THE 3IOKMM OKISCjOJMAN. MONDAY; MARCH 23, 10O7. mimn scuscRirnoji rates. . Cr INVARIABLY IX ADVANCE. "V3 ' - - (By Hall.) . Dully, Sunday included, on year 8 S? Dally, Sunday Included, ilx month.... " IUy. Sunday lncltidsd. three nnonth. . II! rjally. Sunday Included, one monttt -75 . Ually. without Sunday, one year n.Ott Dally, without Sunday, six montha 3.25 Dally, without Bunday, three month!.. l.T Dally, without Sunday, one month j Sunday, one year 50 Weekly, one year lsued Thursday)..- Gunday and Weekly, one year "-SO BY CARRIER. Dally, Sunday Included, one year ' Dally. Sunday Included, on month " HOW TO RMIT Send postofllee money rder, express order or personal check on yeur ocal bank. Stamps, coin or currency r at th sender's risk. Give poatofftc ad dress in full. Including county and "at. I'O STACK RATES, ' "Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postottlc a Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pages I Bl 1 to 28 Pi.ei ..2 cents SO to 44 Faces 48 to 60 Pace .3 cnt . cent .Foreign Postage, double rate. IMPORTANT Th postal law ax trtct Newspapers on which postage 1 not fuly -Unpaid are not lorwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The B. C. Becltwltn fcpeclal Agency New York, room 43-30 Tribune building. Ctu go, room 510-612 Tribune building. KEPT ON 8 AXE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. Poetoltlc New Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. . Denver Hamilton & Hendrlck. "06-912 . Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 121 Fifteenth street; I. Welnsteln; H. P. Han . aen. Kansas City, Ma Ricksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. . Minneapolis m. J. Kavannugh, 50 South Third; Eagle New Co., corner Tenth ana Eleventh; Torn New Co. Cleveland. O. James Fushaw. 307 Su perior street. Washington, D. C Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa- Ryan' Theater Ticket office; Kemble. A. P., H735 Lancaster ave nue; Penn -News Co. New Tork City 1. Jones & Co., Astor House;; Broadway Theater News Stand. Bnffalo, If. Y. Walter Freer. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnaon. Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley OlklBim Stand (lul- NCWI Co. Oaden D. L. Boyle. W. O. Kind, 114 Twenty-nfth street. Omaha Barkalow Bros., Union Station; Mageath Stationery Co. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento New Co. I 4SU K street. Salt Lake Vton Book A Stationery Co. Roseneld A Hansen. Los Angelea B, E. Amos, manager aeven atreet wagons.. : . ' Has Diego B. E. Amoi. Eons; Beach, CaL. B. E. Amo. Pasadena, Cai A. F. Horning. Fort Worth. Tex Fort Worth 8tar. eaa Francisco Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; X.. Parent; N. Wheatley.. Koldfleld, Mev. Louie Poll In. Eureka, Cal.-r-Call-Chronlcle Agency. Norfolk, Va. Krugg & Gould. Tin Beach, Va. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1907. FRANCHISE ON SECTION EINE ROAD. Again The Oregonian will say that the Section Line road should be re served as public highway, and the county should give over no part of it for right of way for a traction rail road. The highway might be used well enough for a passenger streetcar line, as are streets of the City of Portland, but not for electric trains, running twenty-five, forty to fifty miles an hour. Such traffic could not be tol erated In Portland streets, many of which are no wider than the 60-foot Section Line road. If users of the Sec tion Line road want the convenience of electric cars on that highway, they should -understand fully what they are doing, when they petition the County Court to grant a franchise for the Mc- Corkle Electric Road to Mount 'Hood. They will surely rue the day that they signed the petition, unless they re strict the use of the road to that for passenger streetcars. They will not be able to thrust railroad trains off the road after it shall have proved a nui sance and a monopoly of the highway. . The demand of the public for speedy transportation and prompt freight service will prevent the users of the road from enforcing proper regula tions. A railroad, whether steam or elec tric, should be required to furnish Its own right of way, and, if It is backed by substantial capitalists. Instead of by franchise speculators, it will prefer to own the land for its tracks. A sixty foot right of way, seven miles long, would amount in all hardly to fifty acres of land. The purchase of that much land will not break up a project that is promoted by responsible capi tal. A railroad to Mount Hood should not be a streetcar line. Its tracks should be heavier built and its grades should b more even than a streetcar line re quires, if It is to attain the speed that good service demands along the sixty mile distance to Mount Hood. The Mount Tabor Improvement Asso ciation declared itself opposed to the franchise, on March 11. in the following language: Whereas. An application lias been made for a franchise for an electric railway on the Section l.lne road for certain considerations, and believing that a transportation corpora tion seeking to construct a railroad should purchane a right ot way without obstructing a county road with tracks, therefore be it Resolved. That it Is the sense of this as sociation that no franchise should be given an electric and traction railway on the county roads, but that ail county roads should be kept permanently free of all ob structions of the sort and open to the use of the public for which all county roads were built, as the county roads arc but tlO feet wide, and cannot be occupied by one or more car tracks without seriously ob . etructing traffic. This resolution touches the matter In the right way. It shows that there Is a body of citizens on the Section Line road who can see ahead into the future, when population on each side of the road will be dense and their wagon traffic will need the full 'width of the highway, yet will not "be able to get rid of the electric railroad occu pying part of Its surface, nor to com pel tho car company to keep the road near its tracks in proper repair. Such companies promise to maintain their part of a road in perfect condition, but none has yet lived up to that promise. Multnomah County has spent large sums of money for improvement of the road, and will spend much In fu ture. The road would be torn "up to lay the tracks, and never would be kept in as good condition as it the tracks were off It. A franchise is likely to be an abused privilege in any event. It is an at tribute of the sovereign power of gov ernment, conferred on Individuals be cause the Government Is not prepared to make a certain improvement or euuip a certain convenience. Franchises have been trafficked in. In Portland and elsewhere, for enrichment of their possessors and for aggrandizement on the public. The people have sanctioned their .issuance because they had not the foresight of the men who secured them to see the future value of the privileges. Tfers of the Section Line road shduld put on their long-distance spectacles. If It were a physical ne- cessity for a Tailroad to Mount Hood "to use the road, or parts of it, because there were no other land available for the route, there -would be good reason to grant the application for franchise. ' "OCTSIDE" REAL ESTATE. Writing to The Oregonian, a woman teacher In the public schools, earning $70 a month, with no one dependent on her, asks whether it Is advisable to buy a suburban lot which she can pay for at the rate of $15 a month; also, whether it is safe to undertake more than one lot in the hope that she may realize a good profit within six months or a year. On the matter of speculation. The Oregonian's views are well known throughout the Pacific Northwest. They need not be repeated. If anyone wishes to take the long chance of buy ing on a margin, real estate is a great deal better than Chicago wheat or New York stocks or undeveloped enterprises. More than one large fortune had its start in such opportune speculation. Be fore entering on that kind of a venture. each person must decide for himself whether an inactive real estate market would spell disaster to- him. Lots that are paid for will never embarrass him seriously. As a truthful guide, apply the same rule to suburban lots that the capital ist applies to business property offered him for investment. Will It, when im proved, pay a satisfactory return? If a $750 house on a $300 lot will rent for $10 a month. It is surely a good invest ment; Just so with a $1000 house on a $500 lot, or a $2000 house on ari $800 lot, at proportionately higher rental. The net income above taxes and insurance will seldom be less than 8 per cent, and in most cases 10 per cent. No married wage-earner who does not own his home can do better with his savings than to buy a suburban lot and build a dwelling. Where he can do this in Installments, the whole prop osition resolves itself into acquiring a home by the monthly payment of a sum about 25 per cent more than what his rent would be for a home of the same class. In other words, let him add one-fourth to his necessary expen ditures for rent, and in nine years his home will be paid for. Any payment in excess of the stipulated amount has tens the day when his property shall be free from encumbrance. Looking to the future of Portland, it is fortunate that no tenement houses. to be crowded with -breadwinners, ob trude themselves on one's vision. Those who work for scant wage betake them selves to the cottage. Within the city limits and the suburbs, ramified by streetcar lines, there is room for a population of half a miHion. allowing a lot fifty by one hundred feet to each family. Pure air and plenty of play ground conduce to good health and sound morals. The electric car, in- a measure, equalizes distance. As Port land grows, the demand for suburban homes must increase, and under this demand their market price naturally will rise. "Neighborhood" makes values. No stranger looking over the big area known locally as the East Side needs a pilot to point out the enhanced value of lots in additions where building re strictions have been enforced. Every man who builds an attractive home adds dollars to the vacant lot beside it. Sentiment cuts considerable figure in choosing a home; an advantageous site is worth whatever the intending pur chaser is willing to pay for it. Speaking broadly, whatever influ ences are at work to build up a city, build up all sections of it. Portland is growing faster than ever before, and on a substantial basis. If the location and the price of a lot suit you. and you have the means to pay for It, buy It. The chances of decline in price are very much less than the probability of steady advance. NO DISASTER AT SALTON, PERHAPS. . There is evidently a bright, as well as a dark, side to the'Salton Sink dis aster. By the breaking of the banks of a canal the water of the Colorado River was turned into this' dry bed of a former sea, with the result that many farms were destroyed and the Southern 'Pacific was compelled to move Its tracks to higher ground in order to keep out of the water. Comparatively si?aking, however, tho area of tilled lands submerged was small. Now comes the Texas Legislature with a resolution recently adopted declaring i that the filling of Salton Sink has done more good than harm and that no further efforts should be made to keep the water out of the basin until thor ough investigation has shown beyond question to what extent Arizona, New- Mexico and Texas have profited by the accidental escape of water. The Tex ans assert, and have figures to back up their statement, that the filling of this dry sea-bed has increased the rain fall very materially in the three states named, and that the area thus bene fited is so much greater than the area submerged that the greatest good to the greatest number requires that the Colorado be left to seek the lowest level. Statistics for one season show the increased rainfall throughout the States of Arizona and New Mexico and a part of Texas. Possibly this Increase was due to other causes, but the resi dents of those stales ate quite certain that It should be attributed to the fill ing of Salton Sink. In this they have the support of scientists, who nave for many years declared that the creation of a sea where the dry, hot basin "ex isted would produce the change now experienced. What the Texas Legisla ture wants Is that careful observations be taken for a year or two, so that the actual effect of the creation of the in land sea can be ascertained. But California is not likely to listen very patiently to the suggestion from Texas. The Salton Sink is in Califor nia. It has been the hottest place in the state. Because it was hot, it served as the starting-place for sea breezes. As everybody knows, hot air rises and cooler air rushes in to fill the space. A column of heated air rising from Salton Sink brought cooler air from the west and eventually extended its influence back' to the Coast, where the cool air from the. ocean, rushing In land, formed the refreshing breezes Which attract Summer visitors. Pro prietors and residents of Summer re sorts on the Southern California Coast assert that the filling of the Sink with water from the Colorado has very no ticeably affected the sea breezes and has caused a humidity of the atmos phere In ail the region between Salton Sink and trie ocean. Here is where conflicting interests are likely to cause difficulty. Califor nia wants the Sink -to stay as It was, while Arizona, New Mexico and 'Mex ico want it to stay as it is. Even though the inflow of water be prevent ed in the future, it will require several years for the water now in the . basin to evaporate. The task of controlling the river is probably greater than the state would wish to undertake, so, if the three states east of the sink can prevail upon the railroads and the Gov- ernment to adopt a let-alone policy, the sea may be permitted to remain. It has been suggested that the property owners directly Injured by the filling of the sink might be compensated for their loss, and thus the demand for the reclamation of the sink be silenced. While this might satisfy the demands of those who have rights directly af fected. It would not be satisfactory to those who are indirectly interested be cause of the effect the filling of the sea has on the ocean breezes. But if It should prove to be true, as now believed by many, that creation of a sea where a dry sink existed before will permanently increase the rainfall in the arid region of the three states, what was at first considered a serious disaster may prove to be a very for tunate accident. WHOHE BUSINESS IS ITT An Astoria paper, whose editor once misrepresented the people of his county in the State Legislature, is much in censed because The Oregonian a few days ago published in its news col umns a report . that steps were being taken by unknown persons to purchase some 10,000 acres of tide land above Tongue Point. According to the re ports at hand, the plan was to pur chase this land at a nominal sum and, use It for railroad terminals, mill sites and docks, for which .purpose it would have a value of from $1,000,000 to $10,- 000,000. The facts, so far as they could be learned, were given, together with the statement from ex-State Land Agent Oswald West that he is watching the proceedings and will oppose any effort to purchase the lands. The facts were printed as accurately as they could be learned, and without any comment from this paper. But publication of facts seems to worry the editor down by the mouth of the river. He would rather see the lands sold and the facts published aft erwards. "If a railroad or mill company wants to buy the land3 at $2.50 an acre and spend thousands of dollars in Improving1 them, what business is it of The Oregonian?" he writes. "They have been in their present location for hundreds cf years, and the only value they possess would be through reclam ation, and If any capitalists or railroad companies or mill syndicates want to buy them at the price fixed by the state. The Oregonian does not have to butt in and try to defeat the sale. There is ho doubt but all of these lands above Tongue Point will be sold and that James J. Hill will be the pur chaser." Herein the Astoria editor Bhows his ignorance or his desire to deceive. "The only value they possess would be through reclamation," he says. The Oregonian thinks differently. Those lands belong to the state, which means to all. the people of the state". Every citizen has an interest in them. If they have any value as railroad ter minal grounds, it is because thousands of farmers, millers, manufacturers, fishermen and other producers are fur nishing commodities to be shipped. If they have any value for sawmill sites, it is because nature clothed the hills along the Columbia River with forests of the best timber that ever grew. Whatever value they have, and for whatever purpose, belongs to the .people of the state. The people have a right to sell them whenever and for what ever price they please. If location gives them a value they would not otherwise possess, the people have a right to the benefit of that value. If they are worth $1,000,000 the people snouid receive that sum, and the mon ey should be turned into the irreduci ble school fund, instead of into the cof fers of some millionaire. The last Leg islature, after a severe contest, passed an act prepared by the State Land Board, withdrawing all tide lands from sale for a period of ten years. In ten years from now we shall have an al together different idea of values of tide lands than we have today. The new- act does not go into effect until May to. and, according to the report, attempt is being made to purchase the lands in question before the law takes effect. Whether the lands should be sold is a question which the State Land Board will determine. Whether the lands should be sold at $2.50 an acre Is no more the business of The Oregonian than of every citizen of the state, but It was the business of this paper to Inform the people of the reported at tempt quietly to buy up these lands, which hav so great a prospective value. The Astoria editor proceeds upon the theory that has long prevailed in some quarters that deals in public' lands are the business of nobody except, the spec ulators who want the lands. That the ory was exploded In proceedings to wnicn the Astoria man evidently al ludes when he says that "The Orego nian has been instrumental in sending tew innocent men to jail." There was a time when everybody's business was nobody's business, but In these days we are putting into office a few men who make everybody's business their business and protect the interests of the people. AND STILL THE WONDER GROWS, Wireless telegraphy is, at least to the uninitiated, one of the wonders of elec trical science and of an age replete with discoveries and developments that are the marvels of today, to become the commonplace things of tomorrow The whisper upon the wire that could be heard across the continent; the whisper under the sea that could be heard on the farther hore, were won ders in their day; but development In tnis line nas ceased. The message given to the air has succeeded It. Fly ing on viewless wings, it annihilates distance and time and has in a short space of years become an essential ele ment in the official life of the world. Scarcely a day passes but some new feat in overcoming distance is accred ited to "the wireless." The latest feat was the transmission of a message not only across the continent, but hundreds of miles beyond over the open sea, The details of this latest exploit in "wireless" are interesting not only as recording facts of present development, but as forecasting the practically boundless possibilities of the future. An operator a. Point Loma station near San Diego, Cal., so the story runs, got a flash of a message that was be ing sent from Washington, D. C to Pensacola, Fla. Me also caught part of a message from Washington to the battleship Connecticut, which was at the time 600 miles out in the Atlantic Ocean. These messages were clearly read on the Point Loma instrument, coming in on their wireless -wings distance of 2400 miles. Trtily, it would seem that the secrets of the earth and air and sea are being revealed to man through an agency the scope and power of which pass the boundaries of con lecture. ' That no government or department of government or business is dependent upon any one man is a fact often for gotten by people who magnify their own importance in this world's affairs. There is always someone ready to step into the vacancy that may occur in any department of the world's great army of workers. Ex-President Loubet, of France, Is one of the latest to discover his own insignificance in the affairs of his people and has disclosed his dis appointment at making the discovery. Mournfully he complains that he is neglected and forgotten: I thought that my experiences, my fa miliar relations with so many crowned heads and my knowledge of matters of state would Induce those who are now at the helm to come and consult me sometimes. But no one has come; no one has ever asked my advice. The dead are soon forgotten so 1 find are the living. The Wall-Street Journal is trying to call it the "Roosevelt panic," and says it will probably be so known in Wall street history. Very wisely the term "Wall-street history" is used, for it will not be so known in any other his tory. But even if it were, the expres sion would carry no Inference deroga tory to President Roosevelt. If it was necessary for the President to start a panic in order to relieve the people from ' the grasp of a band of railroad robbers, honest mien will not frown when his name is mentioned in connection with It. The people, how ever, have decided that the panic was a move on the part of the railroad magnates to cause a slump in values, which would enable them to buy stocks at less than they were worth and profit by the recovery. Wall-street history will show that this was done. It was a rich men's panic. Setting trap-guns with which to pun ish chicken-thieves is a scheme which has resulted disastrously to the owners of the chickens more times than to the thieves. It 1b not only foolish, but criminal. Stealing chickens Is a crime, but it is not" punishable by death nor by maiming. In the eyes of the law a person who sets a trap-gun for the pur pose of inflicting an unlawful injury is guilty of murder If that injury re sults In death. The Portland woman who set ' a trap-gun in her chicken house a few days ago was as much in need of a lesson as the persons who had been robbing her roosts. She learned the lesson when she received a charge of rice in her face. Mr. Harrlman thinks the American people are "magnificent pioneers." And why shouldn't he think so? Didn't they go into a wilderness and build homes and farms and cities and fac tories to make business for the rail roads which he owns? Now he expects them to go into Eastern Oregon and develop that region as they have West ern Oregon and prepare It for him to plunder. He has yet shown no disposi tion to go with the people and help In the development. His advice is, "Go and prepare a place for me, that where you are I may be also." Why shouldn't he think the people of this country make magnificent pioneers? Only magnificent" is too mild a word. It is an almost universal rule among women to faint at the wrong time, but the Astoria woman who fainted when a shot was fired at her and thus made her assailant believe she was dead, had better Judgment than most members of her sex. He is now dead, and she Is alive to tell the story. But it is a story that won't sound well. so, for morality's sake, It is to be hoped she won't have to tell it. The Philadelphia Press complains be cause the Capitol Commission paid $2400 for a two-chair bootblack stand for the Senate lavatory, when a first- class stand could have been bought for less than $100. Well, what's the dif ference whether the $2300 was grafted one way or another? What's the use of building capitols if no one is to get a graft out of it? The president of the Santa Clara, Cal., Fruit Exchange says that half the prune crop of that locality has been ruined by- the rains washing the pol len off the blossoms. But if half the fruit is ruined, the other half will be of so much better size that it will have a greater net value than the whole'crop. So, don't worry about it. Since Kansas enacted an anti-pass law, nearly all the state officials have moved to Topeka. But such an effect would not be seen in Oregon, for the Legislature In this state provided for payment of the traveling expenses ot its state officials. So, Salem has no chance of profiting in the same way Topeka has. The people of Russia must pay $8,- 000.000 a year to maintain the Czar's palaces, which sum includes all the liv ing expenses of himself and family,. To have a Czar is almost as bad as having a boss in San Francisco. A Pennsylvania man was sent to prison for making fifty-five thousand gallons of wine without using grapes. That's no worse than making cider vinegar without apples. Under a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, betting on horse races must cease. The Canadians can come over on this side of the line to enjoy their sport. A new scheme to encourage the plac ing of wires underground is to impose a tax of $1 or more per year for each pole maintained within city Iimits.'This idea is of Pennsylvania origin. There is some evidence that Roose velt is standing in with the trust cor porations, for he agrees with their idea that he should not run for a third term. Dropping a nickel in the slot-machine is the first step in gambling. Abolish the machines and we shall have fewer boys started on a downward course. A Wall-street paper says that "Phila- delphiana responded well to margin calls." In other words. "Quaker lambs gave up their wool without a bleat." There is a show yet for poor old Lonergan to get on the bakery wagon at Folsom. He will know many of his patrons, too. Henderson, the Oregon City wife murderer and suicide, simplified mat ters all around. Inquests are cheaper than trials. About everybody has suggested work for "Roosevelt" when his term expires except the old lady of "the National." Bellingham talks of spending a mil lion for water, and water simply a chaser! Yesterday was the real estate man's day. 7 r " LIFE IX THE OREGON COUNTRY Out.CaraarlnK. Geer. Olympla Recorder. It takes a "Heneyous" investigation to unearth a heinous official graft. Pride of Oregoa, Echo Register. Little old Umatilla County produces one out of. every 100 grains of wheat produced In the United States. Ignorance of Conceit. Garfield Enterprise. Some people imagine they are temperate merely because they don't drink whisky on an empty stomach and have never had delirium tremens. Dee-Ilsrhted. Albany Democrat. For the eighth time the stork has visit ed the home of the editor of the Hood River Glacier, and the editor humbly asks President Roosevelt if he is satisfied. St. Johns Point of Vletr. St. Johns Review It must have made the mouths of some people water when they read the accounts of Ruef touching the Pacific States and Home Telephone Companies up for $152,600 for franchises. No Embryo Normal Wanted. Wallowa Sun. Have you signed the remonstrance against the county high school yet? If not, do not fall to do so at once. Don't neglect it- It can do no harm and it ought to do good. Umatilla Limerick. T. T. G. In Pendleton Tribune. There was an old codger named Spooner Who wisely concluded that sooner Than go down before "Bob," He'd resign his old job Which was cute on the part of said Spooner. Poor Haul. Rainier Review. A large number of "drunk and disorder, lies" occupied tho City Jail last 'Satur day night, including one woman. As they nearly all were impecunious the City Treasury was not materially benefited by their contributions. How It Happened. Toledo Leader. The Portland bowling team which parti cipated In the tournament at Denver re cently returned without honors and all shrieeled up. The rtgh altitude and arid climate did It. When the Denver bowlers come to Portland they may swell up and pop open. Give Rim the Glad Hand. Gresham Herald. We hope our folks will not forget when meeting a stranger on the street, or on the car, that he may be from the East. At any rate give him a cordial welcome to Oregon. Tell him of the good things to be found here, how we are growing, the oeautirui climate, the water, and. well tell him that this is God's own country and he will do well to stay here. But above all, don t discourage him. TREED BY A BIG BUCK DEER Men Who Saved Him the Victim of Base Ingratitude. Central Point Herald. Will Scott, holding down a claim In the tall timber a few miles from Butte Falls had an exciting experience one day last ween. He was at work In the timber some distance from his cabin, when his attention was attracted by the ferocious Darning or a pack of coyotes in the can yon below him. The sounds were unlike the oridnary coyote cry, and Mr. Scott, becoming- interested, started down the hill to investigate, and, as he stepped around bunoh of thick brush, came suddenly within a few yards of a .magnificent buck surrounded by the pack. The coyotes had chased the buck through the deep snow until he had finally made a stand and was making a valiant though losing tight against -the hungry horde. With hoof and horn he fought them off, but it was a losing game, and had Mr. Scott not ap peared on the scene the unequal fight must have soon been over. So Interested were the combatants that they did not notice the presence of a man. but when the coyotes finally saw him they quickly beat a hasty retreat. With a snort of victory the buck turned his head and saw the man. He paused for the fraction of minute in surprise; then, with lowered antlers and blazing eyes, made a rush for this new intruder, and suddenly Scott emembered that he had no gun. He did not feel In a mood for footracing just then, either, so he shinned up a tree a a pace that would make tha nimble gray squirrel green with envy. Nor did he have any time to lose, for as he swung him self into the first branches the tip of the deer's antler tickled the bottom of- his foot and' caught the hem of his overalls, ripping them to the " pocket. That was perhaps the proudest buck deer that ever trod the earth in Oregon. He had put to flight a band of wolves and treed a man- and he concluded to camp there a hue and enjoy his victory. For an hour he guarded his captive, stamping his feet, shaking his head and making other warlike demonstrations, while Scott remained in the treetop and wished for his rifle. Finally the deer tired of the game and mosfed off into the woods. stopping once in a while and looking back. as If to say, "I've a notion to climb that tree and get you yet." Was Scott mad? Well, rather. He had saved the deer's life, and for his kind ness had been repaid with base ingrati tude. He is an ardent sportsman 'during the lawful season, but in his present state of mind the whole deer family would better give him a wide berth. MAGIC LANTEH-f HISTORY. MAKER Mr. O'Hurs.", Doubts A to Henry VIII and the Catholic church. PORTLAND, March 22. (To the Edi tor.) I had long been familiar with tha mechanical structure of the stereopticon, with Its plano-convex and cqnvex pro jecting lenses. But never, until I recently read a brief account of its application to historical research, did it dawn upon me what tremendous possibilities are latent in the magic lantern. This simple optical apparatus seems now destined to supersede all other "apparatus critlcus" in historical research, and has already enabled some lecturers on history who have mastered its intracicies to dispense with the study of original documentary sources. The ground of my faith in the supreme usefulness of the magic lantern (indeed, in its revolutionary character) is the statement In the report already referred to that an esteemed lecturer on ecclesias tical history by the light of the magic lantern "completely corrected the popular fallacy that the Church of England be gan with Henry VIII." Of course, this correction is a mere truism, if it- is in tended to affirm that Henry VIII did not originate the Catholic Church, which was "the Church In England" for 1000 years before his time: or again, if possibly its meaning be that the present "Church of England by law established"' originaled not with Henry VIII but with one of his successors with Edward VI or Elizabeth. But I take it that the worthy lecturer meant neither of these, and hereon rests my confidence' in the future of the magic lantern. It is bound to revolutionize his tory in all Its departments. Would that ail the historians, from Herodotus to the writers of the "Cambridge Modern His tory." had been possessed of this wonder ful Instrument and knew the virtue that is In it! "But," some- Incredulous critic will interject, "that would not have al tered the record of actual historical facts." Historical , facts, do you say? What have' historical facts to do with the matter? ; ' EDWIN V. O'HARA. ON SMOKING IN PUBLIC PLACES. Dlacnaslon of Queatton as It Applies to Individual Liberty. PORTLAND, March 20. (To the' Edi tor.) Many thousands of clean, thought ful people will thank The Oregonian for its vigorous discussion of the question of the right of smokers to indulge in their habit on streetcars. And now that the question Is up there seems fitness In having It fully considered. It involves the right to smoke, not only In streetcar, but in all public places, and the way to settle it satisfactorily to the public Is In view of the underlying principles. At the Lewis and Clark Fair, by the side of the main entrance to the Gov ernment building, was posted a notice. or command, absolutely prohibiting smok ing within. That was really the voice of the people of the United States. Was that command Justifiable, and was there a good and valid reason for it? Was any smoker wronged because of it? Was anyone ever inconvenienced by it? No. There was unhesitating compliance with the order, and no one found fault with it. It was a public building, put up by public money, and belonged to the public, and no one had a right fb go in 'there with a disgusting or Injurious habit, and the Government, recognizing tms tact. Issued its edict to protect innocent and unoffending people. That notice to smok ers was right. On ths same principle smoKing snoum be prohibited in the Fostoffioe. the Court house and the City Hall. These are all public places, built with public money, for the transaction of public business by the whole public men. women and children, nonsmokers as well as smok ersand no one has a right to go in there and pollute the atmosphere that an must breathe. The smoker claims the right to smoke, if he wants to; but has he also the right to compel everybody else to smoke, whether they want to or not? Has not the person who does not smoke as many and as valid rights as a smoker? Nay, has not the -nonsmoker a better right, seeing that he follows nature, while the Bmoker perverts- it? woo ever neara of a child being born with a cigar or pipe in its mouth? The right of way belongs to the nonsmoker, in a puouo place. The Fostomce belong to me wovem ment, and the Postmaster has the same right to prohibit smoking that kept it out of the fair building. He has pro hibited loafing and spitting on the floor. But neither of these habits Interferes with public comfort like smoking. tou can step over a pool of spittle, or walk around a loafer, but you cannot escape the smoker. You must breathe while you wait for your mail or mark and weigh a package, and the smoker has poisoned every atom of air in the whole building. "I saw a nervous, delicate old lady, who was compelled to stand in line some time waiting for mail, made so sick by a smoker who stood just behind her in the line that she was compelled to stagger out of her place and seek the open air. An occurrence like that ought not to be possible in a civilized com munity. The Courthouse is always tilled with a stale tobacco stench that anyone with an unperverted sense of smell will notice at once on entering, but men and women who know they are injured by entering such an atmosphere are compelled to go there to pay taxes and to transact other nublic business. Courts are held tnere. too, to determine Important rights of persons and property. But how can Judges or Juries, not to say lawyers, think clearly or rise into the higher or nobler realms of thought and teenng in such a place? Under such circumstances is it a wonder that justice sometimes stumbles and miscarries? All . the foregoing applies with equal force to the City Hall and all other public places. But I see the City Council has prohibited smoking during its sessions, and now as the tobacco smoke clears away, may we not hope that the moral atmosphere will also clear up? I believe it will. Man's better and higher nature has a fairer "chance where the surround ings are pure and healthful. In private places the work of renova tion will be slower. But smoke ought to be kept out of streetcars, out of stores and public offices, and some day it will be excluded from the hotel lobby. LEVI W. MYERS. Kearlns; the Century- Mark. Chinook (Wash.) Observer. Last Sunday, the 17th of March, P. J. McGowan reached his 90th birthday. He has lead an active business life for more than 70 years. In the afternoon at o'clock a party of Astoria business men, old-time friends of Mr. McGowan, char tered the steamer Volga and left Astoria to pay the aged cannery man a friendly visit and congratulate him on his health and long life. The party comprised S. S, Gordon, George W. Sanborn. R. B. Dwy- er, B. VanDusch. E. W. and W. E. Tal lant and E. P. Nooman. They were well received by Mr. McGowan, at the home of Senator McGowan, his son. On the trip the party made casual observation of the railroad operations on the Columbia Val ley road, which is being built from Meg- ler's station to North Beach. Lenten Thought. Richmond T!mes-rlspateh. Athwart my never-ending- stream Of ballads, rondels, songs and sonnets There darts the nightmare of a dream Viz.: Bonnets. Not that I hate them, as such; no. A man's more glad than I to spy 'em; The nightmare's Just when you have got To buy 'em. And howe'er well you've garbed your wife. nave nattea, snoo ana eKea peiisnea ner, She 11 need new neaawear in ner life At Easter. A wife if that were all my fate! I'm struggling in far deeper waters; I have to boot land hat) some eight Tall daughters. , Which totals nine: and that Is why I work when 1 should be home sleeping, Ana wny my nazei aexier eye Keeps weeping. And so it happens that each Lent (Ho. prlnter!set thl double-leaded) I wish to goodness females went Bareheaded. STANDING AT THE CAVALRY CHARGES THE MOB Jews In Small Towns Are Ordered to Leave for Sake of Safety. BUCHAREST, March 24. As a train, conveying peasant reservists from the dis trict of Telorman on the Danube, was proceeding to Moldavia. It was stopped at the town of Alexandria by a large number of reservists belonging there. They stoned " the train and persuaded their fellow reserverists to join them in completely ruining Jewish and Greek shops. The mob was charged by cavalry. The authorities have warned all Jews in the small towns and villages to leave for the sake of safety and large . numbers are continually arriving there. In view of the serious state of affairs number of members of the Chamber of Deputies intend to propose proclaiming a state of siege in the disturbed districts. OUTRAGES OX THE . FRONTIER Bands of Farmers Waylay Fugitives in Mountain Districts. VIENNA, March 34. Desnlte the fears of a series of disturbances in Roumania. especially at Jassay, today passed with comparative quiet, so far as the news received here indicated. It seems that the energetic precautions taken by the Government proved effective. While the news from Jassy is satisfac tory, reports from Bukowina, on the fron tier, are less favorable. In the moun tains of Borujenl various bands of farm ers wait for fugitives whom they pillage and maltreat. It is here the Roumanian gendarmes participated outrages. In the District of Dorogol excesses are till going on, while In the Allcsandrla Province of Wallchia. It is said, many Jews have been wounded and their build ings destroyed. NEW YORK JEWS RAISE FCXD Thousand Dollars Given to the Suf fering Roumanians. NEW YORK, March 24. The Rouma nian Jews of the lower East Side, held two mass-meetings tonight to proton against the "atrocities and outrages'com mitted on the Jews in Roumania." About $1000, It was announced, was raised by contributions at the doors. A telegram from Jacob H. Schiff, read at -the meetings, said that the American Jewish committee, through the State De partment and direct sources to Rouma nia, was endeavoring to get correct ac counts of the situation in Roumania. Mr. Schiff added that the subject would be brought up at the next meeting of the Russian massacre general committee, which has been called for next Thursday. M. STOLYPIX TAKES A HAXD Anti-Semitic Disorders Due to Work of True Russian Party. ODESSA, March 24. The Odessa No- vosti claims to be in possession of in formation connecting the anti-Semitic ex cesses in Roumania and the provocative agitation in Bessarabia with the ma chinations of the union of True Russian people, and say that In consequence of this. Premier Stolypin has telegraphed the Governor of Bessarabia urging Im mediate measures to prevent the spread of disorders in that province. NEW ROrMAMAS CABINET. Liberal Ministry Goes in and Jewish Atrocities Expected to Cease. BUCHAREST, March 24. The conserv ative Cabinet has resigned, and a liberal ministry has been formed under the pres idency of M. Sturdza, who was Premier in a former Cabinet. It is hoped the dis orders in the country soon will be ended. Persecuted Jews in Flight. SOFIA, March 24. News received hero from Sistoff and Nikopoli. Bulgaria, say that many Jewish refugees and large Christian landed proprietors have arrived there in boats, fleeing from the prose cution of insurgents. ATTACK EUROPEAN HOMES Troops Called Out to Proteet For eigners From Tangier Mob. TANGIER, March 24. Later dispatches received from Morocco City say that the assassination there of Dr. Mauchamp. who was connected with the chief of the French Geodetic Mission, was followed by a general attack upon the Europeans, who were besieged in their houses, and that the British Consular agent was1 forced to Are, killing two persons. Tho Pasha finally sent troops, who drove off the mob. The troops are still guarding the houses, although comparative calm has been restored. FRENCH PUBLIC IS AROUSED Demand Reparation for Assassina tion Dr. Mauchamp in Tangier. PARIS, March 24 Public opinion is greatly exercised over the assassination at Morocco City of Dr. Mauchamp, who was connected with the French Geodetic Mission, which it is regarded should be the signal for a total change In the French policy in North Africa. The Temps urges the abandonment of the "flabby police." The paper rehearses a long list of outrages on Frenchmen, rep aration for which, it says, was never ex acted, y Earl of Liverpool. LONDON, March 24. Cecil George Sa vllle Fotjambe. Karl of Liverpool, is dead. He was born In 1846. HEAD OF THE CLASS From the Boston Herald. I