TIIE 3IOILNIXG OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1009. POBTXAjn. ORF.GOX. Kntered at Portland. Oregon. Postoffice aa Fecond-t'lass Matlr. Suuscristlou Kat Invariably In Advance. (Br Mall.) Dally. Sunday Inrluded. one year Duiiy. Sunday Included, six months...... 4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three months... 2;1,5 Daiy. Sunday included, one month -"3 Ial:y. without Sunday, one year... .. 8 00 l'nily, without Sunday, six months 3 25 ry. without Sunday, three months. 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, one month..... .60 Weekly, one year 1.50 Sunrtpy. one year 2 50 Sunday and weekly, one year 3.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year 9 00 Dallr. Sunday Included, one month 75 How to' Rmnlt Send postofflce money ordr. express order or personal check on jour local b.mk Stamps, coin or currency re at the sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dress in full. Including county and state. Tostac Kate 10 to 14 paaes. 1 cent: 16 to 2S j..-n;es. 2 cents; SO to o paxes. 3 cents; 46 to eo pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rates. Eastern Business Office The S. C. Beck wlth Special Agency New York, rooms 48 3o Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. rORTLAVD. FRIDAY, ACirST S7. 1909. MR. TAFT AXn POST AT. BANKS: It is pleasant to be assured that Mr. Tnrt- has not abated a. Jot of his par tiality for postal savings banks. If he urges Congress to establish them, as he says he will in his me.isafp next December, it seems hardly possible that this useful institution can be de layed much longer. The reasons which President Taft mentioned to his call ers for establishing postal savings banks are such as would naturally ap peal to Congressmen and financiers, but they are not the strongest ones which can be advanced by any means. It is perfectly true, as he says, that postal banks would attract a great deal of money that is now kept In 'secret places by persons who have no confidence In other banks. Their lack of confidence may be groundless and foolish, but they do not think so, and in any case it is a fact which states men must reckon with. Some econo mists compute at $500,000,000 the sum of money which would be drawn from hiding and put Into circulation by opening postal savings banks. A kindred fact which Is almost as Important may be mentioned, though Mr. Taft said nothing about it in his casual talk with his visitors. The foreign laborers In the United States, who are numbered by the hundred thousand, are as a clans economical and thrifty. They come here with the purpose to better tneir condition and they save their wages with a. rigorous determination which some of our native workmen might imitate with advantage, Still they do nOt trust our banks, and Instead of depositing their savings here they send them back to Italy and elsewhere to be retained In government savings banks. This is a steady drain of capital and in the course of a year It must amount to a considerable sum. If we had postal - savings banks It woald be deposited In them. This Is known to be true, because foreigners often seek to leave their money at the postofflces under the false Impression that the United States has taken the same wise meas ures as their home governments to encourage thrift. Experience both here and abroad has taught them that money left with the government la safe beyond peradventure. What may happen to money left in ordinary banks is to them a dark and dubious question. Many native citizens feel verv much the same way about the matter. As for competition between the Government and private banks it Is out of the question. For one thing- the funds which would be deposited at the postoffice are now either in con cealment or else they are sent to foreign countries. Xo bank gets any benefit from them. ' In fact the way they are handled Is a positive Injury, not only to the banks but to trade in general, because they are withdrawn from use in great quantities for long periods. Deposited with the govern ment, this money would go into trade at once. It might be used to reduce the 2 per cent bonds which are troubling financiers Just now by a tendency to depreciate, or It might be deposited in the ordinary banks where the government keeps 113 funds. What ever was done It would begin to cir culate. While It lies In concealment it might as well be annihilated so far as Its effect on commerce is concerned. The postal banks would practically add half a billion dollars to the circulating medium of the country at a stroke. The low interest which the postoffice would pay Is another reason why no Xational banker need fear the com petition of the Government. Ordinary savings banks pay 3 per cent and some of them 4 per cent. Xo one suggests that the postal banks shall pay more than 2 per cent. The Injury which some bankers anticipate from them is therefore pure hallucination. If they had studied the subject with the facts before them and minds free from panicky Tear, their vusious of fright would have faded away. Why should postal banks Injure private banks here any more than In the dozen European countries where they have long been established? It is nonsense to Imagine such a thing. Poal banks would do no harm whatever to any honest en terprise. On the other hand they would do all the good Mr, Taft re counted In conversation and a great deal more. No man Is so friendly to a corporation as one who has money Invested In it. The same Is true of governments. The Inimitable patriot ism of the French people is party ac counted for by the fact that so many of them own a share of the public debt. Everv man who put money In a postal bank would Immediately be come a champion of the Government. Whatever he had been before he would now stand Inflexibly for law and order. He would be transformed from a sentimental to a practical patriot. Xo better method could be desired for making ardent. Americans out of foreigners than for the Government to take care of their savings. But the best of all reasons for postal banks Is "the Immense encouragement they would offer to thrift. Waste and heedlessness of the future are our Na tional failings. We need lessons in economy more than any other teach ing. The postal banks would give them, first by displaying everywhere the opportunity to save, and secondly by offering unquestionable security. Mr. Taft can do nothing better for the country than to contend for postal banks until he gets them, and when that great victory for the common good Is won another awaits him In the parcels post. Eight of the largest armored cruis ers In the Navy have been ordered to sail from San Francisco September 4 for the Orient. A Washington dis patch announcing the departure says that the mission is a friendly one. Nearly all cruises are undertaken in similar peaceful circumstances. The fact that eight of the largest and fast est vessels in the American Navy are hurried out on less than twq weeks notice, at a time when political and diplomatic relations between the prin cipal Oriental powers are In a mud dled condition, may have had nothing to do with this hurried departure of our big fighting machines. At the same time. It might not come amiss for us to be in position to look after our Interests across the Pacific in case something rough were started along the Manchurian frontier. It required more than six "months of newspaper talk and posing to get the last Oriental fleet out of this country, and; when we hurry one out in ten days, comment may be expected. DR. JORDAN, SALMON PROPHET. Salmon men of Puget Sound are trying to find out what Dr. David Starr Jordan actually said, as to their in dustry a while ago. Several days be- fore the "big run" he was quoted in Bellingham as remarking that the sal mon Industry was ruined and that traps were to blame. This version of Dr. Jordan's utterance is backed up by a newspaper reporter and a high fish authority of the State of Wash ington. Then came so many fish that the canneries couldn't pack them. As to Dr. Jordan's remarks at that time, there is no dispute. They were these: "I do not advocate abolishing any kind of gear, but regulation of all. The large run this year is not surprising. It was expected." Since Dr. Jordan claims to be one of the highest fish authorities in the United States and is this country's member of the international fisheries commission, large Importance Is ascribed to his opinion. A good many salmon men think, however, that too much importance Is attributed to him. Others commend him as a big medicine man In fish knowledge. Among the latter are gill-netters of Astoria who ouote him in advocacy of abolition of upper Columbia River fishing and of lower Columbia traps. Whenever the Legislatures of two states debate salmon. Dr. Jordan's name is tossed around as if belonging on the one hand to a very great personage and on the other to a very Insignificant one. Dr. Jordan is also an authority on seal fishing In American waters of the' Pacific. Although his itreas were adopted as the United States policy In dealing with this vexed matter, that policy has proved a failure. Is it possible that Dr. Jordan Is far ing the same as most other men who have posed as prophets of salmon? Soon or late their pet Ideas are ex ploded. Beyond protecting salmon by limiting the open seasons and the reach of gear and by hatching salmon eggs articicially, little proved knowl edge exists and even in those realms It is small. An expert In salmon can ill afford to say too much. Dr. Jordan evidently has said a great deal. DEMOCRATIC ROLL OF HONOR. Queer Idea, Bryan's, that there should be a roll of honor for the seven "Progressive" Republican Senators whose conduct accorded closest with the Democratic National platform Whom of his Democratic party would he Inscribe upon the fame list? Are there no true sons of Democratic faith? "We favor Immediate revision of the tariff by- the reduction of Import duties," says the Democratic Xational platform. "Articles entering Into com petition with trust-controlled products should be placed upon the free list and material reductions should be made In the tariff on the necessaries of life, especially upon articles compet ing with such American manufactures as are sold abroad more cheaply than at home; and graduate reductions- should be made In such other sched ules as may be necessary to restore the tariff on a revenue basis." Mr. Bryan's Democratic compatriots in Congress njmbly forgot their party's pledge, when it came to making up the tariff schedule. They were op posed to putting articles of their own states 'on "a revenue basis," and quite overlooked their party promise and Bryan. Just like Aldrich they were In turn. In holding high the tariff on their local home products. One of the nimblest Democrats along this line was Senator Chamberlain of Oregon. Little would be said about them but for their false posing. After they had boosted high tariff, they remembered their party platform and voted against the bill because It was not on a "revenue basis." The buncombe Is the sorry part of it. Wherefore, the question recurs, whom of the Democratic party ought Mr. Bryan to Inscribe on the roll of honor? WOHI.DK TROTTING RECORDS. Two seconds was clipped from the world's trottlng-race record at Cleve land, Ohio, Wednesday, when Ham burg Belle took the first heat in a race In 2:01 M and followed It up with a second heat In 2:01. The phe nomenal nature of this performance can be appreciated when it is re membered that every trotting race record broken since Xancy Hanks trotted In 2:04 In 1892 has been made by a mere fraction of a second. The "two-minute trotter" has been with us for several years, Lou Dillon having circled the track In 1:58 Vi, while Cresceus made an exhibition mile in 1:59 ahd Major Delmar lacked but one-fourth of a second of making a mile in two minutes flat. These three performances, however, were made against time, with running horses for pace-makers, and In the case of Major Delmar with a wind-shield preceding the animal. Such records are vastly different from those which result from an actual race, and, from the accounts of the world-beating race at Cleveland, we annarentlv have two two-minute rac ing trotters near at hand. Uhlan, New England gelding. wa beaten In the first heat by Hamburg Belle by only a fraction of a second, and, as they meet again later In the season, the world's record may rest with the gelding. Hamburg Belle In bringing the race record back into the camp of her sex, has dethroned 'Cresceus, a stallion that captured the record in 1901. A review of. the trotting-race records reveals the fact that as record- breakers the trotting mares outnumber the opposite sex nearly two to one. Highland Maid trotted a mile In 2:27 In 1853, and that was the record until Flora Temple trotted In 2:24 H In 1856. Flora Temple trotted the first mile that was made under 2:20 In 1858, and her record of 2:19 re mained good until Dexter circled the track In 2:18 In 1865. Goldsmith Maid brought the record back to her sex in 1871 and held It until Ranis, an ex-cart horse, trotted a mile In 2:13 in 1878. The glory of Rarus was short-lived, for St. Julian clipped half a second from his record a year later. Maud S., Nancy Hanks and Alix in turn between 1880 aTid 1S94 worked the record down te 2:033i. where it remained until Cresceus beat The Abbott in 1901 There Is a long list of fast trotters all the way down the list from Flora Tern pie to Hamburg Belle, but as record breakers the mares seem to have all the best of it and the two-minute race record may not be far away. THE SHADOW ON THE MARKET. Union Pacific sold below T198'ln the New York stock market yesterday, a loss of more than $20 per share within a week. This stock led in the recent advances in the market, and yesterday It led In the declines. There has been no material change In the usual conditions which govern the stock market that would warrant so heavy a slump -In the Harriman stock. Money is still comparatively easy and the outlook for traffic Is exaellent, but a power more 'potent, unchangeable and certain than all other influences which Wall street is ever obliged to combat has thrown a shadow across the Harriman securities. With the command of more capital than has ever been placed at the disposal of any other lndividul on earth, Mr. Har riman has built up a gigantic railroad mac hlne without as yet training a successor who can handle it. The rehabilitation of Union Pacific Intrenched Mr. Harriman so firmly In. the confidence of his financial spon sors that they have never since ques tioned his independence of action. He has. without consulting anyone; bor rowed millions .and purchased roads or control of roads without making his plans known even to the directors until the deal was consummated. Any Jealousy or fear that - this one-man power would become dangerous has been sneedlly allayed by the remark able results achieved results that pos sibly might not have been so satis factory had the secret plans been en trusted to more than one man. So long as everything which Mr. Harriman touched turned Into gold, hl3 board of directors was content to give him free retn. and, as no failure'threw a cloud across this shimmering sky, the Harri man power increased amaelngly. With good health and the ability to handle this financial Frankenstein which he builded. all would go well with the Harriman properties; but with failing, health and no successor sufficiently well trained to grapple the gigantic task, thera is naturally some reason for these shivers that run through Wall street whenever the Har riman health shows a turn for the worse. In building up his machine, Mr. Harriman has gathered around him the best railroad talent in the United States, and to these able lieu tenants he has always cheerfully given due credit for the marvelous showing made by the various properties of the far-flung Harriman system. But no single one of these lieutenants can grasp all of the delicate and divergent parts of this wonderful financial and industrial machine. On this point the New York Journal of Commerce, which has never been very favorable to Mr. Harriman or his methods, pays the following tribute, to his remarkable achievements: The scope of the financier's plans. If they could be laid bore, would slugger the na tion. While he Is checkmating James J. Hill here and the Ooulds there. pullli'-K the teelh of the Vanderbilta one day and the next bringing J. P. Morgan Into line, he la conning over schemes at a hundred differ ent points of the continent, seme of them that to the layman would appear too paltry for serious eonsld'eratlon. In the South alnno ha has marked out developments whose accomplishments any ordinary human being would regard aa a brilliant life- work. Mr. Harriman indeed Is as a stone rolling down a hill, gathering momentum with each bound forwsrd. But there Is a bottom to even Mount Everest. It will be noted that the bare ru mors of Mr. Harriman's Ill-health were sufficient to cause a. loss of $20 per share In the market value of his prin cipal railroad stock. This fact may well cause one to wonder what may happen if he should suddenly die. A FORTUNE FOR SLEDICAX, RESEARCH. If half the stories told about the Chicago packing houses are true or were true it seems marvelously ap propriate to employ the fortunes they create in medical research. It savors keenly of a repentance and restitution. Investigators In medical science can make good use of all the money Mrs. Nelson Morris, widow of the packer, has left for their researches and a great deal more besides. Although medicine has advanced rapidly in the last few years, it still has a plenty of unsolved problems and they are of a nature which requires long and ex pensive experiment. Most of the alleviation of human ills which has been attained in the last quarter of a century physicians . have reached through experiments on living animals. This work requires not only the most exquisite technical skill and 'tact In dealing with hostile sentimentality, but it also consumes very large sums of money. The victories which the art of heal ing may be expected to make in the next decade or two will almost cer tainly include a cure for cancers. These frightful scourges of mankind have hitherto dctied every remedy but the knife, and even surgery Is not always successful In treating them. A person who is once attacked by a" genuine cancer stands a pretty good chance to perish by a lingering and painful death. Radium and the X ravs .have been used against It with some effect, but physicians do not put very extensive trust in either of these agents, though great things were once expected of them. Neither the cause nor the cure of cancer is known, yet in spite of this fact and the awful misery it Inflicts on human beings, there are people In the world who would stop the cancer researches at Buffalo and the Rockefeller hospital because they cause some discomfort to mice and cats. Mrs. Morris, who has left a fortune for medical Investiga tion, belongs to a saner order of be- ngs than the antl-vivisectionlsts. Grays Harbor has another ship wreck, the steam schooner Fair Oaks striking on the rocks at North Jetty. By a coincidence, the gunboat York town, which will have the distinction of being the largest naval vessel to enter Grays Harbor, had Just arrived off the bar, when the accident hap pened. If the usual Governmental ig norance of harbors had been permitted to prevail, $he Yorktown would prob ably have been wanted not to enter the harbor after the smaller craft was wrecked inside. Fortunately for Grays Harbor, she has no knockers Im bued with the idea that one port can be built up by pulling down another. The Fair Oaks was wrecked because she got out of the channel, and ves sels of much greater size and draft en ter and depart in safety, bec'ause they keep in the channel. 1 Steamships, go aground in New York harbor when ever they leave the channel, and there Is. more water there than there Is on Grays Harbor bar. ' President Elliott, of the Northern Pacific, in a speech at lAberdeen, pre dieted that "thenext ten years would witness greater railroad developmen In Oregon and AVashington than any one now dreamed of. He also said his company has orderd 3o00 new freight cars and is securing figures on 100 locomotives and 100 passenger vcars. These orders indicate a. tangi ble foundation for the optimism ex pressed by Mr. Elliott. That the new equipment will all be needed as soon as it is ready, now seems a eertalnty "Railroad development in Oregon and Washington" covers a wjde range o territory, but there is only one water level outlet from all of that vast region east of the Cascade Mountains in the two states, and at that outlet is a city which is growing more rapidly than ever before in its history and which will, to a greater extent than any other city in the Pacific Northwest, enjoy the benefits attendant on the fulfill ment of Mr. Elliott's prophecy regard ing railroad . development. That city is Portland. 1 Some student of the salmon situa tion at the entrance of the river, an nounces a theory that the present shortage in the pack is due to the re cent killing of such large numbers of sealions off the ocean shore, near! the Columbia. According to this theory, the salmon only come into the river to avoid being eaten up by the sealions The theory suggests the possibility of taming a numoer oi me wis eaters and sending them out to round up a school of salmon and drive them in, as a dog drives sheep. The sealion is easily tamed, and. If this new theory is correct, we may expec in the future to witness the novel spectacle of the gill-netter starting seaward with his gasoline boat, accompanied hv a counle of trained sealions to round up the salmon. Or, better still the big sealions could be taught to tow the boat out to an advantageous lo cation, and save the expense of the gasoline. It is said that Mrs. Nicholas Long- worth has set the women and children of the country a bad example in that she. smokes cigarettes In public. If she is guilty of this unseemly and. most unwomanly habit, the charge is cer tainly well based. For some reason the consumption of cigarettes has in creased enormously In the past five years, the use of them extending In very many instances to women, ana even school girls. It Is only worse for Mrs. Longworth to Indulge this abmmlnahle habit than for Mrs. Jones to do so because of the prominence of her father and the influence that she exerts bv reason of this. On this view the charge lodged against her by a California educator is a serious one. The hop-harvest of the Willamette Valley will be in full blast next week With "favorable weather for picking the crop promises to be one of the most satisfactory in years. It Is said by a man who has intimate knowledge of the situation that fully eighty per cent of growers failed to spray the vines, and the large area thus rep resented will be greatly damaged by even one day of rain. Of course, every body hopes for a warm, dry September as the climax of a cool and most ae lightful Summer.. There is no reason to fear that this hope will De disap pointed At all events it is yet too early to assess any probable damage to crops from unseasonable rains. The Oregon State Agricultural Col lege equipment was highly .commend ed bv visiting agricultural college presidents on a recent inspection or the Oregon Agricultural college, tne inspection of the college equipment. Its student list and curriculum seemed to surprise the deans of similar in stitutions In the East and Middle West, who were in the visiting party. Why.' Because the habit of bounding the Nation on the West by the Mississippi River is one that is difficult to over come that, inaeea, is never uvet come except by personal observation. Tasmania has proportional repre sentation, we are told: therefore, we should have it. Abysinnia, Uganda, Swat and Liberia are about to"' adopt it, we hear. We are too slow. Do we Intend to let Abysinnia, Tasmania and other great countries beat us? We wot not. The prize for being the fool of the family belongs here and we are going to keep it by thoroughly U'Renizing the entire state and all its people. Perhaps. Why not have a parade of school children for Taft when he comes to Portland? Not precisely a parade, but a line-up of 25,000 or 30,000 young sters who will be glad to see him, and he no doubt glad to see them. The President will be here on a Saturday, so there will be no break-In on school work. As an event to be remembered, Taft's coming puts Into the shade any other possible attraction. Probably the Sutton family would better let their unfortunate son rest in his grave. It will avail nothing to dig up his body. No matter what the Annapolis board found, the public Is now pretty well informed as to the available facts of his killing.. Xo new Inquiry bids fair to help his memory or his assailants. Fifty-seven experts In the National Pure Food Congress at Denver say benzoate of soda is all right and forty two experts say it is Jiot. If all ex perts thought alike, what would be the use of experts ? Another more or less perishable rec ord has been made by a Frenchman who stayed up in the air nearly three hours. However, the birds are still several laps ahead. A man who tried to call on Mr. Harriman to collect . several million dollars of back interest on railroad stock was arrested as being demented. He was. 'Nor has the welkin been made to ring by clamorous demands of our BInger for a speedy trial. Roseburg Is good enough place for him. Why, indeed, should either Mr. Pinchot or Mr. Ballinger attend the Conservation Congress at Seattle? Wasn't Joe Teal there? President Taft's coming will be synchronous with the mellowing of the fruit that made(Oregon famous. IN DEFENSE OF HUMBLE ONION. It la the Friend of Man and the Enenry of Disease. Washington Post. Doubtless God could have made a more wholesome vegetable than the onion; but doubtless God never did. to borrow the thought of Isaak Walton on the straw berry, and we put no credence in and bear with litt'e patience the following paragraph relating to a perversion said to have een perpetrated by -a heathen in California: Aft who like onions will hone that the odorless onion said to h-ive been rort" by Wing Hop, a Chinese gardener llvin, in California. ma,v soon be piareu u:wn market. Wing Hop has for years been en eaired in the philanthropic labor or tryin to grow an onion that should have all th virtues of the old familiar vegetable of that name without the one. quality . that has offended so many of the. fastidious. H says now that hi3 efforts have been crowned with suroess. When you get an odorless onion yo will have an onionless onion. Years ago a man invented a pipe that gave you smoke without the effect of the nicotin in the tobacco, and another fellow in vented a drunkless whisky, or pretended to. Men had no use for either and re jected both. As for the onion, it is the friend of man and the enemy of disease. It is good for the stomach, for the liver, for the kidneys, for the skin, and a delight for the properly educated palate. No ship's crew ever suffered from scurvy that had a supply of onions. Gen era! Grant refused to move rtls army one campaign until he got a cargo of onions he had ordered. Gen. Forrest, the Confed erate chieftain, insisted on onions as part of the ration of each of his troopers. Anrl those of the "fastidious" who will have none of the- onion because it is re garded as a publican vegetable have no business to go far from tlie home where their bandboxes are kept. The onion is best raw, but it is excellen boiled, fried, or even roasted. It is fln for flavoring, and for a turkey it beats all creation when mingled .with the stuf fing. But an odorless onion? It will prove art Insipid bulb lit for neither Christian no pagan. Out with it! SKTBOATS NOT NEW INVENTIONS. Men Have Made Air Trlpa Often an Even Crossed to Britain. Chicago Journal. The proud ambitions of variou aeroplanlsts to emulate the perform ance of Bleriot in crossing the English Channel bring to mind the fact that the same body of .water has been crossed on other occasions by aerial means. January 7, 1785. Blanchard and Jef fries sailed from Dover to Calais in balloon. Earlier than that by almost 15 years Dup'oy Ve Lome Invented steerable balloon which was used dur ing the siege to carry messages be tween the troops in Paris and outlay. Ing points. The flying machine itself is not by any means new. In fact, considering the very long time that men have been building flying machines, the back wardness of the science today is rather remarkable. v Away back -in 1273 Friar Bacon built a flyer, and as long ago as 1651 Bishop Wilkin wrote that "It will be as usual for a man to call for nis wings when he is going on a journey as it is now to call for his boots. Before 1700 Borelli actually flew in an airship of his own devising. In 1800 Sir George Caley performed mar vels of aerial flight. Henson, 'Petti grew and others added to the small total of aerenautic knowledge. In 1S75 VonGroof, the famous flying Belgian, attracted a great deal of attention, and from that time forward interest has steadily grown and inventions have multiplied. In France, Germany ana this coun try hundreds of ambitious men are de voting their skilled brains to solution of the problem of human flight. The promise for the next few months is large. Perhaps It is not too much to expect that before the first day of Jan uary, 1910. the future of air naviga tion shall have been assured. Corporation Tax Dilemma. New York Times. After the United States has collected a tax from- a corporation In respect to the transaction of its business, will it guar antee the privilege of doing the business In respect to which the tax Is collected .' If not, the United States is In the posi tion of taking something for nothing, and taking it from one who is allowed to do business while another is forbidden. For example, the business of guarantee Ing bank deposits is both lawful and pop ular, however it may be criticised from some points of view. But the Attorney General of Kansas has just ruled that a company formed to guarantee bank de posits at a higher rate of interest than Kansas approves may be excluded from doing business in Kansas for that reason alone. Would the United States collect the cor poration tax in respect of business which Kansas refuses to allow? Or, having col lected the tax, would the United States proceed to constrain Kansas to allow what otherwise it would disallow? Recent limitation has settled that It Is unlawful for a state to cancel a license to do business within a state because of appeals Co Federal courts against state legislation. The right to litigate could not thus be restrained. But can the right to do a lawful business in respect to which the United States has collected a tax be withdrawn? The dilemma appears to possess embar- rasssments for either the United States or its component states. It was prudent to arrange the enactment of such a stat ute in such a manner mat debate was impracticable. French Dlallke New Tariff Rates. ' Springfield Republican. The new American tariff, bears more hardly upon France than any other na tion, and much hitter feeling is repre sented to exist there over the fact. That country exports heavily to the United States silks, fine cottons, wines and sirhl- ar articles of nicety and luxury, and these articles take the brunt of the tariff increases made over the old Dingloy rates. The French press Is quite excit ed and the more radical newspapers are counseling tariff reprisals. Should these be resorted to. however. French exports to this country would fall under 25 per cent duties additional to those com plained of, and this fact seems to be having a sobering effect in France. But that country may raise its minimum or most-fayored-nation tariff rates, and thus seek to' "get even" with the United States without Incurring the application of our maximum schedules. This course may be followed. Minister of Commerce Dupuy, however, is quoted as saving with delphlc effect that "France will defend her interests without recourse to the tariff." Scorned Flla Advice. Cleveland PJain Dealer. 'Madam," said the medical man, gravely, "you must practice filling your ungs with deep breaths or pure air." "An bust the smithereens out of my ew direet'ry gown," sniffed the lady. I think I see myself." And turning on her high heels she haughtily left the apartment. A Parallel. New' York- Poet. Secretary Ballinger's denial that there has ever been any controversy between him and Mr. Pinchot' reminds one of Crabbe's hero, who Began his state with vigor to reform: And made a calm by smjllng at the storm. The Trouble With Too Many. Charleston News and Courier. Some people are so busy telling the Lord his business that they have no time to at tend to their own. LARGE PRIZES FOR AVIATORS. France and England Tempt Men Who Operate Flying: Machines. j London Cable to New York Sun. Although M. Bleriot has won the dis tinction of being the ttrst man to cross the English Channel in a heavler-than- air machine, enough prizes remain to be won to make it worth while for other aviators to persevere in their at tempts to accomplish a flight over the same course.' The three bigges prizes are $20,000 offered by Baron de Forest for the first Englishman- who succeeds in do ing the trip in an English-made ma chine, $5000 offered by Henri Deutsch to the pilot who makes the same trip carrying- one passenger before Decern ber 31. 1903, and 12500 offered for the first aeroplane to cross the Channel before January 1 next, but in this com petition attempts may be made only on the second and fourth Sunday in each month. The following is a list of some of the principal prizes to be won by aviators: Prize. Conditions. Closes. 00,000 London to Manchester In 14 hours . with cot more than, two -stoppages -'o.iMft 1 'i)iir4 nf 10 kilometers - to be covered 10 times Sept., '09 2OO0 Aviator making record fliffht from Brussels to Ostend ) and hack, or equivalent distance - In BelKlum Oct. t, '09 .-somi One mile, all British flier and pilot ....April 6, '10 S21J0 First worajn to fly a clr- j cular kUometer $f0m Ten annual prizes for aviator hoLtlins record distance flieht on December 31 each vear Jan. 1, 'IS S4W0 Three annual prizes for a return . fllg-ht over a 100- kilo meter straight course $.o:Kl London Manchester. Pay able at the rate of $5 per mile for first attempt exceeding- '-'0 miles ; ! $10.000 London-Manchester. Ma chine must be British built and . have an Antoinette et-Klne $2T.(.hj London-Manchester. Brit ish bulit engine $30'Kl First aviator to fly from Milan to Turin. Distance about 80 miles $2100 First aviator to fly from camp at Chalons to Essy pa rade grounds $2400 First aviator who follows a specified route over Paris be tween 10 A. M. and 3 P. M. Aviators must previously have accomplished 20 kilometers .. ..... $10.0i.10 First aviator to travel i p the course of the Hudson River between New York and Albany. Distance 142 miles.. $5O00 First German aviator to fly !n less than one hour from Frankfort to RusseNheim and V back, making a descent at the latter r'ace Oct. '09 $20.000 First aviator who carries a passenger from the Depart ment of the Seine, or Seine-et-Olse to the Puy-de-Dome lu six hours ... Jan. 1, 'IS $2010 For the first aviator who, having stopped his engine, Veepa aloft for five minutea without descending . more than SO meters $oOK) For the first person who makes flight In heavier than air machine between Liverpool and Manchester '. M. Dujardin - Beaumetz. the French Under Secretary of State for Fine Arts, has given orders for a painting to commemorate M. Bleriot's cross Channel flight. The picture is to rep resent M. Bleriot immediately after landing, receiving the embrace of his compatriot, M. Fontaine, and enveloped in the folds of the French flag, which had been used as a signal for Ills land ing. The artist commissioned to paint the picture la XI. Tlievenot. Slang Well Horn. Cleveland Leader. Some diligent student contributes to Puck a list of striking instances of the use in famous books of slang phrasps which came into vogue long after the writers who fathered them, often, it is true, in an entirely different sense, passed away from earth. "Forget it cast it away comes from Hawmornes Mamie Faun and "It's a Sure Tiling is found In Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer." It appears that "Twenty-throe." signi fying the last, is in that wonderful and least Dickensesque of Dicker.' novels. "A Tale of Two Cities." "Cut in and win" is traced to Thackeray's "Vanity Fair." e Farther back. "Nothing doing" crops out in Addison's Letters, and "Gone to the wall" is found in. John Bunyan's Immoiwl "Pilgrim's Progress." In "Love's Labor Lost ' it is discovered that Shakespeare says: "Give Hector a gift a gilt nutmeg a lemon." So one of the very best slang-born phrases of the day. Slake good, can be located In Deu teronomy. The truth Is that many slang expres sions are merely the popular discovery or second birth of phrases and words of an cient and excellent lineage. It is a groat mistake to lump all slang together as of like quality and justiflcation for its iex istence. Another Climate Equal to Oregon's. PORTLAND, Aug. 24. (To the Edi tor.) In the first chapter of Justin H. McCarthy's hook, "Needles and Pins," a sequel to "If 1 Were King," there is a description of the climate of Poitou, France, as viewed by the inhabitants of the province, which so aptly describes the climate of Portland, and so nearly echoes the language often heard from the lips of enthusiastic residents of Portland, that one wonders if Mr. Mc Carthy has not sometime encountered Portlander in his travels and lis tened to his praise of the Rose City. He says: "No true Poitevin ever tired of praising his country's cli mate. It was brisk in Spring, suave in Summer, calm in Autumn, mild in Winter. When it rained the rain was not like the rain of less-favored re gions; it was good for man as well as cabbages; you might walk abroad In it and be not only none the worse, but, rather, all the better. When It blew, the hoarse winds hooted no dirges as elsewhere, but were as cheerful trum pets encouraging hunger and thirst amk, the amiable appetites." J. 5. IvlAItV l.N. The Turn In Ibe I.nne. Nashville American. There are even signs now of a breaking away from Bryanlsin and the other "Isms" which have so distracted and disturbed the Democratic party for nearly 20 years. We think we see signs of a return to reason in some states which are Just now appar ently beset with demagogues and plapued by unwise legislative enact ments. It is an old saying that it' Is a long lane that has no turn. Even so. he turn has been reached in the Democratic lane, and from this time- on the conservative, thinking men are going to come to the front. It is high time they were coming to the front. It Is incumbent upon the party to put aside the demagogues and the destruc tives and make our fair land a land of peace and plenty, and, above all, a and where common sense rules, where here shall be equal rights to all men. special privileges to none. Her Specially. . New York Times. ane doesn't boast tiirectolre shape,- Her hairs not Psyche style. As o'er the grass, at dewy morn. he flits, with quip anri smile. Her tidy skirt's of natty blue. Her blouse short-sleeved and- white; And every movement of our Jane we watch with keen aengnt. weet come that breath of murmuring pines From river bank and hill. The sky Is cloudless; myriad birds Their matin chorus trill. The bacon's sizzling In the pan. The coffee scents the air. Our table's spread beneath the oak; We wait for Jane, the Fair. Oh. Jennie isn't murh on fudge. Nor yet with chafing dish. But out here where our tent gleams white No worthier cook you'd wish. Rah! Here she cornea: Ho. breakfast, boys. And then for forest tramp! Ah, who can beat the Johnnycakes Our Jennlemakes in campi Life's SunnySide Love of country is so fine a virtue that it seems difficult to carry it to ex cess. A resident of a small village in the north pf Scotland paid a business visit to London the other day. He hap pened to call on a merchant who was unknown to him, but had once made a stay in his native place. . In the course of conversation the visitor made use .of an expression that led the other to exclaim: "Surely, you como from Glen McLuskie?" The assertion,' however, was denied. Presently, to the merchant's surprise, another Glen McLuskie expression was heard. "My dear Mr. AIcTavish, I feel convinced that vou are a Glen McLuskie man after all." insisted the merchant. "Weel," returned the other, "I'll no' deny it any longer." "Then why didn't you say so at first?' demanded the Englishman. "Weel," was the calm response, "I dlnna like to boast o' It in London."- London Chronlcie. Homer Cummlngs, the Connecticut member of the Democratic National - committee, who was In charge of the Eastern spetfkers' bureau in the 3 908 campaign, is a rattling good story teller, and one day at the Hoffman House, with Senator Culberson, Colonel Johnston, of the Houston Post; Rep resentative John Wesley Gaine3, of Tennessee, and several other well known Democrats as listeners, he told of a Celtic friend of his In Stamford who came to him some years before In a Presidential campaign and said: "Homer, ,1'm 1 going to try voting the Republican ticket this year." "W ell, now, that's a surprise, Jerry, for I ttiougnt you were a rock-ribbed Democrat," said Cummlngs. "And I am," said Jer.ry, "but I like Jim Blaine, for he's part Irish, so I want to do what I can for him. I'm going to vote for Blaine all right, but ' whisper (us he got close up to Mr. Lumming's ear) I'm going to cut the divvle out of Logan." Washington Star. A kindly lady who lives in New Jersey evinces great Interest in the personal welfare of her servants, an Interest which led her not long since to make inquiry of a new maid-of-all-work touching the latter's domestic felicities. "I understand, Nora," said she, "that you have a model husband." "Shure, mum: lie's the foinest a gyurl could have," was the enthusiastic re sponse. "If ye could see th" way he trates me, mum, ye'd be after sayin' he 'were a frind instid of a husband." Harper's Weekly. Ex-City Counsel Joseph Coult is an enthusiastic angler and always has a fund of fish stories on hand. The best one of the collection, he frankly admits,- was told him by a rank ama teur, who lives in Montclair. 'Two weeks ago," recited the rank amateur, while Mr. Coult listened at tentively, "I lost a $" bill whtlo canoe ing on Greonwood Lake. The bill fell into the water and disappeared. Well, I went fishing yesterday and caught V big black bass. I took it home and when it r as opened what do you think I found?" "The $5 bill," ventured Mr. Coult. "Not en your life. I found $4.95 In change and half a plug of chewing to bacco." A.twark Star. A young New York broker of con vivial habits fell in with an old school friend who had gone on the rond. "Whenever you're in town come up and hunk with me," urged his friend as they separated. "No matter what obi time it is. if I'm not there Just go ahead anrl make yourself at home. I'll be sure to turn up before daybreak." Soon after this the salesman arrived n town about midnight, and, remem bering his friend s invitation, sought out his boaruing-house. There was only a dim light flickering in the hall, but he gave the boll a manful pull. Presently he found himself face to face with a landlady of grim and terrible aspect. "Does Mr. Smith live here?"' he faltered. "He does," snapped the landlady. "You can bring him right in!" Phila delphia Reou-d. Bryan's Share In the Fraud. Nashville American. Brvan is out in a statement in which he not only flays the recent tariff en actment, but blames the President for it. He says that "the Aldrich lull is a con summate fraud deliberately planned and boldly executed." This to true, every word of it, yet it doesn'uacqulre any par ticular force coining from a man who lus exploited the Democracy for personal profit. Had' Bryan paraniounted genuine tariff revision instead of economic fall acies, the party might not today be dis organized, dispirited, moribund, on the outside looking In. Insane Credulity. Chicago News. Another sign of Thaw's Insanity, the Judge says, was that he believed all his wife told him. IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, GENIAL AUTOCRAT This' man, lovetl of the people he so loved, recalled on his cen tenary in a specially well-written id'etch which will appeal to every American, young or old. CHASING HENEY INTO THE WILDS OF OREGON Experience of nn Orcgonian cor respondent fieltinir an interview with the noted prosecutor miles from civilization. BEHIND THE SCENES IN A BIG CIRCUS Some inside facts of life in a city of tents that the public does not know, with fine illustrations by staff photographers. FRANCIS RICHTER'S SUCCESS IN LONDON Opinion of cold critics on his remarkable musical insiirht, his technique and driving force. TAFT, CHAMPION AMERICAN TRAVELER His comingr trip will bring; his mileage up to the moon's distance from the earth. ORDER EARLY . FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER