THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAN, MONDAY, APRIIi 23, 1910- PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postoffice as Eacond-Class Matter. Subscription Katen Invariably In Advance. (BT MAID- pally. Sunday Included, one year $8.00 JaJly. Sunday Included, six months... ""H Ially. Sunday included, three montha.. XJnlly. Sunday- Included, one month.... IJaily. without Sunday, cna year n.00 lally. without Sunday. six months.... 3.:j Ia(Iy. without Sunday, three months 1.M I'ally. without Sunday, one month ?' Weekly, one year 1 o0 Sunday, one year 2.60 tut day and weekly, one year 3.60 (By Carrier.) rally. Sunday Included, one year Ually, Sunday Included, one month.... ,'5 How to Keralt Send Postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoffice ad dress in fun. Including: county and state. Postage Rates 10 to 14 paces. 1 cent; 18 to 28 pages. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages, 3 cents; 40 to 60 pases. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Kastem Business Office The S. C. Tteck with Special Apency New York, rooms 48 C0 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 010-512 Tribune building. PORTIAND, MONOAY, APRIL, 25, 1910. TH K WriJJEKNKSS SIIOII.O BE TAMT21. Forest lands of the public domain In the West are closed to homestead entry, because, say conservation radi cals, they are more valuable for tim ber than for food and because, more over, when they were open to home steaders, they were "Guggenheimed" meaning- "grabbed" by speculators and monopolized by syndicates. Ad vocates of this policy profess to see Jn the homestead land law one of the great sources of loss to the Nation. This talk comes from shallow minds who know little or nothing' of the pioneer history of the West. It reflects the kind of intellect that wishes to send Bill Hanley, of Har ney County, to prison, because, as other pioneers always have done, ho cut scrub junipers from public land to use as firewood. Homesteading of public lands in the "West is the product of the Nation's wisest statesmanship. This system of land bounty populated the West with the most sturdy citizenship. The peo ple who were induced by it to under take pioneer hardships and subdue the country performed a National service that was worth far in excess of any benefit they ever received from the land. Even now, were the law allowed by conservation officials to continue in operation, it would be the means of adding large areas of wealth-producing land to the re sources of the country. There was fraud under the law, but that was the fault of negligent officials. This Gov ernment should be strong enough to see that a beneficent law is enforced. Its fear of fraud is a confession of weakness or negligence, or both. The homestead law is an outgrowth of the donation land law, which was first urged on ''onress by Sen ator Lewis F. Linn, of Missouri, some 70 years ago. The donation act gave land to Americans who would go forth to the wilderness and bring distant lands into the sisterhood of states and Add new strength to the sinews of the Xation. "This is enough to. perpet uate the memory of Lewis F. Linn to remotest generations," says -Clinton A. Snowden, in his recent History of AVashington. "The world will yet remember him." The settlement of.AVestern lands under the homestead law is called by some conservationists and busy Pinchot officials, "robbery of the peo ple." This is an extravagant habit of language that in time will be cor rected. This Western country needs return to the homestead law for tam ing of its wilds, expulsion of wild cats, and conservation of its re sources. Where forest crops will sup port hundreds of Inspectors, food crops will sustain tens of thousands of homeowners. ABIXKS OF TEOPI.E'S ItUUS." Constitution reformers swarm Ore gon in many places. Kach reformer declares his purpose to promote the "people's rule" and the "people's choice," through some initiative and referendum improvement. Eachasserts his scheme, more than any other, will enable the people to govern them selves, to cast off the yoke of boss and to ordain their untrammeled will. But so many of these improvements have been presented that a call has gone up from promoters of several of them for suppression of the others this, too, In interest of the people and for protection of the people's right to rule without annoyance from agita tors who are deemed reprobate. The people must not be. allowed to decide for themselves, then, but must have a body of select reformers to pass upon Improvements that are good and bad. So that, one step back of the new deal, the people are to be no freer than they were before and bosses of another sort are to judge what works are good for -the electo rate to vote upon and what statesmen are worthy of the public confidence. This much for the sham. In truth, . however, the people of Oregon have been ruling ever since the commonwealth was created and since its constitution has been in force. They have been able to do everything that they have wished to do, as the public conscience has Awakened to one' thing and another, and to put down one set of bosses after another. They have elected good men and others to office, but never have found it impossible to get rid of the others. This old constitution is the product of best experience in the progress of people's rule. Yet now come single taxers and grangers with theoretical schemes of tax improvement; U'Ren and his alleged foes of boss rule with a reform Body of law that would give despotic powers to Governor and so called inspectors. Socialists and pub lic ownership cranks with a project that would authorize the state to build railroads; Prohibitionists with a fanat icalidea of stopping consumption of liquor. Each of these invokes- the right of the people to rule. Ru,!e of the people is a hackneyed phrase of every brand of agitator and of all together. They know that these are the charm words that win popular attention r.nd sanction. But it is com ing to a point where voters of Oregon will not take up with so-called re forms of the constitution just because their promoters promise more power to voters. The new power accrues to cranks and agitators, not to the whole people. In fact, each of these changes lessens the power of the people to hold ag"itators in subjection. This state will do well to hold on to the remnants of its old constitution and reject all these so-called reforms, for they will not improve the condi tion of the body politic. It will be safe to cling to established principles of equal and uniform taxation of all property: of representation in law making bodies; and, of freedom of in dividual conduct;- also to adhere to restrictions against Government con struction and maintenance of rail roads. These' manors have all been fought out before this and it ought not to be necessary to travel again the thorny paths of experience. Likewise, old methods of determine ing people's choice are proved best. They are the methods of deliberative choice by representatives- of the peo ple in assembly. Citizens of Oregon are coming back to the people's rep resentative choice. Republicans will hold assemblies this year and Demo crats will hold banquets and confer ences both to select candidates and policies for the people's choice in pri maries and election. . . THROl'OH ORECOX The Portland Business Men's Ex cursion, scheduled to leave tonight on a four-days' journey through West ern and' Southern Oregon to Klamath Falls and return, is assured of a cor dial welcome at every place along its itinerary. It is altogether an im portant event, and it will bear im portant results. Portland has no special message to bear to the state at large by this en terprise except of its good will and good cheer. The definite design of the Portland business men is thus to show their interest in the progress and develop ment of the various parts of Oregon. They want to know by personal in quiry and examination just what the outside places are doing, and they want to know also what would be done here to help along the general ad vance. It is a good thing for business men to get acquainted with business men everywhere in Oregon. Portland has no hirh-board fence around it. All roads in Oregon lead here, and there is a way out over them for Portland as well as a way in for the rest of Oregon. It is a get-better-acquainted ex cursion .by some members of the great Oregon family to other mem bers. The household is harmonious and reasonably happy now; but it can never be either too harmonious or too happy. Therefore Portland is start ing out today to pull the latchstring on many welcoming Oregon doors. V.'JtAT OK the i n I hi:? If Portland hopes or expects to maintain its present prestige as a ship ping port and compete with. 6ther ports in the Pacific Northwest, it is necessary that there be an end to the continual trouble along the water front. Nearly all day Saturday two large Oriental liners, operating under time charters of more than $200 per day, with this particular expense doubled while they are in port, were unable to load or discharge freight on account of a strike of longshoremen: It was not a matter of wages that caused this tie-up. It resulted from the dis charge of three men who left their work and visited a saloon several blocks away. The misguided foreman, unable to convince himself that thb steamship company was paying fifty cents per hour for men to engage in the pastime of beer drinking, dis charged the men on the spot. Then followed the sympathetic strike. Portland has removed some of the handicaps that in the past have driven shipping away from the port. Some of the greatest of these handicaps still remain. They should be removed. VOICE OF THE M-niBINO TRUST. Cost of plumbing makes a mighty big tax on property owners. When they seek opportunity to reduce it, a mysterious influence interposes. Now that cemeit , sewer pipe can be bought at half the cost of terra cotta tubes, the influence begins its work and City Plumbing Inspector Hey declares the cement pipe porous and unsanitary, against the testimonial of City En gineer Morris that it is neither. Pos sibly Mr. Hey is unconscious of the influence. If so, he should wake up. The plumbing trust has powerful hold on builders in this city, through manufacturers and jobbers, boss plumbers and journeymen. The or dinances are popularly believed to have been framed at behest of these interests, so that specifications are the most expensive possible. All this makes for profit of jobbers, who sell supplies at wholesale prices; bosses, who sell them at retail; and members of the plumbers' union, who sell "time," on which . he bosses collect also a handsome bonus. Cheaper soil pipe will cut into profits of the plumbing combine and of the terra cotta trust. The latter fixes prices without competition and with a piratical greed that makes big prolits for its promoters. Now if Mr. Hey is free from this power and is attached first to the interests of hi3 employers in this case taxpayers he is not taking the plain course to prove it. Mr. Hey should make himself right with the men and the women who pay his salary. In view of the City Engineer's assertion, and of ordinary commonsense, he is wrong. Cement pipe should not be porous nor unsan itary and its cheaper price commends it to the citizens who pay the bills. YAXCEY. The name "Yancey," which ap pears in connection with the huge cotton frauds that have spread con sternation through both hemispheres, is one that has Ion- been honored in the South. There was a Yancey who made a great stir at the time of the outbreak of the Civil War and had his finger in that pie more conspicuously than any other Georgian, with one or two exceptions. This family Is one of many in the South which be gin with the letter T. In the North we have few such. There is Young, of course,- but not many more. Yates belongs more to the South. The only well known man of that name in this country was a Kentuckian. The Yancey of Civil War fame was born In Georgia, but soon took up his residence in Alabama, which state sent him to Congress and made him a member of the convention which re ported its secession ordinance in 1860. He was sent to Europj as one of the Confederacy's agents, but what serv ices he rendered the cause history does not proclaim vigorously enough to be heard distinctly. No doubt his deeds arc celebrated in the annals of his family. The Yancey who has fallen into cotton troubles doubtless belongs to the same stock. Until proof to the contrary is at hand, the world will believe that the Yancey whose cotton house is in trouble was immoderately speculative and inclined to rush madly into rash ventures. This may not be true at all, but the name Yancey im plies things of that sort. It snarls and twists the mouth in utterance Just as the character of its owner may be supposed to depart from straight lines. There is much in names, notwithstanding Shakespeare's opinion to the contrary. Most men try consciously or unconsciously to live up to their names, and, if the sound by which they are known is harsh, their natures oftentimes acquire from it a tinge of unnecessary cruelty. One involuntarily hopes that Mr. Yan cey is better than the sound of his name. COXIX'SIXC SALMON LAW'S. Never a fishing season rolls around but brings along many examples of the perplexing, confusing and wide spread absurdities of our laws for pro tection of salmon. The spectacle of a force of county officers in hot pursuit of a force of state officers who inter pret the laws entirely differently from the manner in which they are under stood and declared by the local courts is an incident that should be as un usual as it is unnecessary. It should not be necessary for an officer en gaged in enforcement of the law to flee like a thief with his booty, for fear of arrest at the hands of another officer acting for citizens who radic ally differ with the fish warden as to the meaning of the law. -The seizure of a lot. of fish caught in the Willam ette River seems still further to have "localized" our badly demoralized fish laws, for the seizure was resisted in consequence of a decision rendered by the Circuit Court of Clackamas County. We have never yet succeeded in per fecting an international fish law or agreement by which fishing in waters dividing this country from Canada can secure the protection it needs. We have been similarly unfortunate in failing to perfect mutual laws between states, so that observance of the law's requirements would be insisted on from both shores of the stream. As a grand finale it would now appear that we have been unable to enact laws that would be mutually oper ative between Portland and Oregon City. This is a situation that can hardly reflect very much credit on the intelligence or intentions of persons most interested in fish legislation. .To the average layman, it would ap pear that a law that permitted Wil lamette River fishermen to work, and denied the same privilege to Colum bia River fishermen, is very poor law. If the impending legal struggle will more clearly establish and demon strate the confusing and conflicting nature of our fishing laws, it may 'be of material aid in bringing about cor rection of the evil when the next Leg islature meets. The reform in these laws should run through the entire system. We cannot prevent salmon from swimming from one county to another, from Oregon waters into those of Washington, or from Ameri can waters into those of Canada. It thus becomes imperative that concur rent legislation be enacted that will protect the fish for the mutual and permanent benefit of all the' people, regardless of which side of a fine imaginary line they may dwell. THE BIBLE IV fOIXECE. Young college men seem no longer to deserve the rtproach that they are ignorant of the Bible. Some years ago it was a common observation that they knew rather less about the Scriptures than about anything else, which was saying a good deal, but, according to an article in the May Century, start ling reforms in this particular have been initiated and indeed carried out. Nothing is now more common in col lege than for the students of all grades to unite In classes for the study of the Bible. It is possible to win almost as much fame by eminence in Scriptural research as by prowess in football, and it is said that a skillful expounder of difficult texts ranks next to a speedy sprinter in academic glory. All this Is well, though the value of Bible study depends somewhat upon the way it is done. The mere propa gation of ancient and baseless tradi tions about the Scriptures is not espe cially beneficial to youths any more than to adults. If the college boys are learning facts and sound critical opinions about the incomparable liter ature of the Hebrews, one would be disposed to praise the new departure in their fnterests without stint. If they are merely committing to mem ory certain historical errors, some reservations must be made. In any case, these Bible classes will bring the youths into intimate rela tions with the English Bible, which in Itself is a piece of good fortune not to be despised. No doubt the ac quaintance they will gain with the un paralleled beauties of its style will help chasten their crude literary taste. It may be guessed that some of the ex ecrable college English of which so much has been said lately may be at tributed to the sad forgetfulness of the Bible into which the last generation permitted itself to lapse. The conse quence was not merely a sinful race of men, but, much more regrettable to some persons, a race which could not write its mother tongue without hor rible blunders. COTTON" AT CLOSE KA.VGE. Long-range views on any subject must necessarily lack the accuracy possible only where a close-range study enables proper consideration of all the details and conditions affect ing the issue. To this fact is largely due the general misunderstanding of the ship subsidy project at interior localities,' where knowledge concern ing it is all theoretical and opportuni ties for observing the practical work ings of the scheme are missing. Some what similar is the misconception on which the periodical attacks on deal ing in futures is founded. Every year, some whining "shorts" in. cotton, after selling large quantities of the staple which they never possessed, set up a cry over "manipulation." It is but natural that the New England cotton manufacturers should sympathize with these professional shorts, . for both parties have the same end in view, towit, depression of prices in the raw material. This year the efforts of the "bear" contingent in cotton have proved so unsuccessful that they have rushed to the Federal authorities, asking prose cution of the men who, they claim, are responsible for the high prices of cot ton. New Orleans is the great cotton center of the world. It is at that point and. in the adjacent territory that an overwhelming proportion of the world's supply of raw cotton is mar keted or financed. In such circum stances it is-but natural that the New Orleans papers should be exceptionally well informed on all phases of the subject. Both the Picayune and the Times-Democrat, newspapers of un questioned character, have repeatedly denounced the efforts to abolish trad ing in futures; and both papers are severe on this latest attempt to pun ish the "bulls" while the "bears" are to go unmolested. The Times-Democrat recalls the tremendous slump in the price of cot ton a few weeks ago, when thousands of "bears," taking advantage of high prices and great speculative interest, flooded the market with "short sales" contracts and hammered prices more than three cents per pound before a better understanding of the actual sup ply and demand checked the down ward movement. The New Orleans papers would like to know why an ef fort is being made to punish the "bull" pool with no mention being made of the "bear" pool. "Is it a crime?" asks the Times Democrat, "to form a bull pool, but no offense to form a pool on the op posite side? If this be so, giant spec ulators in cotton must be 'bears' If they want to keep out of jail, and the South must expect to see speculation always arrayed against its chief com modity." Thus far the only effect of any of these periodical attempts to regulate practical matters by theoret ical and impracticable methods has been to increase the opportunities for unscrupulous speculators to "rig" the market on the strength of the reported prosecutions. Portland gained something more than a new gravity route down .from the rich Inland Empire when Mr. Hill built the North Bank road. Admis sion of this city into trade territory from which it had previously been barred was the first direct tangible evidence of the ' benefits " to follow completion of the road, but indirectly the gain has been even greater. The Hill lines, for the first time in their history, are this year engaged in a publicity campaign;- in which Portland, in most cases, is given precedence over all other ports in the Pacific North west. Not only has this newcomer in Portland's railroad field undertaken to exploit on an extended scale the resources of the great Central Ore gon region, but it has also been tell ing the world of the wonders of the Portland Rose Festival. No better or more effective publicity work has ever been undertaken than that in which both the Hill and the Harriman rail systems -are making known the re sources of the Pacific Northwest. Good results from this work are inevitable. Vancouver is the Jatest of the Se attle suburbs to be drawn on for names for the census taker. Mrs. Hig gins, of Clark County, visited Seattle for the purpose of accompanying her two. children to their home after a term at the Washington State Univer sity. This, of course, offered suffi cient excuse for the enrollment of the three names in the Seattle census lists. A fjjv- days ago, the Olympians were objecting because Seattle insisted on. counting the crew of an Olympia steamer as residents of Seattle. As Vancouver is nearly 100 miles farther away from Seattle than Olympia, it will be observed that the protest of the Olympians was entirely unwar ranted. In view of the methods em ployed, it seems strange that Seattle would stop counting with a paltry 300.000 on the roll. "The mills of the gods grind slowly," but they move like Halley's comet when compared with some of the movements of this great Government of ours. When the steamship Czarina pounded to pieces in the breakers at Coos Bay last January, there was much unfavorable comment regarding the action of the life-saving crew at that point, the general opinion being that a life-saving crew should save life, providing it had the proper equipment. After a lapse of more than three months, the Government has at last decided to investigate, and a special agent is on the way from Washington. If the life-saving crew, accused by the Coos Bay Board of Trade, do not all die of old age, they may some day be reprimanded or discharged. Your insurgent like Poindexter doesn't want to do anything the Ad ministration or the Republican party organization wants him to do, but he wants all the Federal Jobs the Admin istration has to give. Possibly the Administration may prefer to follow its own method of giving. "Going fishing," says Mr. Hill when asked about his forthcoming trip to Oregon and the Northwest. "Jnst get ting away from my office," says Banker Steely "Educational purposes,", says Banker Baker. Come on to Oregon and no questions will be asked. "If Seattle does not reach the coveted goal (300,000)," says a Se attle letter in The Oreg-nian, "it vlll be because the people are not here." If Seattle does mark up its figures to 300,000, it will also be because the people are not there. Colonel Roosevelt will be criticised, of course, for uttering a lot of highly moral platitudes before the French Academy. But shall the most obvious truths be forgotten or ignored because some one fears the mob will cry "chestnut?" A partner in the Morgan banking firm is cominj out to look ov.r Ore gon with James J.- Hill. Yet nobody here appears to be fric'ttened over the prospect of his investing a few millions in Orepin. Murderer Wezler "doesn't know why he did" it.'" Then he shouldn't, have done it. The law ought to ar range It so he cannot suffer hereafter from similar homicidal aberrations. Now people and potentates of the Old World understand that the seven years of Roosevelt were i o false alarm. Mr. Bryan is extremely careful, amid the growing Democratic pomp, about finding the next paramount is sue. Peary Arctic Club says it won't get the South Pole this year. No hurry. South Pole can wait awhile. Democrats are very happy. But they ought to think of the fights they will have over the spoils. Senators Aldrich and Hale defeated the people. They quit without giving the people a chance. ' PEOPLE'S RULE BY MOB IS DEAR They Rule Wisely Only "When Or Kan laed and Directed. The Dalles Optimist. Not many years ago there was some trouble in the City of Pittsburg; the authorities were put to rout, the clty was sacked, many millions of dollars' worth of property 'was burned, chaos reigned but ""the people," represented by a mob, ruled that day in Pittsburg. And that day will, long be remem bered there, for every year when the taxpayer goes to pay his assessment he finds he is still paying a portion of the expenses of that ill-fated day when "the people" ruled for the courts, from the lowest to the highest, said that the city should reimburse the property-owners for their losses, for the officials had allowed "the people," rep resented by the mob, to rule for Just one day. Not many years ago "the people," represented by the mob, ruled for one day in New Orleans, and for a short season "the people," represented by the mob, ruled in Cincinnati. Indeed we can point to hundreds of cases where the officials have allowed "the people" to rule. There is no such thing as the rule of the people except through orderly and decent proceedings, and, to main tain that "the people" can, will or ever have ruled for the good of them selves or the good of the community save by chosen loaders, elected in an orderly manner, is to By in the face of all the precedents of the past. What did "the people's" rule, the rule of the Commune, mean in Paris? What did it mean in New York during the days of rioting In 1864? What has it ever meant when "the people" took the place of authorities? Are we comparing the people of Oregon to a mob? Not at all. We are simply pointing out that for the Republicans of Oregon to elect the men they want they must act in an orderly manner through chosen leaders, and not as a go-as-you-please mob. Noth ing for good was ever accomplished by a mob, nothing for good ever will be. Corrupt governments, corrupt court's; have been overturned in that way, but the cost was too great to contemplate, and the same results could and should have been accom plished through peaceful methods. LIFE IX THE OREGON COUNTRY Didn't Look Good, KhT Echo Echoes. -The Bank of Echo received $2600 of new 1910 20'gold pieces last week. They look, funny. 1 - I I-tt-Iatt- Fanning. Polk County Itemizer. It will not be long until every farmer around here is using road autos. as they are found serviceable for so many dif ferent things applicable to ' farm life. Bob Cannon Ge( Help. Mitchell Sentinel. Bob Cannon. the cattle king. of Wheeler County, spent Sunday in town. He ha3 bought a new talking machine and God knows we don't think he needed it. Pre-Nupttal Try-Out. Baker City Herald. It has been suggested for the benefit of the young girl who's only ambition it is to get married, to get used to a hus band. Try sleeping with a beer keg and some stale tobacco. You'll get used to the smell. Youthful Notions of Humor. - ' Castle Rock (Wash.) Advocate. Some enterprising students decorated a portion of the rooms of the high school building with skunk cabbage and lim burger cheese last Friday morning, and while the effect was beautiful, it is said the aroma was almost enough to drive a person to hard drink. Rabbltville Saves) Its Money. Rabbitville. Cor. The Dalles Optimist. A feller was hear trying to raze mun ney to put a fence around the grave yard, but Me and the leading citizens refused to put up a cent for such a useless expense. Them that is berried there can't get out. and us fellers what is out don't want to get in. So whyfore is a fence needed? Democrat) All Oppose It. . Amity Standard. That the assembly plan of nominating Republican candidates for tho coming primaries is the only logical way of se curing an equitable expression of party preference is borne out in the united opposition of all Democratic papers in the state to the plan. It would surely shut out the Democrats who are wont to go into the primaries and call for a Republican nomination ticket and help in selecting the candidates they are to vote against. Twain and Hla Critic. PORTLAND. April 24. (To the Editor.) So Mark Twain had his critics? I will not criticise his critic, but mention two of many things which entitle Twain to the Christlike forgiveness of all his sins and immortality: The exquisite inter pretation of Christian Scienee, and the epitaph on his wife's tomb, who, by the way, was the delight of his life and his soul, own true mate and helpmeet: Warm Summer sun. shine kindly here; Warm Southern winds, blow softly here; Green sod above, lie lifjht. He light, i4od nitrht, dear heart, good nipht. good night. LOUIS GREEN M UN FORD. Honorable Mention. Chicago Record-Herald. "I always have the profoundest re spect for any man who is earning his own living and not complaining about it." "Yes. a man who does that undoubt edly deserves- a lot of credit. Still, a public office-holder who isn't always setting tip the claim that he is sacrific ing his private interests so that he may serve the public deserves honorable mention too" Milk In tbe Coronnnt. Lebanon Criterion. The truth is, there is no valid objec tion to the assembly that Democrats, Populists, Socialists and other ists are complaining about. They want to en deavor to keep up some kind of strife in the Republican party, in the hope of getting an office. Truthful Peddler. Boston Transcript. Mrs. Byers All the big berries are on top of this box, I suppose? Peddler No, mum; some of 'em are on the top of the other boxes. .. . Things I Still Believe In. . The same old courtin', the same old kiss. The same old weddin', the same old bliss. The same old blue in the same old skies. The same old yell when the baby cries. The same old dinners, the same corn bread. The same old prayers on going to bed. The same old Bible, the same old truth. The same old hickory we felt in youth. The same old mother, the same old love. The same old hope of meetlncr above. ' C. JE. CLINE. V'SE IS BEST CONSERVATION. John L. Wilson Says State Control Is Better Than Pinchot Disuse. From an Address Delivered at Chrissto , pher. King County, Wash. I remember attending a. dinner in New York, when the Governor of that state spoke with pride of the. fact that his state had established a forest containing 1.000,000 acres. I replied that I could take him to a National forest In Idaho in which ho could place the entire Empire State and then walk around it and not come in sight of it. It is right and proper that the people should conserve their natural . resources, but I am more interested in the man who is alivo today, rather than the man who may be living a hundred years from now. I want to see him settled on thesa fertile acres. I want to see the 640.000 acres of school land In the reservations given back to us. The railroad land in the reservations now unsurveyed pays no taxes. I want to see that land surveyed so that it may bear its part of the bur den of maintaining the state. Nature has supplied the West bounti fully in the matter of water" power. If my memory serves me, the Government reports show that in the Columbia River water shed, which includes part of Mon tana, Idaho. Oregon and Washington, there Is more than 39,000.000 horsepower. If we should develop 10,000 horsepower every year for 2400 years we should not reach the nd of it. And the water power developed would be just as good at the end of that time as it is today. It does not wear out and the best way to conserve our coal supply is by using water power. I want to see our resources conserved, but I don't want to see the proceeds of the bounties given us by .Nature go into tho coffers of the Federal Government. Our water power belongs to the State of Washington, and any plan whereby the revenues from that resource go to the Federal Government is illegal. The Fed eral Government cannot tax water power in Indiana or Connecticut. Why should it take the water power in this state? I hope to see the day when every house between Seattle and Tacoma is lighted by electricity cheaper than any we have ever known.- Every kilowatt of electri city used which has been produced by water power saves its equivalent in coal and kindling. A few years ago a tax was placed on sportsmen who hunted and on the men engaged in taking fish in nets for com mercial purposes. The proceeds from thesa licenses was used to establish hatcheries and to protect the game. V ashington ' has more fish hatcheries than any other state and the last report of the Fish Commissioner shows that the product of our fisheries last year was valued at $13,500,000. while only a few years ago It was worth only $r00,000. That is the sort of conservation that pays. MR. TAFT AS A MAKER OP NEWS. More Happening In His Administra tion Than In That of Roosevelt. 'Washington. D. C, Cor. Boston Ad vertiser (Rep.). One of the surprising features of the Taft Administration so far has been the great quantity of news con cerning it that has been made in Washington, p. c. At the end of the Roosevelt Administration, In view of the many and varied activities of Mr. Roosevelt, it was thought that by con trast Mr. Taft's term would be dull. Indeed, from the news point of view, and the active correspondents looked ahead with some doubt. "I suppose in a month or two the most exciting thing we will hear about will be inci dents that would interest a Judge," said one correspondent. "We will be writing about .writs of certiorari. Our pens will be plagued to make those Interesting." But nothing- of the kind has hap pened. In fact, there has been more news In the first year of Mr. Taft's Administration than In any of the Roosevelt years, inclusive of the last and" especially of the final months, when the President seemed to lie awake nights so as to figure in the headlines. There has been the same varied happenings as of yore at the White House and there has always been occasion for the stories writers like to wire. It has been a bit dif ferent to be sure. There is now no Ananias Club, no "Dear Maria" letters, no big stick swinging, no malefactors to be hanged. And so on. But there have been other thrillers. Pinchot and North, insubordinate subordinates of the Government, have been decapitated. The Ballinger inquiry, with its cam paign of inference and insinuations, has kept the stage for 12 months. The' tariff made exciting tales, and the in surgency in the House was a revolu tion the like of which at no time oc curred in any immediate previous Ad ministration. There is this difference between the Taft and Roosevelt Ad ministrations: The latter rather mo nopolized attention, but In the Taft Administration the President has per mitted or has been compelled to allow the other end of the avenue to figure In the limelight. The Taft legislation, too, has been of the utmost import ance and is still before the people, so that all in all the newspaper corre spondents find at present more to do than ever they dreamed possible 15 months ago. In fact their pens have not been so busy in many years. Opposed to Nesmith County. Dallas Observer. The promoters of the scheme to di vide Lane and Douglas County and cre ate a new county to be called Nesmlth are flooding tho state with circulars and pamphlets containing argument In favor of the proposed county. Their latest circular is a sketch of the life and public career of the late Colonel J. W. Nesmlth. This is purefry a senti mental appeal, and the thousands of voters who were friends and support ers of the Illustrious statesman in his lifetime should not permit themselves to be influenced by it. The question for the people of 'Oregon to decide next November Is whether it is neces sary or desirable to create another county in Oregon at this time. The question is one of business, and should be settled on its merits not on mere sentimental grounds. The Observer is among those "who have long believed that the people of Oregon would honor themselves by erecting a statue to the memory of James W. Nesmlth, but it has extreme doubts as to the propriety of giving the name of the dead soldier and statesman to a county with boun daries as zigzagged as a scrap in a crazy patchwork quilt. How a Juror Was Lost. Kansas City Star.- In a Southern county of Missouri years ago, when the form of question ing was slightly different from now, much trouble was experienced in get ting a Jury in a murder trial. Finally an old fellow answered every question satisfactorily; he had no prejudices, was not opposed to capital punishment and was generally a valuable find. Then the prosecutor said solemnly: "Juror, look at the prisoner; prisoner, look upon the Juror." The old man adjusted his spectacles and peered at the prisoner for a full half minute. Then, turning to the Court, he said: "Judge, durned If I don't believe he's guilty." Feminine Bnrsrnln Hunter. Brooklyn Eagle. "Is it legal for me to marry htm on his deathbed?" a woman asked a Chicago lawyer. When he said "Yes," she mar ried a man who died within an hour leaving jier $300,000. Then the lawyer had to sue for his fee. We owe much of our humor to femininity. CRITIC ARISES IN MICH WRATH Objection Made to Mrs. Larone'a Eatl- m'( mate of Mark Twain. PORTLAND. April 24. (To the Editor.) Such statements as those published in The Oregonian of last Thursday in the form of an interview with Mrs. Nina Larowe, a member of the Quaker City narty made famous by Mark Twain's "Innocents Abroad." cannot be over looked or forgiven by a slight retraction in the next issue of the paper. I be lieve hundreds of people who read these remarks have felt them an absolute in dignity. Women from time immemorial have been accused of having no sense of humor, but.it passes the bounds of com prehension that any woman should live so devoid of humor and literary appre ciation as this most respectable woman lady who, on the very day of his death, slandered one of the grea.tet-1 and best loved men whom America has ever pro duced. Despite the '"magnificent- and almost inconceivable glory of the fact that the Emperor and Empress of - Russia set up the tourists in a row and cave them tea I to drink, I wonder how far or how long this tr1p of influence" would have shod its glory without the undying illumina tion of Mark Twain's "Innocents Abroad." If the woman referred to who was a member of that rarty has any claim to notoriety, it is not because her trip cost her $12o0; it is not because' she was introduced and vouched for before being allowed to Join; It Is not because the Henry Ward Beecher church got up the trip; it is simply and solely because , of the presence of that one man whom Mrs. Larowe is pleased to stigmatize as "absolutely no good." How, may I ask, did this man who was "not respectable"; this man who "knew nothing of Eastern society"; this man who was "absolutely no . good" how did he worm his disreputable way Into a party of people who had to bo introduced and vouched for and known to be respectable? How did he manage to grossly Impose upon and deceive Henry Ward Bcecher's church? How did he manage to pass himself off as a member of Eastern society? this man who would stoop so low as to attend a prayer-meeting to meet his future wife? After all, should not a Christian spirit, instead of holding bitterness and resent ment, rejoice that Mr. Clemens did in some unexplained manner slip in? Was it not perhaps the very influence of such generous and Christian respectability as displayed by Mrs. Larowe in her inter view which made of this man who was absolutely no good, who was "nobody and resented that no attention whs paid to him," a man loved, honored and cele brated not in America alone, but; through . all the world? What is there that this drear old world can give, as fine as a little laughter to lighten the cares? Where, far or near, can we find another man who has given to the world the wealth of hearty laugh ter which Mark Twain has given through his books? It is not often that the world is made richer by a Mark Twain a man with all his sterling qualities, and his power ,to do good, not only by the cheer ing influence of his humor, but the sound wisdom of his philosophy and the mag nificent example of his . own beautiful and human character. We may lose without universal grief our millionaires, our politicians and our statesmen, but somehow the whole world seems a little emptier, and there Is one gap in the ranks which can't be filled, when a man like Mark Twain lies dead. HARRIET OXER. GERMANY'S MAN OF THE HOI It. Herr Baltiu, IMebian and Jew, Is the Kaiser's Friend and Adviser. Philadelphia North American. Hamburg is very proud of the fact that Herr Albert Ballin, Jew and plebeian by origin, the managing director of tho Hamburg-American Steamship Company, Is, next to the Kaiser, the most inllucn tial man in Germany. Herr Ballin is now the Kaiser's otaosen adviser and con fidant, his guide, philosopher and friend. Herr Ballin frequently travels to Bor- lin or Potsdam to meet the Kaiser, who seeks his advice on current affairs of state. When Herr Ballin is at Hamhurg ' and the Kaiser in one of his two resi dences, intercourse between monarch and shipping director Is curried on by use of the telephone, and very frequent are the occasions on which Herr Ballin, on putting his ear to the receiver, heats the Emperor's stentorian, martial .voice. The Kaiser has offered various minis terial posts to Herr Ballin, who has re fused them all, partly because as manag ing director of the Hamhurg-Amerika company he earns an income twenty times as big as that of tho imperial chancellor, and partly because he real izes that he has more effective influence as the Kaiser's unofficial adviser than he would have in office. It is improb able that Herr Ballin will ever take of fice under the crown. Through Herr Ballin the Kaiser can learn'more about the real state of public opinion than he has ever been able to as certain in his seclusion In court circles. Moreover. Herr Ballin, as a man of business, is a man of peace, and his In fluence is exerted to maintain peace. Herr Ballin is working hard to create a feeling In Germany in favor of an un derstanding between Great Britain and Germany, and he tries to lessen the friction between Germany and France, and to smooth over all international difficulties. His exceptional influence at court has excited the keen jealousy of the aristo cratic, bureaucratic, military and other exalted groups who formerly command ed the Kaiser's car. They recognize in Herr Ballin not merely a menace to their own personal Influence, but also a sign and token of the new- order of things. Strenuous efforts havo been made to encompass his downfall and to bring him into disfavor, but without success. Hist: Louisville Courier-Journal. Lest we forget, a quiet, unostenta tious, self-effacing, publleity-bhurining. shrinkingly modest, unknown, unpho tographed, unsmiling, noise-hating, ret icent, secretive lion-hunter contem plates approaching these shores clan destinely and surreptitiously, slipping unnoticed through tho crowd at the pier, to seek the solace of solitude and Indulge in pious, patriotic meditation. Poor Ananias. Cleveland Plain Dealer. "This' said the guide as he led his little band of tourists about the odor iferous byways of Damascus, "is the home of Ananias." "That's funny," said the thin Connec ticut man from Danbury. "I s'posed old what's-hls-namo lived in Pittsburg. But mebby this is his Summer home." The guide shook his head. "His Summer home is n?t mentioned In ears polite," ho said and passed on. In Behulf of Smith. Cleveland Plain Dealer. If they put Pocahontas in the- noble ' hall of fame. Let's hope her carven tablet will dis play no brand of shame; 'Twould be a grievous scandal to pro nounce the maid a myth Remember what she did to save the mighty race of Smith! Bachelors, Take Warolifr. Boston Transcript. Hobbs Alienists say tha: si:ir,le n.en are much more liable to inyanit" th-n married. Dobbs Sure they are! Sinerle men are always in danger of goir crasy over come woman. Poker In Texas. Houston Post. "Can he play poker?" "I guess so. Nobody seems to want to play with him."'