8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY., MAY 7, 1907. jft (rattan SFBSCMPTION RATES. - INVARIABLY IK ADVANCE. XI (By Mall.) Daily. Sunday Included, one year. .....$S-0 really. Sunday Included, six months.... 4 rslly. Sunday Included, three months.. 2.25 Dally, Eunday Included, one month.... Daily, without Sunday, ona year 9-00 Dally, without Sunday, six months 3.25 Dally, without Sunday, three month. . Dally, without Sunday, one month..... Sunday, one year Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... JBO Sunday and Weekly, one year 0B BY CARRIER. . Daily, Sunday included, one year Daily, Sunday included, one month.... la HOW TO REMIT Send postoBlce money order, express order or personal checlc on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoffico ad dress In full. Including county and state, POSTAGE RATES. 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Jamestown Exposition Nws ftanrl; Potts & Roeder; Schneider & Kaiser. Pine Beach, Vs. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, TUESDAY. MAY 7, 1907. TOl.ITICS AND ART. What would happen to the world if iverybody should act upon the princi ple that it is better not to resist evil? Perhaps nobody can tell with certainty, but Pennsylvania gives some pretty plain indications. That commonwealth was founded by a sect which held con sistently to the doctrine of non-resistance. To them strife was among the worst of moral crimes and peace the greatest of all blessings. Rather than fight they were willing to be harried by the strong and plundered by the greedy. They valued quiet above the safety of iheir country. They taught that "he who defended himself against aggression was equally guilty with the aggressm. This sect predominated. In the early history of Pennsylvania, and Its influence has been strong; there ever since. So Ions as the dealings of the colonists lay almost entirely with a confiding people iike the Indians', who were unpracticed In guile and easily won by frankness and sincerity, the principle of non-resistance seems to nave worked well in Pennsylvania. The Quaker colonists had less trouble with the natives than most of the other set tlers in America. The bland smile and gentle tongue of William Penn extin guished, the native laud titles quite as completely and with far less bloodshed than the guns or the Puritans. But when the time came for Penn sylvania to deal with the wiles of civil ized Iniquity the principle of non-resistance did not work so well. One does not mean to say. of course, that the conspicuous pre-eminence of Pennsyl vania as a happy hunting ground for the grafter can be attributed entirely to the effects of the belief that it is wrong to fight evil; but that belief has prevailed there, and the state is, be yond all question, more soddenly en mired In corruption than any other in the Union, not excepting New Jersey. The latter Is making an honest, if not very, violent, effort to attain to some thing like decency in its public affairs. It has brought to the fi-ont a number of men of high character and' energetic public spirit, and shows no disposition to discard them. But with Pennsyl vania it is different. Her spasmodic lunges toward municipal honesty are awkward. They are like the uncouth antics of ft f:it man who leaves his of fice once a year to piny baseball and who docs not particularly care for the game. The pretentious display of reform spirit which Philadelphia made a year or two ago turned out to be something very different from genuine public ir tue. Nothing could well have "been more sordid. It was all on account of a rise of a few cents per thousand in the price of gas. It contained not a trace of un selfish devotion to the general welfare. Robbery a thousand times worse did not stir th faintest resistance in the somnolent city so long as it was merely committed upon the public and did not visibly affect the budget of the individ ual householder. The person who car ried the bnnner of reform to an appar ently brilliant but really deceptive and nugatory" victory was. after all. a mere politician of a peculiarly petty type who threw off all semblance of a reform leader as soon as he could make his peace with the bosses. Almost alone among the states of the Union, Penn sylvania has produced no uncompro mising' friend of the people and enemy f . the grafters. The mushy-brained rermypacker. crafty, cowardly, plausi ble, is one type of her contributions to our statesmanship: Penrose is another. Quay, who commanded the affection ate loyalty of Pennsylvania for many years, combined the qualities of Penny packer and Penrose. He was the per fect fruit of the principle of non-resistance applied to public affairs. He was in exemplification miraculously com plete of the sort of men whom peace at any price sets over us for rulers. Neither Pennypacker nor Penrose has cue-tenth the malign ability of Quay, but. working together, they have man aged to perpetrate a fraud on their state which makes him turn in his grave with envy. It concerns the dec orations and furniture of the new State Capitol at Harrisburg. The committee which had charge of these was under Pennypackor's control. (Publicly It ad vertised tor bids upon fractional parts of the supplies; secretly It made a rule that no bids were to be considered ex cept for the whole. This threw the contract to a single firm which stood well with the committee, and rich was the harvest it reaped. No imaginable opportunity to pilfer was neglected. The stealings foot up some ten or fifteen million dollars, while the devices by which they were effected are too ridic ulous for vulgar farce. The artistic furnishings of the Capitol of the Keystone State were purchased by weight. When the brutal Senator in Mary Anderson'8 charming play of 'Pygmalion and Galatea" proposed to pay the sculptor for his statue by the ton,' we all used to laugh at the absurd ity. It Is absurd no longer. It has be come a rule of statesmanship, at least in Pennsylvania. The bronze chande liers, supposed to be products of the finest art of the Nation, were bought by the pound and the firm which sup plied them cheated In the weight. Ma hogany tables were paid for by the cu bic foot, the price toeing computed by multiplying their length, width and height together, so that the public paid for ten feet tf air-to one of table. The plate-glass for mural decoration was to be of the finest French make- The con tractor supplied a cheap domestic vari ety, for which he charged about double the price of the genuine. The profits of the contractor were something stupen dous. Nothing like them has been seen even in San Francisco. In the celling of the Capitol at Albany. N. T., painted paper was substituted for English oak, but the rake-off was modest indeed compared with that of Pennypacker's contractor. An investigation of this peerless, piece of thievery Is under way in Pennsylvania, --hich Is painfully bringing to light the knavery that everybody has known all about for months. The present Legislature being dangerously tainted with the reform spirit and somewhat regardless of the principle of peace at any price, the in vestigating committee finds it con venient to postpone its report. Judging from wnat we know of Pennsylvania's history,, when the Teport is. presented to the succeeding Legislature a resolu tion will be adopted commending the moderation of the thieves. Doubtless It will counsel the people, whose cloak has already been taken, to fulfill their Scriptural duty and give their coat also. JAMESTOWN AND SEATTLE. Mr. Thomas McCusker suggests in his letter to The Oregonian from Norfolk, Va., that the Jamestown Ex position is the "suspicion of a farce." It may be supposed that Mr. McCus ker's characterization is as mild as conditions w-arrant. The exposition opened under brilliant auspices. There was a stupendous naval display. There were official visitors from all over the world. It was altogether a magnifi cent inauguration .of a momentous his torical celebration. Tet the facts are that the exposition was in a woeful state of unpreparedness. It will be two months at least before buildings will be completed and a generally cha otic situation overcome. Besides all this, the exposition is reported to be in financial straits. They have either undertaken to do too much or they have done It a year too soon. "When the exposition is finally completed, it will be In the middle of the long, hot Southern Summer, and few Northern visitors can be expected to go South at that time. The outlook for James town is gloomy Indeed. No small part of the success of the Lewis and Clark Exposition was due to the fact that everything was prac tically In readiness on the opening day. June 1, 1905. The beauty of the grounds, the obvious efficiency of the management and the symmetry and splendor of the completed buildings conspired to give the affair a wonder ful advertisement, and from 'that time on the success of the Fair was never in doubt. The managers of the Alaska-Yukon Exposition at Seattle may learn something both from Portland and from Jamestown. They have scheduled their opening for June L 1909. They have more than two years for effective work. If they shall not be ready at that time, it will be their own fault. THE LOST CHILD. A sorrow that has appealed to the best that is in the human heart for sympathy js that caused by: the mys terious disappearance from his rural home, bordering upon the Delaware marshes, of Horace Marvin, the 4-year-old sou of Dr. Horace Marvin; the agonized search for the boy by' his father and the discovery, full six weeks after the disappearance of the child, of his body about half a mile from his farmhouse home. The anxiety of a parent, when death in any form menaces his child, becomes distraction when this menace comes In the form of the sudden, unexplained and inexplica ble disappearance o the child from his home. ThV'd . town beadle of a former generatfon w-lth clanging bell and sonorous voice, calling "child lost, child lost," through the village streets emptied as by magic every home and engaged the occupants, one and all. in a distracted search for the little wan derer. The beadle and his bell have passed, but the announcement that a child Is lost Inspires city police and town and county constabulary to eager search; and now, as in former days, pitying neighbors lend their aid in the anxious quest. If perchance the child is found alive and unharmed, the pub lic rejoicing extends far beyond the limits of the neighborhood; it his body is found, sympathy Is widespread; and if. as in the case of Charlie iftoss, a generation ago. no trace Is found of the missing one, the public, still expectant, Fttll sympathetic, rises eagerly to every clew for ' years, refusing to abandon hope of the Wiinderer's ultimate return, or of definite news of his death. The astontshing endurance, shown by a young child lost in the woods Is a matter of pioneer record in many com munities of the Oreat West. Some years ago forty, perhaps, or more a little boy of 3 years wandered from his home on the Molalla. 1n Clackamas County. He was clad only in a cotton shirt, and was allured into the woods that adjoined the pasture lot by ripe blackberries. A close watch was not kept upon children at their play- by the busy ranchers in those days, and the child was not missed for some hours. About sunset, however, the family be coming thoroughly frightened, the neighborhood was aroused and search ing parties beat the bush for three days and nights until finally upon the morn ing of the fourth day. the child was dis covered sitting on a log picking and eating the berries that grew profusely around him. His cotton shirt was in tatters and his limbs .were swollen from mosquito bites . and ' briar scratches; but he was otherwise un harmed. -He had grown shy and wild in the woods, and upon being discov ered attempted to crawl away and hide. But In a few days all traces of his alarming experience had vanished. The neighborhood literally went wild over the affair and many regarded the fact that the t-hild had lived so long unprotected in tne woods, with nothing to eat but berries, as a miracle equal to that of bringing the dead to life Few cases of this kind end so happily as did this one. Next to this, the more satisfactory ending, bitter and disap pointing as it is, came to Dr. Marvin in the finding of the body of his child. Here all doubt, all agonizing specula tion, end. Th.3 knowledge that nothing further can harm the child or Inflict suffering upon him Is In a way a com pensation for the loss. The mystery of his death 1.? baffling, but the fact is as sured. Much more distracting would be the thought that somewhere, under perhaps cruel environment, the child lived and suffered. This possibility is set at rest in the case of little Horace Marvin, and to this extent the father's anguish is lessened. The mystery of the boy's sudden and complete disap pearance will probably never be solved. But enough is known to make it rea sonably certain that his death, how ever it came about, followed his dis appearance with little delay. So. offer ing this slender meed of consolation to this sorely bereaved father, a sympa thetic public will follow him In thought across the continent to the place of sepulture and breathe with him a sigh of relief that all is over. LIN MACLAREX. Rev. John Watson, whose death is today chronicled, will be remembered wherever English literature is read, by his pen name, under which he wrote a series of sketches published twelve years ago with the title "Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush." Unlike Barrle, he Idealized the persons he pictured. He peopled the glen of Drumtochty with austere, sympathetic, brave men and women in whom the spirit of hu mor was deeply planted. In his por trayal of Scottish types he exagger ated their good qualities and made them better than they were with one exception. Dr. Weelum Maelure. Here Is a warrior that appeals uni versally to mankind; no writer, living or dead, ever created a hero finer than this country physician "A Doctor of the Old School" is a modern classic. Ill a list of the greatest short stories, It could not rank lower than third or fourth. Though a minister of the Presby terian Church, Dr. Watson was un orthodox and narrowly escaped trial for heresy over his sketch of "Posty," whom he allowed to die unconverted and yet with the hope of life everlast ing. He was Intensely religious but not tainted with cant. No more beau tiful tale of the Master's last days was ever penned than Dr. Watson's "In the Upper Room." Among persons of Scottish birth or heritage the death of Ian Maclaren will be counted a per sonal loss. HOW TO SETTLE ONE QUESTION RIGHT The Linn County Grange is right in Its contention that "some forms of wealth have not borne their propor tionate share of the tax burden"; and it may be right in its other contention that the last Legislature appropriated too much money for the State Univer sity. We shall see later The Grange is also to be commended for propos ing that an Initiative 'bill shall be framed and submitted by the State Grange for regulation of appropria tions for the State Normal Schools, the Oregon Agricultural College and the State University, "with a view," so the Grange says, "of settling these vexed questions and of stopping the present methods of log-.rolling in our State Legislature." These vexed questions will not, we think, ever be settled un less the people at large shall by spe cific initiative bill fix reasonable and sufficiently liberal sums for mainte nance of these institutions. There Is no disagreement between the Grange and a great majority of the people of Oregon that we should have a State University, a State Agricultural Col lege and a Normal School or Normal Schools, though there is a decided dif ference of opinion as to the number of Normal Schools. But that is another question. But the Linn County Grange is wrong, we think. In proposing the ref erendum also on the State University appropriation. It is quite apparent to The Oregonian that the appropriation bill will be sustained by the people, probably by a large vote. The only result of the referendum will' be to embarrass and delay the work of the university, prevent desirable improve ments and withhold salaries from members of the faculty and employes for more than a year. It ought to be remembered by the Grange that the referendum was Invoked a year ago on the omnibus Normal School appropria tion, and undoubtedly there was a strong and Justifiable sentiment sup porting the movement. Yet. the bill passed. In the end the state had to pay the appropriations, and more. Nothing was accomplished except to add to the burden of the taxpayer The Oregonian then suggested the. Initiative as the correct method) to get at the Normal School appropriation.' Its advice was ignored. Now the Linn County Grange appears disposed to take such advice in part only. It con cedes that the Initiative is the proper remedy for the abuses of log-rolling and excessive appropriations. That is good. But the Grange ought also to abandon the proposed referendum and let the ciuestion of the appropriation for the State University, Agricultural College and Normal School be settled on its merits under the initiative. Kansas is nothing ir not remarkable in its development, its prosperity or Its depression. It led the hosts of dis content in the political upheaval and financial disaster that preceded and ex tended through the second administra tion of President Cleveland, and it now leads in the shout of prosperity that echoes from ocean to ocean. Recently all the breweries of the state were con fiscated by the authorities, but there is no sound of a wail as from a crowd athirst. On the contrary, according to recent reports, the state is now In the enjoyment of the greatest prosperity In its history. It is its boast that there is not a village of" 500 population in the state without a 'bank, and all of these Institutions are full of money belonging to farmers. There may be a note of warning beneath this boast, but the Kansas farmer hears it not. He sees, op the contrary, continued expansion of the resources of the state and- finds the secret of Its abounding prosperity in the application of modern ideas and expedients in the cultivation of the soil. Irrigation and the cultivation of the sugar beet are strong elements in the prosperity of Kansas. On lands that two decades ago were given up to drouth, beets worth millions of dollars annually are grown, and this through irrigation, and without trenching upon the wide areas that are given to the production of corn and wheat. Applied energy. Intelligence and water form a combination that laughs at adversity. This is why Kansas laughs, forgets the past, enjoys the present and looks hope fully to the future. Fruitgrowers ' in Southern California are strongly opposed t any govern mental action looking toward the re striction of Japanese immigration. They say they are now unable to get the help necessary to harvest their crops and that further restriction will be dis astrous to them. -..The manager of an olive-producing company near Los An geles Is quoted as saying that last year his company was unatle to get white help at any price and had to beg for the Japanese. They- were compelled to wait until the Fresno grape harvest was over before they could get workers for the oltve harvest, and then the sea son was so far advanced that the frost injured the crop, making it impossible to fill contracts. Japs have been paid $1.25 a day and whites $2.25, but at those figures a sufficient number of workers could not be secured. ; He thinks shortage of help this year will result in immense damage to the fruit Industry In California. This view of the Japanese question comes from one who is. of course, biased- by his personal in terest. White labor pretty generally opposes Jap Immigration largely from personal reasons. The Japs work for less money and therefore tend to re duce the wage scale. The Government now has a special agent in California investigating the Jap situation, and this official will hear both sides of the question. Strychnine pills ieft,on a shelf within her reach were responsible for the death last Sunday of a 2-year-old dau-rhter of Mr. and. Mrs. Victor Peter son, of Tenas Illthee Island, near As toria. It is one of the established facts of natural history that young children put everything that comes to hand In their mouths. Parental vigilance, while knowing this to be a fact, nods some times, with results that are disastrous. It Is unkind to blame parents for an event so distressing as the death of a child from accidental poisoning, but the fact remains that accident In such cases is the logical sequence of their own carelessness. After all. Imprisonment is not so hard for a rich man as for a poor one. The rich man has friends who will write him daily letters, make frequent calls, provide reading matter and entertain ment, and 'supply him with all the dainties money can buy. The poor man must sit alone and forgotten in his cell with nothing to do but brood upon the past and curse the evil day that led him Into crime. The rich man has the consolation of knowing that he has been persecuted, while the poor man must suffer the disgrace of knowing that he was prosecuted. The rich man Is a victim of conspiracy; the poor man a felon and an outcast. The Mount Hood and Barlow Road Company has been granted an increase in tolls over its road. The showing of the expense of maintaining this road, including the bridge over Salmon River, for the benefit of Summer tourist travel, was doubtless satisfactory to the Clackamas County Court, hence the In crease was granted. If tourists think the tolls too high, they have the remedy In their own hands. They need not pat ronize the raad. . The supply of material for boxes Is so short In California that fruit packers are worrying over the question of get ting boxes in which to ship their prod ucts. The Riverside Enterprise bursts into rhyme to express the seriousness of the situation: Woodman, cut down that tree. Lose not a single bough If we ever needed snooks We certainly need 'em now. Before the minister of the gospel who officiates at the Corey wedding voices the usual request that If any have rea sons to offer why the marriage should not take place, let them speak now or forever after hold their peace, it might be well to close the church doors so that the protests of 85.000.000 people will not be heard. Here's wishing success to the farm ers in the Deschutes country who are boring for artesian water. When they have a supply of water for domestic purposes there will be few more pros perous homes in Oregon than in the Agency Plains country and the region farther south. The loyal subjects of his youthful majesty Alfonso XIII of Spain find the stork a tantalizing bird. The sound of his wings is in the air, but he refuses to alight according to the programme mapped out by the physicians of the Queen. If counsel In the great conspiracy case at Boise should- happen to get too warm. Judge Wood can cool them off in the city's famed natatorium. Promoters of a new suburban tract advertise that tie view of the moun tains is sensational. In other words. It Is a view of beauty unadorned. Citizens of Eugene complain that the weather man Is in league with the local cptionlst and the two have made the town "too dry for anything." "We may confidently hope that in vasion of the Inland Empire by a train load of Portland business men will not be resisted. Portland rosegrowers who expect to compete at the carnival next month can have no fault to find with the weather. About 23.000 Portlanders are getting ready to ' umpire the match between Devlin and Lane scheduled for June 4. The hopmen are said to be praying for rain. Yet some of them voted themselves into "Idry" precincts. Miss Mabelle Oilman Is reported- to be lame in her foot. Mr.' Corey's lameness Is in the other extremity. .Mr. Corey will likely cross his fingers while he promises to "love, honor and cherish." Next week Portland will devote all energy to baseball, politics and prosper- WHAT OTHER ST ATES ARTS DOIJie Liberal Appropriations for Support of State I'ntvereltlea. Seattle Times. It would appear to us that Oregon can scarcely afford to throttle Its university. That state has not been lavish toward Its leading educational institution, which nevertheless has always maintained a high place among- the universities of the West. The taxpayers of Oregon would pay only 3-10 of a mill to furnish the appropriation of $125,000. The State of Washington, supplies its university with $225,000 per year for main tenance. Idaho has appropriated $260,000 for two years and California's appropria tion approximates $1,000,000. The total annual income ' for the . University of Colorado Is $166,000, North Dakota $152,000, Utah $164,000. The University of Oregon has been on a basis of $M,000 for the past two years, and was on a basis of $60,000 for the two preceding years. Of those, amounts $47,500 was from a? fixed annual appropriation, and the balance from a special appropri ation of $62,500 in 1905. President Campbell, of the University of Oregon, says if the referendum were invoked on the $125,000 appropriation the university would be forced to depend for a year and a half on the old fixed ap propriation of $47,500 per year, plus some $10,000 or $12,000 received annually in in terest on university funds. The number of students has increased since 1903 from an enrollment of 218 to an enrollment of 340. exclusive of the departments of law, medicine and music, which are practically self-supporting;. It would seriously ham per the university to be obliged to care for a half more students on the old appropriation of 1903. Any development of the departments would inevitably be delayed until the fate of the appropria tion could be determined at the polls a year from next June. Such a result could not fall to prove calamitous. So much for the immediate effect on the university. Ultimately, It would ap pear, the appropriation would stand, as only a small minority of the people of the state oppose the bill. UNIVERSITY IS A SEEDED LINK High School Principal Argue Against Referendum Movement. KLAMATH FAI,LS, Or.. May 4. (To the Editor.) I have noticed the reports of the action of the Linn County grangers in regard to the University of Oregon ap propriation, and being interested in educational matters ask leave to speak on the subject. I believe In practising economy in pub lic as well as in private affairs. But we are all aware that in both what Is done sometimes in the name of economy is really gross extravagance. And I believe that will be the result of this affair, if it goes so far as to be submitted to the people. There is an old saying "that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well." The University of Oregon is, I believe, conceded by all to be a necessary institution. We need a supreme head to our educational system. We need university-trained men in our state. Our university men have made good at home and abroad. The institution has certainly proved Itself worth maintain ing. Then, is it not worth maintaining well? . Statistics prove that Massachusetts, which leads in expenditure for education, leads in per capita production, and each state shows a per capita production pro portional to educational expenditure. Hence such expenditures pay. Oregon is now entering an era of great advancement. All educational Institu tions should advance equally with other things. Heretofore we have had our University, but it has helped a limited few. Why? Through no fault of the university management., but because' we have not promoted high schools to sup ply the link betwen common schools and the university. Now. high ' schools are being promoted all over the state and are rapidly preparing students for the univer sity. There is a largely Increasing de mand for university-trained young men in business. Each year sees a lancer number pre pared and desirous of entering. Last year we in our schoof graduated one. this year we graduate six. So it is elsewhere. For this reason, our university facilities should be enlarged. One of the greatest inducements we hold up before our students is the possibilities of such an education. We In Klamath County have lately spent $50,000 to build a High School and supply the link between the common schools and the university. Now we do not want the university facilities impaired. The argument that more money should be spent on the common home schools is good, but we can do that and get returns on the additional money Invested. Klamath County is doing it, and other counties can. I am' confident that it is going to be done. But the more we im prove ' our home schools, the more we need the university. It is a poor adver tisement for the state to have the word passed .along that we are begrudging the little money we are giving to this cause. Our sister states are giving millions. I feel positive that the people will vote the appropriation at the polls, and our grangers will cost the state a lot of money all to no purpose. The idea of shutting down on extravagance Is good, but 1 am of the opinion that there should be some foundation to a test case. I be lieve that the people will vote that our granger friends have no case. I think that Is the sentiment out here in the sagebrush. '. JOHN G. SWAN. Principal. Klamath County High School. APPROVES SCHOOL TEXT CHANGE! Teacher Sketches the Educational In stitution of the Future. PORTLAND, May 6. (To the Editor.) Every few years there comes up the question of a change of school text books, and just that often there is a cry of expense. Who suggests this change of texts? The teachers do. Why? There surely can be no selfish motives on their pae-t. There is scant profit even to the book sellers. The per cent of gain on school books Is less than in any other form of merchandise. This same cry arose when another text was added to the Bible and spelling-book schools. Since then, we have had many changes. But each im provement has been fought for. There have always been a few who have become educated In spite of the schools. But that is no argument for poor methods and dry text. School is for the aver age child. And the average child has not the determination of Abraham Lin coln. It is the average child 'that re cruits the slums. I will hope that the school of the next 2ft years will be as different from that of the present, as the present is from that of 50 years ago. I hope that then from 35 to 50 children will not be penned in one room. (70 deg. F.) and seated in one place for six hours a day. It is a won der that more children do not develop nerves and more teachers become in valids. Suppose a mother were to restrict even two or three children in that way. The school of the future will have gym nasiums, kitchens, gardens, workshops. A child will not have to learn that a square foot Is a surface bounded by four straight lines meeting at right angles. He will have square foot before him. He will have miniature house to carpet, plaster and hang paper. When he fin ishes the common schools, he will have all the accomplishments of a Robinson Cru soe and know some craft at which he could work. Then, will we have the millenium- A TEACHER. ity. PERPETl'AL FRA? CHI5ES ARB DEAD Are Only- l.!renaea Revokable 7 Con ferrlna; Power-. Ssri Mr. Hayek. PORTLAND. May . (To the Editor.) During the last few days Portland has heard considerable from candidates seek ing nomination at the primaries, about perpetual franchises and pledging them selves against such arafts. It has also been publicly said thaT certain prominent attorneys assert that the Fourth-street as well as the Portland Gas Company's franchises are perpetual, and again that other learned expositors of the law. equally distinguished, maintain that they are not. Some one else asserts that as suming the Fourth-street franchise to be perpetual, it does not deprive the City of Portland of the right to compel the Southern Pacific Company to run electric cars over that line instead of railroad trains pulled by steam locomotives. While all these discussions are going on. the Southern Pacific Is regularly run ning its passenger and freight tratne through the heart of Portland, and the Portland Gas Company continues to fleece the public lamb. The latter Is more or less befuddled as to whether or not the City of . Portland is situated In the Port land Gas Company, or whether the Port land Gas Company Instead of the City of Portland Is now the metropolis of Ore gon. After all I have heard from candidates, and myself read about grafts in per petuity. I have come to the conclusion: That as a fundamental proposition in mu nicipal law. it Is impossible to grant a! perpetual franchise, either now or In the future charter or no charter and: That all the so-called perpetual franchises granted in the past, by either a territorial government or the City of Portland, are not franchises at all, but merely licenses revocable at any time by the powers that granted them. Why are the powers Inactive? We have a City Attorney whose duty it Is to force issues of the kind enumerated, and while we are waiting for another Legislature to meet and adjourn with possibly nothing done, let us get busy. Let the proper authorities under whose jurisdiction the matter properly comes. Instruct the City Attorney to get busy. As to Fourth street, it is now no longer a question of per petual franchise, but whether the run ning of freight and passenger trains over that public thoroughfare is not main taining a public nuisance. Now, since "the powers that be" do not and will not act, I submit: That no man should be elected to any office who has not clearly stated 1i!b position on all im portant questions concerning the public welfare. That no office-seeker should be trusted of whom wa have been fore warned that he has corporation leanings, and certainly no citizen should be elected to any position with legislative func tions who is representing a quasi-public corporation as attorney, financial agent or lobbyist. That any man who makes certain promises while a candidate and after becoming a public official remains inactive or acts in opposition to his prom ises should be presumed to have "sold out" and be accorded thereafter the traitor's reward. FRANK HAYEK. LIFK -IN NEW YORK'S HOTELS Some of the Prices Pnld by Men Who Have Money to Burn, From New York Letter to the Philadel phia public Ledger. John W. Gates- reservation of a suite of rooms in the new Plaza Hotel, which will cost him $42,000, has called attention to the staggering prices paid for accom modations In the great hotels and apart ment houses of New York. Fifth avenue, of course, is the street on which the high est rentals are charged. At the Holland House, for instance, there are sufteB con sisting of nothing more than two rooms a parlor and a bath costing $15,000 a year. These are corner suites, with a frontage on Fifth avenue. Fully 35 suites In this hotel are leased by persons who are prac tically permanent guests. No other city can show anything like such prices for hotel accommodation, nor even London during the season, when all hotel rates are raised from 30 to 50 per cent. At the Waldorf-Astoria there are a number of permanent guests paying in the vicinity of $20,000 a year for small suites. Prices of an Impressive nature are like wise the rule among the apartment hotels in the Fifth-avenue district. At the Ren aissance, on the corner of Forty-third street and Fifth avenue, suites may be made up according to pleasure of the persons leasing them at the rate of $tW0 to $S00 for each room per month. In the apartments above the Van Nor den Trust Company, on the corner of Fifth avenue and Sixtieth street, 10-room suites cost as much as $12,000 a year, un furnished. At the Bolkenhavn. on the corner of Fifty-ninth street, $9000 a year for a furnished apartment and $7500 for one unfurnished are by no means unusual figures. But when It Is considered that James J. Hill and other magnates fre quent this region when in town, such prices begin to appear less astonishing. Apartments at Sherry's are leaded at the rate of $1000 per room a year. The aver age cost of small suites in the Sherry building is $5000 per year. No Such Thins; aa a Cork Ug, Minneapolis Journal. "A cork leg?" said the dealer. Why, man, a cork leg would crumble under you ltke a leg of bread. You don't want a cork leg, but an elm or willow one." "I thought the best ones were cork the lightest, you know." "No, indeed. A leg was never made of cork since the world's beglnnng. But many men think as you do. and I 'll tell you how the fallacy, originated. The inventer of the modern artificial leg the leg instead of the stick was John Cork. Cork's legs, cork 'Igs, were famous around 1810. And when ever a man makes your mistake he pavs an unconscious tribute to Cork's skill." THE PARTIES OUTSIDE "WE HADN'T INTENDED TO CALL ANYWAY." From the Chicago Inter Ocean. "PETE," A BVLLDOG, IS NOW ON DUTY AT THK WHTTKHOUPK TO RK I FORCE THE POLICEjrEJf NOW STA riONED THERE. WASHINGTON DISPATCH. COST OF LIVING GOES tP. Labor Bureau Sa Utah-Water Mark for 17-1 ear-Period Late la 1906. New York Evening Post. The Bureau of Labor has taken another look into the cost of living, and it finds it is -tllI Increasing. -Its latest examin ation had to do wtth wholesale prices only. It is now making a study of retail prices. The Investigation Just completed shows that wholesale prices, considering -S commodities as a whole, reached a .higher level .in m than at anv other time during the 17-year period covered. The average for the year 1SKK was 5.S per cent higher than for 1905: : 5 per cent' higher than for 1897 the year of lowest prices during the 17-year period: and 22 4 per cent higher than the average for the ten years from 1890 to 1S99. Prices reached their highest point during the 17-vear neriod in December, 1906, the average for that month being 4.1 per cent higher than the average for the year 1906. and: S3 Der cent higher than the average for December. 1905. The study of the Bureau was extended to farm products. foods, clothes and clothing, fuel and lighting, metals and implements, lumher and building ma terials, drugs and chemicals, house furn isnlng good., and miscellaneous com modities. Only two of the nine groups; showed a decrease in price as compared with 1905 farm products and drugs and chemicals. Seven groups showed an in crease in price, this increase reaching 10.4 per cent. In the case of metals and implements, and 9.6 per cent in the case of lumber and building materials. The average price for 1906 of farm pro ducts, taken as a whole, differs but lit-, tie from that of 1905, a decrease of only! one-half of one per cent being shown.' Food as a whole Increased 3.6. per cent I in average price for 1906, as 'compared i with 1905. The principal articles show ing an increase were cheese, fish, fruit, j hog products, milk, rice, and vegetables, i No change took place in the price of I bread. A slight decrease in the wholesale; cost of coffee, eggs, wheat flour, corn' meal, beef, sugar and tea Is shown. Of the. 76 articles included underj clothes 'and clothing, 66 showed an In-1 crease in price, Ave showed no change,! and only four showed a decrease. In t the group, as a whole, there was an ! average Increase of 7.1 per cent In price, j In fuel and lighting, as a group, there) waa an increase in price of .5 per cent. ' There was an advance In the price of an-; thracite coal of domestic sizes, coke, and petroleum, and a decrease In candles, j broken anthracite coal, and bituminous coal. There was a greater increase in 1 price for metals and implements than any other group. In this group the in crease for 1906 over 1905 was 10.4 per cent. Of a total of 3 articles in the group there was an increase in price of 29 articles, including tools, barbed wire, copper. lea pig Iron, nails, silver, tin plates, etc. Tvjenty-four of the 27 articles Included under leober and building ma terial increased in price In 1906. Tha: only three articles that showed a de-' crease were pine doors, linseed oil. and quartered oak. In the group, as a whole, 1 there was an Increase in price of 9.6 per cent. The only one of nine groups under con sideration that decreased in price to any considerable extent was that of drugs and chemicals. In this group there was a decrease of 7.2 per cent. There was an increase in price of both grain and wood alcohol, and in that of brimstone. House furnishing goodf, as a whole. Increased 1.7 per cent in price. More than half the articles in this group, namely., earthen ware, glassware, woodenware. and ar ticles of cutlery did not change In price. The Bureau of Labor has made' no at tempt to go into the causes of the rise and fall of prices. The aim has been to give the prices as they actually prevailed in the market. In explaining why it does not discuss the Increase In prices, the Bureau says: "The causes are too com plex, the relative Influence of each too uncertain. In some cases involving too many economic question, to permit their discussion in connection with the present article." The Bureau ventures to sug gest that the various internal revenue and tariff acts have In a marked degree affected prices by helping them to move upward. Carrie Nation Declines Marriage Offer. Washington, (D. C.) Dispatch to the New York World. Mrs. Carrie A. Nation has had an offer of marriage from a Civil War veteran living In Virginia, and In the current Issue of her newspaper, The Hatchet, she thus tells why she declined It: "Lonely and despondent at times be cause he hasn't a wife. Thomas Flan agan, of Virginia, wants to marry. And he sings his song of 'Can't Ton Sea I'm Lonely?' to Mrs. Carrie A. Nation. Shi received the letter ot proposal from this ardent admirer -Friday, and he wants an early answer so he can arrange his af fairs. "But he will receive the marble heart. He will get the frigid mitt. Mrs. Nation says she Is wedded to her work and that she can't wed a man. "In his letter Flanagan says he is a government pensioner at $12 a month, and has $275 in the bank, together with a house and some land. His wife died some time ago, and ever sine he hag been lonely, and at times despondent." Moving . In. Tietrolt Free Press. Across the street they're moving in. The flvst van load Is there; And on the sidewalk there is heaped Much costly furniture. And through a window not far off A neighbor looks the while. To estimate from what she see The stranger's wealth and style. "A baby grand piano! My! They must have lots of dough; I wonder who on earth they are?" She mutters, soft and low. "Jut see the lovely chairs they have, I'd like to own them all; I wonder what her husband does? I'll be the first to call." The second van arrives, and still The neighbor watches there: Her eyes are Kiued upon each rug. And fastened on each chair. Of every article she maltes A rapid mental list: Then mutters, as the doors are closed t "1 hope they play bridge whist.