innocent, right and wrong, suffer alike. Brutality is the solo require ment of the onslaught. Apology, retrac tion, correction are words unknown to the Hearst school of journalism. Is it surprising that Mr. Brisbane could find no more to say of the character of the en ergy? Hearst," says his eulogist, is "the greatest creator of intelligent dissatslfac- tion that this -country has seen." This may or may not be correct. There was another journalist, of the name of Wil liam Lloyd Garrison, who instigated re volt against oppression, but nobody ever questioned the purity of his motives, the disinterestedness of his action, or the no bility of his soul. Could Mr. Brisbane say as much of Hearst? Surely he must perceive the distinction between appealing to the latent good and the smouldering evil in human breasts. "Hearst is in tensely practical.' Indeed, yes. He rails at trusts, and tries to build one; he de nounces political corruption, while squan dering money for delegates; he objects to bosslsm, yet aspires to autocracy; he be seeches favors from a great political par ty, and then betrays it; -he shamelessly trades with the very men whom he has denounced as political and personal crim inals; he abruptly ceases to attack one whom he has branded a scoundrel In the hope of winning that one's evil influence to gratify his own ambition; he professes with his lips individualism and American ism, while in his newspapers he preaches confusion and communism. Such a condition surely would ustify a severe arraignment of any offender, but for reasons frankly noted we feel no call to indulge in harsh treatment of Mr. Hearst, the individual. Nevertheless it is fitting and indeed a manifest duty, in connection with the publication of Mr. Brisbane's eulogy, to set down calmly and dispassionately the simple facts re specting Hearst, the force. They are sub stantially as follows: As a journalist, though keen, enterprising and resourceful, he is a burning disgrace to the craft; as a politician, .though shrewd and at tlme3 even sagacious, he is no more scrupulous than the basest of those whom he has stigmatized as criminals; as a partisan, though earnest and efficient in appealing to the masses, he is a traitor; as an office-holder, he is pre-eminent iri shame ful neglect of his duties;, as an agitator, his delight consists in reveling in the incitement of evil passions: as a dual personality, though possessed of many engaging qualities, he is so utterly de void of character, so unsteady in even his own recklessness, so faithless to his professed ideals, so scornfully disregard ful of moral responsibility, so addicted to detestable practices in efforts to gratify his ambitions, so sinfully persistent in stirring the caldron of discontent, envy and hatred, as to be a living and glaring reproach to American civilization. Gould Bays An Enellant Yacht, New York Commercial. George J. Gould has purchased the English-built turbine yacht Lorena, and will soon bring it to these waters. Commo dore Gould formerly owned the steam yacht Atalanta. which was sold to Vene zuela, and has owned many other vessels among them being the Vigilant, which he raced In Brilisn waters ana aiterwara fitted out as a trial boat for the Defender when that yacht was built to defend the America's cup. The Lorena was built In 1903 for Amzl L. Barber, and is the largest yacht afloat with turbine engines. She is 300 feet over all. 269 feet on the water line. 33 feet 5 inches beam, 20 feet deep and 15 feet draft. ' ' A Children's Song. Rudyard Kipllnsr. Land of our birth, we please to thee Our love and toll In the years to be. "When we are grown and take our place Aa men and women wth our race. ' 2 Father in heaven, who lovest ali. Oh, help thy children when they call: That they may build from age to age An undented heritage. Teaf-h us to bear the yoke in youth- With steadfastness and careful truth; That, In our time, thy grace may giva The truth whereby the nations live. THINGS THAT WENT WRONG. No. 1 The -Faithful W ife. . There was. no -doubt of the besotted prisoner's guilt. The red-nosed, watery eyed, repulsive wrelch had beaten his wife, a frail-looking, undersized woman whose hands bore the marks of toil. The case had been proved against him clearly. Prisoner." said the police justice, stern ly, "you have committed one of the worst and most brutal offenses that disgrace our civilization. I shall fine you $50 and send you to the workhouse, where you will stay until it Is paid." "Your Honor." sobbed the wife, in pleading tones, "make it $200! You needn't be afraid. I'll take in washing to raise the money to get him out!" No. 2 The. fine of VOuoj Millaap. The story of Christopher Millsap. a young bookkeeper in the employ of a wholesale house, affords a striking illus tration of the way in which the wind is often tempered to the shorn lamb. Not on account of any fault of his, but because the business would not justify keeping him On the salary list any longer, Christopher had lost his situation. Day after day he tried to secure an other, but without success. One morning, when he found himself reduced to his last cent and was thinking gloomily of suicide as the only way out of his troubles, the postman handed him a letter. It was from Ketcham & Fleecem. attorneys-at-law. Brattleboro, Vt., and read as fol lows: "Dear Sir: Your uncle, Orville Stinjay Millsap. died last week. As administra tors of his estate, we have been looking over his papers, and we find that you owe him $."0 for money borrowed Feb ruary 27. 1902. with interest at 6 per cent from that date. An early settlement will oblige." Chicago Tribune. And One Came From Oregon. Springfield Republican. It Is singular how three states, Penn sylvania. Massachusetts and Maryland, continue in our own time to furnish the bulk of the Attorney-Generals of the United States. When Mr. Moody came to the office, he succeeded Mr. Knox of Pennsylvania, and when Mr. Moody re tires next Winter he will be followed by Mr. Bonaparte of Maryland. Since the foundation of the Government in 17S9. these three states have furnished 20 of the 48 Attorney-Generals. Pennsylvania supplying eight Massachusetts seven and Maryland five. Maryland's number will be increased to six when Mr. Bonaparte arrives. States like New York and Ohio have furnished only three each. The hold which the three slates referred to have upon this office, . and have had always, seems inexplicable. True, the Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Mary land bars have ever been distinguished, but their record in the Attorney-General's office can scarcely be said to be due to professional superiority. It must be reckoned merely one of .the curious ac cidents of Government. One Centenarian In 1: ",000. Hospital. The labors of Sir George Murray Hum phry proved that there is about one cen tenarian to every 127.000 people, and that of 70 authenticated cases no one reached 110 years, three only are said to have been 108 and one 106. The full exercise of the various powers. mental and bodily, is conducive to great age. so that there need be no fear of en tering heartily, actively and with full in terest and energy into the assigned work of life, physical or mental. The inhabitants of any countryside, as in Delabole, in North Cornwall, point with pride to the number of hale and hearty octogenarians, nonagenarians and centenarians living among them as an evidence of their healthy environment and hygienic lives. So in Paris, with its 10,509 octogenarians and 620 nonagenarians,- S9 of whom are approaching their 100th year. Six inhabitants of Paris are more than 102 years of age. A Seedleaa Pear. Ashland Tidings. Something new in choice fruit has been on exhibition at the office of C. H. Gil lette in Ashland this week a seedless pear, of fine appearance and choice qual ity. It is from a tree about eight or ten years old. For several years it has borne seedless pears, this year yielding three or four boxes of the fruit. A few of the very largest pears on the tree each year have seeds. The rest are all seedless and when cut in half show a smooth surface .from skin to center. where the seeel cells are usually found. The seedless pears on this tree are a trifle smaller than the average Bartlett. but probably contain more clean fruit substance and in taste they are superior to a Bartlett. having a marked flavor resembling somewhat that of the little sekel pear. It Is believed this seedless pear may be propagated to the extent of producing a practical nursery stock of trees of the same character, and exper imentation will be begun at once with that end in view. "Mrs. Brj-nn, Flrat Lady In tbe Land." Boston Globe. Good for Mr. Bryan! Wrhen an enthu siastic Georgian said to him: "Mr. Bryan, I hope to see you our next President, and your wife the 'first lady or tne land. "Thank you," answered Mr. Bryan, with a laugh; "I never may be President, but Mrs. Bryan is already the first lady in the'land." Out For tne Sweepatakea, Medford Tribune. On Friday morning a fine hoy made his appearace at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Hazleton. In addition to raising premium onions, this enterprising couple is bringing up a fine large family. FROM THE OFFENSIVE The Attitude of the Trust Jrour Years Ago. Jf"Tn Public . FOR A HOME TECHERS TRUST Halcyon Daya Recalled When Papers Were Granted Normal Gradnatea. PORTLAND, Oct. 25. (To the Editor.) In Sunday's Oregonian there is- an article entitled, "Why Oregon Loses Her Pest Teachers." I should like to object to some of the statements made. The assertion Is made that there is a deplorable deficiency of teachers from a numerical standpoint. According to an issue of The Oregonian last June triere w-ere fully twice as many applicants for positions in the Portland schools as there were positions. In Marion County, a county standing with l.ane. Douglas and Clackamas, 'next to Multnomah, in point of number of teachers employed. Super intendent Moores said hist August that he had enough competent teachers to place one in every district of his county, provided the Boards of Directors wouid pay a living wage. I have talked with a number of the County Superintendents of Oregon, and each one has told me. In substance, the same thing. Those who are familiar with the school history of Oregon know that when Ore gon had a law granting state papers to normal graduates, the supply of teach ers far exceeded the demand. Teachers would bid against each other for posi tions, and many district schools em ployed the lowest bidder. As to why tho supply was so great, it may be said that there were several causes. I wish to speak only of one. Many persons can cram, work and worry through a normal course ana gain barely a passing mark but who canont retain enough of what they have studied to pass an examina tion six months or a year afterward. Everyone is in sympathy with any movement intended to raise the standard of our norma! schools, but such changes cannot come In a day. Before any good measure may become an effective law. public opinion must be turned in that direction. At the present time both the newspapers and the body of leading edu cators of Oregon are working along cer tain lines to that end, and criticism of the whole system of Oregon's schools will not be of much benelit. But when our normal schools do reach the position that we all expect them soon to reach, will it be the earnest, conscientious teacher who will seek to avoid the state examinations? Rather, I think, it will be this teacher who in the full confi dence of her ability, education and train ing, will say to the state: "Give me your most difficult text. I am prepared." This is the attitude of the medical stu dent after finishing a four years' course. The state requires the medical test, and we do not hear physicians objecting to it. Why is the writer of the editorial so anxious that the supply of teachers bo increased? The teachers of Oregon have been carrying on a fairly successful fight to get teachers' salaries (wages, more correctly) increased to a fair amount. It has been my experience that the teachers of Oregon do not object to the examination, but that graduates of small normal schools of other states, who hav ing failed in their work come to this state hoping to have a state paper grant ed on their normal diplomas, do object. From this class we hear a great deal ot criticism, and it is my belief that The Oregonian has honestly mistaken this criticism for that of Oregon teachers. Allow the graduates of the normal schools of this and of every other state to teach here without an examination by the state, and what would be tho effect? What is always the effect when supply exceeds the demand? Or, why should a teacher wish the requirements made easy? . PORTLAND TEACHER. What' In a Name, Anvwayt Kscanaba (Mich.) Dispatch. If a name counts for anything, Mitchell Jasper, an Indian, living in Delta County, took a flyer directly in the face of fate when he appeared before the County Clerk In Escanaba and got a license to marry Mary Kick-a-Hole-in-thn-Sky. Jasper's prospects are further endan gered by the fact that the name of his future mother-in-law is Afraid-of-No-Man. Flip Flop. " " : Astoria Herald. The Herald this week announces change of policy. Henceforth it will be Democratic in politics. Not the Dolly Varden-Citizens Democracy, but the pure, unadulterated Democracy which laid the foundation for this grand Government and its institutions. This change of policy i.s the result of the Republican party's at titude on the tariff question, and that alone. Whew! Only One Lefts' Seattle Post-Intelligencer. C. E. S. Wood, of Portland, Or., says social troubles have their origin in fool laws enacted by fool politicians elected by a fool people. It is refreshing to learn that Oregon has one man left, among all its fools, who is competent to point out these fundamental sociological shortcom ings. Help! No Way To Treat a Friend. New York Tribune. A -Hearst Buffalo paper, perhaps by ac cident, printed a very poor likeness of William Sulzer, and over it they got a wrong heading, as follows: "New York's Latest Murder Mystery. A Ghastly Find." Mr. Sulzer said: "That is no sort of a way to treat a friend of the plain people." C. D. Gibson Wants Paria Studio. Brooklyn Eagle. Charles Dana Gibson is seeking a studio in Paris after a tour of the great art gal leries of Italy and Spain. Ho acknowl edges being a sufferer from homesickness and would have returned to America but for the persuasion of friends. TO THE DEFENSIVE I'D Mf To I Explain our. company 5 P0VT 10M ' The Attitude of the Trust Today. From the Chicago Tribune.