8 THE MORXIXG OREG0X1AN, THURSDAY, JTTXE 6, 1907. 1 STJBSCBIFTIOX BATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (Br Mail.) Daily, 8unday Included, on rear $8.00 raHy, Bunday Included, six months.... 4.25 Dally, Sunday Included, three montba. 2.23 Dally, Sunday Included, ona month.... .75 Dally, without Sunday, ona year....... 6.00 Dally, without 8unday, six months..,. 8.23 Dally, without Sunday, three months.. 1.73 Dally, without Sunday, ona month.... -60 Sunday, ona year 1.50 weekly, one year (Issued Thursday).... l.ou Sunday and Weekly, ona year. B.00 BY CARRIER. Dally, Sunday included, one year...... 00 Dally, Sunday Included, ona month.... .79 HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money erder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dress In full. Including county and state. ' POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland, Oregon. Postofflce ss Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pacs t cent IS to 2S Panes 2 cents 80 to el Pases cents 46 to AO Paces 4 cents Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The . C. Beckwith, Special Agency New York, rooms, 48-00 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms S10-612 Tribune building. KEPT ON SAXJS Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postofflce News Co., ITS Dearborn St. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marls, Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton A Handrlck, 900-911 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 1214 Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen, 8- Rica. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut; Sosland Newa Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugh, SO South Third; Kagle News Co., corner Tenth and Eleventh; Yoma News Co. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, 807 Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Kemble. A. P., 3735 Lancaster ave nue; Penn News Co. New York Clty--U Jones Co., Astor Houee; Broadway Theater News Stand. Buffalo, N. V Waiter Freer. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson. Fourteenth nd Franklin streets; N. Wheatley: Oak land News Stand; Hale Newa Co. Ogdea D. I Boyle, W. Q. Kind. 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. Union Station; Msreath Stationery So. Sacramento, Col. Sacramento Newa Co 430 K street; Amos News Co. Salt Lak Moon Book & Stationery Co. ; Rosenfleld A Hansen. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagona. Han Diego B. E. Amos. Long Beach. Cal. B. K. Amos. Pasadena, Cal. A. F. Horning. ' Santa Barbara, Cal. John PrecheL San Joae, Cal St. James Hotel Newa Etand. Fort Worth, Tex. T. Robinson. fan Francisco Foster & Crrear; Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; I- Parent; N. Wheatley; Falrmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co. Ooldfleld, Nev. Louie Follln. Eureka, CaU Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Va. Jamestown Exposition News Stand; Potts A Roeder; Schneider & Kaiser. Pine Beach, a. W. A. Cosgrova. PORTLAND. THURSDAY. JUNE 6. 1907. JEFFERSON DAVIS. Under the provisional constitution of the Southern Confederacy, which was adopted at Mottomery, February 9, 1S61, Jefferson Davis was elected first President for a term of one year. The election was made ty states, each hav ing one vote, and It was unanimous. At the end of the year he was re elected by a unanimous vote. There were other candidates, some of them more able than Davis, but none com manded much support. Davis was a compromise candidate, and the confi dence which he enjoyed was more ap parent than real throughout the war. While in prison at Portress Monroe he complained of the disloyalty of the members of bis Cabinet. Governor Brown, of Georgia, constantly thwarted tils plans, and some of the Generals In the field were his enemies. The fact seems to have been that there was little harmony among the Southern leaders, except such as necessity demanded, and not always that. Davla had seen service before his election to the presidency both in war and in Congress, but the ability which he displayed was mediocre. He him self accounted for his choice to be President of the Confederacy on the ground that he was thoroughly repre sentative of the South; his character being typical and his opinions those most dear to the people. He was an ardent believer in the theory of state sovereignty. When a conflict arose be tween duty to. his state and duty to the Nation, he chose, quite consclen-; tlously, to obey the state. Like most of the other Southern statesmen and commanders, this was what he had been taught from boyhood, and for be lieving and acting upon it he cannot be blamed in the forum of morals; though he and they can justly be criticised for bad Judgment. Davis' representa tive character extends even to his choice of words and the pompous rhet oric of his sentences in common con versation. Barret Wendell remarks that everything written by a South erner is pitched some four or five notes higher than would suit a Northern man's taste. Davis' conversations with his physician at Fortress Monroe, all' of which have 'been carefully recorded, sound like orations. His remarks are elaborate, grandiloquent, and not al ways wise. For example, he told Dr. Craven one day that Mexico could never become a self-governing nation of Its own accord, but must remain indefinitely under a northern protectorate. The astonish ing development of Mexico under the leadership of Dlai shows how much value there Is In such prophecies con cerning even the most unpromising peo ples. Nobody can tell what any na tion may bring forth In the way of clvllltatlon any day. The backward races of today are quite likely to lead the world tomorrow. History teaches that human development Is seldom con tinuous, 'but usually by long leaps af ter periods of stagnation. Perhaps some of the Southern prophecies about the negro, of which we tiear so many, may be as mistaken as those of Jefter. on Davis were about the Mexicans. Concerning the negro, Davis was not nearly so ill-tempered in his views as many of "his people," as he called the population south of. Mason and Dixon's line, are now. He believed that the question of racial Intermarriage, would settle itself, holding that the union of whites and blacks was contrary to na ture and would produce sterile off spring in the second generation. He seems to have thought that the ne groes. If left alone by mischief-makers, would settle down into a sort of feudal servitude on the estates of their for mer owners and that all would go on much the same as if slavery had not been abolished. Perhaps this would have been the case but for the mis takes of reconstruction; and. if it would, then those mistakes were for tunate, since a contentedly servile race would be the worst evil that could exist In a democratic commonwealth. The scandalous connection of Davis name with the assassination of Presi dent Lincoln has long since been proved to be unwarranted. The belief that he had part in the conspiracy led to harsh measures. during his imprison ment at Fortress Monroe. Public sen timent at the North Imperiously de manded that he should receive a felon's treatment, and surely he would have deserved it had he "been guilty of a share In that worst of crimes. It was from General Miles that the Immediate orders came to put Jefferson Davis in Irons. The humiliation was unneces sary, and everybody now agrees that It was unjustified. But General Miles had no way to learn the facts at the moment. (He acted as any prudent commander would have acted, and It Is no more fair to blame him for doing his duty than it was to accuse Davis of assassination without grounds. This and other controversies growing out of the Civil War have now lost their acrimony, and have become mere academic subjects for debate among historians. The North has forgotten its eagerness to "hang Jeff Davis to a sour apple tree," and the states that fought for the Union Join with those that fought against it in commemorat ing the virtues of the President of the Confederacy. That his virtues were many and distinguished nobody would think of denying. If he committed treason it was In a technical sense. As he himself said, he was forced to choose between treason either to his state or to the Federal Government, and, like Lee and all his colleagues, he believed that state loyalty was hia paramount duty. The growth of our sense of nationality and the happy decadence of the disastrous theory of state sovereignty make It difficult for us to. assume his point of view; but that he was sincere and morally blame less is beyond dispute. Perhaps the worst error of Judgment that can be charged against him, after the first and fundamental one of believing that peaceful secession was possible, was his purpose to prolong the war In the West after Lee had surrendered. It was during his flight to take refuge with Klrby Smith beyond the Missis sippi that he was captured, with his family. ' As things turned out. the cap ture was the best thing that could have happened to him. It saved his name from the disgrace of participation in a hopeless guerrilla warfare, and it saved the South from sanguinary vengeance. FLECTION BETS. In making election bets men do not seem to sacrifice their morality so much as their common sense, though both suffer. Election bets may be clas sified , by the rule which the elderly Presbyterian deacon applied to fools. Some men, said he, are fools, some are damned fools and the rest are blank blank fools. No bets that we ever heard of were wise. The only possible question about them was which was the silliest. A man who pledges himself to propel another through the streets in a wheel barrow If his candidate loses cannot be said to debauch the public morals. He merely disgraces his ancestors. Of him and his partner in folly it may be truly remarked that they are two of a kind and that the fewer there are of that kind the better. But to advertise for bets on the streets makes a public dis play .of depravity which defies morality and entices the feet of youth upon the road to ruin. All bets are bad, and election bets are no more innocent than others, though they are often sillier. When a stake of money is the best argument a man can make for his candidate, the presump tion Is either that the voter sets his pocketbook above his brains or that the candidate has no merit that will bear discussion. Money talks, to be sure; but what It says is seldom true and never wise. The best it can say for a candidate is that he has friends who put him on a level with racehorse's and prizefighters. LONG-OVERDCE REFORM. A Washington special, commenting on the revolution in methods employed by Land Commissioner Ballinger, says that "he has inaugurated In the Land Office exactly the same methods that he would employ if he were la charge of an enormous private business house, employing the same number of clerks and transacting the same amount of business. He Is handling the Land Of fice from a purely business standpoint. There Is no sentiment about It." For a man who has been an active worker in such a bustling hive of Industry as Seattle, where drones are scarce, this Is not surprising, although It undoubt edly causes a sensation and consterna tion in Washington. Custom not In frequently becomes a law; but there is no good reason why even a poor law should stand forever without repeal. It is a well-known fact that nearly every department lti Washington Is filled with old and Incompetent clerks, who have drawn pay for work which for years they have not performed in a manner at all satisfactory. There is no good reason for the existence of such a conditions of affairs. No false allurements are ever held out to the applicant for a Government position. The emoluments of the position are known in advance, and the individual accepting employment, with a full knowledge of what Is expected of him, has no legitimate complaint or griev ance if he is unceremoniously kicked out of office for failing to perform the work for which he Is drawing a salary. Undoubtedly the basis of the trouble which Mr. Ballinger has undertaken to correct is the failure of civil service entirely to eliminate the old spoils sys tem. For generations the various de partments at Washington were used as a dumping ground for Impecunious or Indolent Individuals who lacked energy to engage in more strenuous work. Every Representative at the Capitol always had a full waiting list on hand, and it was accordingly more to his ad vantage or comfort to put In five medi ocre men at moderate salaries than one good man at a good salary. As a re sult of this policy there are undoubt edly In some departments fifty em ployes of the barnacle type drawing salaries which. If paid to men of en erg?, would show vastly better returns on the investment. It Is not even clear that these drones who have grown old In the service should be pensioned. They accepted the position originally without any understanding to that ef fect, and simply as a business proposi tion. Every obligation of the Govern ment to these employes has been filled when they are paid their salaries for the time they put in. If the Ballinger system of reform can be extended to other departments It might effect such a saving in sal aries on men whose services are not needed that better salaries could be paid to the men who are actually worth more money. When an American busi ness man sends a representative to a foreign country to drum up trade the employe is paid $5000 to $15,000 per year. When the Government sends a repre sentative he is generally paid from $1500 to $2500 per year, and is overpaid at that. Higher salaries for good men and no salaries at all for poor men would work wonders In the Govern ment service, and It Is regrettable that even Mr. Ballinger is so poorly paid that he is about to give up his work before the reforms he has undertaken have fairly begun. AS A MAN EATS, SO IS BE. The poor of Chicago are, it is said, likely to be reduced to a vegetable diet because of the high price of meat. If plenty of fresh vegetables could be procured at prices which these people can afford to pay, the change from a stockyard diet can hardly be construed Into a hardship. It would, indeed, prove a decided advantage, especially to chil dren, who swarm the tenements and have been wont to subsist chiefly upon the refuse meat of Packirigtown. If the theory that as the food is so is the child "and the man whose tissues are bullded upon it. Is correct, the poor, not only of Chicago, but of any great city, would be Infinitely better off, and the stratum of society which they form would be advanced to a higher plane, if a meat diet were to give place to one of cereals, fruit and vegetables. There can be but little doubt as to the cor rectness of . this theory as applied to children whose life in the open air is restricted to the streets as playgrounds and whose parents can only afford the cheapest meata that are procurable upon which to feed meats that are too often diseased or are stale to the verge of decomposition. There is good ground for the belief that, if meat and cabbage were eliminated from the diet of the lnhabltants-of the crowded tene ment districts, the enteric disorders that are so prevalent and the tubercular diseases that thrive In such places would be far less frequent than at present. The fondness of these people for cabbage, the most lnnutritious and Indigestible of vegetables when cooked, and particularly when "seasoned" with grease, is one - of the peculiarities of their diet. Next to this in Una of de teriorating foods Is meat of the quality that the very poor are able to buy. The two, combined with hot, soggy bread washed down with cheap beer, muddy coffee or impure milk, form a diet from which demons might well be produced or people of the lowest grade of Intel ligence evolved. Perhaps, therefore, the advance In the price of the cheapest grades of meat in Chicago, putting such food be yond the reach of the swarming multi tude designated by the general title of "the poor," Is a condition upon which they should be congratulated rather than commiserated. All -depends upon the quantity and quality and prices of substitute foods in the way of cereals and vegetables. Hygienic food Is of first Importance in the construction of a sound body and the evolution of a clean mind. This being true, it Is the basis of that quality of reform which, belivg a growth, gives promise of per manency. ORCHARD'S TALE OF BLOOD. The statement made to the Jury at Boise by Attorney 'Hawley contains the most astounding charges that have ever been made in an American court room. Likewise the testimony of Harry Orchard, self-confessed assassin of the late Governor Steunenberg, establishes a precedent in cold-blooded, deliberate murder. The trial now fairly under way at Boise is one in which every American citizen Is deeply interested. The prosecution, through Mr. Hawley's opening statement, has made charges of such a nature that the people of the Nation unite In demanding the most searching Investigation. This demand will not come from any particular class or clique, but from American citizens in all walks of life. The ranks of union labor are not recruited or kept filled by men to whom "murder Is a trado" and '"assassination a means of livelihood," and every good citizen who Is a member of a labor union will Join with those who are not members and demand the most complete in quiry into the awful charges that have been made. The proudest boast of an American Is that this Is a free country, but that freedom has been insulted, outraged and dragged In blood, and vindication of the outrage is demanded by every man who Is a believer In govern ment and order. Mr. Hawley charges the "inner circle" of the Western Fed eration of Miners with dynamiting mines at Cripple Creek and Independ1 ence, with deliberately-planned mur ders at other points, and lastly with be ing the conspirators who paid Assassin Orchard to murder the late Governor Steunenberg. Neither the guilt nor the innocence of the men has yet been established. It is only known that these awful crimes were actually committed, and that thus far no one has been punished for them. The United States has a wonderful rep utation throughout the world. It is known as the asylum for the free and a refuge for the oppressed and perse cuted of all lands. Until within the past few years crimes -of the nature charged against the "Inner circle" by Mr. 'Hawley were unknown. In fact al most inconceivable. In this country. But the crimes have been committed by some one, and an effort Is to be made at Boise to discover who is re sponsible for their commission. There Is not a good American citizen in the country who would not like to believe that this awful reign of terror, murder and arson had never existed; but, as this cannot be, no trouble or expense should be spared to fix the blame where It properly belongs and mete out to the offenders punishment as near as possi ble In keeping with the crime. The men charged with these crimes will have a fair and impartial trial, and every opportunity will be given them to prove their innocence. If they are innocent, which is the pre sumption regarding all men until they are proven guilty, they will have but little difficulty In disproving the state ments of a self-confessed assassin, for testimony of that kind must always be supported by the strongest kind of cor roborative evidence. The Agricultural Department, which Is always long on statistics and short In thela accuracy, makes the statement that "if for each cow, horse, sheep and hog on the farms of the United States the farmers support one rat on grain, the toll levied would reach $100,000,000 per year." This statement is interest ing for the reason that it opens up an endless avenue for discussion as to the amount of money lost through other pests. Take the potato bug, for Mam Die, or the chinch bus;, which eats the wheat before It Is palatable for the rat. Then there are the Hessian fly, the woolly aphis and a few thousand other pests of a similar nature, and all of them hungry as rats. When this matter is reduced to figures. It seems quite plain that the American farmers are annually lpsing, through the depre dations of pests, more money than they have made since the beginning of the industry. Speaking of the present fad for Ara bian horses, the Saturday Evening Post says: Trotter breedere need not worry about this little Bastern Arabian fad. The East must have Its fad; if It Isn't a French noodle or an English bulldog. It may be an Arabian horse or a Tuxedo handshake It must be something out of the common. That paper states a well-known fact when it says further that there never was a time In the leading horse markets of the country New York, Chicago and Kansas City when cheap horses were in so little demand and first-class horses brought as much money. The Lmarket today for the ordinary horse Is poor, while that-for the good horse was never so high. Even the Missouri mule, first-class of his kind, commands a price heretofore unknown. It Is the old story so often written from the text: "There Is room at the top." The W. C T. U. vigorously opposes re-establishment of the canteen In Sol diers' Homes. They regard any provis ion for allowing the old soldiers to get beer without going outside of the prem ises for it as a "calamity." Practical people recognize the futility of the ef fort to reform old soldiers by compul sion, and see the wisdom of giving them a chance to get a drink of beer under proper restrictions and surroundings. Drunkenness Is prevented, not encour aged, by the temperate view which con cedes the utter uselessness of attempt ing to control the desire for drink by driving vendors of liquors beyond cer tain limits. Not all old soldiers are athlrst for Intoxicating or stimulating 'beverages, but it is safe to say that those who are possessed of this thirst will find means to quench it. Discovering tht the miscellaneous massacre of whites is attended with considerable danger to themselves, the rebellious Chinese, near Amoy, have In dulged In the pastime of killing off a few of the Chinese officials. This di version from the usual Chinese massa cre enables them to get rid of the offi cials who have in the past been compelled to punish the pirates' for infractions of the law, and at the same time presents possibilities for the ultimate opening up of a way for removal of the whites after their present protectors are killed oft. As the rebels are gathering by thousands, and making serious threats, it may become necessary ifor some of the Caucasian powers to go over and shoot some modern civilization Into the ranks of the bad Chinamen. The neighbors of an Individual who attempted to establish a saloon at a small settlement in Central Oregon dy namited the building and destroyed the stock In trade. The act was contrary to law and the peace and dignity of the commonwealth, but In new communi ties considerable latitude Is permitted In the solution of such questions. Drink sometimes changes men into de mons, and Central Oregon is not yet well enough policed to admit of demons running at large. Another Incentive for the outrage may lie in the fact that that new country also offers plenty of opportunity for all desirable newcomers to engage In a more useful as well as more ornamental calling, than that of selling whisky. The President Lincoln, a 22,000-ton steamer, the latest addition to the Hamburg-American line, sailed from "Ham burg on her maiden trip Saturday, bringing to this country 2940 passen gers. The name of this new steamer, like that of the Amerlka, which pre ceded her dn the same service. Indicates that the patrrmage which admits of the operation of such Immense and splen didly equipped steamers does not all come from the land where they are reg istered. Almost any foreigner knows something about "Amerlka," but the name President Lincoln will appeal with more force to the American trade than to the German. Dr. J. Allen Smith, head of the de partment of political and social studies at the Washington State University, is out with a statement warning young people not to marry in the existing condition of "up-in-the-air" prices. He asserts that it will require "an act of Providence to Intervene In. their favor thereafter to enable them to make both ends meet." The doctor has appar ently forgotten the time-honored prac tice of going home to live with the old folks as soon as the glamor wears off and the financial situation shows signs of a strain. BJchard Croker is out with the state ment that he Is still an American citi zen and . that he expects to die an American. The well - authenticated stories of the methods by which the Croker fortune was accumulated have had a tendency to .produce a sentiment among decent people to the effect that If we must have Croker at all he would be preferred as an ex-American. Three men having made a balloon trip from Washington, D. C, to Harris burg in four hours, the Pennsylvania Railroad is Justified in asking the In terstate Commerce Commission for pro tection. Five hundred dollars an acre for an Oregon apple orchard may seem big, but there are thousands of acres In Rogue River Valley which in six or seven years can be made equally valu able. This dally teeter of quotations be tween the New York Stock Exchange and the Chicago wheat pit makes one wonder who really. fixes the value of what men call property. , It is not flattering to the members of the Council to be told by 10,042 voters that their services are worth no more than the present wage. There Is great fear of nervous pros tration in educational circles at this season of the year. Final examinations are now beginning. Mayor Lane unofficially says there will be no further reforms. A commu nity that doesn't make progress is standing still. Those who bet on Devlin can now speak of the June dark days. PRESENT DRIFT OF DEMOCRACY. New York's Public Utilities BUI Step in Centralisation of Power. St. Louis Globe Democrat. The public utilities " bill which has Just been enacted in New York, marks a long step In the centralization of power which is under way in the government of the Nation, of the states and of municipalities. But this concentration of authority seems to be demanded by the conditions. We have just seen a railway regu lation act passed by Congress which arms the Interstate Commerce Com mission with powers far beyond those granted by the law of 1887, which was denounced at the time as des potic and destructive. Charters have been given by Legislatures to cities in the past few years which have granted autocratic authority to Mayors. In more recent times city government In the familiar form has been displaced in many cities, notably In Galveston, by commissions which virtually dispense with boards of al dermen and most of the rest . of the familiar machinery of municipal gov ernment. And this new departure in city legislation and administration is rapidly extending. In the olden days when anything was needed to be done quickly in any part of the country, the cry was, let us go to Jackson. That idea dropped out after Old Hickory's retirement. But It Is revived in a far more exten sive way in the days of Young Hick ory. Roosevelt will do It for us, is the cry today of the persons who are Impatient of the old restraints, and who want things done all at once, and done permanently. Appeals for Intervention In more sorts of things are made to the present President of the United States than were made to a half-dozen of his predecessors. The country is growing with great speed, all the old interests are rapidly ex panding, some of them are taking new forms and varioui sorts of new activ ities are coming into existence. These transformations make a great many persons restive under the old limita tions and Incite demands for short cuts and for concentrations of power into few hands. Thus we have bu1 tans in presidents chairs, czars In the speakership, and we are getting kaisers at the heads of our states and cities. This looks, on the face of things, like a drift away from de mocracy, as that term used to be de fined, but the people seem to demand it, and as the people spell democ racy in any way they want to spell f, this new departure has a chance to stand. PENSIONS AFTER 43 YEARS, Roll of Honor Is Shrinking, for Vet erans Are Passing; On. New York World. It Is 48 years Bince the Civil War was brought to a close. Few of the survivors of the 2,666.999 Federal soldiers who were In the field can today be less than 62 years of age. The roll of the veterans is shrinking rapidly. Decoration day is a fresh reminder how fast their ranks are being thinned by death. Last February, In passing the Service Pension law. Congress provided that any person who had served 90 days in the Army or Navy during the Civil War and held an honorable discharge should get a pension of $12 a month on reaching the age of 62. It was assumed that there would follow a large increase In the pension lists. So far 3S8.O0O applications have been received. Of these 98V4 per cent are from veterans who had already been drawing pensions at lower rates and only Vfa per cent from new applicants. The number of new pensions Is so small that it does not nearly make up for the natural decrease in the old rolls. Last month, the Pension Bureau records show 3616 old soldiers died, while only 882 names were added to the rolls. This deathrate was unprecedentedly high. In the last 11 months, allowing for new pensions, the total decrease was 16,000, only about half the April rate, but with each year the death lists may be expected to lengthen. By June 80, 1906, the total number of pensions had fallen to 985,971, including 273,552 widows and dependants. About two-thirds of the total number of pen sioners are Clvll-War veterans. As there were 2.666,999 Federal soldiers In the field, and 110,070 men were killed in action and died -of wounds and 249,458 died of dis ease, accident or other causes, it would appear that only about one-fourth of the Federal soldiers who survived the Civil War are alive and drawing pensions. This is a much .smaller proportion than is commonly believed, and It is subject to a steady and rapid reduction. "ANGEL" GETS REWARD AT LAST, Senator Stephenson's Interesting; Rein Hone With La Follette. Minneapolis Tribune. The election of Senator Stephenson takes a 'certain philosophio interest from his personal relations to Senator La Follette. The interest lies In a complete reversal of relations that ex isted between persons similarly sit uated in the last generation. Isaac Stephenson is a wealthy lum berman of no great consideration out side of his rather uninteresting trade. He has been known almost solely as the "angel" In the theatrical sense of Senator La Follette. He is understood to have financed the political ambitions of La Follette from the beginning, postponing his reward to their ma turity. The angel Is no new thing in Ameri can politics. From the earliest time American talent for public affairs has been financed by American talent for profitable business.- To go no farther back or higher up, even so respectable and well-endowed, a public man as Sen ator Spooner possessed an art&el In Senator Sawyer. The older and far richer man used his wealth and ex perience to advance the political for tunes jf the younger and more talented. The striking difference is that. In the olden time, the patron put his protege in high place only after he had sated his own appetite for it. In the later time the political ambitions of the angel have to wait until those of the brilliant star he finances have been satisfied . On the whole the change seems to us rather healthy. ' It Is well that the power of talent should take precedence over the power of money. Senator Bourne and His Cigars. From' a Washington Letter. Senator Bourne, of Oregon, is making way In Washington in spite of the fact that he is only a recent addition to the United States Senate. Bourne became known first of all through the generosity with which he distributed cigars to any one he chanced to meet. The cigars were no Pittsburg stogies, but the real prime genuine Havana article, the kind that warmed the heart and attached one to the man who of fered his case. It is a pleasure to note that Bourne does not have a brand for his friends and a brand for himself. Whatever the status of the person he meets. Bourne's hand goes to his vest pocket, out comes the case and then the offer. The Senator from Oregon is Indeed a man well worth meeting. School Girls nnd Applied Cosmetics. Baltimore News. Students of the Girls' High School at Atlanta, Ga., have been warned that If they come to school with applied cos metics their faces will be promptly washed. Mark Twain's London Dinner. Chicago Tribune. Mark Twain, who leaves soon for'Bng land to take a degree at Oxford, will be entertained at luncheon June 25 by the Pilgrims' Society of London. JAP AX MAY 6T7E THE CITY New Measure Proposed to Get Re dress for Subjects. WASHINGTON, June The Japanese trouble in San Francisco probably will be settled by a recourse to the law In formation has been received' here to the effect that the Japanese Consul-General in San Francisco is contemplating bring ing suit against the City of San Fran cisco for damages incurred by the owners of the Horseshoe restaurant and Folsom bath-house from the attack by a mob on May 20 last. The action. If brought, will be under the state law and in the name of the owners of the places wrecked. It is un derstood that the Japanese will be per fectly satisfied with Judicial determina tion of the case. Supplementing his telegraphic reply to the inquiry of Secretary Root regarding the most recent Japanese disturbances In San Francisco, Governor Gillett of Cali fornia has submitted a mail report deal ing in detail with the outbreak of trouble in the Japanese Horseshoe restaurant and Its extension to the bath-house. The Governor's statement is practically the same as those contained in the news dis patches. The State Department has received re ports upon the same subject from the Adjutant-General of California and the Chief of Police of San Francisco. These reports seem to establish the fact that the affair is the natural outcome of the labor troubles In San Francisco and that racial feeling had very little to do with it, save in the latter stages. Two white men. who were said to have worn some kind of badges, -engaged in an altercation In the Japanese restaurant and, accord ing to one statement, a Japanese cook threw a knife at one of them. The fight was transferred to the street, a crowd gathered and the mobbing followed. Possibly It was more violent than if a white restaurant had been the object of attack, but all through the reports run evidences that In some way the Jap anese had offended against the rules of the labor union and that racial feeling was merely an incident to the affair. ASK FOR BETTER PROTECTION Japanese Newspaper Says Treaty Goes to Waste Basket. ' TOKIO, June . The NIcht Nlchi. comenting on Japanese and American relations, this morning says: "Even traditional friendship will not escape a rupture should Incidents like those that have occurred In San Fran cisco be repeated. Whether or not the sufferers- are school children or res taurant keepers, and the site be lim ited to California, it does not alter the fact that our compatriots are victims of anti-Japanese outrages. "Japanese go there under treaty pro tection. "President Roosevelt's enlightened message to the last Congress was re ceived here with eminent satisfaction, but actual developments since are a total failure. "What we want are not so many ex pressions of civilized sentiments, but one act of efficient protection of the treaty rights of Japanese. "The waste paper box Is no destina tion for a treaty between Japan and the United States." The general tone of the Japanese press is becoming outspoken, and unless assurance In some form is made to ensure the safety of Japanese in San Francisco, It Is feared that the friendly relations between both nations will be endangered. Count Okuma, leader of the pro gressives, is outspoken as usual, but it should be remembered that, while fully deserving of consideration, his being out of office permits him a free expres sion of his opinions. Count Okuma generally occupies the position of critic. When in power hia cabinet lived only a few months. Consul Knows Nothing of Suit. SAN FRANCISCO, June 5. Japanese Consul-General TJyeno says that he knows nothing of any contemplated suit for damages against the City of San Francisco growing out of the recent trouble in a Japanese restaurant on Folsom street. To Reorganize Consular Service. CHICAGO, June 5. A bill for the re organization of the United States Consu lar Service was drafted yesterday by the executive committee of the National Business League to supplement the Lodge bill enacted by the Fifty-ninth Congress. Among its provisions for Improvement of consular service are: 1 Removal of the service from the sphere of political Influence by enact ment of the "merit" system of examina tion, appointment and promotion of Con suls. 2 Creation of an examining board, with examination scale of 80 to 100. ' S Minimum and maximum age limit of 21 and 40 years, respectively, for admis sion to the service. 4 Consuls to be familiar with one mod ern language other than English, and possess a knowledge of the natural. In dustrial and commercial resources and the commerce of the United States. 5 Tenure of office to continue only during efficiency and conduct of the highest grade. The league also advocates a reasonable retiring pension for consular officials. 'NOW, WHOM (Mm SBmmw ill JZSWM If MrST NOT BE ACTIVE WORKER Civil Service Commission Makes New Rule. WASHINGTON, June S. The rules of the Civil Service Commission have been so amended as to prohibit all persons in the classified civil service from taking an active part in politics. The amend ment was made by an executive order Issued by the President, and is as fol lows: "Persons who by the provisions of these rules are in the competitive classified service, while retaining the right to vote as they please and to express privately their opinions on all political subjects. shall ' take no active part in political management or political conventions." The addition was made on the recom mendation of the Commission and it is the result of numerous complaints which have reached the bureau from time to time from various parts of the country. ESKSTROMER IS NOW FORGIVEN Writes Apologetic Letter of Explana tion to President. WASHINGTON, June 6. If the incli nations of the President are followed the exequatur of Charles A. A. Eskstromer as Vice-Counsel of Sweden at St. Louis, which was withdrawn some time ago, wil be re-Issued to him. Mr. Eskstromer in be re-issued to him. Mr. Sskstromer in curred the personal displeasure of the President by addressing him a letter, which was regarded as Impertinent and discourteous. It was in relation to the refusal of Mr. Roosevelt to receive a commlttee of citizens from St. Louis who came to Washington to make representa tions in a case regarding certain news papers. The President has received an apolo getic letter from Mr. Eskstromer, which is entirely satisfactory to him, and this he has turned over to the State Depart ment with a statement that he has no objection to the reissuance of the exe quatur to Mr. Eskstromer If the State Department is willing. CANAL DIGGING DURING MAY More Excavation Than Any Month Except Two. WASHINGTON. June 5. The Secretary of War yesterday received a cable dis patch from Colonel Goethals. Chief En gineer of the Isthmian Canal Commission on the Isthmus, stating that the excava tion in the Culebra cut for the month of jiiay was 690,366 cubic yards and at Ga tum 70,360 cubic yards. While this shows a decrease from the excavation for March and April, due chiefly to the rainy season, it shows a very large' increase over May, 1906, when the total excava tion was 194,645 cubic yards. This is in fact the largest total excavation for any single month except March and April of this year. QUESTION ITALIAN IMMIGRANTS Immigration Commission In Europe Studying Conditions. NAPLES, June 6 The members of the American Immigration Commission who are making a tour of the Mediterranean countries to assist them in their recom mendations to Congress for the improve ment of American emigration laws, ques tioned closely the emigrants on board the steamer Florida before she cleared for New York, asking them particularly why they were going to America. There is talk among the Commissioners of making an effort to direct Italian emi grants Into Texas for railroad construc tion Work. Evans Fleet Off for Jamestown. NEW YORK, June 5. Rear-Admiral Evans, with the Connecticut, flagship; the Ohio, the lowa and the Indiana, started today from North River for the rendezvous off Chesapeake Capes, where he will collect 14 battleships and cruisers and anchor them at Hampton Rouda next Friday. Georgia day at the Jamestown Expo sition, which will be observed on Jurfe 10, will, so far as the naval display is concerned, probably be the greatest day of the exposition. The President will review the com bined foreign and United States fleets. As he approaches in the Mayflower more than 85 ships will roar a simul taneous salute of 20 guns each, and they will singly fire a 21-gun salute as they pass. All ships will be fully dressed with a rainbow of bunting and at night all will be illuminated. Snug Berth for Fowderly. WASHINGTON, June 5. T. V. Fow derly was today appointed chief of the new division of information established in connection with the Immigrant Bureau, at a salary of $3500 a year. The new division will conduct cor respondence with governors and of ficials of the various states and terri tories with a view to the best distri bution of aliens. Oregon Woman Is Appointed. OREGONIAN NEWS BUR-EAU, Wash ington, June 5. Mrs. Phebe O. Taylor, of The Dalles, Or., has been appointed matron of the Fort Bidwell Indian School, California. DOES HE MEAN?" From the New York Mall.