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Beck wltn Special Agency New York, rooms 48 BO Tribune buiiding. Chicago, room uio-aia Tribune building. POBTLAXD, TCEPDAT. AlO. IS, 1808. PROBLEMS FOR LAWYERS. Uniform divorce legislation for all the states of the Union is one of the important topics which the American Ear Association will discuss at the meeting In Seattle, but It Is not the most Important by any means. The "divorce evil." as It Is called, is but one phase of a disease which has be come epidemic In many parts of the country, and whose symptoms are various. This disease shows Itself now as restlessness under legal or cus tomary obligations, now as contempt for the law and disrespect for the courts, and too often as bold defiance of regular authority. A uniform divorce law throughout the country would relieve many incon veniences which innocent persons now suffer and would prevent a great deal of injustice, but It would hardly touch the root of our National disease of lawlessness. If the American Bar As sociation can discover the cause of this disorder and remove It, the divorce evil need give us comparatively little worry- Of course the United States Is not In a condition of anarchy. The great majority of us obey the laws and respect the courts. If we have suf fered wrong we either obtain Justice through legal process or go without It. Still there are facts in ominous mul titude which seem to show that here and there In this country society has almost disintegrated. In Kentucky, for example, there are the tobacco rioters, who burn build ings, torture their enemies and take life very much as the wild Indians did In Daniel Boone's days. Parts of Kentucky are still dark and bloody ground. The anti-negro riots in Springfield, which the Illinois militia has just quelled with some difficulty, show how lightly the duty to respect life and property sits upon the popu lation of the city w here Lincoln prac ticed law. If the veneer of civiliza tion is so thin in the capital of Illi nois, how thick Is it in the outlying sections of that and other states? Be sides these egregious Instances where whole communities rise In defiance of the law we . must remember that crimes of violence are more numer ous In the United States as a whole than In any other civilized country except Russia. Some say this is be cause of our numerous low-class for eigners, and perhaps it Is; but why do they commit so many more crimes here than they did at home? More ominous than the actual num ber, of offenses is the apparent inca pacity of the courts to punish them. The law Is like Gulliver on the shore of Liliput. It is bound and swathed and pinned to the earth by technicali ties as by a million strands of fine thread until it is almost helpless. To say that the conviction and punish ment of a criminal is a rare exception Is to reiterate a notorious truth. Cases of lawbreaklng are seldom disposed of upon their merits, but almost always upon some trifling point of scholastic logic when they reach the appellate courts. Future historians In com menting upon our time will quote some of these Supreme Court decisions as monuments of Incredible folly. They will -wonder how grave Judges could deal so childishly with Justice. There can be no doubt that the demonstrated tmpotency of our legal machinery accounts for a good deal of lawlessness. Virtual immunity from punishment tempts men to commit crime. When instances like the fa mous strap decision of the Oregon, court, the release of Ruef in Califor nia and Judge Grosscup's discharge of the Standard Oil fine are continu ally occurring, it Is useless to hope that all ordinary people will respect the law. When the courts grant men of wealth and Influence the privilege to be a law unto themselves, they must expect others to assume the same privilege. The increasing de lays and expense of litigation are an other Incitement to lawlessness. Men find It cheaper to seek Justice with a gun than to litigate. There is a dis tinct tendency in the legal profession to discourage email suits. This, of course, encourages crime. A Federal Judge of great eminence was once heard to say that "the law was the worst remedy a poor man could choose when he was wronged." What a comment on our administration of Justice! It Is a trite maxim among country" people that a man "who goes to law loses even if he wins his cause." Naturally men who think thus resort to primitive means of righting them selves. When the courts abdicate, lynch law is the only alternative. Society has been engaged for centuries in devising ways to make men submit their differ ences to the courts. Now the courts say to the poor, "Your petty troubles are of too little consequence for us to bother with.". Thus the masses are thrust back toward savagery by the very men who ought to uphold the law as the universal umpire for great and small alike. The feeling is stim ulated that courts are a luxury for the rich instead of a necessity for everybody. To this we must add the unpleasant truth that some tribunals have fallen Into the practice of treat ing state laws as of slight obligation. They are set aside on insufficient pre texts and with slight ceremony. When Judges contemn the law, who shall honor It? If It is flouted in its own temple, will It be revered in the market-place? Clearly, therefore, the great task of the legal profession is to make Justice speedy, certain and reasonably cheap. To check the growing belief that the courts are class tribunals and re-establish them as universal arbiters. And toward this goal the first step la to set merit above method in every' cause. Scholastic logic must give way to common sense in the courts, or else law will , fall before anarchy In. the country. J A GRATTFY1XG REPORT. Americans forget big things unless the newspapers Jog their memory. We know, of course, that the United States Is building a canal at Panama; at any rate, we started to work on it a few years ago. Unlike Mr. Harriman's railroad to Coos Bay and Mr. Lytle's Tillamook line, we hadn't heard that operations were suspended. This co lossal enterprise, each day one step nearer completion, lacks the element of news until suddenly announcement will come that the great work Is done. Press agencies don't take time simply to report progress. It will not be long before the Pennsylvania Company will be running trains into New York City. Then a few of us who keep close track of affairs may be , reminded of the greatest and costliest terminal work ever undertaken by a railroad. It must gratify every American, in cluding the most rabid anti-expansionist, to read the report of the special committee which inspected the canal, made public . yesterday. Figures on millions of cubic yards excavated every month during the Winter mean nothing to the layman, but every one understands that yellow fever has been exterminated, and he rejoices. It Is no small achievement to convert a pest-breeding and deadly region into a healthful habitation.- Colonel Goet hals has an army of 26,000 men at work, satisfied with their wage, their food and their sleeping accommoda tions. Besides that, they are on the best of terms with their employer. Note this comment by the commis sion: "From the outset we were strongly impressed with the spirit of good will and loyalty of the employes. . . . This spirit of loyalty and in terest in the work was evinced on many occasions, and should be count ed as an asset of the highest value to the Government in the accomplish ment of its colossal work." At the outset the supply of human labor was the -most difficult problem that the Government faced. Happily this has been solved. The canal is going to be built as fast as men and money can do it; then watch the Pa cific Coast grow. CIRCl'B DAY. For the elephant now g-oe round. And the band begin to play. And th boy around the monkey cage Would better keep away. Old Song. When the poet wrote of "bow dear to his heart are the scenes of his child hood" he may have been thinking of an old oaken bucket, but If he had taken thought No. 2 it is a safe ven ture to say its object would have been the scenes of circus day. From the time of Noah, who ran the first me nagerie, to Van Amburgh, Phineas T. Barnum and the Rlngling boys, circus day has all others "faded to a frazzle." Bright boys are good when a Sunday school picnic is in sight; they are bet ter when Christmas approaches: nothing but the superlative degree will describe them when the circus bills decorate the boards. It Is an inherit ed trait, from the time "dad" got up at daylight to watch the little old one ring show trail into town over the pike to the present day, when half a dozen trainloads are hardly enough to hold the aggregation of wonders that threatens to make a man cross-eyed and wall-eyed in his endeavor to see the whole performance. Bverybody wants to go and every body should go. There Is relaxation of the mind in watching the acts and there is relaxation of the nether ex tremities in leaving the board seats. The circus Is the great democratic en tertainment of the age, and is run spe cially for parents and children. The child who misses it has a bitter mem ory all his life, and the father who does not take his boy Is an old grouch. TrMK TO CALX, IX THE ASSESSOR. News dispatches from Pendleton convey the information that the peo ple of that city are considerably agi tated because a water and power com pany has filed on all the water of Umatilla River just a few days before the city Intended to locate a diversion point for municipal purposes. Ac cording to the view taken by the Pen dleton people, this gives the power company the upper hand and the city must get permission from the com pany to take water from Umatilla River. ' But if Pendleton really wants water from Umatilla River, this Is no time to acquiesce In the claims of any rival approprlator of water. This is the time to get your fighting clothes on and go after what you want. Take a big stick along. The policy of lying down and asking permission doesn't pay. It Is one thing to file notice of an appropriation of water, and quite another thing to get the water. It is one of the fundamental rules of law In the appropriation of water that the water must be put to a' beneficial use within a reasonable time, and what is a reasonable time depends upon the circumstances of each particular case. If the power company has actual use for the water upon which It has filed, there is no need to question its right nor to ask its permission to take water. If there is more water than the power company needs for its own use, Pendleton has a right to take it without asking the power company's permission. If the power company has water to sell, or give away, that is pretty good evidence that it has more than it needs, and other appropriators have a right to it. The law of appro priation does not recognize any right to seize water for speculative purposes. Use is the measure of the right. But, assuming that the power com pany has use for the water, what then? There are several things a good fighter can do, but there is only one course for a quitter. The quitter must pay the price. The fighter can bring a suit to condemn, and when the owner of the water right places a val uation upon it, the Assessor can be quietly notified of the astonishingly large addition to the value of taxable property In the county. A good fighter will manage to catch them either a-coming or a-going, and. perhaps both. If a water right has a high value when the public wants to buy it, it ought' to have a high value when the public wants to tax It. The peo ple of Oregon have been altogether too slow finding that out, and some of the Assessors and Boards of Equaliza tion are so stupid they haven't found It out yet. Perhaps some of them never will. A few years ago, it will be -remem THE MORNING OREGOMAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1908. bered, the State of Oregon engaged in litigation over the right to take a small quantity of water from a ditch at the state prison. The owner of the ditch put an enormous valuation upon the water, but a few months later, when the Assessor listed the ditch at a fraction of the valuation placed upon it by the owner, there was a protest and a vigorous contest. At various times the state has been compelled to buy land for its state institutions, and almost invariably it has paid many times the amount for which the prop erty was assessed. There Is no sense in such methods of doing "business. If Pendleton wants to buy sdme body's water right and wants to know the value, don't send the Mayor or a committee of the City Council around to inquire what the property is worth. Send the Assessor. That is a plan that may well be commended to the favor able consideration not only of Pendle ton, but of the boards of trustees of the State University, the Agricultural College and other institutions that are in need of additional land. RADIATING DARKJiKSS. Dr. Straton's theme at the White Temple Sunday was the Bible, and in elaborating It he seems to have taken great pains to discredit the results of modern scholarship and enlightened research as much as he possibly could. What any Christian denomination has to gain by obscuring perfectly well known truth It is diffi cult to conceive. For example. Dr. Straton undertook to defend the moral character of the Jehovah of the Pentateuch. Of course that tribal deity needs no defense, since he was precisely what he had to be In the conditions of the people who adopted him. It rs Just as wise to defend the binomial theorem or the law of grav itation as Jehovah. These things should be explained, not defended. To defend Jehovah or any other tribal deity implies that we ought still to conceive of the Almighty as the primitive barbarians did. We must renounce all those attributes of love. Justice and mercy which we have enshrined In the modern concept and return to the being who hated every body but the children of Israel, who delighted in slaughter and who spared neither old nor young in the fury of his vengeance. The deity of the mod ern church is a very different person from this. Not even the Jews them selves would think of picturing the ruler of the universe as he appears In the Pentateuch, for those progressive people are hospitable to scholarship and their religion moves with the ad vancing world. One cause of the weakened Influence of the churches is the reluctance of many ministers to accept demonstrated facts. They cling to errors as if there were something sacred about them. Once a mistake Is made in forming a creed or interpreting the Scriptures, these deluded leaders seize upon It with avidity and never give it up. Surely, as Dr. Aked has so well said, we must change this mental attitude if we wish the church to retain its proper place in the world. THE FILL DINNER PAIL AT SALEM. "The full dinner pail is not in evi dence," complains Colonel E. Hofer, edtior of the Capital Journal, whose perpetual grouch must find expression some way or other. . It is possibly worth while to inquire just what the "Colonel's" special grievance is and upon what basis It rests. When he says that the full dinner pail is not in evidence he certainly does not speak of his individual dinner pail. An examination of the' issue of his paper In which this complaint is made shows that the business men of Salem give him most liberal advertis ing patronage. Salem has certainly tried heroically to keep the Colonel's dinner pail full, and its enterprising citizens, it would seem, are entitled to expressions of gratitude rather than censure and complaint. When a man has been given as much advertising business as is indicated by the columns of this one issue of the paper, it woujd be absurd to say that his full dinner pail Is not In evidence. The conclu sion is inevitable that the Colonel was not speaking of his own pall. It Is full, surely. Since the Journal is a local news paper, making a survey of only a por tion of the local field. It can scarcely be assumed that he has gone out seek ing evidence of a full dinner pail of National 'prosperity. That Is out of the question, so he must have been al luding to the conditions In his own Immediate locality or In the State of Oregon. And yet it Is difficult to be lieve that Hofer spoke thus of his community dinner pall. The facts are directly opposite to the declaration quoted above. The full dinner pail Is In evidence in the locality in which the Hofer paper is published, and the Colonel will so acknowledge If he will cheer up a bit and look around him. If news dispatches have told the truth, Salem and Marlon County are exceed ingly prosperous, and it is almost a slander upon the enterprise and busi ness sagacity of the people of that sec tion of the state to say that the full dinner pall is not In evidence. Has not every man In Salem got work If he wants it, and at wages scarcely any lower than when It was Impossible to get help enough a year or two ago? If any man is out of work in that part of the state, is it not his own fault? Is it not a fact that real estate transfers have been larger and more numerous in Marion County in the last few months than they have been before for twenty years? Is not Salem undertaking more public Im provements now than ever before in Its history? Is not every residence in Salem occupied, and is there not a clamor for more houses for the peo ple to live in? Are the owners of store buildings complaining that they cannot find tenants? During the panic last Fall was there the least doubt as to the stability of Salem banks, which, it was reported at the time, paid every depositor all the money he wanted? Has there not been more railroad con struction work In progress in Salem and vicinity in the past twelve months than ever before, and has not the new road done a paying business from the day it sold its first through ticket and accepted Its first carload of freight? All these questions, it seems certain, must be answered In such a way as to discredit the assertion that the full dinner pail is not in evidence up in Salem. Nor does It appear that there Is Just cause for complaint as to the fullness of the more extensive dinner pall of Marion County. Crops have been immense and prices are reason ably high for all products except. hops, and. as everybody knows, the price of this commodity may take a 'boom at any time. There have been no recent reports of foreclosure of mortgages on Marion County farms, nor do the names of Marlon County farmers or business men appear In the recent rec ords of the bankruptcy courts. On the contrary, a number of Salem capi talists have found their dinner pails so full that they came down to Port land and Invested money in city real estate, with the result that . they doubled their money and took the profit back home with them. In view of all these circumstances, one must take Issue with the state ment that the full dinner pall is not in evidence. It is in evidence. The first intimation to the contrary Is the as tonishing declaration on the speckled editorial page of the Hofer paper. But if it were not in evidence, would it help matters any to go about the country parading that fact? Would it bring new settlers or encourage the investment of new capital? Cheer up; smile a little; boost, don't knock. It is only Imagination that makes you think your own dinner pail is not full. It is full, notwithstanding your desire to add a piece of pie in the form of a Gubernatorial salary. Hard-surface streets are not an un mixed blessing. They don't always furnish a foothold for horses. In such weather as prevailed here yesterday many animals were terrified when driven on roadways having a slight grade. At every step they slipped. Some of them fell. . After a short sea son of dry weather, the firs!, rains fall ing on a layer of dust make a paste, and the surface of the street is as if oiled. Horses can scarcely stand. It is Impossible for them to draw a load uphill or. to sustain it downhill unless they are shod with long calks and these not worn smooth. Driving a horse with flat, worn shoes on such a pavement may not be cruelty to ani mals, within the meaning of the stat utes, but it is painful to the spectator and involves unnecessary danger. Proper shoeing of draft horses to meet new conditions is a timely subject for the Humane Society as well as the owners of teams and managers of transfer companies. When the donkey engine superseded the ox team as -a motive power in dragging logs from the forest, the cost of producing logs was materially re duced. Now we have the donkey en gine in use in clearing land from fallen trees and- stumps. The engine not only pulls the dead trees together, but piles them up so that they will burn easily. This is work that men could scarcely do with any number of ox teams. Tillamook has apparently been the first section of the state to use . the donkey engine in clearing land, but there should be general adoption of that method wherever there are extensive acres to clear. In Tillamook, and in all the coast coun ties, logged-off land, even though the stumps be left, produces an abundance of pasturage the year round. It is worth while to clear the land of logs even if it be used for nothing but pasture. The rattlesnake warns its intended victim before it strikes. The hyena snarls in defiant tones before It makes an attack. The untamed Indian ut tered his war whoop before he sprang upon his enemy with toma hawk in hand. But Peter Cooper Hains and his brother stole unawares upon their victim and shot him as he stood helpless In a canoe, unarmed and unable to grapple with his assail ants. One of them had not the cour age to go alone on the murderous er rand. They planned the killing care fully, taking pains that they should be well armed, and their victim stripped to a bathing suit. There is not the slightest indication of insanity. All the evidence points to a depravity which places these murderers a little lower in the animal world than the rattlesnake, the hyena and the savage. When Thaw was on trial the court held that whether the stories his wife told him were true or not was Imma terial to the case. The fact that she told them and that they had an influ ence upon his mind was what made the evidence sufficient. Now, quite likely, we shall see a repetition of this ruling In the Hains case. Mrs. Hains made a confession, so it is said. Whether she was any more true In her confession than she had been in her past life will not be material. From her sick bed over in Seattle the discarded wife - says she has suffered so much herself that she has no desire to make others suffer; so she probably will not prosecute her faith less husband. It is a good thing to live in an orderly town like Portland, where the people- let the law take its course instead of taking summary ac tion against a man who thus wrongs a woman. Bryan ought to.be able to write a book on the "Third Battle," for it Is so different from his "First Battle" that there would be plenty of ma terial. It might bother him to get as much per word for it as Roosevelt is to get for his stories of African Jun gles, but if it should sell as well as the "First Battle" it would not be a bad venture. T. Jenkins Hains, who wielded one of the revolvers at the murder of An nis, is said to be a novelist, but he evi dently has not worked at It success fully enough to become known as such. Perhaps he figured that it would help the sale of his stories If he Jellied some one. But it won't. ' It is argued with all seriousness that if the restricted district be abolished and the inhabitants driven out the city would become unsafe for decent women. How would it do to put hal ters on a certain class of men and tie them up? They are going to break the news today as gently as possible to Candi date Kern. It is generally believed in Indiana that he will accept, for he has never been known to dodge anything but a barber. Bill Squlers has lost that world'B championship again. However, Bill Is doing very well for a pugilist that never had a championship or won a fight. Mr. Bryan won't speak at the Syra cuse (N. Y.) fair 'because they are go ing to charge an admission fee. Now we know he isn't the same Bryan. That Eugene bull was unquestion ably a most valuable animal. No otber kind ars run over by trains. WOMEN ON-THE STREETCARS. Thl Writer Says They Are Uniformly Courteous. PORTLAND. Aug. 24. (To the Editor.) With a heart yet warm with gratitude for spontaneous expressions of sympathy for weakness, extended by women of Portland to an unknown member of their sex, I am impalled to enter a protest against our wholesale condemnation by THe Sunday Oregonlan editorial, "A Phase of Feminine Selfishness." The gentleman from Willamette Heights was indignant at what he saw, which was. certainly, an unfortunate exhibition of thoughtlessness and indifference on the part of gentlewomen. He stated facts as they occurred, hoping for improve ment upon their presentation, . and left the matter there. But the subject must certainly have touched a sensitive spot in the editor's mind, for. devoting two thirds of a column of space to express ing his sentiments, he just includes the entire female population of Portland in one class and gives them all a good scolding. I doubt not but It will do us good, and we will try to improve, but I must af firm that that occurrence of the woman with the baby in her arms .being allowed to stand in the streetcar is a most un usual incident .for Portland. I have many times seen men and women give .heir seats to women with babes, and to men, too, without it being considered an un usually creditable thing to do. I am defending a large portion of Port land women against what I feel to be unjust denunciation because of my own experience. Having lately, through a minor accident, been compelled for a time to use a crutch, and to use the streetcars also, I have been greatly im pressed with the protecting care and sym pathy extended me both by the carmen and the passengers. Upon entering a car. the ladies do not wait for the gentlemen to rise when the seats are all taken; I never passed through the door once, with my crutch in hand, before some daintily-gowned, sweet faced young woman or girl sprang to her feet and beckoned to me. I have been deeply touched at this constant action, and feel that I must pay this tribute of love to the gentle hearts of our young women. In some instances, perhaps, some of us deserve the scathing rebuke of the editor, and it will help to improve our manners, but there are many, many women in Portland I believe a large ma jority of those usually called "represent ative" who do not deserve one word of the editor's severe censure. ONE WOMAN. It only needs to be added that the writer of this communication Is a very well known woman, who "doesn't want her name used," since It will call attention to her misfortune. Isn't It Just possible that that fact, viz., her wide acquaint ance,, may have a little to do with the great consideration and courtesy every where extended to her by women" and men? , Where Hide the MnckrakcraT Des Moines Capital. Where are the jaundiced irresponslbles who some time ago sought to defame the fair name of William B. Allison through yellow magazine articles by picturing him as one who had fattened financially through opportunities afforded In Govern mental service? We note the following paragraph in the New York Globe: "During the heyday of the muckrakers one David Graham Phillips in his series on 'The Treason of the Senate' featured the late Senator Allison as a multi-millionaire who had amassed his wealth while in public life. The will of the de parted Senator was read yesterday; and it appears that his estate was worth less than $100,000 a few pieces of real estate and odds and ends not a dollar in the se curities affected by legislation in which Senators are represented as trafficking. And 25 years chairman of the Senate committee on appropriations. Senator Al lison disbursed ten billions of money.' The foregoing is a sample expression of sentiment which may be found in nearly every newspaper in the country Just now. The people who a year or so ago were wont to give ear to the space-filling sensation-mongers in their malignings of the best men in our public service are realiz ing today that they were listening to a pack of as conscienceless liars as ever disgraced American Journalism. Within five years the journalistic muck raker will be the object of universal con tempt. Toy Railroad for the Csar's Son. . Chicago Inter Ocean. A pretty story relating to the recent meeting of President Fallieres and the Czar- of all the Russlas at Reval has just become public. The Czar's son, who accompanied his imperial parents, quickly made friends with the President, and on discovering what a magnificent present M. Fallieres had brought with him the lad was elm ply delighted. It was an electric railway, with sta tions, tunnels, viaducts and engines and trains, all worked by means of an in genious electrical device. This toy cost more than $1500. The little Prince went up to the President and. taking off his hat, said: "Mr. President, I do not know how to thank you sufficiently for your mag nificent present, and I hope that when I grow up ray father will allow me to come and see you.". Sight of Ambulance Ciirfi Him. Pottstown (Pa.) Dispatch to Chicago Inter Ocean. Driver Klrlin. of the Good Will Fire Company's ambulance ran Into a peculiar experience when he was called out to take Isaac Bauerman to the hospital. Scarcely able to walk from threatened blood poisoning, resulting from stepping on a rusty nail. Bauerman got one glimpse of the ambulance as it stopped In front of his home, and then all his physical disability disappeared. With a bound he reached the door of. his home and locked it. All the persuasion of neighbors failed to get him to open the door. He had mistaken the ambulance for an undertaker's wagon, for he said that he did not want to be buried until he was dead. Bryan "Feels the Need." Springfield (Mass.) Republican. As the campaign advances, Mr. Bryan seems to feel the need of making some little political capital out of the panic. Had the conservative Democrats con trolled the party and named the candi date, the panic and the hard times would have been their strong suit. Re publican responsibility for' the business smash-up would have been thundered from every political stump. Mr. Bryan, however, exonerated President Roose velt personally from all blame, and in so doing he wag consistent. Inas much as he had claimed to be the original exponent of Mr. Roosevelt's policy. New Railroad of Twists and Turns. Kansas City Star. On the new extension of the St. Paul road through the Northwest, in one sec tion, in a stretch of 117 miles there are tl6 bridges, the line going from Fergus County, Montana, into Yellowstone' Coun ty 59 times and returning to Fergus County 58 times. , Smugsled CMunn'i Neckties Betray. . Washington (D. C.) Dispatch.. Ten Chinamen, smuggled from Canada into the United States via House's Point, were betrayed because each pair wore neckties of the same pattern and color. In order, it is said, to be identified as relatives by other Chinamen. STORED-IP WATER FOR ARID LAND Favors New I, aw Creatine; Reservoirs Distant From Water Supply Source. PENDLETON, Or., Aug. 24. (To the Editor.) From time to time The Ore gbnlan makes editorial mention of the need of a revision of the irrigation and water laws of Oregon. It seems that there is one needed change or addition to the water code of Oregon which should be made by the coming- session of the Legislature, and which so far The Oregonlan has not mentioned. This is a provision by which stored water and reservoir sys tems might bo utilized in declaiming the arid lands which are situated at some distance from the source of water supply. As It is, we have laws regulating the turning of the usual flow of water out of streams, transporting it by canals and ditches to the land, but we have no law by which water may be stored on the upper rivers and transported down the channel to the property of those storing it. To illustrate: Suppose A, B and C own 1000 acres of land at the mouth of the Umatilla River, but there is not enough water in the ordinary flow of the river to re claim this. The entire amount of water in the river has been filed upon by prior rights, and A, B and C cannot secure an inch from the ordinary flow of the stream. The result is their arid land remains arid; Instead of being worth from $500 to $1000 per acre as fruit land, it is worth nothing, adds nothing to the taxable property of the county and is a menace to settlement, because it harbors weeds, thistles, squirrels and other pests. Suppose that Oregon had a law al lowing A. B and C to go to the head waters of the Umatilla River, where hundreds of square miles o mountain surface sends down millions of Inches of water to waste each year, and build a reservoir to hold water for irrigating their 1000 acres 30 miles below. Sup pose they were permitted by law to measure Into the channel of the Uma tilla River 1000 inches, or 6000 or 10,000 inches to be diverted by them at their headgate'30 miles below, regardless of Intervening water rights, headgates or ditches. They would simply use the channel of the river to transport their stored water from the mountain reser voir to their land and would not Inter fere with the ordinary flow of the riv er. They would turn in 10,000 inches and allow say 10 per cent for evapora tion, seepage and waste, and would then turn out 9000 inches as their own property, 30 miles away, where their arid land is situated. If Oregon had such a law. It would reclaim hundreds of thousands of acres now lying idle. But as it is now, every drop of water running in the channel of a etream belongs to the vested rights on that stream. There Is no pro vision for storing and transporting water through the channels of streams. Under the storage law, hundreds of reservoirs could be bullded In the high mountains to catch the waste water of Winter and Spring, and then as this water was needed by its owners below, they could measure it out into the channel of the stream, transport It 10, 20 or 30 miles to their headgate. and turn It on their land. This would not interfere with vested rights along the streams, but would be an actual benefit to the adjacent lands by keeping a flow of water in the stream at its low stages, when ordinarily it would be almost dry. In all of the Eastern Oregon counties are hundreds of sites for reservoirs high up . in the mountains, where im mense quantities of waste water might be stored in Winter and Spring. If this water could be transported to arid lands below, It would work a revolu tion in the agricultural development of the state. It would give individuals and companies the right to pool to gether and store this water of the flood seasons and transport it to needy land In the dry periods, and thus transform many of the idle tracts into homes and verdant fields. Another benefit of this storage law would be that It would prevent floods. With the gates of reservoirs open to catch any unusual flow of water, the most threatening flood might thus be dissipated and distributed into the waiting reservoirs, and thus become, not a menace, but an instrument for the development of the country. There could be no objection to this law permitting the storage of water, from any interests, in existence. It would not take from vested rights one iota of their privileges; it would not divide up the flow of any stream; it would not take a drop of water from any man, company or municipality, but It would allow land-owners to go into the watersheds of the mountains and create a new supply. This new supply would be the absolute property of the owners. It could be measured Into the stream by" Inches and measured out again, Inch for Inch, under state con trol. It would not hinder or affect the operation of any ditch, canal, headgate. power plant or any other river prop erty. It would simply give the people, of the state the right to store waste water, hold It as their property and use It as they saw fit, using the nat ural channel of the river to transport It to their land. 1 hope The Oregonlan will give this careful consideration and urge it upon the coming Legislature. It is even more important to the people of Oregon than Statement No. 1. BERT HUFFMAN. Dos; Wins His Own Case. New York Times. At a recent reception in New York, Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor, was pre sented to a well-nown society woman. The latter looked at him hesitatingly for a moment, then said. "Yes, I am certain. I am very glad to see you again, Mr. Borglum." "I haven't the great pleasure of re membering." replied the sculptor. "Yes, it was in Los Angeles." said the woman, "and you were the defendant in a police court case." Borglum was flabbergasted, but man aged to stammer out that he was never In a police court In his life. Then the woman explained. It seems that Mr. Borglum. whe- in pr-'m-" i' -fornia. owned a magnificent English mas tin. The dog was amiable, but the chil dren of the neighbor were frightened by its great, size, and so. one morning the dog's owner was arrested on the charge of allowing a vicious animal to run at rarge. The JudRe ordered the ani mal to be brought in, and the great beast gravely marched down the aisle to the bench, and, putting a huge paw on the Judge's knee. looked solemnly into his face. The case was at once nonsuited. Mr. Bryan FIntters the Printers. Philadelphia Enquirer. "If I am not a printer myself." ex claimed W. J. Bryan at the banquet of the Lincoln (Neb.) Typographical Union, "I have given printers more work to do, I think, than any other man in the United States." Mr. Bryan's boast would be unimpeach able If he had not left one little word out. No man in the United States has had the distinction of supplying the printers of the country with three "bootless" speeches of acceptance as nominee for the Presidency of the said States. . Walter Refuses to Accept Tip! Baltimore News. When Honus Muller, a waiter in a restaurant in New York, refused to ac cept a tip. the walking delegate of the Walters' Union threatened to call a strike unless Muller were Instantly discharged. The matter is under discussion. MR. TAFT AND THE METHODISTS Dr. Cllne Ssys It Isn't So Then "Goes After" Unitarians and Catholics. PORTLAND, Aug. 24. (To the Ed itor.) Just why my good friend Dr. Dyott, in his sermon published in this morning'e Oregonlan, should. des ignate the Methodists as being dissat isfied with Mr. Taffs religious predi lections is not easy to understand.. About the only expression thus far re ported on the matter was from a negro convention and an Eastern Chautauqua, where a big crowd at the latter, not more Methodists, perhaps, than others, responded enthusiastically to an ex pression of regret by one of the speak ers that the next probable President refused to accept the divinity of Jesus Christ Dr. Dyott likewise, In showing the favorable attitude of the Presbyterian Church toward the Republican nominee, failed to mention the fart that at a great Methodist missionary meeting In New York ity not long ago, pub lished in the Associated Press dis patches, Mr. Taft was one of the prin cipal speakers. It Is taken for granted that Dr. Dyott, by some means, failed to have knowledge of that occurrence. A second reading of the sermon synopsis, however, leads one to think that the speaker set out. among other things, to eulogize Unitarianism, not a difficult task, by the way, for a Con gregationalism as the two denomina tions have been good backdoor neigh bors a long time. In this connection it may be noted that the Congregational School of Theology at.Andover has Just gone over boot and baggage to the Unitarians at Harvard. It is not surprising that everything in relation to a candidate for the Presi dency should be brought out. It has always been so, and it is no secret that Mr. Blaine's Interest in the Roman Catholic Church cost him the Presi- , dent's chair. And Mr. Taft may expect that what most people regard-as grant ing that church the big end of a sharp bargain in payment for church claims in the Philippines and Porto Rico will not be overlooked at the ballot-box in November. An ecclesiastical hierarchy that has proved a menace, to good gov ernment in Germany, Italy, France, Mexico and every other place where It has had the right of way, may expct to be watched in a republican form of government like ours. In the opinion (which is worth but little) of this ' writer, a man's church affiliations should not enter Into the consideration where his whole character is most ex traordinary, like that of Mr. Taft. Nor is it well, on the other hand, to at tempt to pummel honest, plain men, Buch as marched out at their country's call In 1861, and now are many of them in the evangelical churches, into some thing or anything they do not and will not like. They are mostly, with their descendants, a hardhearted lot. Only a small percentage are Methodists. Re ligious convictions, right or wrong, are hard to Jostle. Tirades from the pul pit, as well as ironical editorials In The Oregonlan, will prove futile. C. E. CLINE. SNAKE RITES A FRUITGROWER. Varlely of Accidents Happen to Fred Morgan, Near Ashland, Or. Ashland Valley-Record. Fred Morgan was bitten by a rattle snake this side of the Tyler plaL-e on the Ashland-Klamath Falls stage road last Friday and badly poisoned. Mr. Morgan was taking a load of fruit to Klamath Falls and at the creek stopped to let his horses drink. A large rattle snake was on the scene for the same purpose and Mr. Morgan felt the time worn instinct creeping into his blood and proceeded to get down off the wagon and bruise the serpent's head. The rattler was seemingly retiring to a clump of brush when Morgan grabbed at a piece of board in the vicinity of the rattler's tail and was startled with the rapidity with which the Rattler fronted and socked his three-ouartei-lnch fangs Into the middle linger of his right hand, clean to the bone with both strikes and discharging Its load of poison into the flesh. Morgan's companion soon dispatched the rattler, which measured five and one half feet in length, and was as thick as a man's arm and had his tall ornamented with eight rattles and a button. Unexpected and unavoidable circum stances developed In -his arrival in Ash land, and it was five hours before Morgan arrived at the Southern Ore gon Hospital with his arm tightly ban daged to obstruct the passage of the poison through his system. His finger was cut to let the poisoned blood run out and three pints of whiskey in his stomach and one pint injected fail to make him drunk. One-thirtieth of a grain of strychnine every two hours, All night, was administered to help the whiskey undo the work of the rattler's stock of goods. Mr. Morgan was un conscious and had a close call before being brought through, his . critical poisoning.. Mr. Morgan had only been out of the hospital a brief time, as Just a week to the very hour he met with an ac cident at the C. C Fisher place near the Normal School, that came within a moment of sending him to his etern ity for a reckoning with the powers that be. While employed sinking a well. Morgan had lit a fuse and the horse had drawn him to the surface with a rope tied around his waist. As he was placing his hands on the curbing, on the top of the well, the rope broke and he went down 35 feet and struck the back of his head such a stunning blow that It required several stitches to bring the wound together. Though badly stunned, he was Just conscious enough to gather himself together and extinguish the burning fuse a second before the deadly discharge was pre pared to take place. Insists That Eve Was Negress. Philadelphia Inquirer. Rev C. F. Choolzzll. B. S.. M. A., grad uate of King. College, Oxford, Trinity College, University of Berlin, special ec-, cleslastlcal envoy of King Menelek of Abyssinia, and descendant of a ine of ecclesiastical priests of Abyssinia 300 years old. is visiting here. He is telling the blacks that Eve was a negress. that Moses was a negro, that Solomon was a negro, and that Homer was a negro. His present business In this country is to tell the blacks to go back to Africa, where he says they belong. He bases his assertion that Moses was a negro on a Biblical story to the effect that God told Moses to put his hand in his bosom and that when Moses drew the hand out it was white; therefore he must have been black. CONJUGAL COMMENT. The bride Just think of it. dearest, fifty year from yesterday will be our golden annlverary. Brooklyn Life. Mrs. Benham Death love a shining mark. Benham 1 wish your mother had more pollBh. The Bohemian. Mr. Bacon Now. I want you to act natu ral when we are In church. Mr. Bacon Don't be lUy! How am I to act natural when 1 can-t talk? Yonker Statesman ... v nn n,l,t,li " Snlri TtlfkS. wwn -- ... angrily, a he tried to eat one of hi wire biscuits, but couian t. i wish jou wr,, returned Mr. Hicks. "I'd get a few featn ers for my hat." Globe. Wife Cwho always look on the cheerful Bide of thins, to- husband who has put the lighted end of hi cigar in hi mouth) How lucky you were. dear, to discover It Imme diately! London Opinlcn. Mr. Newlywed My husband admire everything about me my voire, my eyes, my form, my hanls! Friend "And what do you admlro about him? Mrs. Newlywed Hi good taste. Philadelphia Prea. (