8 THE MORXING OREGOMAX, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1907. erBstnirnoN rates. fjr IKVARIABLT l?f ADVANCE. TS (Br Mali.) Pally, Sunday indwlM, en year S 2? ll!y, Sunday Included, six month!.... 45 Dally, Sunday included. thre months.. 2-25 Pally. Sunday Included, one month,.... fally. without Sunday, ene year - nj Dally, without Sunday, six months 3.Z3 Ially. without Sunday, threa month., l.i IMy. without Sunday, ona month Sunday, one yeu. c Weekly, one year (issued Thnnday) l-5o Kunday and Weekly, one year. ...... BT CAKRJEK. Call?, Sunday Included, one Tear '-J Dally. Sundaj Included, one month ' HOW TO IIF.MIT Send poetoffice money order, express order er personal check on jour local bank. Stamp, coin or currency ara at t!ia sender's risk. Glvo poatottlc aa drtaa 1b tail, lncljd'.nar county and sta-a. rOSTAGE KATES. Emered' at Portland, Oregon, PoatoBle aa Seroed-Clasa Matter. 1 :a It Pages t cent 1 to 26 raises cents go to it ! s cente 4 ti 6U Pages tenia Vei-eigjt postage, double ratea. UlTOllTAvr Ti.a postal iawt axe attlct. Nivf papers on which postage Is not fully l.tpa;a ere not forwarded to destination. EAMTKRN BUSINESS Ointfc. -. The 8. C. Bsckwltb Special 4eaty Ke Tork, room 43-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, roonia 510-MJ Trlb-se building. KEPT OX SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. Postefflce Nec Co.. ucaruorn atraet. St. I'auJ, .Uinn. J. St. Alai-te. Commercial !tior.. Denver Hamilton 4 HendrlcV. 906-91 Seventeenth street: Pratt Book Store, 121 r.rteenth etreet; I. Welnsteln; H. P. Han aen. Kansas City, Mo KlcksecUer Cigar Co Ninth aod Wainuz. Minneapolis M J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third, Eagle News Co., corner 'renin and Eleventh: Toraa News Co. Cleveland. O James Pushsw. 30T Su perior etreet. V-ashbiglan, D. C. Kbbltt Houae, Penn sylvania avenue. l'blladcliihin. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Keiuble. - A. P.. 3733 Lancaster ave nue: Pern News Co. , !"ew York City L.. .Tones & Co., Astor House;; Broadway Theater News Stand. Buffalo. '. Y. VP alter Fraer. Oakland, f al vr.. H. Johnson. Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; Hale News Co. - Ogdem D. U Boyle, W. G. Kind, 114 Twenty-fifth street. Hot Spring, Ark. C. N. Weaver ft Co. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 161S Farnam: Ma?euth Stationery Co. Haa.ramento, Cal. Sacramento Newa Co., 4SD K street. Sale Ijike Moon Book ft Stationery "Co.; Xlosenfeld & Hansen. I .on Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons. Pan Irlego B. K. Amos. Long Beach, Cal B. E. Amos. Pasadena, Cal A. F. Horning. l'ort Worth, Tex. Fort Worth Star. San Francisco Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand: Hotel St. Francis Newa Stand; X Parent; N. Wheatley. Goldfleld, v. Lou la Poll In. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Va, Krugg ft Uould. Pino Beau-h. Va. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, FRIDAY. MARCH 22. 1907. WHERE RESPONSIBILITY LIES. The Oregon ian has received from a member of the last Legislature a pro test against the article in these col umns Wednesday comparing the action of the Washington Legislature with that of the Oregon Legislature upon the subject of revenue-producing legis lation. The gentleman making the pro test says that Oregon has already upon its , statute-books some of the laws passed by the Washington Legislature at its recent session. This is true. But The Oregonian was not making a comparison of Washington laws with Oregon laws. ' It was showing .that at the same time that it raised the ap propriations the Washington Legisla ture provided new Indirect sources of revenue, while the Oregon Legislature did not. The public demand In this state has been lor enactment of laws that would eliminate the direct state tax, as has been done in- Wisconsin. , Instead of working toward that desira ble end, Oregon is farther from It to day than It wias before the last ses sion of the Legislature. The point The Oregonian tried to make, and did make, was that there was entire failure of revenue legislation in this slate, while- the Washington Legislature passed many revenue laws. But consideration of this feature of the protest is of minor consequence. 'There Is in the letter before us a mat ter of more vital importance, for it has a vastly wider bearing than any ques tion of action upon a particular class of measures. The gentleman who sends in the protest was a member of the House and says that the complaint made by The Oregonian should have been lodged against the Senate, for the desired legislation was defeated in that body. This answer is an attempted evasion of 'responsibility. It i3 a pitiful answer for any man to make In this -ear of our Lord, 3907. after on man . has forced through boti houses of tha Unltea States annsrress th most important legislation that h;te 'been enacted in a quarter of a century. President Roosevelt oould have ex plained the failure of pure-food, child labor, empioyers'-ltaibtlity ar?d railread--rato laws by saying. "The Senate 4a feat'i the b!:is." But he didn't. He wa not a q'.iit'ar. If the House or rtcopresealatives ir. the Or-.'Kon Lsis:aturo was in earnest ibovt revenue legislation, it could have forced the passage of the bills desired by the people. The Representatives wouiii navv) bank ot thorn a public Oiilis 'on so strong .that the Senators could not have tood out a-rainst it for one tay. It is an old sayintr Uvat one man and O-Mi make a majority. In this country 'he voice of the people is the voica of God, and ona man with the voice of the people to support him is a inujoriiy. Had there bfen in the House of Representative Iiarf as much willingness to fight for revenue legisla tion as there was to fight for normal svhool appropriations, the bills would hv gone through both houses. Where thr-re is a will there Is a way. There was c. way so force through the com pulsory pass law over the Governor's veto, fhoush there was no public opin ion to support it. There was a waj" to force the passage of the Monmouth appropriation bill with a Drain rider :a it. Numerous other Instances might be mentioned of bills passed by meth ods well known to .members of experi ence in legislation. But no way was found to force the passage of the laws most desired by the people. There seemed to be no one who was willing 'or able to make the flght with public opinion to support him. , On need not go far for a method of forcing action. The constitution de clares that neither house shall adjourn for more than three days without the consent of the other. If the Repre sentatives had been in earnest about revenue legislation, it could have re fuser to consider the fiuestion ot final adjournment until revenue from indi-rv-t sources hud been provided or some moans had been devised for placing part of the burden of taxation upon property that is not now bearing its rnaro. The House could have said to the Senate, "We have been here forty days and have passed bills carrying ap propriations aggregating $3,500,000. This is an increase of a million dollars in expenditures. The people expect us to provide new sources of revenue, and we will stay right here for forty days longer if necessary In order to give the people a square deal." With the House firmly standing in such a position, it would not have taken the Senate half an hour to make up its mind to agree upon some reason able legislation. The clamor from the hills and valleys and plains of Oregon would have been, so great that no mem ber could -have stood out against it. There were soma g-ood fighters in the Legislature, but they were themselves out fighting for four normal schools and other measures In which the people had no particular Interest. Perhaps The Oregonian ought to criticise Gov ernor Chamberlain for not. forcing the Legislature to pass revenue measures, and It would do so but for the fact that the Legislature put him in a hole so deep that he was helpless and could not be expected to do any aggressive work. ... In conclusion, let it be remarked that the people of Oregon are looking for men whose abilities mark them as leaders of public movements men who are in full sympathy with the people and who will at all times and in all places fipht faithfully and intelligently and to the last ditch for public inter ests. Oregon is looking for men who, in mind and character and vigor, stand head and shoulders above the-average citizen. There are honors awaiting such men. They are not expected to have the powers of a Roosevelt, but are expected to do for Oregon what Roosevelt has done for the Nation to have abilities and force of character strong in proportion to the tasks that would be placed before them. Fight ers are wanted who will fight for the right and for the people, and who will not excuse failure of legislation by say ing "the Senate did it." TRE COMMON INTEREST. That Puget Sound people are taking a broader view of the problem of de velopment of the commercial interests of the state is evident from the gen eral approval which has been given the appropriation of J125.000 for improve ment of the Columbia River. In for mer years thcro was determined oppo sition to any project which tended to develop the Upper Columbia region in Washington tributary to Portland com mercially. Now the rights of the East ern Washington producers are being recognized, as indicated by a leading editorial in the Tacoma Ledger com mending not only the appropriation of the $125,000 by the state, but also the recently announced policy of President Roosevelt for adoption of a comprehen sive system of improvement of inland waterways. Farmers on the Washington side of the line received a large share of the benefits from the expenditure of $185. 000 by the State of Oregon in building the Portage Road, but Oregon taxpay ers made little complaint on that ac count. Taking Upper Columbia im provements . as a whole, residents of Washington have more interest than those in Oregon, but it has not always been easy to induce Puget Sound in terests to grant Eastern Washington demands for river improvements. With Oregon and Washington working to gether on projects in which both are Interested, there will be greater pros pect of success. PARANOIA. Mr. Jerome's latest move in the Thaw trial seems to have been shrewd ly conceived. He insists that Thaw is a paranoiac; in other words, that he is a victim of chronic and probably in curable brain disease, which is entirely likely to repeat Its previous manifes tation and cause another homicide. Paranoia differs from what is more or less satirically called "brain storm" in at least one important particular which everybody can understand. In both of these mental disorders the pa tient suffers from delusions; but in brain storm the delusions, as Dr. Will iamson suggested in his interesting pa per before the County Medical Society the other night, break out suddenly without pre-existing motive. The acts which follow upon them are "impulsive and unpremeditated." They project themseives across the patient's "men tal horizon as does the meteor across the sky. bursting unexpectedly out of the darkness, no one knows wrhence, and quickly vanishing," no one knows whither. On tilts other hand, in paranoia the de.iuions are systematic. They con struct themselves into a story or plot Tiho.ie parts are logically connected as cauii3 uiid offset . A rational origin !s imagined for them and the crime to which tr.ey lead up is the natural ca tastrophe tf the psychopathic drama. Mr. Jerome agrees with Dr. William son in holding that paranoia is no ex cuse ior crime ur.der the law as it now stands: but the famous Prosecuting Attorney takes the ground that it ought to be an excuse, end he goes so far as to say. to the presiding judge in the Thaw trial that the conviction and execution of a prisoner named Taylor under conditions exactly similar to those of the nrardurer of Stanford White was "one of tb most rewsome acts he had ever seen." But while Mr. Jerome decidedly be lieves that a paranoiac should not be executed, he maintains just as firmly that he ought not to be set at liberty. The disease is chronic, and very likely incurable. It involves radical lesions in the structure of the brain. The series of systematized delusions which induced the murder of Whit is quite likely to reaur with reference to some other man: or it may take a new turn and lead up in. true dramatic sequence to some other- form of crime. There fore a person who suffers from para noia should be placed in confinement, not to punish him for his acts, but to protect his fellow-men from their repe tition. From brain storm a man may recover, and, improbable as it appears, his return to sanity may take place almost immediately after the commis sion of violent crime. Medical science seems to place this sinister fact beyond dispute. The fact is sinister because it will naturally tempt persons of crim inal Intent to contrive imitation brain storms for the sake of the immunity they afford.' Still.' truth is truti, and we must accept it whether the conse quences are agreeable or not. Mr. Jerome undoubtedly hopes to se cure the indefinite confinement of Thaw on the -ground that- he is an in curable paranoiac. The Graves law in Washington-aimed at a similar result by ordering that an accused person who advanced- the plea- -of insanity should be confined forthwith in the penitentiary- and kept there until the medical officer saw signs of returning l mental health, While the couxts .have virtually pronounced this law uncon stitutional, not -because its vital idea is unsound, but because the right -to insti tute proceedings to prove his sanity ought to be reserved to the prisoner, the validity of an older Washington statute which provides for the deten tion of insane delinquents has been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States. Mr. Jerome's hope that he may be able to put Thaw in prison for life seems, therefore, to be reason ably well grounded; for -the experts are substantially agreed that he is a para noiac. THEY GOT WHAT THEY. WANTED. . The recent slump in states' rights among the railroad presidents is some thing to shudder at. While the rate bill was winding its devious way through Congress, Federal regulation, according to the magnates, was little short of high treason. It would shat ter the Constitution into fragments and make -the ghosts of the fathers shiver with anguish -in the Elysian iields. Regulation of the railroads was one of the reserved rights of the states; it was a high prerogative of the local Legislatures which only the most un scrupulous Congress and the wickedest of Presidents would think of usurping. Very well; so far so good. Congress adjourned after enacting a more or lesF effective law which all the mag nates prophesied would rain down de struction and ruin upon the railroads. It actually resulted in just about doubling their dividends. Then the states took their turn. Behold the dawn of the Jubilant era of states' rights. One Legislature after another establishes commissions with full grown teeth. A fearful host of states adopts. the 2-cent fare; and then what a change comes over the spirit of the magnates' dream! The dreadful truth is that our rail road presidents almost without excep tion have soured on states' rights. Mr. FVitech, Harriman's new president of the Illinois Central, thinks "Federal regulation will not be detrimental to the railroads," but to state regulation he says avaunt. Mr. Stickney, of the Great Western, wants "the discordant regulations of the states eliminated and a system of regulation toy the Fed eral Government gradually evolved." And so with all the rest of them. Never was there seen before such a swift and unanimous change of heart. St. Pat rick's preaching to the Irish made many conversions and some very rapid ones, but its effect was nothing com pared with what a little practical ex perience of states' rights has done to our railroad presidents. May not one reasonably surmise that it would have a similar influence upon the other cor poration magnates who now in their innocence clamor for it? A CHEERFUL NOTE. There is now and then a note in the great chorus of labor discontent that is music to the ear. One of these is sounded in the statement that it is more difficult at present to find jurors for petty cases, that wear away the time of courts, vex the passive ear of justice and twist the manifest Intent of the law, than it is to flndi farmhands. There is a wholesome ring in this note, It seems to dismiss ,in a single strain the company of hangers-on about Jus tice courts and courthouse corridors the clan of "professional" Jurors always waiting for -the. sound of the slogan that calls them to a comfortable seat in a warm room for a few hours or days, with a warrant upon the county at the end of the sitting and to intro duce ,to fields and orohards a colony of meti willing and -anxious to work for a living. Not that the professional juror has turned farmer "or farm la borer. By no means; but his waiting ranks are no longer full and recruits are not coming; in. On the other hand, the boundless pos sibilities of a diversified agriculture in our state are, by the eame token, be ginning to be appreciated. From the hopyards of the Willamette Valley to the -beet 'gardens and wheat fields of Eastern Oregon; from the strawberry beds andV orchard groves of Hood River to the Logan berry areas and apple and peach orchards of Southern Oregon, the call to Tural industries .is heard, while at intervals all along the way in any and every direction unoccupied lands invite the settler to purchase and till age. The town idler "looking for' a job' on street corners or about public build ings will always be with us. Like the professional tramp, he represents a ty.pe evolved from civilization and ex isting in spite of it. But the thinning of his ranks is a matter of congralula t ion to taxpayers, while the influx into the farming regions of laborers and men with families is wholesome and full of promise. Wise indeed is the man of small meer.3 or the man whose labor Is his capita! and who takes advantage of the opportunities and the wages of prcspe ity to got a holding upon the soil which will respond to his Industry with an assured support and a comfortable competence The menace of industrial depression which the practiced ear of James J. Hill has noted as already faintly puisir.g the air will have no terrors for him, should it proceed to a blow. Calamity can hardly overtake a man who has his own roof over his head, plenty to. eat and something to sell from the product of his own lands. The present is an excellent time for the homebullder to secure an agricul tural holding in Oregon; for the farm hand to make himscdf first useful and then indispensable in the great scheme of diversified agriculture, and for the man "waiting for a job" about town to get off h -waiting list. Of course we might add that it is time for him to get off the earth, but there are some things that must be left to the workings of over-indulgent Nature or to the inter vention of divine Providence, and this seems to be one of them. The completion of traffic arrange ments between the Harriman lines and the Canadian Pacific promise very lit tle in the way of new freight business for Portland, lor various reasons. For one thing, tariff duties between the United States and Canada would pre vent much shipping across the line, even if advantageous traffic arrange ments favored the diversion of Cana dian business from Puget Sound to the Columbia. There seems to be no par ticular reason why the new arrange ment should bring new business to Portland. From an advertising stand point, however, and in the improve ment of service, as well as the proba ble diversion of passenger tratTtc to Portland, the signing of a contract be tween the O. R. & N. and the Cana dian Pacific seems likely to be benefi cial to Oregon. Portland wijl occupy a more prominent place in Canadian Pa cific literature, though even now the road particularly interested in develop ing tiu? CajLadlan Northwest provinces cannot he expected to make any spe cial effort to disclose the opportunities for settlers in Oregon. Portland will henceforth be on the Canadian Pacific's map. Bringing the Canadian Pacific into closer competition with the North ern Pacific and Great Northern will undoubtedly mean better service than would otherwise be given, for it fs in character of service rather than in rates that railroads show their rivalry. Joaquin Miller relates in one of his recent articles that In his boyhood days his chief delight was a bowl of milk and cornbread in a fence corner." And the rising generation would be more healthy and more vigorous if we had in this day more such simple diet and ife in the open air. Tea and coffee are supplanting milk, and wheat bread made at the -bakery has taken the place of cornbread. Both as to food value and digestibility the "johnnycake" is superior to the baker's bread, nut it is "old-fashioned," and the children of to day would take no delight in it. Its roughness stimulates the activity of the digestive organs, while the soft. glutinous foods bring on torpidity. In addition to this, tho warmth and com fort of the modern home robs the child of the exhilarating influence of the ooen air. More milk and cornbread eaten in fence corners-would go far toward eradicating some of the ills to which-flesh is - heir, particularly dys pepsia and tuberculosis. The nd of March is approaching. In the worSs of the weather-wise al manac, that did duty in a past genera tion, "look out for storms about this time." Incidentally, look out for a blow from the tail of a new cornet that Professor Matteuci, of the Vesuvius Observatory, says is impending- "about this time." The impact, according to this high authority, threatens conse quences particularly dangerous to the world. Specifically, he says: "If the comet's tail comes in contact with the atmosphere of the earth, ignition and disaster, the end of which -no man can foresee, would be likely to follow." However, since this is something that human intelligence cannot control, it will be just as well not to worry about it, but to take whatever March brings cheerfully and philosophically. A Portland organ of privilege caught redhanded with stolen goods on its per son cries "Stop thief!" to The Orego nian, obviously intending to divert at tention from its own misdeeds. In 1903 The Oregonian, on the occasion of Mr. Sothern's dramatization of Villon's life story, gave a sketch of the vagabond poet and some extracts from his phil osophy, with all due credit to him. R. L. Stevenson had previously published a similar article. On this fact is based a silly and malignant charge of pla giarism against The Oregonian. Our neighbor should content himself with his native dullness; it is not necessary for him to let envy drive him to abso lute idiocy. Mr. Harriman has undertaken to punish the State of Nebraska for its railroad legislation by laying off some trains and placing others on slow schedules. He has also prescribed petty rules to annoy purchasers of tickets. All this might be well enough if the railroads were stronger than the people. Since they are not, it would seem to be the part of wisdom not to push exasperation too far. What does Mr. Harriman expect to gain by mak ing the voters of Nebraska hate him and his railroads? ' Which is worse morally, the briber or the man whom he bribes? Was Eve more guilty than Satan? The common judgment of mankind always has been that the guilt of the tempter exceeds that of the victim whom he 'beguiles and ruins. Ruef is black enough, but the corporation magnates who used him as a mere instrument to dissemi nate corruption are so . much blacker that he looks like driven snow beside them. The stock joke of the facetious Call fornian that "it rains thirteen months out of the year in Oregon" usually falls from parched lips, with a crackle suggestive of a brush fire in August. Now, however, it has a gurgling sound that tells of a deluge that puts the gentle, reasonable rains of Oregon quite out of countenance. Cotton is still king in the commercial life of the United States, not "the king," however, but "a king." He shares the commercial throne with coal and copper, steel and gold, wheat and lumber. The export" value of this great staple last year raw and manufac tured was $500,000,000, or about 28 per cent of the total of our domestic ex port. It is reported that holiday goods or dered a year ago for sale for Christmas, 1906, are just arriving, the delay hav ing been due to poor freight service. But the railroads are not alone in be ing slow. They have had something due them from the people for several years, and are just getting it. There is absolutely no excuse in this city or state for men to remain idle, pending the settlement of a strike, or for any other reason. There is work for everybody in one vocation or an other, at wages that promise personal and family maintenance and a surplus or rainy-day fund. The fate of the young man of 23 years who "drank himself to death" recently in Aberdeen. Wash., must ex cite the pity of the pitiful. Still, since he had chosen this course In life, an early finiali was desirable, both, for lrfmself and for society. ' The commencement of the annual rise in the Columbia River is already noted. This means that the heavy snows of the Winter will be drained oft gradually and that the prophecy of a repetition of the flood of June, 1S31, will not be fulfilled. Two City Councilmen at La Grande have -been sentenced to ten months in jail on a conviction of trying to extort money from gamblers. Is La Grande trying to rival San Francisco? The Capital Journal thus speaks of its home .town: "The blight and par alysis of graft are upon this commu nity and should be shaken oft." Better call a grand jury. Colonel. According to its newspapers, Spo kane is startled by a proposal to close its saloons 'between 2 A. M. and S A, M. Just when Spokane begins to en joy life. Too bad those Easter hat bills can't be paid in May this year. FAVOR FEDERAL REGULATION. Railroad Prpaldeata Yleeew fli tbe Great Heatlon ot tbe Day. Seven of ten railroad presidents inter viewed by the Chicago Tribune last week favor co-operation between President Roosevelt and the railway corporations looking toward Government - regulation. In each case the extracts published be low . are from signed statements tele graphed to The Tribune by the. men men tioned : L. C. Fritch, assistant to the president of the Illinois Central Federal laws are, as a rule, fair because made after due deliberation and prepared with more care than state laws. With few exceptions. Federal legislation will not be detrimen tal to railroads. The greatest good will come from a better understanding be tween the railroads and atate and Na tional Governments. Many things could be corrected without the passage of op pressive laws. The move to get President Roosevelt and the railroad presidents to gether is -a good one. E. P. Ripley, president of the Santa Fe. The late Mr. Cassatt. Mr. Hughitt and mys-elf have favored, for many years, co operation with the Interstate Commission for the passage of laws giving that body more authority and releasing railroads from the absurd restrictions of the Sher man antt-trust law as construed by the Supreme Court, but we were largely in the minority and the railroads as a body, made the mistake of fighting all legis- ation. with the result that the law now in effect is very bad in some particulars. B. L. Wtnchell, president of the Rock Island A great many railroads are ready to co-operate, with the Government now. If there is a sufficient number and the President Is ready, co-operation is in eight. A. B. Stickney. president of the Chi cago Great Western I think the time has come when, if the whole regulation of railways can be done by the general Gov ernment and the discordant regulations bv State Government can be eliminated, a system of Government regulation could gradually be evolved which would insure to all shippers fair and equal treatment, and which would give, to railway invest ments that stability of values which is so desirable. F. t. Underwood, president of the Krie The present condition of public senti ment towards corporations and combina tions of all sorts I believe invites disas ter. When it is remembered that the agricultural industry is the leading one of the United States, and transportation ranks next to it in importance, it should not, to my mind, be hard to perceive the effects which would result from dealing the transportation interests of the coun try the severe blow of impairing their credit. W. H. Truesdale, president of the Dela ware. Iackawanna & Western. This feel ing of hostility and prejudice towards the railroads has already resulted in laws be ing, passed which will work injustice and hardship. T. P. Shonts. president of the Toledo, St. Louis & Western I believe that the financial interests stand willing to co operate with the Government with fram ing legislation that will be fair to the public and fair to the shareholders, and that unless this common ground is reached disastrous consequences will follow. George B. Harris, president of the Bur lingtonI am very glad to hear that Pres ident Roosevelt will use the great influ ence he commands to bring about an equitable adjustment of the transporta tion question, and ' hope earnestly that such regulations may result as will give the railroads such adequate compensation for services rendered as will promote the most perfect possible conditions for the safe and prompt carriage of persons and property, for-the Improvement and so far as is possible the perfection of the per manent way and equipment and finally to justify the investment of the enormous sums necessary for additional tracks, terminals and equipments. These things are necessary to provide for and protect the growing trade of this country. F. A. Delano, president of the Wabash History is full of cases where states men in their endeavor to get certain leg islation have sought to inflame public sentiment, and after that sentiment was aroused it has swept everything before it, even its originators. Is there not a' real danger that the bitterness born, as I believe, of imperfect knowledge of all the data may In this case go much fur ther than those" who promulgated the movement ever intended? W. H. Caniff, president of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Whatever may have been the mistakes in the past, or the natural results, It Is imperative now that sober, earnest thought and judgment prevail. The proposed confer ence ought to result in a better under standing of the complicated problem which now confronts the American peo ple. DR. B ROUGHER IS TAKKX TO TASK. Member of Hnssalo St. Church Cham pions Cause of Rev. Paul Rader. PORTLAND, Or.. March 20. (To the Editor.) It is a matter of deep regret to one who has, ever since the arrival of Dr. Brougher In Portland, been a sincere admirer of him and his work, that he should have so descended as to put his name to the petty and al most malevolent attack upon the ser mon delivered by Rev. Paul Rader at Hassalo-street Congregational Church on last Sunday morning. It seems al most Incredible that a man of his known Christian kindness should have thus sneered at a small church in the very beginning of its efforts to inaug urate new work. As a church, it is unnecessary to state that we do not look forward to "empty benches." under Mr. Rader's ministry. The thrust at Mr. Rader's "Anti-Saloon League record" is entirely uncalled for, as he left it exonerated of every charge, and the best people in the city have full faith in his integrity. The report of the sermon in question, being short, gave a very inadequate idea of its character and fineness of thought. Certainly, all Christian work ers will agree that a "crowd does not constitute a chureh," and the story of the "dead dog" was simply an illustra tion of what sometimes attracts a crowd. I do not think It was the im pression of the congregation that any special church was aimed at. Rather, it seemed a note of encouragement to a small church, that through many struggles was still trying to preserve its spiritual life; telling us still to work on, since not numbers but those to whom the "holy spirit revealed it self" constituted the church. The censure of Dr. Brougher was en tirely out of proportion to the imagined offense. Let us hope the good doctor was onlv unhappily Impulsive. 0?tE OF ThE MEMBERS OF HASSALO-STREET CHURCH. Harriraao Not Sheared. Topeka State Journal. When the smoke of the flurry in Wall street with apologies for the metaphor Is passed, it will probably be found that Mr. Harriman had sold a large amount of certain stocks when the prices were high, and he found it convenient to lower the prices before buying them back. Wall street is having a terrible time this week at the Spring shearing of the lambs, but you will notice that it doesn't affect the rest of the country very much. . Twelve years ago this sort of trouble In Wall street would have precipitated a panic all over the coun try. The country is no longer depend ent on Wall street as it once. was. His Wtfe'e Compliments. v Smiles. 'What did your wife say when yoe. ar rived home last night?" "She didn't say anything; atmply pelted me with flowers." "How singular!" "Singular, did yon say? Oh, the pots came with them, you know." APFROrRIATIOSjFOR IMEHSITY Father of Betereadnm Doubts If Grasgprs Are Well Advlaed. OREGON CITY, Or., March 21. (To the Editor.) Is there good reason to order the referendum on the Uni versity of Oregon appropriation bin? I ask this question particularly of my brother Grangers. Have the Grangers appointed any commtttnes to make per sonal examination and report on the institution and its needs? Have any of the officers or members of any Grange spent so much as two days at the University within the last two years? If they have not already made such careful examination, it is to be hoped they will do so before circulat ing referendum petitions. It goes without saying that no man. and much less an organization of the standing and character of our Grange, should take the lead in demanding a referen dum petition without full knowledge of the facts. For myself, I do not know. But in common with practically all the people in Oregon I have groat faith in the judgment of the Board of Regents, and I also have confidence in those mem bers of the ways and means commit tee whom 1 know personally. These men made a careful study of the con ditions and needs of the University, and most of them were convinced that the appropriation ought to be more rather than less. On general princi ples we should do everything in our power and make every reasonable sac rifice for the edtication of our citizens. They are now the supreme power, and the safety of the state depends on their wi3dom and knowledge. The appro priation is only J1.25 per year per voter, and I do not believe there is an intelligent day laborer in -Oregon who will not cheerfully pay that amount in the hope some clay that it may bene fit his own child. For myself. I would rather see ap propriations for educational purposes doubled rather than reduced a dollni- except in cases where it may be clear ly shown that the money is not being wisely spent. In this opinion the vote on the appropriation bill last June shows that I am only an average citi zen. From the little I have seen of the University, I am convinced that no mechanic or farmer can go through the laboratories and mechanical de partments without a feeling ot shame that the state does not supply a bet ter equipment of tools and mechanical appliances. W. S. U'llliX. NOT SO BAD AS IT LOOKS, PKRHAPS, Significant Feature of the Late Wall Street "Panic." New York Times, March 15. Some light upon the situation may be obtained, and perhaps a little comfort, too. by an examination of the day's quo tation list. If the wreck of the market has resulted from general conditions, then undeniably the situation is bad. If it is the work of individuals, or if it re sults from the condition of individuals. Wall street need not give way to despair. The sales of the day. as we have said, reached the total of 2.5B3.OT0 shares. One half of this total was made up of trans actions in these shares: Shares. Decline. Amalgamated Copper.'. Reading Union Pacific V. S. Steel common.... S.'i6.llT., 1 r,:i:i.270 20i 371.S.-.0 20 , 315.400 3l Total 1.277.19:5 This makes up one-half of the day's market. Add Pennsylvania Railroad, 146,445, and Southern Pacific, 110,250, and the total for these six stocks is reached ot 1,533.890. Outside of these stocks the transactions reached only the normal total of a million-share day. This little list includes not only the bulk of the transactions, but the extreme declines. The Street can draw its own infer ences. In seeking to determine whether the remarkable events of the day are to be ascribed to general conditions which might inspire the fear that everything is going to smash, or by individual condi tions. the Street may be further aided by taking notice of the fact that some of the most Important men in the financial com munity are away in the South, on the ocean, or in Europe. Upon such 'occa sions absence is indeed conspicuous. Ke Retaliation. Washington Star. There is a good deal of talk of retal iation on the part of railway manage ments. It is reported from Nebraska that the railroads have reduced the number of their trains and have even gone so far as to compel passengers from outside states to buy fresh tickets and recheck their baggage at the Ne braska state line. Attempted retalia tion against the public is shortsighted policy. The people will not be retaliat ed against, and a company which re sorts to this device is a candidate for stringent and thorough regulation. One of the best friends of the railroad cor porations has uttered the warning that concerted resistance on the part of the railroads would be suicide. The obvious course ot prudence is for the railroads to submit patiently to a process of reg ulation, subject to court review to se cure inalienable constitutional rights, which is so unmistakably an expression of the public belief that the transporta tion lines should render service for lower rates than have heretofore pre vailed. Good sense will ultimately dom inate in this propaganda of reform. NOT EVEN IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN T if t r Ji ' if hv 1 Facsimile of PJrat 1'ngr. An Oregon Girl and One of Her Pets. ins last irr.en. The Story of Christ, told by days, in the words of lite Gospel. THE BACKYARD FOR A C.iBPE.V Timely hints to Portland housewives on raising vegetables. " BEST AWVAL FLOWERS. Varieties suitable for planting ia Portland next week. 3K. DOOLET OV MVSIC. No man or woman who ever heard a piano should miss. it. GCARDIXG VSCLE SAM'S MOXF.P How the Nation's Strong Box is pro ted ed against robbery. J'RIXCE EDDY A SAILOR. Heir to tlie British Throne has a new ship all his own. HOW GEO ADE WRITES PLAYS Interview in which the Hoosier Hu morist talks shop. "DOX'T SPOIL THE HOGS." Homer Davenport shows what dam age fashion has done. JOAQV1S MILLER. Veteran Poet tells when he first heard of gold in California. MARY STEWART CUTTING. Little Stories of Happy Life: The Mission of Pleasure. , OXE-PAGE CLASSICS. Nathaniel Hawthorne's Masterpiece, "The Scarlet Letter." J.V THE CAPITAL OF ALGIERS. Frank G. Carpenter describes its forty-million-dollar boulevard. THE ItOOSEVELT BEARS. Seymour Eaton tells of their visit to the London Tower. EASTER STORY FOR GIRLS. ' "Kate's Violet Vision," a tale of happiness by Lonise Lexington. If Coed to Be Alive. Charlotte Perkins Stetson. It Is good to be alive when tbe trees ahlne green. And the steeper hills stand up against the sky; Big sky, blue sky, with flying clouds be tween It Is good to be alive and see the clouds drive by. It is good to be alive when the strong winds blow. The strong, sweet winds blowing straightly off the sea; Great eea, green eea, with swimming ebb and flow It is good to be alive and see the waves roll free. AN OUNCE : From the- New York World.