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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1908)
i 8 TTK MOKAIJNti OREGOMAX, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3. 1908. m SUBSCRIPTION BATES. INVARIABLY IX ADVANCE. (By Mail.) Dally. Punflay Included. one year 8 00 Daily. Sunday Included, six months.... Dally. Sunday included, three month!.. S.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month. 3 Daily, without Sunday, one year J. 00 Daily, without Sunday. lx months.... 3io Dally, without Sunday, three months.. l i Dally, without Sunday, one month 0 Eunday, one year f.'W Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... Bunday and weekly, one yer 3 u BY CARRIER. Dally. Bunday Included, one year 9 J0 Dally. Sunday Included, one month 7a HOW TO REMIT Send postollice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofflce aa 4rss In full, including county and stats. POSTAGE KATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postoltlce as Fecond-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pag' - 1 cen' t to 28 Pages 5 cen" SO to 44 Page 3 cents 19 to 60 Pages "' Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are -Newspayers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Atrrncy New York, rooms 48-50 Tribune building. -ni-cago. rooms 610-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex: Postoffles News Co.. 178 Dearborn street; Empire News Stand. St. Panl. Minn. N. Ste. Marie. Commer cial Station. Colorado Springs. Colo. H. H. BelL Denver Hamilton Kendrick. 900-919 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. I1 Fifteenth street; H. p. Hansen. & Rice, George Carson. Kansas City. Mo. Rieksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut; Yoma News Co Minneapolis M. . Cavanaugb. 50 South Third. Cincinnati. O. Yoma News Co. Cleveland. O. James pushaw. 80T Super ior street Washington. D. C. Ebbltt House. Four teenth and F streets: Columbia News Co. Pittsburg. Pa. Fort Pitt News Co. Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Office. Penn News Co.; A- P. K.emble. 873S Lancaster avenue. New York City HotalinBs news stands. 1 Park Row, 3Sth and Broadway. 42d and Broadway and Broadway and 29th. Tele phone 8374. Single copies delivered: L Jones & Co.. Astor House; Broadway The ater News Stand; Empire News Stand. Ogdea. D. L. Boyle; Lowe Bros.. 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omuliu. Barkalow Bros.. Union Station; Mageath Stationery Co.; Kemp & Arenson. lies Moines, In. Mose Jacobs. Fresno, Cal. Tourist News Co. Sacramento. Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 430 K. street; Amos News Co. Salt Lake. Moon Book Stationery Co.v Rosenfeld et Hansen: G. W. Jewett. P. O. corner: Stcipeck Bros. Long Beach. Cal. B. E. Amos. Pasadena. Cul. Amos News Co. San Diego. B. E. Amos. bau Jose. Emerson. V. Houston. Tex. International News Agency Dallas. Tex. Southwestern News Agent. 44 Main street; also two street wagons. Fort Worth, Tex. Southwestern N. and A. Agency. Amarllla. Tex-Tlmmons Pop. San Francisco Foster' & Orear; Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. parent: N. Wheatley; Falrmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co.: United News Agency. 14 to Eddy slreet; B. E. Amos, man ager three wagons; Worlds N. S-. 262o A. butter street. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson, Fourteenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; B. E. Amos, manager five wagons: Welllngham, E. Q. (iolillleld. Nev. Louie Follln. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3. 1008. REVIEW AND FORECAST. Mr. Cake owes his failure to his championship in the election of Statement No. 1, as he had owed his nomination to use of the statement in the primary, and to the. fact that, under the conditions, the Democrats had seen fit to throw to him in the primary a considerable body of their votes, knowing they were heaving dynamite Into the Re publican camp. Mr. Chamberlain re ceived the votes of thousands who do not expect the Legislature to elect him, and who gave him their votes In accord with that forecast and Intent. Their protest. In other words, was egainst the new-fangled scheme of pledging candidates of one party for the Legislature to the election of the candidate of another party to the Senate The belitf now is general that the Legislature will not elect Chamberlain. The Oregonian ex presses no opinion upon It, at present; It has not data enough. It only says now, as it has often declared hereto fore, that it regards the scheme as perfectly irrational and unworkable, since it annihilates distinction of parties, proposes to upset the consti tutional method or system of election, and to compel members of the Legislature to act directly against their own political principles, as well as against the ordinary motives of human nature. It Is, In short, the impracticable scheme of doctrinaires, effective chiefly In pro ducing discord and disorder, intensify ing factional feeling, and giving the minority party a tremendous advan tage. It is the use of the Democratic party once more, first by one Repub lican faction In the primary, and second, by another Republican faction In the election, to hold control of the Republican partyjor to "get even"; and no other weapon could be so ef fective in the hands of either faction as this contention over Statement No. 1. It is always the abstraction, the absurdity, the thing that is useless or impracticable, in politics or religion, that men fight over most. Ten to fifteen thousand votes that were given to Chamberlain were cast for the pur pose of putting the ' knife into the faction- that took up Statement No. 1. Thousands more, detesting the folly, did not go so far. To begin with. In such primary, there never will be a contest Involving an entire party for an important office, which will' not produce an im medicable rupture In that party; be cause it is not in human nature to carry on a bitter contest for a prize . and then to find the defeated con testants and their friends unite with eagerness and enthusiasm in support of the competitor who has been their antagonist and even their enemy. The methods necessarily employed in such a primary forbid union and harmony in the ensuing election; and the be lief, or even the allegation, that the aid of the opposite party has been called in or accepted by one of the primary contestants or the other, will provoke reprisals every time. Add to this the lunacy that proposes to make the members of one party elect through the Legislature the candidate of tnj opposite party for the Senate, and you have all the necessary mate rials for producing the confusion that exists in Oregon today. All this, too, has come like oil to the flames of old contentions in the Republican party. Already the feud was inveterate, and long . past cure. Still, as the fire must smoulder out some time, it might have disappeared within a few years more, but for this new fuel, which makes a fierce flame that will burn till defeat and failure, one added to another, shall reduce the party to a hopeless minority, with no prospect of profit, or of gratification, to one faction or another, from con tinuance of it. It Is not to be doubted that the people of Oregon, taken as a whole are for the primary law, which in itself is not unreasonable, but sure to beget by its methods and practice fatal dissen sions in any powerful party. Nor is it to be doubted that the majority of the whole people are at present for Statement No. 1. All Democrats are for It, because It Is a means to tease their opponents and bring profit to themselves. Some Republicans are for It, because tinder existing condi tions they are able to use It as a weapon against an opposing Repub lican faction. Other Republicans are not for it, because they consider them selves the victims of it, through the combination of an opposing Repub lican faction with the Democrats. But no matter who may be for it, or why, or how parties and factions in course of time and events may change their attitude towards it it cannot stand as a perma nent method of politics because it is not reasonable; because it is the nega tion of party organization; because it violates custom, usage and constitu tional method; because it is an Isolated attempt by a Bingle state to do a thing which upsets effort to get results through party action; because it breeds dissensions and spreads' fac tional divisions, and cannot but do so as long as it shall last or attempt shall be made to enforce it In political sentiment the state is overwhelmingly Republican, but in present conditions there is no bond of union. Two-thirds of the voters of the state are Republicans, and they vote the ticket offered them in the name of the party throughout; but they except the head, which they take as the representative of .their factional differences, put the knife into the head of the ticket, then go right-on down the line voting for everything else that carries the Republican name. All Republican factions will, however, be united on the Presidential ticket in November; the Democratic party will not be able to make more than the appearance of a fight. Should the Republican candidate for the Presi dency be elected, as he probably will be, the embarrassment of a Repub lican Legislature called on to elect a Democratic Senator is a prospect that might impress you with its gravity or stir your risibilities, according to your humor or your -mood. We shall see whatjwe shall see. s Mr. Cake did not, know, or did nol fully realize, that he was between two Republican factions and in position "to get the knife;" yet he was voted for loyally by great numbers who were in position between the two factions, devoted to neither the one nor' the other, yet devoted to their party. Does a man's desire for honor and office blind him to a situation? Often; but it never should. Though the primary law breeds party divisions, it will be accepted and adhered to, because on the whole it appears to be fair. But the excres cence known as Statement No. 1 will not be kept, because it is no proper part of such law; only a crazy notion of such minds as those of XJ'Ren and Bourne, and a delusion of such others, for the time, as may be impressed, superficially, with the nov elty of it. Chamberlain is merely playing with it; he does not believe in it for a moment as a permanent and practicable thing, and even now does not expect that it will elect him.' But he finds it good enough to pester his adversaries with; yet as a man of sense he doesn't expect it to prevail or to stand. ' There can be no rational politics with the Holy Statement; . nor with Initiative and Referendum, till men learn to use them carefully and spar ingly. Tinkers of the Constitution are to go out of business and to attend to employments to which their talents are equal. Mr. U'Ren or Mr. Wagnon might hoe cabbage with advantage, and Mr. Crldge might run a post wagon. These are very useful employ ments. But the state is to have less of the work of this sort of people as Constitution-tinkers; and the' less it has the better for its peace and pros perity. AX HONORED BAND. The Indian war veterans will be en tertained in this city as usual at the annual reunion of these grizzled war riors and their wives, by a banquet prepared and served by their descend ants. The tables will be spread In the "Woodmen of the "World Hall, Eleventh street, and tn"e banquet will be fol lowed by a special address by Mayor Lane and music by the Veteran Quar tet. This announcement brings a flood of memories of the time more than half a century ago, in . which the streets of every pioneer village in the "Willamette Valley resounded with the footfalls of courageous, sturdy young men, "off for the Indian country," the survivors of whom are known, hailed and honored as the Indian War Vet erans of today, who rallied at the call of George L. Curry, Governor of Ore gon Territory, in defense of the frontier homes that w.ere menaced by hostile savages. Hastily and scantily equipped, these sturdy young settlers went out to do battle against an am bushed foe, much better equipped for the fray than themselves and with the advantage that thorough acquaintance with the country gave. Some of them came not back again, but after a time more than one mutilated body was sent back to the settlements, a grew some object lesson of savage warfare, to be laid away from sight with sor row, with shuddering and with tears a sacrifice uponthe altar of home and of country. The survivors of the returning host a yearly dwindling band-r-will be with us next week, first as Indian War Veterans and again as pioneers, enjoy ing the welcome and "breaking bread and eating salt" with our citizens. It is not necessary to bespeak for them a .cordial welcome, or a generous measure of hospitality. The announce men of their coming insures the cordial greetings, the sympathetic ad dress, the inspiring music and the j bountiful feast which are their due. The lives of these men and of the women who walked beside them car rying woman's full share of the bur dens that grew out of the Indian wars of the frontier, are practically all be hind them. They live largely in the shadowy domain of memory. To many of them the annual reunion with their comrades Is the one outing of the year. Prone, as Is the wont of age, to reflection, this coming together is a bright anticipation, indulged for months prior to its realization. It Is meet, therefore, that their coming among us should be hailed as an op portunity to express our appreciation for their heroic part in the settlement of the state which is their due. PORTLAND PROGRESS DISCONCERTING: The letting of a contract by the Hill lines for the largest wheat ware house In the United States to be erect ed on the old Weldlor mill property in this city, seems to have disturbed the Tacoma News. The editor be comes almost hysterical in asserting that Pqrtland has always had access to the new field that is now about to be opened up by the North Bank Road and that the railroads have by prefer ence, at enormous expense, been haul ing the grain over the Cascade Moun tains to Tacoma, instead of down to Portland over the water-level grade. "Let Portland build all the ware houses she pleases," says the Tacoma paper, and "the grain will go where ships tie up to the docks." But It Is not Portland that is building thin mammoth warehouse and wharf. It is Mr. Hill, who is Just completing a railroad from the grain fields east of the Cascade Mountains by a water level grade over which he can haul wheat at a profit at a rate so low, that to meet it, would bankrupt any line that was forced to lift the traffic over the lofty Cascade Mountains. Mr. Hill is building this wharf at Portland because this is the most con venient port at which he can deliver grain and receive the maximum freight rate. If he had no intention of delivering this wheat at Portland for transfer to the ocean carriers, the construction of such an Immense dock would be a needless expense, for Port land already has in operation, a sys tem of grain (docks of much greater capacity than that of all Tacoma grain docks combined. If there was to be ho grain hauled to Portland over this line, there would be no necessity for making a heavy investment In ware houses for handling It. . It is, of course, barely possible that Mr. Hill has made a mistake by not consulting with- the- News editor before letting the contract for such a big warehouse, or even before building the . North Bank Road, but he has gone so far with the Investment already that it is too late to back out, and he must now pay the penalty for his own folly, by shipping -wheat from this city. , The News is slightly Jn error when it asserts that "the grain will go where the ships tie up to the docks." This happens sometimes, but as a rule the process is reversed, and the ship goes to the grain. The experiment of mak ing the grain go to the ship was tried on the Columbia fifty years ago, when Oregon first began shipping wheat. The ships in that case stopped at St. Helens, twenty-eight miles below Portland, and owners decreed that point to be the head of navigation. The grain, however, was assembled on the Portland docks, and there were other ships In great numbers whose owners were glad to send them to Portland for it. For the information of the News, it may be stated that "ships tie to the docks" at Port Town send, Bellingham, Port Blakely and a dozen other ports on Puget Sound, but the grain does not seem to "go" to them. A closer study of the geography of the Pacific Northwest, with a treatise on the laws of gravitation and political economy, as a side line, might be quite advantageous to the editor of the News before taking another strangle hold on such an important topic as Portland's shipping. ENTER THE GHOST. Persons who are interested In the affairs of the spirit world will And an entertaining letter from Thomas Buckman, of Ashland, today In an other column of The Oregonian. ' We gather from what this contributor says that he is in possession of some evi dence which proves that the spirits of the dead can communicate with- the living. At any rate, he takes us to task rather severely for doubting that such evidence exists, and this, of course, he would not do unless he pos sessed knowledge of facts which are unknown to us. What are these facts? Mr. Buckman would have conferred a more substantial favor upon mankind by stating them and showing how they might be verified than he does by casting vague reproaches upon The Oregonian for lack of faith. When the facts are forthcoming and are shown to be Indisputable then faith will come readily enough, and not be fore. Mr. Buckman commits a curious er ror which we have noticed in a great many other people who undertake to defend spiritualism. He assumes that nobody who doubts the alleged won ders of his faith has ever investigated it. The fact is, on the contrary, that those who have investigated most carefully, conscientiously and com pletely are the ones who doubt most radically. The alleged, communica tions from the dead which are ex hibited by mediums convince only those who wish to be convinced. Upon a skeptical mind they have no power whatever. Our contributor thinks we would, never have said there was no evidence of spirit communication had we "once thought how big a statement It was." The truth is that we have thought It all over very carefully In deed and the bigness of the statement does not trouble us in the least so long as we are certain that it is true. I If such evidence exists, we say again, ' let it be produced. The Oregonian has not been without interest in these questions during the I passing years. It has taken pains to look and learn when there was an op- portunity and It is not ignorant of the J contents of books where investigators t have recorded their observations. The result of it all is a settled belief that thus far nothing whatever has passed between the worlds of the living and the dead. Whether some means of communication may not be discovered In course of time we do not undertake to say. If there are such things as spirits we do not see why they should not send messages to living men and women and perhaps a line of com munication and a code of signals will be Invented sometime. Meanwhile, nothing is gained, so far as we can see, by pretending to do what cannot be done. Mr. Buckman errs in saying that fraud "is eliminated almost entirely from private circles." ' Those circles are the hotbeds where It flourishes most luxuriantly. It is safe to say that there never was a "successful" private seance held where fraud, either conscious or unconscious, was not committed. The conditions In private circles utterly preclude calm criticism of what happens. Investiga tion is not permitted. Any person who displays skepticism is frowned upon and probably excluded. The effort at such meetings is to create an atmos phere of credulity and work up ."faith" at all hazards. It is a little difficult to decide whether private seances are worse than public ones, but we think that upon the whole they are. Mr. Buckman thinks we "acknowl edge that mediums possess a power which is not understood by the world," and wonders why we should deny that power to be "spirits." We deny it be cause many persons who possess the power declare that it Is mere telep athy, or thought transmission, and that spirits have nothing to do with it. If spirits are not needed In one case of thought transmission they are not needed in any case, and it is a good rule to choose an explanation In ac cordance with natural law whenever we can. To invoke spirits unneces sarily is not a sign of a healthy mind. In his letter Mr. Buckman gives us some good advice. In return we will give him a little. Let him reflect how much misery has been created in the world by superstition, how tyrannical it has been, how cruel, how degrading to mankind, and then let him ask himself if it is not better to be a little too skeptical than a great deal too credulous. x U'Ren wrote to Chamberlain that the only way to assure the perma nency of the Holy Statement was to beat Chamberlain and give the popu lar vote to Cake. But Chamberlain gets the popular vote. Now then, Holy Statement men are absolved from their obligation by the Great High Priest. You see there is trouble ahead. Should adherence to the Holy Statement elect a Democratic Senator the Republican party will turn solidly against the Holy Statement and rend it, and cast out all its adherents. Should a Republican Senator be elected in spite of It, the Holy State ment will be dead anyhow. Whether the Holy Statement kill its advocates or they kill it, or all of them perish together even makes gain for com mon sense in politics. The big Cunarder Mauretanla ar rived at Sandy Hook lightship at 7:50 Monday night, after clipping seven minutes from the west-bound record. Seven minutes is not very much time to save on a three thousand-mile voy age, but the passengers who waited over a day or two In Liverpool . to connect with the Mauretania, and who, of course, were unable to get ashore in New York until yesterday morning, are undoubtedly satisfied with the performance. The prestige which goes with a record-breaking steamship is worth more to the com pany operating her than the time saved Is worth to the passengers car ried. Eight cargoes of wheat aggregating 900,000 bushels arrived out at Queens town from Portland Monday and Tuesday, nearly all of the ships mak ing fast passages. Of course, Portland Is not much of a wheat port in the opinion of the Tacoma News, but any port which can dispatch a sufficient number of ships to swell the arrivals out to 900,000 bushels in two days, is bound to attract some attention, even In Europe, which draws to her shores fleets from all parts of the world. "Fudge-eating mollycoddles, stiffs, salary quacks, loafers and dirty graft ers." These are a few of the pet names applied to the ministers by Billy Sunday, the revivalist. Billy as serted that gome who were preaching should be carrying the hod. Perhaps he is right, but Billy leaves us a little In doubt as to whether he should be teaching language to an association of yegg men or doing literary work for Tom Lawson. Marlon County votes against the university because it has a college of its own. Benton does the same thing because it has the agricultural college, and' Washington the same thing be cause It has the college at Forest Grove. Good friends, it does strike us that this is too narrow to be worthy of you. The Republican candidate for the Legislature who declared for State ment No. 1 and was elected now is in a fix. Unless he withdraw from it, he is not a Republican but a Democrat. Any look ahead should have foreseen this plight or predicament. Mr. Chamberlain's best friends are advising him not to quit the Gov ernor's chair now, but to wait till the Legislature shall elect him to the Senate. The Oregonian wishes Mr. Chamberlain well, but is in no posi tion to tender him advice. Statement No. 1 Republicans elected to the Legislature now are Democrats. It is an embarrassing position. ' They might escape from it by resigning and giving their constituents the oppor tunity to elect men who would repre sent them. ' Statement No. 1 is surely the real thing. Ask any Republican Legislator who signed it. Manning and O'Day deserved to be elected, anyway. That's something. - THE3 PI. ATT SCANDAL. " The Shame, of New York, and a Na tional Shame. New York Times. Going to court to make his defense against charges that would bring shame and humiliation to any man of any age, this Senator of the United States, now nearly 75 years old, by his appeararrce in the witness-chair. Into which in hla helplessness he was lifted by his attendants, and by his testi mony, presented a spectacle of physical decrepitude and moral laxity to which only a morbid imagination could add a darkening touch, in publicly resisting a blackmailing attempt, he did what many men would not have done, and that must be put to his credit; but that is the only entry upon that side of the unpleasant account. The baffled complainant went from the courtroom to the Tombs, to await trial upon charges of perjury, while he returns to his (seat In the Senate, In which he represents the greatest state in the Union. It is a shameful truth that Thomas C. Piatt is a Senator, the occupant of a great office, to which he has three times been elected, and now, for the third time, the public decency is af fronted by the flaunting forth of his follies and frailties. Society may in some measure condone the vagaries of those whose brilliant abilities and dis tinguished service have won Its admir ation and its respect, but the record of Mr. Piatt entitles him to no such exten uating and complacent leniency of judgment. His occupancy of the Sena torial office is a scandal, which com mon decency demands should be ended at once by his resignation. The people of this state have been mightily stirred up of late about horse race betting, a practice that may be viewed as an innocent pastime or as a perilous Indulgence, according to the means or the moderation of those who engage In it Will they now demand that this man come down from the seat he is not, and never was, worthy to occupy, and take himself out of their sight, where hla senile philanderlngs will no longer outrage their sene of decency? Thomas C. Piatt in the Sen ate is a more revolting spectacle than the' bookmakers at the race track. Will the pulpit, in eloquent indignation, launch against him him its rebukes, will it exhort listening congregations to make heard an organized and state wide demand for his immediate resig nation, will It point out that to over look and condone repeated transgres sions blunts the public conscience, un dermines morality and destroys right standards of conduct? Do the people really need to be aroused to the frag rancy of the Piatt scandal? Are they asleep? Have they any care for the good , name of the state and for their own dignity? Ta what lengths must this old man go? How often and how many times must the community ring and the air reek with his escapades be fore they will come to the pitch of action? His term will not expire until March 4, 1909. Will they tolerate his presence In the Senate chamber another week, without making their protesting voices heard by him? He is a useless Senator, that they all know. This Is not the worst of it. It is grievous that the Empire State should be without credit and without authority in the Senate, but the con tinuance there of Thomas C. Piatt works a deeper 111. In civilized socie ties loose and shameless conduct in vokes the penalty of public odium. It is, in effect, a repeal of the law of common morality to permit Thomas C. Piatt to enjoy further those marks of public confidence and those honors that are worthily bestowed only upon re spected and self-respecting men. What an example to the youth of the land! LEND A HAND FOR JVEW BCSIJfESS St. Eon la People Head Movement to De crease Number of Unemployed. (Prom a olrcular Issued by the National Prosperity Association of Bt. Louis. Mo. A canvass just completed by this as sociation shows that St Louis manufac turers, merchants, bankers and other busi ness lines, are demonstrating their con fidence by increasing materially the num ber of employed. Concerted action al ready taken by many business organiza tions in their respective cities and towns has produced good results, similar to those obtained In St. Louis. The National Prosperity Association directs its efforts: First To obtain as much publicity as possible, in newspapers and correspond ence, for encouraging information about crops and business. Second To secure with returning pros perity first consideration for the unem ployed. . Third To discourage reckless and un justifiable attacks upon business and rail roads in political platforms and by poli tical speakers. St. Louis newspapers, business organi zations, wholesale houses and their traveling salesmen, railroad system with 4 their thousands of employes,, promptly indorsed the movement: they co-operated with the association; they furnished the machinery which made the purposes ef fective. . ' The National Prosperity Association Is supported by voluntary contributions from business men of St. Louis who think they see good in the movement. The National Prosperity Association be lieves that In times of depression the last thing to do Is to reduce wages or working force; ftat in returning prosperity the first thing to do Is to re-employ those laid off and to maintain standards of wages. It exerts Its influence to make effective this creed. . What St. Louis is doing, every othr city, every town, con do, either through the organization of its own Prosperity Association or through the existing busi ness organizations. The United States Government recently 'compiled a directory of business organizations. The list con tained over 100,000 of these leagues, ex changes, clubs and associations. It shows enrollment of business men everywhere. These business bodies exercise most ef fective Influence upon local matters. If they can be brought to active, vigorous consideration of National affairs, their power for good will be very great. For this consideration the National Prosperity Association appeals. A hopeful spirit cultivated by the 100,000 organizations means the end of business depression and timidity. Concerted consideration for the unemployed means work for everybody. A warning watch upon the politicians means a campaign of reason and sanity without disaster to business. Straw Hat Stopa Pursuing; Bull. Philadelphia Dispatch. William Miller, living near Loganville, Pa., aged 63, was being chased by a bull until the animal's attention was dis tracted by Miller's new straw hat which blew off, when the pursued had time to escape. For Mooning Swains. Puck. Fair are your cheeks as roses rare; (All who write rhymes have said this.) Your eyes are brlg-ht as stars at night. A million girls have read this.) Ah! (Here Insert her name.) Your Hps are life's elixir! (Or say, "Love's scintillating? flame." 'Most either one will fix her.") , Girl with the fascinating curl, (First lesson, this is simple!) r My heart beats true to none but you. (Now shy one at her dimple!) Ah! (Here Insert her name.) Your Hps are like old wine. dear. (Or put far more secade and tame "I would that you were mine!" here.) Love, by yon disc moon high above, (An oath's the proper caper) I swear you this a. true heart's kiss! (Try this on scented paper.) Ah! (Here insert her name. ) This passioned rhyme must woo you! (Jfere make a bid for lasting fame.) Who hasn't loved ne'er knew you! RESTS IN HILL HE DEFENDED General Clinton's Body. Revolutionary Hero, Kelntrrred at Kingston, N. Y. Chicago Record-Herald. ' With cannon booming an echo of the thundering guns of revolutionary days, the body of General George Clinton, first Governor of the State of New York, twice Vice-President of the United States, sol dier, patriot and statesman, has been taken to New York City from the Con gressional Cemetery at Washington, D. C, and reinterred in the Hudson Valley hills at Kingston the hills of his nativity, which he so valiantly defended against the invasion of the British. When the countrymen of the warrior statesman assembled around his bier there was recalled thia historic and char acteristic utterance, which General Clin ton made on a memorable occasion: "I would rather roast in hell to all eternity than consent to a dependence up on Great Britain or to show mercy to a damned Tory." General George Clinton, whose memory has been thus honored, was a man of re markable character. He was born in Lit tle Britain. Ulster County uiow Orange). N. Y., July 26, 1TXI. He was named after Admiral George Clinton, son of the Earl of Lincoln, who was Colonial Governor of New York from 1743 to 1753. Gen eral Clinton's father was Charles Clinton, native of Longford. Ireland, who came to America In 1729, settling In Ulster County. In 1775, when 14 years- old. Clinton ran away from home and shipped on board a privateer to fight the French. The next year he enlisted In his father's regiment and displayed vallance and daring In the fight against Fort Frontenac. After these hostilities he took up the study of law in New York City, was admitted to the bar and became clerk of the Common Pleas Court In Ulster County. In 176S he was elected a member of the New York As sembly. He was elected in 1775 as one of the delegates to the second Continental Congress, in which body he adfocated all the warlike measures that were adopted. In this year he was appointed General of a brigade and assumed com mand of the militia of "Ulster County. He served with great honor to himself and his country. In. the Spring of 1777 Congress appointed him commander of all the posts In the Highlands of the Hudson, and so nobly did he control the military forces that in June, 1777, after the New York State constitution drafted by John Hay had been adopted, he was elected first Governor of the state. During the war Clinton was mainly oc cupied in carrying Into effect the public defense and security. He was re-elected in 1780 and continued as Governor until 1795. He entertained General Washington In New York when peace was declared with Great Britain, and on the occasion of the evacuation Governor Clinton rode be side "the Father of his Country" as chief magistrate of the state. After the war Governor Clinton Inter ested himself in the construction of the Erie Canal, and afterward became an earnest champion of state sovereignty. So popular did he become that he was elected Vlce-Fresldftit when Thomas Jerrerson was elected to . the Presidency of the United States for the second time. Clinton was married to Cornelia Tappan, of Kingston. He had one son and five daughters. One of his daughters became the wife of Cit izen Genet, French Minister to the United States in 1793. ASD FROM HUGHES' OWS TOWN Send Call That Taft'a Nomination at Chicago Be Unanimous. New York Globe. "Make it unanimous." This is the timely and pertinent suggestion that the Taft organization of New York makes to the "field" Presidential candidates. The contest is over, and has been over for two weeks. The nomination of Secre tary Taft is assured. There has been ample time to find flaws, if any existed. In the Taft tables of first ballot strength, and nothing has been discovered. It would be an act not only of graciousness and good humor, but of political wis dom for the candidates to recognize pub licly what they acknowledge privately that there is not a vestige of doubt con cerning the result of a roll-call If one is had at the Chicago convention. The Taft men of New York have made a record that warrants them In asking respectful consideration for their sugges tion. When the name of Governor Hughes -was presented,- although their own Judgment was that Secretary Taft was the most available candidate, they interposed no captious opposition. They said: "Governor Hughes Is a good man. It Is fitting that be should have the sup port of his own state and every chance to develop what strength he can through out the country." The political game Is supposed to be ruthless and cruel. Here was an Instance where politeness and consideration were controlling. The Hughes movement did not move per haps it was launched too late, perhaps the name of Governor Hughes was too new to the country for it to hope to succeed. In we approaching campaign it is not enough that the Republican party shall win and Secretary Taft be elected Pres ident. More than this is needed. We want it to be recognized during the cam paign that he is certain to win. Business is showing signs of revival. Manufactur ers who are impatient to get on full time and worklngmen who would like to have their jobs back should not be asked to wait until after November. They won't be required to wait If It shall ap pear there Is no reasonable doubt as to the November result. One element making for doubt will be removed If there shall be a unanimous nomination of Secretary Taft at Chicago and an im pressive demonstration thus made of Re publican unity. For Man and Anto. Puck. Mrs. Russet You durn old fool! Haven't I warned you time an' agin about buyln" patent medicines frum them market-place fakers? Mr. Russet But this here is something entirely dlff'rent. No household should be without it fer a minute. Mrs. Russet Of course not! What is it? Mr. Russet Carburetted Peroxide uv Gasso Hydrolene. Good fer Man an" Auto! Squirrels Make Useless 300 Phones. Kansas City Star. Squirrels around Salina', Kan., put 300 telephones out of use by gnawing holes In the lead cables, permitting water to run In. which destroyed the conductor paper around the separate wires. Sacs for Breach of Promise at SB. Columbus (O.) Dispatch. At Lebanon, Ohio, Jesse Gaston, aged 83, sued Rebecca Jane Sides, aged SO, for failure to marry him, setting damages at $10,000, but accepted 125 as a com promise. Red Squirrel and Ground Hogs, Pets. Baltimore Dispatch. A young red squirrel, the property of a little daughter of William S. Gantlln, of How Hollow, Mi, has as a chum a 2-year-old ground hog, a pet in Gantlln's family. Bnll Snnkea to Kill Farm Peats. Galveston (Texas) Dispatch. ""More than a carload of big "bull" snakes has been shipped to the farms around Adeline, Texas, to kill the rat tlers, prairie dogs, rats and rabbits. First Train Ride at 66 Years Old. New York Press. Peter Lawson, of Sullivan County, New York, aged S6, has just taken his tirst ride on a railroad train. Eight Hobos' Jobs Fought For. Baltimore News. In answer to a theater advertisement in New York for "eight hobos," 200 men applied for jobs. ANY FRAUD I IV SPIRITUALISM One Believer Takes The Oregonian t Tank for Freely Impressing Doubt. ASHLAND. Or.. June 2. (To the Edi tor.) In the Oregonian of May 27. you make statements In regard to mediums and spiritual manifestations that you certainly did not take well into con sideration. In regard to the mediums there in Portland, 1 do not propose to speak, as I am not there to investigate their doings, but there are some there whom I have always regarded as very upright people. Had you once thought how big a statement it is to say. "There is not one atom of evidence that the spirits of the dead can communicate with tho living," you would not have made it. You say that, "All those persons who try to make money by offering such pretended communications play upon the credulity of the public." Accord ing to that statement there are but two classes who have to do witli spiritual ism knaves and fools. In speaking of mediums you say. "If they would hon estly tell the truth about this power, it would be pleasant to see them exhibit It; but they do not tell the truth." Now honestly. Is not that the state ment of an over-conceited egotist? You acknowledge that mediums possess a power which is not understood by the world, yet when they give the source of that unusual power, strangely enough, they all become liars. This question will arise in the minds of many, how does it come, that while you admit the mediums are possessed with a strange power, ant. you also ad mit that you don't know the source of that power, that you know that It is not what the mediums universally claim It to be. I shall not go into any discussion of spiritualism at this time, but will say that there are not only thousands, but millions, of the most intelligent people who are very iirm believers that they do get communications from those who have passed through the change known as death; and to have some one who has never had the testimony to con vince him of its truth to jump up and say there is no such testimony, and those who imagine they have had the testimony have simply "been eager to be fooled," and of course aro fooled, comes in ill grace, to say the least; and many will think of the statement that has been made about the one who "Is wise in his own conceit." The expression of a belief is all right enough, and people as a rule are very generous to .torerate It; but a positive statement presupposes that the one who makes it knows whereof he speaks and when one would Indicate by his statement that he is possessed with the real knowledge to speak, as though he had all the facts at his command, when common sense would indicate that he could not possibly have more than a simple opinion, it places him in a very unenviable position. As to fraud, we are all well aware of the fact that there is a great deal of it practiced, and it requires very close scrutiny, and the keenest of senses, many times to be able to sift the false from the true. In that which is offered through public mediums; but, the spir itualist is rarely ever made a spiritual ist by what Is offered through public mediums; he is almost invariably con vinced by what he gets in private cir cles where fraud is eliminated almost entirely. But spiritualism is not alone in having fraud foisted upon it; the public suffers In many ways, for in stance, a man making a positive state ment concerning which he is entirely deficient in the knowledge of the facts. We will go farther, and say that a me dium claims to bring word from a de parted friend to console the bereaved heart of the one here; a priest claims to know the condition of the one who died, and dictates the course of lite that those who are here shall pursue to Insure happiness hereafter: a preacher claims that he has everything clear as to the condition of the de parted, and states what thoso who aro still in this life must do to find grace in the country beyond: the agnostic jumps up and is very loud in his de nunciation of all the rest, and says they are all simply matters that aro being peddled for a pace, while he lias to have so much for every talk he makes. Weill who are the frauds? and who are the gullible people? Would it not be well for anyone before making a broad onslaught upon any one class of people to listen a llttlo before he starts in as he might hear the words whispered in his ears: "Go slow!" THOMAS BUCKMAN. MORE DATA ON COST OF MVINa American Conditions Also Reflected In Europe and the Orient. Chicago Record-Herald. We had recently a notice of an advance in the price of meat which may possibly operate as a check on predictions of a general fall in prices. It is interesting to noto also fresh proofs that the advance of which so much has been said during the last few years has its parallel In other countries. One of our consuls In France reports the following Increase in percentages from 1902 to 1907: Beef, 22; veal, 14; mutton, 25; pork, 27. Upon other foodstuffs the advance has been: Bread. 15; butter, 14; cheese, 25; vegetables, 15 to SO; pastry, 25; fish, 60. Sirloin sells at 31 cents a pound, leg of mutton 28 cents and veal 31 cents. The people, it appears, are consuming more and more horseflesh, which sells at about one-third the price of other butchers' meat, but the consul says that the change is not due to Its cheapness alone, but also to the fact that the old repugnance for it is being over come and is rapidly disappearing. The developments thus recorded are referred to in the local press as "tho triumph of the horse," though the horse might con template them without any great elation of spirits. Other consular reports Indicate that the rise in prices has struck the Orient also. In two years there has been a heavy ad vance in India on the common food sup plies," and the cost of living in Calcutta is increased by an advance of from 25 to 30 per cent in rents. Statistics from several Chinese cities show the same tendencies. Rents have about doubled in ten years. "A seven-room house in a row without garden" brings J0 gold a month. Household commod!ti?s have gona up from SO to 40 per . tent. Servants' wages still appear very low when juiisod by American standards, hut in certain places there has bren a big advance. We know also that since the American oc cupation of the Philippines the cost of living there has been very considerably increased. Ballads of the Northern Girl. Puck. Her manner wss perfectly sweet And golden the hue of her hair: She was pretty, of course, and petite: And when you would ask of her: "Wher Are you from?" she would answer: "Kau CTlalre, "Wisconsin. What? 'Baltimore'? Nixie! What made you think I was from there?" . . . She always applauded at "Dixie " She was fair from her head to her f eot ; She was oh. description's despair. As she rose from her orchestra prat And pounded her gloves to a tear This little maid from Bellalre, Ohio Inuenuous, tricksy. "New Orleans? No! . . . How yoa stare!" She always applauded at "Dixie." She is found in the shop and the street; She sits in a restaurant chair; She may be bourgeois or elite: Tiut she thrills to the Southerner's air. From Portsmouth, N. H.. and Biff Bear, N. Y-, this itjiquitous pixie. Thourh blue wes her grandfather's wear, She always applauded at "Dixie." L'ENVOr. O Epitaph-makers, prepare This sentence, and chisel it quick, see? Here Lieth Miss Legion, the Fair; She Always Applauded at "Dixie."