10 THE MORNING- OREGOXIAN, . WEDNESDAY, MAY' . 25, . 1910. PORTLAND, OREOOS. . Entered at Portland. Oreson, Postoftiee u Sconil-ClMi Matter. " subscription Rates Invariably la AdnUM. .. (BY MAIL). Daily, Sunday included, one year 18.00 aly. Sunday Included, alx month. ... 4 2 f!y' f undy Included, three months.. 2.25 Dally. Sunday Included, one month 15 Dally, without Sunday, one year B.0O Da y. without Sunday. six month. -S5 Dslly, without Sunday, three months.. 1.75 Pally without Sunday, one month 0 Weekly, one year 1.60 Sunday, one year S-60 bunday and weekly, one year I. SO (Br Carrier). l "y- Sunday Included, one year B OO Dally. Sunday Included, one month 75 to Kenilt Send Postoftiee money x"Ttl order or personal check on our local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give nostoftlee ad orees In full. Including county and state. l"ste Kates 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 15 In . pa"e"- a cents; 30 to 40 paces. S cants; 0 pag-es, 4 cents. Foreign postage iouble rate. -ifi Bnslness Of Hoe The S. C Beek ,iltL bpeolal Agency Jiew York, rooms 4S Sio Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510 B12 Tribune building. " PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY, MAY 25. 1910. SPANISH WAR BURDENS. History will probably record Amer ica's war on Spain as an unjustified at tack of a strong: nation upon a weak one. It will also mark down some of the penalties of retribution that are already appearing: a burden in the Philippines, another in Cuba, a heavily growing: load of taxation for far-flung: naval defenses and serious responsi bilities in new spheres of international rivalry. These responsibilities were subjects of debate last Monday in the United States Senate, when that body was considering: the naval budget, which Amounts . to 1184,000,000. Senator Heyburn, of Idaho, inserted the re mark in the debate that the people of the United States did not want war, but were driven into it by their "rul ers." But America was precipitated into the war by the excited condition of the public mind and the rivalry of parties following; the destruction of the battle--ship Maine. The declaration of war by Congress was not the work of "rul ers"; on the contrary, heads of the Government endeavored to avert con flict. President. McKinley used all the influence of his Administration to prevent war; for many weeks he with stood popular clamor and Jingoism in Congress. But destruction of the Maine, supposedly by Spaniards at Havana, produced a wrath in Amer ica that overwhelmed his opposition; Democrats in Congress, thinking to gain party advantage for themselves by declaration of war, urged hostilities, and Republicans, fearing to be out done in avenging a supposed outrage upon the Nation, assumed to take the lead. Thus the declaration of war was adopted almost unanimously. , This would have been a very dan gerous step for the United States, had Spain been a strong power. But per haps in that case the United States would not have rushed pell-mell into war. Tet rivalry of political groups for advantage of war and easy victory brought humiliation of France by the Germans in their latest conflict and loss of territory and treasure and na tional rank. Precipitous haste of po litical factions in France to be first in conquering Germany brought France to the dust beneath the superior power of the nation assailed. The conquered belligerent may never regain its for mer place at the head of European affairs. This is the price France paid Tor an unjustified war. Had Spain been a power the equal of Great Britain, the outcome . of America's precipitate declaration of -ar might have been very much differ ent and the competition of Republican, and Democratic parties for the favor of the excited populace and for spoils of a war of aggrandizement might have laid low the pride of this re public. It exposed the Nation to this 'anger when President Clevelani in his second Administration defied Great Britain with his Venezuelan ulti matum, in response to hysterical pop ular excitement. Prime Minister Sal isbury is said to have desired to take President Cleveland's message as an Insult and a cause for war, but to have been overridden by Queen "Victoria. The danger of war at that time be tween America and Britain was grave, and it is probable that the exposure of Canada to American attack was all that dissuaded Britain from conflict. Decrepit Spain went down before the superior naval equipment of the United States. Its own naval force Ras. meager, and its leading men re alized from the first that it could not cope with America's. Spain' sent out a small squadron to certain doom, yet It had to do this in order to make a show of fight and to preserve ancient Signify and pride. Some persons imagined the United States had an interest in Cuba superior to that of Spain or the rest of the world, and that therefore this country was Justified in intervening' between Spaniards and Cuban rebels and eject ing the Spaniards. But this sentiment would probably not have been strong enough to control the American Gov ernment had it not been strengthened by the Maine disaster and the sup posed responsibility of the Spaniards therefor. Now that the Mainj is likely to be raised, perhaps it will be discovered that its destruction was not caused by the Spaniards, but by inter nal explosion, such as has occurred on other war vessels. The United States is certainly paying dearly for its conquest of Spain. Per haps future benefits will compensate, but that is to be proved. Meanwhile, it foots the bills for costly establish ments for Navy 'and Army in the Phil ippines, and soon must foot another intervention bilJ in Cuba. SETTLERS ARE J.OT "UIOGESHEIMS." Mr. Louis W. Hill, head of newly projected railroads in Oregon, observes that this state needs for its upbuild ing and for traffic of his lines settlers and homebuilders on the public do main that is, return of Pinchptized "conservation" areas to homestead entry, at $2.50 an acre, in accordance with law. This is the well-founded opinion of a railroad man for whom Eastern Oregon has long waited with vast areas of conserved wilderness. Now that the railroad-maker has come and pointed out the requisite of progress, faddists of conservation set up a tirade and call Hr. Hill a "Gug genheim." But this is not the opin ion of the Eastern Oregon country nor of persons elsewhere, who have learned from the history of their country that the pioneers of the Na tion's progress everywhere have been homesteaders on cheap Government land. Conservation theorists turn their aces against the record of their country. They deny people of the Far West and newcomers who are joining them, the opportunities that have made all the older states strong and great. They have reserved one-thira-of Ore gon and 350,000 square' miles of land in the far West from homi builders. This area, is nearly twice that of France or Germany or Spain. It Is three times that of Great Britain or Italy and half again as large as Austria-Hungary- It is one-eighth the surface of continental United States. The policy that locks up such a vast region from pioneer set tlement marks one of the most mon umental blunders of present-day statesmanship or of popular craze. It is no answer to say that settlers are land thieves. This is not true, and persons who assert it throw most un worthy aspersion on a most stalwart element of American citizenship. The pioneer settlers of the Far West have not been thieves nor robbers, nor were their forefathers in the Middle West and on the Atlantic side of the continent. The Government should continue to llow its citizens to make homes on the public domain. Mr. . Hill's judgment of this matter is sound. Who dares call AmeTlcan settlers "Guggenhelms"? ... This Western country has been "conserved" since the morning: -stars first sang together. It is time to let settlers turn Its wild resources to civ ilized uses. ' DOCK. BONDS AND OTHERS. Just as well, and better, that the so called dock 'bonds have not been of fered for sale. So bad a time is it for selling bonds that even tenders "for water bonds best of all descriptions of bonds offered are far below par; and bridge bonds bring no offers at all. This is admonition that the finan cial world does not like the situation as here presented. The intimation is that the city has sufficient amounts of outstanding- bonds for the present, and would better wait a while. But money for further water supply, and for Broadway bridge, is necessary; which it is most , probable would be supplied at home if 5 per cents were offered at par. Moreover, Eastern -buyers have dis like of bonds issued under the initia tive voting system prevailing- in Ore gon, and prefer bonds authorized di rectly by the Legislature. This is one reason why offers for our bonds do not come freely. Use of initiative and ref erendum, as a method of lawmaking. Is supposed to indicate a spirit, among those who employ the system, not fa vorable to investments and securities. CANDOR AS TO PROHIBITION. The Oregonian has not said state prohibition would "ruin" Oregon, Dr. Clarence True Wilson and , similar goodly men to the contrary, enotwith standing. Nor has it said local pro hibition would ruin any community; instead, it has commended prohibition by local option. But this paper has remarked that state prohibition would be injurious to Oregon, and it repeats this declaration with full confidence in the facts and reasons supporting- it. Traffic in liquors in large popula tion centers is not suppressed In . any large municipality of a prohibition state. Make-believe prohibition of liquor In Portland and in the larger towns of Ore gon would put this state in the cate gory of such commonwealths as Maine, "Vermont and Kansas, whose names are synonyms of intolerance, irration ality and folly the country over. This would be real injury to Oregon. This state is now entering upon a ca reer of new activity and progress, and it ought not to be displayed before the Nation and the world as a common wealth of crankiness, hypocrisy and hateful strife. Oregon will continue to grow with or without the sham of prohibition in its leading cities, but its rising greatness will strike newcomers and neighbors more favorably with honesty of law and sincerity of citizens. Oregon has nothing to gain and much to lose from the farce of prohibition. It will not even gain as increments of Its population the ranters and brawlers of prohibition;' for tfiey will go elsewhere tomorrow or soon there after, whether they shall engraft their hobby on Oregon or not. Oregon will preserve its self respect and the respect of its neigh bors by repudiating this humbug of liquor suppression. This common wealth now has a local option law which enables any community to pro hibit the saloon. If this law cannot be successfully applied to prohibit li quor traffic In Portland and the lesser cities, none other can be. Liquor will continue to be sold in Portland no matter what the pretense of law may be. Just as it is sold in every large town and city in every prohibition state. - . A LESSON FOR WOMEN. The highwayman who attacked the Montavilla schoolteacher, a night or two ago, departed from the ethical code of his profession in two particu lars at least. No self-respecting- hold up man ever tries to rob a woman, for one thing, and in the second place he never uses blows upon either a man or a woman. If it is essential to ac complish his purpose, your ethical highwayman will kill, but he will not strike a person with a vulgar weapon like a hammer. , From the circumstances surround ing the attempted robbery of this young woman and many other things which have happened lately, the sus picion is inescapable that the highway man's profession in Portland has fallen to a low estate. It is clearly in the hands of a depraved gang who care not for" the noble traditions of their calling. They seem to be a greedy crew who are satisfied to get money, no matter, how they come by it. If they do not take care, they will soon be classed with our pre'datory millionaires and then what will the shade of Dick "" irpin have to say to them? . Sad as one must feel over the vul gar rudeness of this, Montavilla high wayman, still the attack upon the young- schoolteacher is Illuminated by one circumstance, brilliantl. illumin ated, .one might say. That Is her val iant defense of herself, or at any rate her valiant determination not to be robbed. So far as one can discern from the account of the affair, her re sistance was merely passive, "but it was effectual. Although the robber struck her several times over the head with his unspeakable . shoemaker's ham mer, nevertheless she was so protected by her hat and hair that she seems to have 'suffered no great harm before help arrived and the wretched miscre ant had fled. Let us all rejoice that the robber es caped, so that the precincts of our Po lice Court need not be defiled by his insufferable presence. Can we not dis era in this event a lesson which every woman ought to heed? Those who have hitherto neglected to provide themselves with wide and ample hats should do so without delay, and those whocs hair is by nature too scanty to ward off the blows of a shoemaker's hammer ought to fortify themselves with wigs. THE HOCSE OF LORDS. A reader of The Oregonian who lives in Boise. Idaho, wishes to know whether or not the House of Lords has given up its hereditary right to rule, and, if it has not, what the effect would be if it were to do such a thing-. The House of Lords in England has not given up any part of its power as yet. , The late election turned on the question whether or not the Lords had the right, to reject a budget which the Commons had adopted. The voters of Great Britain sustained the budget, and the Lords, accepting the result of the referendum, passed it without much delay.-. .. ..-.. But in the debate over the budget the fundamental question came .to the front whether or not it Is wise for a civilized country like England to per mit a body of hereditary legislators to exist. The bitterness of the question is intensified by the fact that, while the Lords retain their power in full, it is impossible for any measures of radi cal reform ever to be passed. Such bills "as that for Irish home -rule, the reform of ' the poor laws on radical principles, and" the like, will always be rejected by the peers, who. are fixed by their economic interest in reactionary prejudices. - It is highly probable thta the pres ent Parliament will be dissolved within a few months, and in the new elec tion which must follow the principal issue will be the regulation of the power of the House of Lords. Even the Lords themselves do not expect that they will escape some restriction, and they have proposed various meas ures of reform on their own behalf. The Liberals, however, win not be sat isfied with anything which hereditary Tory legislators are likely to propose, and will frame some restrictive, or perhaps revolutionary, measure of their own. Still, it Is not by any means certain that the great body of the British peo ple wish to make much change in the House of Lords. The rural voters are deeply attached to the territorial magnates, who in a certain way have been a civilizing influence In the coun try and have performed a number of feudal duties with commendable zeal. They are the natural leaders of the rural population, and upon the whole, so far as one can discern, their leader ship seems to have been satisfactory to those who are most concerned. FAR EASTERN PROBLEM. Negotiations are proceeding- between Japan and Russia for a Far-Eastern policy adapted to the usages of both countries. Advices from St. Peters burg are that while the matter has as sumed definite form, "there is reason to 'believe that Japan is seeking- to ne gotiate a convention on broader lines than Russia now wishes." It Is, of course, not at all surprising to learn that Japan is not thoroughly in accord with Russian ideas- regarding a policy for the Far East. Nor Is it surprising that Russia is, backward about meeting the Japanese views. The Japanese made history at a rapid gait when they lowered the flag of the Czar a few years ago, but the great contest was one of those affairs which terminates with both of the contest ants dissatisfied. Japan was at first contented with the glory of the achievement. But as glory does not pay war debts or taxes, a feeling of resentment ap peared. Since the close of the war Japan has been endeavoring to secure by peaceful diplomacy and cleverness, some of the spoils of war that escaped her clutches at the Portsmouth settle ment. For a time there were Indica tions of a tacit understanding between Japan and Russia by which it would be possible for each country to do po-. lKica! prospecting and exploitation In Manchuria. The famous "opendoor" in Manchuria . was so thoroughly choked and .jammed with Japanese tradesmen that those of other coun tries had extreme dllticulty in edging in.. Russia was apparently assigned a certain portion of the field, and all went well until England, Germany and the United States sent up a protest against the aggressions of both Japan and Russia in trade territory in Man churia. It has since become necessary for the two powers to maintain a fairer attitude toward the rest of the world. Being deprived of the advantage they sought to exercise it Is now advisable to formulate a new policy. Anything like a permanent or satisfactory pact between Russia and Japan does not, however, seem possible. Japan is so hopelessly involved with the weight of her war debt, with her ship subsidies and other forms of graft, that she might be willing to fight again for the chance of getting something besides glory out of it. Russia, still smarting from the wounds of conflict, has been gathering in gold and strengthening her war chests until, with the financial aid of her creditors, she is again in a position to dictate the breadth of the lines on which the Far Eastern con vention shall be negotiated. The Muscovite and the Japanese are both too greedy to remain at peace in the same field unless that field is well policed by other nations. THE PANAMA EXPOSITION. If there is any good reason why Washington, D. C, should be consid ered in any way eligible as a site for the 1915 Panama Exposition, it is not easily discernible. The Panama Ex position is to be held for the purpose of celebrating completion of a water way between the Atlantic and the Pa cific Oceans. Washington is on neither the Atlantic nor the Pacific, and is not even accessible to the big ships which will form such an important part of the celebration. "Viewed from either a historical or a commercial stand point, no reason exists for considering Washington as a site for the great show. The contest is accordingly nar rowed down to San Francisco and New Orleans. Both of these cities are mak ing a strenuous fight for the honor, and there Is so much money and so much public pride behind the move ment in each of these cities, that it will not be an easy matter to dislodge either of them from the position they have taken. New Orleans has a strong lobby at Washington, and the merits of the claim of'th Sm,ihn ... r J nltion by the Government will be con sidered by the House foreign affairs committee Thursday and by the Sen ate expositions committee a day later. California has 'already made a strong demonstration and the Kahn resolu tion now before Congress, if it passes, will give the Pacific Coast city liberal Governmental support. Naturally' Oregon, Washington and all other Pacific States and territories will lend unqualified support to San Francisco. This Is assured by geo graphical location, even were there no other conditions to influence the de cision. But there are other influences and they are powerful and pertinent. The Panama Canal is being construct ed for the purpose of bringing closer to the old-settled regions of the East, including New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, Boston and even Wash ington, a new empire on the Pacific. The people of the United States as a rule are familiar with the older-settled regions along the Atlantic Coast-and as far inland as the Missouri River. There are in such regions no new fields f-r commercial or industrial exploita tion, and nothing of interest that the public Is not already familiar with. The Panama Canal is not being built for the purpose of making these old and highly developed". regions accessi ble for the sparsely settled new West. Instead It is to open up for the "over flow" from the East new territory of surprising natural wealth. - Visitors to the Panama Exposition at San Francisco will get glimpses of a wonderland that extends all the way from Panama to Alaska and thence across the Pacific. Nearly every diplo mat, warrior or financier who has mentioned the subject within the past five years has stated that the Pacific will .be the scene of the world's great est conquests, both industrial and po litical. The Pacific is the natural lo cality for the Panama Exposition, and the American people will come West to view it because they have great in terest in learning more of thlsi land of old romance and new wealth. Some of the oldest highways in ex istence were built . by convict labor. Along many of these world-famous thoroughfares internal commerce has followed the line of least resistance for more than a thousand years. It was not the excellence of the convict-built roads of the Old World that started Washington on the work of securing first-class highways by the same meth ods; but our neighboring state is now following the system of the" ancients with results that are In every way sat isfactory. Not only is the state secur ing fine roads at small cost, but the work is beneficial to -the health and morals of the convicts who are doing the work. The success of , Washing ton In roadbuildlng by convict labor is so pronounced that it should be fol lowed by other Pacific Coast States. Thousands of miles of these roads are needed, and there are thousands of convicts who should be working on them. Upland tracts nrar Dayton, Wash., are selling as high as $140 per acre, while in the valleys as high as $450 per acre is being paid. This is the land which a few years ago made Co lumbia County, Washington, famous for its great yields of wheat and bar ley. But not even big crops and high prices for grain warrant farmers to continue growing it on land that will turn off from 250 to 1000 per acre when planted in fruit or vegetables. It was a year or two after the farmers in the vicinity of Milton and Free water, Or., abandoned wheatgrowbig before land sold as high as it is now selling near Dayton. Today the land, which was formerly considered valua ble .only for wheatgrowing, is paying good dividends on a valuation of more than J1000 per acre. The suburban trolley line is still reaching out and drawing the country closer to the city. A new line was opened from "Vancouver to" Orchards, Wash., Sunday. For the entire dis tance of six miles are fine farms and fruit ranches whose owners will now have all of the conveniences of the city added to the comforts of the coun try. Land along the line to Orchards has doubled and trebled In value since the coming of the North Bank Rail road made it so easily accessible from a good shipping point, and now the trol ley line will make it still more desir able and valuable. All of Clark County, Washington, is in such .close touch with Portland that the building of an electric line or any other improve ment is of great value to this city. It certainly should not be necessary to Indict the old pioneers and upbullders of the State of Oregon. In order to advance and carry out the theories of the men of the East, who have done nothing for the country, their state, or their communities. , This remark from Louis W. Hill, president of the Great Northern. Nor were the early pioneers who subdued the wilds of Pennslyvania and Illinois thieves of the public domain and crim inals, although conservation faddfsts in those Btates argue as If they were. Te church people of California who are so eager to stop the proposed prizefight no doubt are wise in appeal ing to the law, but, after all, there is a better way. If nobody bought tickets' there would be no fight. Why not persuade everybody to boycott It? Surely here is a boycott which no court would condemn. - Judge Burnett en joy s an enviable reputation for doing a good deal of business in a short time. His visit to Portland may therefor do more than merely relieve the local judges of their accumulated work. It may give them useful hints upon the value of indus try and orderly methods. Pinchot. Garfield, Glavis, Kerby, et al., are great conservers, and now the public sees some of the things they have been conserving lies, scandals, conspiracies, spy workings, etc., all for the purpose of "getting" Balllnger. Conservation is a big subject. The drydock Dewey seems to have followed the example of the man it was named after. Neither of them was able to keep afloat, though both took up a good deal of space. In bidding the comet farewell polite ness 'forbids vain allusions to unful filled promises, but we cannot help hoping that the. next one will bluster less and show more. Insurgents are laying claims to Roosevelt. But the Colonel is too strong a fighter to believe in the rule of the majority by a minority. Certain persons say the earth passed through the comet's tall, but they are the ones who know least about it. DEMOCRATS AFRAID OF" VICTORY. Fear . Party May Not Make Good ' Bad May Lose In 113. Washington Dispatch to New York Mail. Some of the longest heads' in the Democratic party are credited with a singular lack of eagerness to have their party carry the electrons this Fall and control the Sixty-second Congress. These men it is asserted for them; they do not say it themselves bold that there is everything to lose and nothing to gain from a Democratic vic tory in November. With a Republican Senate and Presi dent standing between any measure and its enactment. It is urged that a Demo cratic House could do nothing; except make a record for itself. It is just of that record that some big Democrats "are alleged to be afraid. There is a fair prospect now for the nomination of a 'conservative Democrat in 1912 Judson Harmon, of Ohio, or some man like him. Such a man would not care to have a Dem ocratic House write his platform for him in advance. Wealthy Democrats, it is asserted, will be" chary of contributions to the party cause this Fall. The mere possibility of success has brought back Intimations of the old Democratic discord. Champ Clark, the minority leader, hopes to be speaker of the next Congress. But he is a Bryanite. and as such unacceptable to a considerable number of his colleagues. It is declared that already 34 Demo cratic votes- are pledged against the fulfillment of his avowed ambition. Whether Democrats wish it or not, they may find' themselves morally bound by the circumstances of their Fall campaign to bring in a new tariff bill, if they carry the House, even al though they know it will not get past the Senate. Tariff revision, futile or otherwise, it is asserted, means business unrest and factional dissension, as the Democrats can learn from their own experience In 1894, if they' are indisposed to take the present troubles in the other camp as a typical revision aftermath. Many Democrats seem afraid of the bill the House would bring in under the leadership of Champ Clark, afraid of its effect on public opinion. They recall what the Mlssourian has said. "If I had my way, I would tear them (the custom houses) all down from tur ret to foundation-stone, for' from the beginning- they have been nothing- but dens of robbers." Responsibility as- a House majority will bring with it also the necessity of getting along under the new rules, of demonstrating that the uprising against "Cannonism' was well founded and not like the prior uprising- against "Reedism," mere claptrap. PORTLAND, SEATTLE AND CEN9V1 Suggestion That They Unite In Cele bration Over Their Great Growth. Christian Science Monitor. Portland, Or., and Seattle, Wash., are Involved in a rivalry very similar to that which existed between Chicago and St. Louis 30 years ago and between Minne apolis and St. Paul at a later date. Each is claiming, in advance of the census re turns, to be the larger city, and as in the case of the other rivalries referred to, it is quite probable that the census returns will not be permitted immediately to settle the controversy. Already there are charges and countercharges with ref erence to the correctness of the enumera tion Just taken. Without going into the merits of the case, and without taking sides in the contest, it will not be out of place for an observer at this distance to say that even at the lowest estimate that one city places upon the population of the other, each has great reason to be satisfied with the progress it has made, and both, should be proud of the splendid showing their growth is making for the new Northwest. Tacoma, which is not a competitor for first place, may well be taken into con sideration in this connection. Assuming that the population of both Portland and Seattle exceeds 200.000, which seems like a conservative estimate, and that Taco ma's population exceeds 100.000, we have three cities in the Columbia-Willamette and Puget Sound region of a size and character that speak volumes for the ad vancement out that way during the last 25 years,, and, more, that give promise of still greater advancement . in the next quarter of a century. Portland has about 10 times the population that It had in 1885. Seattle has about 20 times the popu lation it had then. Tacoma in 1880 had a population of 720. These cities need not grow at any such rate in the next 25 or 30 years as in the past to attain metro politan proportions. Instead of wasting their time and their energy and their enthusiasm In efforts to prove that each is claiming greater growth than it is entitled to, they might well unite in a celebration over the growth which all are able to exhibit and over the wonderful development of the country round about, which has made this growth possible. Poe'a Name Leads In Hall of Fame. Baltimore News. In the first Installment of answers in the popular canvass being conducted by a New York newspaper may be ' ac cepted as a ' dependable criterion of public opinion, Edgar Allan Poe is gen erally considered more deserving of a place in the Hall of Fame than any other famous American of native birth. From the official list of 206 nominations for the honor, 19 of the representative men and women who were asked to vote put the author of "The Raven" ahead of all the others. These voters Included prom inent educators, ministers, writers, edi tors, painters and sculptors, as well as United States Senators, Cabinet members and Governors. This feeling of the popu lar pulse is not confined to any one or two sections of the country. Ranking next to Poe in favor with the voters so far is Patrick Henry, who re ceived 16 votes. William Cullen Bryant gets 15. George Bancroft and General Philip H. Sheridan 14 each. An election for the Hall of Fame is held every five years. A total of 40 names is to be selected from the nominations 26 Americans of native birth, four Ameri cans of foreign birth and 10 famous American women. Prohibition That Doeist Prohibit. (Roseburg Leader.) Let it be here stated that Roseburg has never been voted "dry" by a ma jority of the residents of the city. This majority came from people living out side the limits of the town and whose farms ' were not affected either way. The facts are many and solidly against prohibition. When they are all sum marized they mean a bonded debt of about $75,000 that the saloons would alone have paid by this license, the loss of thousands of dollars of money each year to our business men, and money always in circulation, and a. gain in the number of bootleggers and an increase in the number of drunks from the sale of illicit whisky, not fig-uring the loss to property owners by the decrease in earning value of their property. Under these, circumstances is there any wonder that there Is opposition to prohibition that does not prohibit and causes an annual loss to the legitimate citizen and the property holder. Acquired in Germany. Washington Star. It would not be surprising if Colo nel Roosevelt came back home with a pronounced liking for frankfurter sau sage and potato salad. Prospects for a Long Session. Indianapolis News. The President is firm, the standpat ters are firm and the Insurgents are firm. T.noW. HIta a lik-.. ....!.. .vuq SVDDIWU v- Congress, doen't it.' , RECTOR FIGHTS PROHIBITION"." Lens; Island Preacher ttnlts Pnlplt to 3iak War on "False Temperance." New York World. The Rev. Dr. William A. Wasson, rec tor of Grace Protestant Episcopal Church, Riverhead, L. I., has resigned his pastorate in a letter to Bishop Bur gess, and will give his. whole time to fighting prohibition and "temperance, falsely so-called, and advocating the true temperance, which means moderation and self-control." The resignation is to take effect on September 1. The decision of Dr. Wasson to fight against prohibition and for licensed sa loons is a climax to a contest of several years, which has given him a Nation wide reputation. Four years ago he caused a furore at Riverhead and else where on Long Island by publishing a letter on the license question, whlcli was at that time engrossing the attention of the people of Riverhead, which had been "dry" for several years. As a result It became "wet" again and it has been "wet" ever since. Because of his working: openly against "temperance, falsely so-called," there has been constant friction in the Riverhead church. While a large part of the com munity supported the minister in the stand he took, some of his parishioners disliked the notoriety brought on the church and others disliked his utterances on the liquor question. Notwithstanding, there has been no effort to get Dr. Was son to resign and he has been successful In his church work. e . Dr. Wasson. sets forth his reasons for giving up his ministerial work and fight ing the prohibitionists and other temper ance workers in his letter to Bishop Bur gess, which follows: 1 ' t "Grace Church Rectopy, "Riverhead. L. I., May 14, 1810. "To Right Rev. Frederick Burgess, D. D., . Bishop of Long Island. "My Dear Bishop: I hereby tender you my resignation of the rectorship of Grace Church, Riverhead, to take effect on Sep tember 1 next. "This is a step that I have had under serious consideration for some months. It does not mean that I have less regard for the Church or her work or less ap preciation of my duty and privilege as her minister. On the contrary, it is these very considerations that are determining my course that I may serve the Church more effectually. I see an ampler op portunity than a local pastorate can -afford of preaching the Gospel as this Church hath received the same; and I feel that I am "thereunto called.' "The supreme immorality that con fronts and threatens the Christian Church in this country is that which masks and misrepresents itself under the guise of that noble word temperance. The prohibition movement is more dan gerous than commercialism, for the lat ter, .at least, makes no pretenses. If It demoralizes, it does not deceive. "The poisonous influence of this hum bug 'temperance' is more disastrous than that of drunkenness, for the latter is seen and loathed for what it is, whereas the prohibition propaganda parades in the liv ery of heaven. "This spurious temperance' slurs, not always covertly, our Lord Jesus Christ, because, In his own words, he came drinking.' A copy of the Prohibitionist; the official organ of the National Prohi bition party, is before me, containing an editorial in this very strain, the gist of which is that if Jesus did drink wine he was Ignorant of the fact that he was setting a bad example to all future agesl Jesus Christ must sit at the feet of these blasphemers to take lessons in good morals! And these modern scribes and Pharisees have the brazen nerve to call themselves Christians! Calling the mas ter of the house Beelzebub, how much more then of his household. , "This perfidious crusade denies and. where it can, tears away and destroys the lawful liberty, wherewith Christ hath made us free. Our own -branch of the one universal church, in agreement with all the other ancient divisions of the same, expressly and formally places the wine cup in the hands of every com municating member and commands: Drink this. Indeed, it looks on this sacrament as at once the consummation and the wellsprlng of the Christian's spiritual life. Our church, in so many words, in the Catechism, teaches that wine (and by analogy other alcoholic Deverages that may be no more daneer ous than wine) has an even stronger claim than that of legitimate indulgence. It teaches that wine is a food: 'Our DOdies are strengthened and refreshed by the bread and wine. How far, or whether at all, the individual members of the church shall commonlv use these beverages, the church leaves to the con science and the good sense of the mem- Der. "The moral influence of this tyran nical, unscrlptural and unchristian pro hibition propaganda is wholly and many sidedly bad. While the masses of its adherents are no doubt sincere and hon est, its protagonists, as a class, assault all who differ from them with savage and venomous ferocity. They admit no difference In judgment. Even to ques tion their wisdom argues moral deprav ity. In addition, they slander and fal sify. They browbeat. They set wicked traps to entice to sin. Where they pre vail, there begins an orgy of hypocrisy and law-breaking: and the last state of the community Is worse than the first. "I believe there is a great and urgent work for the Church and her Master to be done in exposing and combating this threatened reign of terror. In this work I propose to do my little share by giv ing up my whole time to it. I shall op pose that menace to true religion with voice and pen. "With my brother I -am now collabo rating on a book aiming at once- to ex pose the real character of this mis called temperance movement and to show how Intemperance can be met and overcome, here a little and there a little, by ' methods that approve them selves to the reason and Invade no in herent rights. I am writing for the periodical press as well. And I am pre pared to speak wherever men will listen to the voice of the church and the mes sage of the everlasting gospel that has been intrusted to her care. - "Henceforth I shall give my time and thought to fighting temperance falsely bo called and advocating the true temper ance, which means moderation and self control. Yours sincerely, "WILLIAM A. WASSON." Explanation Eaoash. New York World. No one can quarrel with Professor Laughlln's list of causes for high prices, so far as it goes. It includes: the tariff, the advanced value of good farm lands, the movement of farm population to the cities, the rise of wages, the dis appearance of range-fed beef, civic and national extravagance, the cost of mili tarism here and abroad, the monopoly methods of trusts, costly trouble-saving methods of retailing, growing extrava gance in the standards of private life. Here is food for thought in directions where remedy is possible, without wor rying overmuch about gold production which cannot be controlled. Accommodating; the Film Man. St. Paul Dispatch. "Hold, man! What would you do?" "I would die! From this bridge I will leap into yon mighty torrent and end it all all!" "Heavens! But if you must, wait 20 minute until T nnn Mnd ... i ,iijr muvinjs picture machine; this will make a cork- i"S nun. One Office He Doesn't Want. Philadelphia Inquirer. There ma v hn whni. a - w - - -J aui. Lt L UlllCeS that Mr. Roosevelt might be induced to take, but we feel quite certain ha will never run for the .Vlce-Presldencyv LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE - Robeson L. Low. manager of the bank ing department of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company's Jamaica branch, prides himself upon the fact that one of his forebears was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Several days ago Alfred Cohen, a wealthy young man of Jamaica, walked into the Title Guaranteo & Trust Com pany's office and found Mr. Low sighing checks. He watched him a few moments and then said: "You're quite a signer, aren't you?" , "I ought to be." replied Mr. Low, straightening up a bit: "one" of my an cestors was a signer of the Declaration of Independence." "Huh!" remarked Cohen, "I guess you haven't got much on me. One of my an cestors signed the Ten Commandments." New York World. A man in Ohio recently sought an ex pert in oil, because he believed that he had struck oil on his land. He brought a sample in a bottle. Evidently he had been in a great hurry. and had hastily grabbed the first bottle at hand, for when the chemist had duly analyzed the sample submitted, he sent the following telegraphic report: "Find no trace of oil. You have struck paregortc" Youth's Companion. e e e "The teacher in one of the classes ia a school in the suburbs of Cleveland had been training her pupils in anticipation of a visit from the school commissioner." said George Si Wells, of Pittsburg. "At last he cam and the classes were called out to show their attainments. The arith metic class was the first called, and In order to make a good impression the teacher put the first question to Johnny Smith, the star pupil. 'Johnny, if coal 1 selling at $6 a ton and you pay the coal dealer $24. how many tons of coal will he bring you? 'Three,' was the prompt reply from Johnny. The teacher, much embarrassed, said, "Why, Johnny, that isn't right.' 'Oh. I know it ain't, but they do It, anyhow.' "Kansas City Star, e ' e e The farmer marched Into the little, gro cer's shop with a firm step. "I want that tub of butter," he said, "and that lot of sugar, and all that other stuff." "Good gracious!" said the widow who kept the shop. "Whatever do you want with all them goods?" "I dunno." said the farmer, scratching his head. "but. you see, I'm the executor of your husband's will, and the lawyers told me I was to carry out the pro visions." Tit-Bits. e e e "John D. Rockefeller, Jr.." said a New York banker, "asked me one Saturday afternoon a good Biblical text to base an address on. Tm thinking.' he said, 'about that beautiful verse from the 23d Psalm "The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want." 'Beautiful and appropriate.' I agreed. 'But. Mr. Rockefeller, there is even a better verse in the same psahn "Thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over." ' " see Miss Fanny Crosby, the hymn writer, overflowed, on her 90th birthday, with wisdom and humor. Apropos of sight, the blind poet told a reporter a story both pretty and pathetic. "A little boy," she said, "once took up his grandmother's spectacles and put them on his nose, as children will. Then, peering through the glasses, he frowned, and said: 'But I can't see, grandma! There must be some thing between my eyes and the glasses! What is It?' 'It is 70 years, my child. the old lady answered. Can Jeffries Get Barkf Philadelphia Press. A wide range of men, not Individually or immediately interested in the prize ring, will watch with keen personal at tention to see if James Jeffries "can get back." Her is a man once doing with amaz ing success the most difficult, dangerous and taxing of physical tasks. A fight calls for the highest physical endurance, supreme strength, even temper, quick ness, dexterity and skill, all exerted after months of patient preparation, whose fruits must be plucked or Tost In mo ments of extreme tension, when seconds are as long years. In their earnings. Can he "get back?" Experience is all against him. The moral and physical laws are both inexorable. WJiat a man sows that shall he reap. What a man builds into body, nerve and mind that will he find when he draws on his re serve. No one can restore to him the years that the locusts of leisure and pleasure have eaten. He may. like Esau, seek his early birthright of strength, nerve and decision, but he will not ob tain it again though he yearn for it with tears and with training. Sentence Sermons. Chicago Tribune. Perspiration for better things on earth is the best aspiration for heaven. Giving my imagination a rest often Improves my neighbor's reputation. To know yourself may not rev.eal all truth, but It may prevent some lies. The suffering of the saints under the sermon does not augment their grace. Many preachers think that arRuinK over the tools is the same as building the house. No feeding is more delusive than that you are raising yourself by despising others. It is better to be a fool seeking wis dom than a wise man satisfied with what you have. There are too many who would rather go over the falls than not seem to ba in the swim. Children would be more truthful if wa were less anxious to make lying profitable to them. Many think they have the faith that is ready to die when they have only the fanaticism that is anxious to kill. Divorce Cards, Chicago Record-Herald. A Cincinnati woman has Issued divorce cards explaining that she cannot see why It is not as proper to do that as to make formal announcement of engagements or births. The Cincinnati woman probably got her idea from John Jacob Astor. who. a few months ago, gave a notable divorce supper In New York. Divorce cards will. In addition to the Information they convey, be useful in showing the social standing of the di vorced lady and gentleman. For those who make fine pretensions handsomely engraved cards will have to be useTT. while people in the humbler walks of life may be expected to get along with mere printed cards. It might be sug gested that a particularly dainty grass widow might add a pleasing touch bj havlng her divorce cards adorned with baby ribbon and sent out in sweet-scented envelopes. - The Co ed Problem. Kennebec Journal. One of Harvard's professors says thai co-education is bad and that women oXten break down from the strain of trying to keep up with men. This should quiet the suspicioin that has gone abroad that the men frequently break down from trying to keep up in the race for scholarship honors with th women. Tfew Definition of Financier. Chicago News. Little Willie Say. pa, what is a finan cier? Pa A financier, my son. is a man who can separate other people from thell money without the aid of a sandbag. Adjunct to the D. A.. R. Louisville Courier-Journal. "What's the latest D. A. R. news?" "Oh, they are talking of forming a Ben adJct Arnold chapter for traitoresses." i