8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, . JUNE 23, 1909. (lip mmmx A"tY rJ,ir PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflca u Fecond-Class Matter. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall ra!ty. Sunday inrluded. one year $8.00 Xally, Sunday Included. six months 4.23 Ially. Sunday Included, three montha. .. 2.25 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 rally. without Sunday one year 6.00 Xally. without Sunday, six months 3.25 Dally, without Sunday, three months 1.7.1 Dally, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year 1.50 Funday, ona year 2.50 Sunday and weekly, on year 3.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, ftunday included, one year .... 9.O0 Dally, Sunday included, one month 75 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, 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. I'nstaire Katt-a lo to 14 pages, l cent; 16 to 28 pases, 2 cents; 30 to 44 pages. 3 cents; 46 to tiii pages, 4 cents. Foreign postage double ratefl. f.aatrrn Business Office The S. C. Beck wlth Special Agency New York, rooms 4S 60 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23. 1909. RIVALRIES OF NATIONS. Germany's policy of naval expansion Is no new thing. It dates as far back as the close of the Franco-German "War; but it is only within the last few years that it has begun to excite much apprehension in England. For the situation of England is such that she feels she must hold supremacy at sea, or content herself to live at the suffer ance of the power that may be stronger at sea. It Is a contest of resources between all the powers of Europe. Each, of course, has the right to consider its own interest first. Alike in Great Britain, Germany and France taxa tion already boars so hard that the question where more revenues are to come from is a puzzle for all; and,, as some one has said, the people have reached the point where they must consider whether they will consent to tax themselves to death, in order to avoid being: killed by the direct method of war. We get a statement of the German point of view from Maximilian Har den, a German publicist of high au thority, both at home and abroad. A review of his recent works shows that, while deprecating . the burden placed both on England and Germany, he discerns for both a like if not equal danger. Neither country, he declares, can feed itself in case of war Ger many longer than England, but neither for so long as could suffice to raise an effective blockade. Germany, I Herr Harden maintains, must have j colonies, they are vital to her extst 5 enee, and she must secure them ira- mediately if not in South America, then at the expense of Great Britain; : and to this end if a Germanic bond . to include Great Britain and the , United States cannot be formed, war must result. The sooner, the better. , "If there is mutual good-will between j England. America and Germany, these ; three great Industrial nations will find ; the possibility for natural and pacific 1 expansion"; but, says Harden, such a dream cannot be realized without bleodshed. "Englishmen have not ' learned from history to divide power: ; they are determined at any cost to hold i by force and violence that which they i regard as theirs." Preferably Herr Harden would see this German expan- slon on the houth American continent, where German influence is already paramount; but, "without the friend ship and co-operation of the United States this Greater Germany is not to be dreamed of, and, besides, Germans in South America are very content - with their existing lot, and are merg ing in the body politic there as here." This is extremely interesting, as a view of the mind and intent of Ger many. What does it portend? The right of Germany to create fleets as well as armies, for support of her own interests and for pursuit of her own destinies, no nation can question. But her effort gives portents of great changes and stirring events in the world's affairs, which must greatly concern us or America, even if we are out, lookers-on. ! AMERICAN INTEREST IN CHINESE LOAN European bankers, who for many years have enjoyed the prestige and 1 profit which follows the loaning of i money in the Far East, are making I strenuous objection to any particlpa j tion by the United States in the loan of J27.600.000 for the Hankow-Sze j Chuan Chinese Railway. American j financiers, appreciating the value of - making a creditor of China, are not in- iclined to abandon the effort to handle a portion of the loan. Viewed from its surface appear- ances. there is something peculiar j In the eagerness with which the world's bankers attempt to force their loans on poor, old China. With the United States constantly seeking new i-apltai from abroad, and even at this time lamenting the diffidence of the French regarding our steel stocks now offering in Paris, it seems strange that we should be making an international outcry because we were not offered an opportunity to lend our money to the Chinese. But underlying all this discussion regarding who shall have the honor of making the loan is involved the ne cessity for maintaining the integrity of China. This country to a greater" ex tent than any other prevented the dis memberment and division of China about ten years ago. Our only object at that time was to keep the ancient empire in such shape that it could not be exploited or despoiled by one coun try to the exclusion of all others. China escaped becoming spoil of war largely through American interven tion, but is now the object of a finan cial conquest, which, so far as her m. , tegrlty is concerned, is fully as dan i. serous as Its warlike predecessor. Trade does not always follow the flag, but it always follows the money which is used in cultivating and en couraging It. Consequently the United States has a deep interest In placing China on her list of creditors. The merchant who lends money to a farmer quite naturally expects that farmer to do his trading at the store of the man to whom he is indebted. ' The nation that lends money to an . other nation by the same token can reasonably expect the borrowing na tion to reciprocate with any trade fa vors that can be placed with the lender. It is for this reason that the United States is desirous of being on at least even terms with our German and British trade competitors. News dispatches regarding this loan say that "the agents of the European bankers at Pekln had advised their Drlncipals to permit the New Yorkers'" Join in the loan. No "permission" f I was required, for this country has a 'distinct right to participate in the L iisui wets couierrea 1 1 v mil ' agreement concluded by Sir Ernest Sa- tow, the British Ambassador, with Prince- Clung on October 1, 1903, in which it was provided that "if China desires - to construct a Hankow-Sze Chuah line and her capital is insuffi cient, she will obtain all the necessary foreign capital from Great Britain or the United States." Briefly stated, this country desired to and will participate in the Chinese railroad loan in order to maintain an interest in a great trade field that is Just opening up. As a purely finan cial investment, the loan is not attrac tive, but from a" diplomatic stand point its importance is hard to over estimate. WINNING A HOME. In making his triumphant progress from the city's din to, the country's fterene quietude, -'T. V. R." enjoyed an advantage which most men lack. His' wife heartily helped the project along as the reader of last Sunday's Orego- nlan will remember. Although there was no house on their suburban acre and they had to dwell in a tent for a while,, still "T. W. R.'s" brave help meet did not complain. She is a para gon and an exemplar to most of her urban sisters. Let her light so shine that it may be seen of women. By a migration to the suburbs and owning a house and garden, the family of small means not only saves rent, but it enjoys luxuries in the way of fruit and vegetables which are never dreamed of in the average tenement. Green peas, asparagus, new potatoes. the spirituelle cucumber and the di vine strawberry belong to the home owner in quantity and quality limited only by his muscle. Yet there are women who cling to brick and paving stones and shudder at the thought of green fields. It Is they who are, at least partially, responsible for crowd ed tenements, high rents, barren sav ings accounts and the poor health of their children. Thrice blest in his wife is "T. W. R." Together he and she will build a home worth having. From their tent they will pass to a comfortable cottage and the grip of the landlord they will know no more forever. "What is to hinder thousands of other families from doing likewise? Nothing but that inertia which enchants and paralyzes. Speak the divine "I will," and forthwith you own a dwelling with a garden full of savory herbs and sapid fruits. HIS RETIREMENT OVERDUE. From Washington comes the pleas ing news that James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, will retire from that office in December. The news will not. ue surprising to anyone who nas fol lowed the policy of President Taft in surrounding himself with men who were familiar with, or at least have some knowledge of the work for which they are drawing salaries from the Government. The administration of "Tama Jim" Wilson would have been less ridiculous had the Secretary of Agriculture sufficient business sense to appoint assistants familiar with the Important work which the department essays to handle. But Mr. Wilson at all times has seemed averse to hav ing anyone in the employ of the de partment who knows any more about it than, he knows himself, which; of course, makes it difficult for the pub lic to realize on the heavy investment it has made in maintenance of the de partment. Mr. Wilson has remained in office for twelve years, and through all that period his crop reports, which have cost the Government millions, have been regarded as Jokes. It was during his administration that "leakage" of one of his carefully prepared crop re ports enabled a coterie of Wall street gamblers to clean up a fortune in cot ton. The immediate cause of his downfall, and undoubtedly the reason for his retirement, was his March crop report, showing such vast stock of wheat In farmers' hands that the Wall street gamblers who sold the market "short" made millions before the ridiculous nature of the Wilson report was understood, and the market re bounded. It does not make much difference whom President Taft ap points to succeed Wqson. The change will be for the better. MAINTAINING SEAPORT PRESTIGE. Soundings made by pilots and ship masters show quite clearly that the work of tl jetty at the entrance of the Columlna River has been so effect ive that thSre has been a pronounced increase in the depth of water. As it has been the Portland policy since the beginning of river Improvements on both river and bar, to maintain a river channel strictly in keeping with that at the river entrance, the Port of Port land announces its intention this sea son to dredge the river channel to twenty-six feet at dead low water an increase of one foot over the chan nel dredged last year. While the river Is very seldom down to the zero mark, and theold twenty-fi've-foot channel has, with the aid of the tides, carried many vessels of more than twenty-five feet draft, the additional root will be of advantage, for the coming season will undoubtedly bring a number of very large steamers to the port, and there must be no delay in handling them in the river. The City of Portland, which has taken up 'the task of deepening the river as the bar Is deepened, is not the small, struggling municipality that more than a score of years ago had great difficulty in raising the few dol lars necessary to "sluice" St. Helens bar with propeller, so that vessels of sixteen and seventeen-foot draft could reach this city without lightering most of their cargo. The Portland which Is changing the mighty Columbia River so that it can accommodate any craft afloat ' is a rich and powerful city, growing by leaps and bounds, and ex tending its field ef operations to the remotest districts In the Inland Em pire. This city became the original seaport for all of the vast region drained by the (iolumbia River because it was the point farthest inland at w-hich ships could discharge their car goes and load outward with the prod ucts of this region. It has retained that original position of commanding prestige because the citizens of Portland have resolutely determined that the great highway to the ocean should be improved, and at all times kept in condition safely to float the type of ships needed in this trade. The efforts of Portland have been rewarded with an increase of nearly ten feet in the depth of the river channel, and the Government work has resulted in an increase of several feet in the depth of the chan- nel over the bar. These results have been sufficiently encouraging to war- rani rnni nnana rr tha tt nrfa that have been so well rewarded, and Port land will year by year increase the depth of the river, meeting the greater draft of the vessels and enabling the traffic of the great region east of the Cascade Mountains to continue on "the line of least resistance," with no bars or shoals to interfere with passage of the largest ships afloat. The building of the North Bank Railroad and the feeders by which it is supposed to drain the Inland Empire has changed the commercial map of the Pacific Northwest. Even the Pa get Sound papers admit that most of the traffic of that great region east of the Cascade Mountains will now flow through the Columbia Gorge, and on arrival at Portland will be more than 100 miles nearer the ocean than at any other port on the Pacific Coast. Twenty-six feet in the river will be a good draft for the coming season, but next year we must work for twenty-seven feet, and, as the channel on the bar deepens, the river channel must show proportionate increases in depth. Port land has begun this work and is sat isfied with the results from such be ginning, but will not appreciate to the fullest extent what it means until both river and bar show a depth warranted by the importance of the region to be served. SPOKANE GETTING "WORST OF IT." "Spokane conclusively proved before that tribunal (the Interstate Commerce Commission) that it is the victim of railroad extortion and discrimination," says the Spokesman-Review. It was this policy of "extortion and discrimination" which enabled Spo kane's jobbing trade in the past ten years to show, greater proportionate gains than that of any other city on the Pacific Coast. It was "railroad extortion and discrimination" which presented to Spokane a protected terri tory 200 miles in diameter against which all comers were barred. It was this "railroad extortion and discrimi nation" which permitted the Spokane jobber to ship out of Spokane at a low rate, but prevented Coast Jobbers from shipping into Spokane except at a high rate. There are a great many communities in the Pacific Northwest that would like to participate In the same kind of "railroad extortion and discrimination" as that which has made Spokane rich and powerful. A FIVE BILUOS-DOLL.R PROJECT. The sessions of the National Irriga tion Congress grow in interest and im portance year by year. The vast sub ject of irrigation and the conservation of natural resources is a great deal better understood than it was five years ago, but there is still much for the masses to learn about it. The 17th session of the National Irrigation Con gress, which convenes at Spokane, August 9 and continues till August 14, will contribute its full share of in etruction and inspiration. Mr. Arthur Hooker's plan of promoting a bond issue by the Federal Government to carry on irrigation projects and other Internal improvements on a gigantic scale, will doubtless be vigorously op posed, for it cannot be expected that all the delegates to the congress will approve of it. For one thing, the sum of money he contemplates rasing staggers the imagination. It is $5, 000,000,000. It requires some con fidence in Mr. Hooker's projects to enable one to believe that it would be advisable to increase the National debt by this amount at a single stroke. Mr. Hooker argues that the increase of values throughout the country from the works he contemplates would more than counterbalance the expenditures so that no 'debt would really be cre ated, but all promoters talk in this way and not all of them justify their words by their deeds. But a rational mind la not repelled by a project simply because it is big. More than one big thing has succeeded In the course of the ages and we need not assume that the human race has lost its capacity for repeating the per formance. The separate items of Mr. Hooker's scheme could be equaled by the past achievements of several dif ferent countries. Holland, for instance, has recovered from the depths of the sea areas as large in proportion to her whole territory as the 100,000 miles of overflowed and swamp lands which Mr. Hooker wishes to spend $1,000, 000,000 in draining. Although the Dutch have made several ventures of this kind, they have never lost money on any of them. Each has been a brilliant triumph of engineering and has added many thousands of acres of fertile land to the country. The peo ple have been provided with new homes and the promoters have reaped handsome profits. He would spend another billion for good roads. Our National inertia in this direction is an exception, not by any means the rule, in the history of the world. As far back as we can go in the accounts of mon archs and republics, we find them building roads, sometimes for the march of armies, sometimes for the advance of trade. Among the most enduring and certainly the most hon orable of the relics of civilizations now dead, are the highways they con structed. Were ours to perish today it would leave no such reminder of its glory to the future, for our roads. all but the railways, would disappear in fifty years without leaving a sign to tell where they ran. Indeed, most or them would disappear eves' Autumn as soon as the storms begin It may seem ungracious to begin nnaing iauit with a project so mag. . : .; . . , . .. as wr. nooKers nve billion dollar bond issue, and yet one Is con strained to ask why he fixes the in terest rigorously at 3 per cent during ins entire century the issue has to run. nothing is more certain than the con tinuous fall of the rate of interest as a country develops. Beyond nerad venture if money is now worth 3 per cent., in nity years it will not be worth more than 2 unless some great war Intervenes to obstruct the working of economic processes, would it not be wiser to provide for refunding the debt at the end of twenty-five or thirty years and thus give the public the benefit of any interest reductions which may occur? Of course, we are aware that to speculate upon this subject may appear visionary to many per sons. It is extremely unlikely that Mr. Hooker's proposed bonds will ever be Issued, and yet stranger things have happened. The more intelligently the people investigate the subject of In ternal improvements the more likely they are to perceive in some such project as Mr. tiooKer s, a -very de- slrable form of National investment and activity. Concerning his proposed $5,000,000, 000 of bonds, one remark may be made with fair confidence. If they were is sued in moderately small denomina tions and offered to the public instead of a clique of financiers, they would be oversubscribed in a short time. It is contrary to our popular prejudices to think well of a permanent National debt, and yet there is no form of in vestment which the public loves so tell as Government bonds. Small holders of capital , will accept low in terest from the Government in pref erence to high rates from private com panies. - It is a well known fact also that we lack in the United States a safe and stable method of investment for people of humble means who are not financial experts. In this matter we are far behind France, Germany and England. These Nations have been farsighted enough to encourage thrift by providing safe investments for petty savings. Mr. Hooker's bond issue might produce its most valuable consequence in this direction, though in saying so we do not wish to depre ciate what it might do in the way of improving our roads, our rivers and our arid lands. Whether his method of accomplishing this desirable, end Is the best or-not, is a fair question for debate. John Bull has again come back to the United States as a purchaser of "the roast beef of old England," and has just placed an order with a Chi cago firm for 1,000,000 pounds, to fol low a previous order of 3,000,000 pounds, which is to be shipped in July. So much disturbance was created over the iniquities of a few Chicago packers a few years ago that the entire beef trade of the country was seriously in jured, the good packers suffering with the others. The occasion was highly pleasing for the foreign meat dealers. and they pushed the good thing along, but the placing of orders at this time would indicate that confidence in the American beef has been restored along with that of a number of other indus tries which got within the radius of the far-flung muckrake a few years ago. Little use or no use to blame the city authorities for the fire at Mount Tabor, on Monday night. No fire equipment can prevent the outburst of flames, when all the conditions are prepared and maintained for produc tion of a quick and rapid fire. A lot of plumbers' waste had been left in a building, and a bottle of muriatic acid, used in adjustment of pipe joints. The acid had eaten up the cork, and ignition of a quantity of oily rags was the consequence. Was the fault then the fault of the city in not having nre engines on the spot at the moment, ui ux muse wno created the con ditions that caused the fire? One of the infirmities of the human mind Is the habit of passing over causes and dwelling on effects or results of care lessness and folly. Count Zeppelin, who has been en deavoring for the past twenty-five years to make a successful flight across Germany In a balloon, will per. naps be somewhat skeptical about the success of Walter Wellman in balloon ing across the present location of the north pole. The Wright brothers are the only aerial navigators who have ever been able to control even partial ly the forces of nature in their flights, All others except a few foreign avia tors have been subject to the whims of the wind. Until the forces of the air with which Zeppelin and all others have to contend are subdued, there will be no such thing as starting for a long mgnt with even a reasonable de gree of certainty of reaching the ob- jective point. Ground was formally broken vester. day on the Cape Cod Canal, which Is to connect Barnstable Bay with Buz zards Bay, thus eliminating one of the most dangerous points of navigation on the Atlantic Coast, and shortening ine vineyard sound route to New York by seventy-four miles, and the outside sea route by 122 miles. This saving, wnen tne enormous tonnage that moves between the two points is con sidered, will shortly pay for the cost of the twelve-mile waterway now un der construction. The canal will be twelve miles long, and thirty feet deen Wherever a waterway exists, or can be Duiit, that can float vessels of thirty foot draft, no railroad in existence can compete with it. The Mayor's letter, endeavoring to excuse his obstructive acts, is charac teristic pettifoggery, worth no atten tion. Facts and results tell the storv Special pleading is nothing. The Mayor nas simpiy Deen playing his part in at tltudes before the glass, during his whole term. The city, fortunately, is atioui to see an end of the perform ance. Even those who thirst for nov. elties in public affairs tire at last of ireak administrations. In Illinois the Supreme Court has pronounced the direct primary un constitutional on certain technical con ditions that do not prevail in Oregon xne airrerences between the funda mental laws of the two states would render a primary law suited to one of tnem wholly inoperative in the other. o uuge van ianie declares your neighbor's fruit on your side of the fence yours. What win he decide about the midnight noise of your neighbor's cat, or the back yard odor or your neighbor's swill barrel? If the Federal Government is sroin to lay claim, to part of corporation earnings, will anything be left for cities which have given public-service con cerns valuable concessions without compensation ? Mrs. Gould may have been some thing of a sot, but was always "a perfect lady." What must a woman do to lose this elegant distinction? Mr. Harrlman, after all, is in good health. What a fine thing for the Des chutes railroad. What do Coos people think about it? Mr. TJRen and other constituents of Senator Bourne will rejoice that he Is making so enviable a record in green vests and golf. Now we see why Oregon's land-fraud defendants wished their trials long de ferred. Our BInger Hermann is hard to beat. Mayor Simon can't begin a dav too I soon on the new garbage crematory I authorized at the last election. TAKING COUNSEL OF" THE ENEMY Comment on the "Unerring Jadcmnt" of the People Jane 7. PORTLAND. June 21. (To the Ed itor.) A certain Democratic paper, ab normally wise in its day and genera tion, has a vision that unless the Re publican party of Oregon takes its ad vice as to , organization and manage ment it will surely meet its Waterloo, Hear it: It all means that there is blight, dis traction, bitterness and defeat for the Re- eublican party, in this state, if In any evil our the dismal doctrine promulgated from Sellwood is made part of the party creed. That is, unless the course mapped out for the Republican party by the said Democratic paper shall be followed, it will fail to show that virility which at this time sets forth a result includ ing the election of a Democratic Gov- rnor twice, one Democratic United States Senator appointed and another ust "sitting" for a full six years' term. Also a Democratic- Mayor of Portland for four years. These results have come since the Republican party of Oregon began following the trail which the said Democratic paper says is the only path which will lead it to victory! Great guns! Tta wmth i. j ... l its wrath is aroused by those reso- f wood Republican Club calling for the repeal of the initiatory law, which gives to half a dozen cranks the power to propose a law and f force it upon the people to approve or reject. In upport of this scheme It is claimed that the recent election in Portland demonstrated that the people are fully ualified to enter upon a sea of general legislation, because "the electorate dis criminated perfectly between the good and tha bad and voted with unerring judgment and complete intelligence. With the exception of the rejecting of the new charter, due to lack of infor mation, not a false move was made, not conflict resulted, not a single unwise erdict was rendered." But how does this Sir Oracle know all this? Where is its source of' in spiration? How does it know that no false move was made? What will the voters say who voted for these de feated measures? And why was there lack of information about the new harter"? And how does it come that an elec torate which does things "with un erring Judgment" elected such a dan- gerous man to their every interest as Mr. Simon the head, front, tail and I hide of "Simonlsm," that bugbear which supplied the text for rods of editorials setting forth in redhot adjectives that the Republican candidate for Mayor was the representative of every evil purpose in municipal government and the embodiment of graft, inefficiency and general maladministration? Wasn't mat a raise move'! If not, where couia one probably be found which would merit the term in the estimation of the said journalistic guardian of the Republican party's interests? Doubtless thn siiwnAj -i.,i, i j . . v. 1 ... uau lu ,7 1 s'vcn i an oiner lanuiaiiea comDined when it declared ror curtailing the powers of "the elec- torate." It is more than likely that the Sellwood bovs hnH ii v,oH h - . . 7. w " voiced by the said sizzling enemy of Simonlsm" and from the depths of their natural disgust demanded th withdrawal of such powers from plain- ly incompetent voters as can be consti- tutionallv done. indeed, with the result before them, a tally sheet which shows more votes for "Simonlsm" than for Munleyism. and Albeeism combined, what else could the Sellwood Republicans do? Under the th J,h t, Ut marvel at rtJ.? . " andaPPaud th evi- A partial and more or less consolinsr . w uiiciwiis juuKiimin. explanation can be found, however, in the conclusion that that lack of infor- , mii icjctieo tne new cnarter was the foundation of that companion uusuuKicu ciiuri wnicn inaugurated another era of "Simonlsm." Back of it all, though, looms large the unsolved puzzle that there- should have been any in -the city, and it works. They call it lack of information among the elec- the assembly method, or the "suggested torate on these important questions, ticket," and throughout Oregon the poll Lack of knowledge is ignorance, and ticians of the old school have taken no- snouia an ignorant people have full sway in the disposition of vital aues- tions like these? Nay, nay. Again it is pertinent to remark that the Sell- wood Republicans probably took the aforesaid Democratic paper at its word and acted accordingly when they rose in tneir places and demanded protec- tion from the dangers which nhvinnsiv grow out of permitting people without information to decide momentous pub- lie questions. And It may be remarked that Demo- cratic concern lest the Republicans of Oregon should abandon their tactics which have governed them during the past tew years, resulting, as they have. in Democratic Governors, United States Senators, Supreme Court Justices. Dis trict Attorneys and Mayors, is easy of interpretation. It carries its own key witn it, and the Republican who de mands that the course which has pro duced these results shall be followed further, cannot plead "lack of informa tion" when he stands astounded at the consequences. PIONEER REPUBLICAN. Steel Workers Mast Cut Out Liquor. Pittsburg, Pa., Dispatch to N. Y. World. The United States Steel Corporation has taken a determined stand against its worKmen annking liquor. Within the past week there have been posted in all the big mills of the Pittsburg ana unio aistricts notices that work men once entering the mills to work will not be allowed to leave until they are through their day's work. There is no reference to "booze," but the man agers and superintendents speak their minos plainly. xne corporation an- pears to want to run the mills hereafter on a strictly temperance basis. Num erous instances of spoiled work in the past tew years nave been traced to workmen who have been in the habit of going outside for their drinks at any time they feel like it. Until now neither corporation nor mill bosses have objected. Income Tax Amendment. Brooklyn Eagle. It ls probable that two-thirds of this Congress will submit an income tax proposition to the legislatures of the states. It ls also probable that a ma jority of the legislatures of the states will favor the proposition, but not a two-thirds majority of the states. A minority of one more than one-third of the states could defeat the change or the Constitution. The highly cap italistic rich states and the poor states with venal legislatures would be likely to beat the amendment. The rich states could protect their capitalistic classes, who in turn would sympa thetically buy the legislatures of poor ana venal states. IVew Jersey Thieves Steal Bandstand. Newark. N. J. Dispatch. Thieves stole a bandstand in Mary Benson Park. Jersey City. The struc ture was 15 feet square, with an or nate balustrade, steps and ornamental metal root. F-XVEt YEARS' WORK AT PANAMA Three Year More Ought to Finish the Bis; Excavation Literary Digest Complete statistics of the first five years May, 1904. fo April, 1909 of Uncle Sam's work on the Panama Canal are now available. In these five years there have been three different canal commis sions, three chief engineers, and endless conflict of expert opinion over the rela tive merits of the sea-level and the lock type of canal. The New York Tribune, summing up in an editorial column the most salient facts embedded in the com mission's statlsUcs, reminds us that the two French companies whose work pre ceded that of the United States Govern ment excavated 81,548.000 cubic yards in 18 years of actual digging prior to 1904. Under AmPrlPAn nn t ruT OT.oi'oHm, in Ave years has amounted, to 73.124.849 J j..:v.... .i. i, 1 . '.. ' -3, uidu IUULCU rt-I t H II S Vile Ull- ferent years as follows: ' Cubic yards. May. 1!04. to April. lfor. 64S.911 May. 190R. to April. 9ort 2.155.123 May. 1906. to April. Irt07.... fl.715.554 May, 11107, to April. 1908 2.Y062.0U May. 1908, to April. 1909 38.542.650 The small showing for the first year is due to the fact that real construction work was not begun by the American engineers untu more inan a year alter ih. TTr,n-H a,.t. v .i of the unfinished canal on May 4, 1904. That period was devoted largely to sani tary work and exploring. Now, however, the working force and the machinery have been brought up to what may be regarded as the fullest practicable effi ciency. Therefore, it is not to be ex pected, eays the Tribune, that the ratio of increase in excavation from year to year will be continued. What we may look for Is a continued rate of a little more than 3,000,000 cubic yards a month. This would dispose in less than three years of the estimated 101,641,745 cubic yards yet to be excavated. The time re quired for the actual completion of the canal, however, depends upon the time needed for the building of the dams and locks, "and as those structures are with out precedent in the history of engineer ing, there are no data for determining their requirements." Turning to the question of cost, we read : "Detailed statistics of expenditures are available down to February 1 last, or three months less than the five years. The total to that date was $93,915,657.76. Of this sum. only $60,122,448.05 went for actual engineering and construction work. Buildings cost $8,787,502, sanitation $8,054, 962, municipal improvements in the Canal Zone $4,007,497. civil administration $2,61S, 732, and so on to an aggregate of more than one-third of the whole. Many of these non-construction expenditures were made once for all and will not recur, so that hereafter a larger proportion of the appropriation will go for actual construe DIRECT PRIMARY I. AW. In Illinois and Then In Oregon and Washington, Seattle Tlm For the third time the Supreme Court 1 of Illinois has declared the direct prl- mary law to be unconstitutional 11 ' stated that objections were made to tne cumbrous election machinery and to restrictions placed on voters before tney were eligible to the orlmarv. I , ,, . .. . - oDiigea to declare fealty to one of the political parties before thev could vote. me gravest objection to a direct Dri- mary- especially that feature relating to United States Senators, is that it de- pnves legislators of the right of choice. guaranteed by the Constitution o the United States, When the Supreme Court of the Stnta Washington considered the direct pri- -$,,ia 1 ,' a5""eJi ? VV" an. Pin'n -?,2h,'s polnt' the lssu no having been However enthusiastic the Vunnortera of the law may be. the direct urlmarv cannot be called a success in any sense oi ine wora. in tnis state it has visited upon the people the calamity of an "Ac cidental Governor," who under the old system cauld not have been elected to any permanent position. In other state!! i tne results ,i r o n full,. ..t, ; i , Oregon, whero a pnKH, T ii ' turn elenteH n.mr.r.M ,i it1(j Senator, appears to be recovering its bal- ance. Simon s success as candidate for Mayor of Portland can have but one meaning tne revival of machine poli. I tics. The leaders of the party have tried it I tice. Illinois will probably be obliged tn en I dure an extra session of the Legislature in order to cure the defects in the law Jusf knocked out. Some of these days the People may learn that after all there ls no better system than the good old constitutional way laid out by the found I er3 of the Government- 14 nas ,ts faults, to be sure; but they are in no sen!e so glaring and vital as is a statute that puts a premium ore IrK!ness ana incompetency In the State of Washington the riiT-et primary -law has given us Hayand that one acciaent is enough to condemn it, Pet Crow Found to Be the Thief. Lexington, Ky, Dispatch to the New York Tribune. A pet crow in the familv of AloT ander v. Anderson, at Rockport, Ky., has been found to have been the thief ! which for several years has been pur loining diamonds and articles of jewel ery which the family had missed from time to time, and for the theft of which several servants had been accused and discharged. The crow was seen to fly from the house with a diamond brooch in its mouth, and a search of his nest in a nearby tree revealed a gold watch, two rings, two $10 bills, one $20 goid piece . ... . 0 emu utanj oiner ar ticles of more or less value. The loss of the articles had lnno- baffled the members of the family and a policeman of Rockport, who had been at work on the various robberies In an enort to locate tne missing articles and arrest the thief. a Weedcuttlng by Motorboat. London Globe. In Egypt an enormous amount trouble and expense has been caused by the weeds and other vegetable growths which spread so raDidlv a to choke canals and other waterways in in a lew days. Clearing by hand has been found impossible in one district, so a motorboat has been equipped with a unique weedcutter and placed in ser vice. The cutting attachment consists of a pair of V shaped knives with sharp and powerful blades, worked by belt irom tne propeller shaft. They trail along the bottom of the waterway, cut ting ine growtn ofr at the roots. It is said that the litle boat will clear as much as five acres an hour. Chameleon Rose That Changa Color. Le Petit Jardin. White in the shade, red in the sun. such is the twofold character that has given a name to the chameleon rose. At night, or when it is carried into a dark room, it assumes a waxlike white ness. This does not occur abruotlv. but the petals first pass through a blush tint, which rapidly changes Into a very pale rose, and finally ends by oecoming the purest white. Then, if it is taken into bright sunlight, with the greatest rapidity it resumes the scarlet tint of the most brilliant peony. This horticultural phonomenon comes from Japan, that country of magic gardens and wizard horticulturists. A GRIEVOUS MISTAKE. Mothers Make It Who Push Daughter. Into Association "With Chinese. PORTLAND, June 22. (To the Editor.) There has been much said and written about mother love and its supposed protection.- It often takes an unique turn, hard to understand by a layman. For instance, would -some good-hearted mother-lover be kind enough to explain the workings' of the particular brand that makes possible an occurrence so horrible as that which has just happened in New York? A mother introduces her young daughter to Chinamen, and the world knows the result. This mother is not an exception. There are thousands like her today, and they are more numerous upon our Western coast than Eastern. It matters not what the pretext be that lets down social and racial bars, the re sult is the same. I have heard the ex cuse given by fond mothers that their a"?h',M U.ld Tk V- assoriaie wUh some particular John Chinaman because ne was Americanized, civilized. Christian ized, educated, and wealthy. Was not Leon Ling all of these? Surely, it must be nothing but ignor ance of life and Oriental iniquities that mane possible such errors. If these mothers could only know Oriental life they would understand that nothing on earth can make a Chinaman anything but a Chinaman. The gods of their fathers are never forgotten. It ls a great deal the same with all races. There was a missionary in Central Alaska who di vided his time between making the Si- wasnes pray and making them nav. Thev were his flock and he fleeced them. He bought their valuable furs at half price ana paia tnem witn stale goods at five prices. Once, after a service, one of tha Indians, believing himself alone, said: 'Why do they force new gods unon us-' the god of our fathers was the raven. our fathers' god was better for the In dian and cost us less." Was this "nrt. ing" Indian "converted." No more does the Chinaman fnrsnkn the rods of his fathers. He may pre tend to do so, but he knows why he does it. The thing we do not understand is why instances such as the "Sieel mys tery" do not awaken otherwise good mothers to a sense of greater resDon- sibility. It may he a good mother who encour ages her daughter to recognize a China man or negro because he is wealthy, but she can hardly be a wise mother. Neither does the theory of "treating everybody right obtain," for what is right between equals is wrong otherwise. For instance, we must have our daughters, treat the Chinaman in friendly way so as not to wound his feelings, but would any mother place her babe in a crib be side a rattlesnake because she did not wish to inconvenience the snake bv ousting him from his unnatural position? The right way for white girls to treat Chinamen is to let them alone. Many other mothers send their daughters lntq au manner or places under the guise of charity. It is a sad mistake. It is wrong to imagine you can do this with safety; The young girl's place is among the best. not the worst element In humanity. There are a number of girls' charitable societies that should have attention. There is a world of truth in "Vice is a monster, et cetera." A SIOTHliR. The following statement comes from an-i other woman and mother well known in Portland : (To the Editor.) In your editorial of June 21 on the subject of "Misguided Ef fort" there is so much wisdom and com mon sense that I am moved to offer in confirmation the following statement Some years ago, when I was engaged in the free kindergarten work in the city, I met the American wife of a prominent Chinese merchant. They had met in the Baptist Chinese Mission in San Fran cisco and married there. The Chinaman was more than usually wTell educated in his own country, as was also his wife in her native land, as weli as refined and cultured beyond the average. All of which only aggravated the awful misery which this' unlawful mesalliance brought upon her, including the consciousness that she had betrayed the confidence and re spect of her friends, who, in return, re-r pudiated and disowned her, together with her children, of whom she had five, and to whom she could give no claim as citi zens to any country. There were times when the weight of the full realization of all this fell upon her with such force that she would take to her bed. When the burden seemed more than she could bear, on one occa sion she sent for me and seemed to find some relief in pouring out the bitterness of her heart, in the meantime disclosing what she had found concealed under what you call the "veneer of hypocrisy and cant grafted on the calculating shrewd ness of the Oriental mind." She also, re peated the statement which her husband had made to her. in almost the identical language which you use, concerning "the distances between the spiritual instincts and moral life of the West and of the East," which, he claimed, could never be "bridged by missionary efforts." for the same reason that you give, in substance, that "their religious systems are such as have been evolved naturally, from their own natures and situations," involving at the same time such awful penalties for any violation of their religious obligations so thoroughly inbred that no power on earth could shake them In the real sense, notwithstanding the fervency, sincerity or capability of their teachers or their own professions. Celebrated Elm Tree Has a Cancer. Boston Herald. The famous Bertram elm in Salem, Mass., has a cancer. It was noticed for some time that no cavities showed on the Bertram elm, which is near the library. This was' proof to the experienced eye, that there was decay inside the tree. An Investigation showed that the elm had a cancer on the Inside, which, if al lowed to grow, would kill the tree in a few years. Incisions were made and por tions of the inside were found to be punk. Tiny roots had begun spreading inside this growth. Efforts are now being made to remove the cancer. This elm is famed for its size and beau ty. The trunk measures 27 feet in cir cumference, and its age has been reck oned as 100 years. The estate was for merly the home of Captain John Bertram one of Salem's famous merchants of olden days. The Eighth Wonder. Oh! You Katherine Clemmons Gould! Will you, or the benefit o the great And thirsty population, Tell The great brotherhood of the arid thorax Just how you accomplish It will you take the time to writ A little old treatise on your Method of absorption. Explaining just how to connect With a quart of Clicquot chased by an absinthe frappe Superinduced by a baker's dozen Of brandies and sodas, Mixe4 with a. Boston bamboo and m couple of 'Mamie Taylors" and then to get an Appetite for lunch surround Five sloe gin rlckeya With enough Martinis to get That comfy feeling, and then cap that with a Royal fixz To hold your strength until the garcon Brings something in? And we reiterate. You, Katherine Clemmons. we love our Lemonade, but oh. you pousse cafe! And agam we aslc In the middle of a red Hot day with throats Like unro the Amargosa desert and super heated coppers lzzllng for the want of lubrication, with A - Far-away look to the sign of Ump Two blocks away, what will you take To tell us. little one. the process Through which the thirsting soul must Go to grapple with a Three-way cocktail, two picon punches. A goblet of May wine, a dash of green Chartreuse, a cool little Pitcher of sparkling burgundy and moselle Mixed With a night cap of three Scotch high balls And a stein Of "Shandy," And Still have the mora look rosy? T. O., in Goodwin's Weekly.