10 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAT, JUNE 3, 1910. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oreson. Postofflea as Btcond-Class Matter. Subscription liutem Invariably Advance. (BI MAIL). Dally, Rundar included, one year ; gaily. Sunday Included, six months.... J J J?ally, Sunday Included, three month. . 2 Cally, Sunday Included, one month..... ! Xally. without Sunday, one year J-go JJally, without Sunday, six months J ially, without Sunday, three months.. . "y . without Sunday, one month - weekly, one year J-50 Sunday, one year - 50 fcuaday ana weekly.- one year a-60 (By Carrier). Dally, Sunday Included, one year ?2 aiIy- s"Oday Included, one month 7S otr to Remit Send Postoffice money Sraer. express order or personal check on vour local bank. Stamps, coin or currenoy " at the sender's risk. Give postotfice aa "ress in full, including- county and state. . ta Kates 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 1 pages. 2 cents', 80 to 40 paxes. 8 cents; u to 60 paxes, 4 cents. Foreign postaxe uouble rate. Eastern Business Office The 8. C. B with (special Agency Kevr Tork. rooms 4S o Tribune building-. Chicago, rooms OIO t!2 Tribune building. PORTLAND, FRIDAY. JUNE S, 1910. RESPECT FOR THE (OIBTS. Respect for the courts is a fine thing-. One may go farther than that and say that it is a necessary thing, for without the respect of the public our courts will in the long run lose their power and without their , power to decide controversies the country would lapse into barbarism. All this Is admitted by every sensible person; and yet it is as certain as anything can be that the courts are losing the respect of the public andathat it is by their own fault. The follies, vexa tions and endless delays which attend the administration of justice have be come so serious that the people of the United States are at times and in places beginning to revert to those primitive conditions where every man takes his cause into his own hand and seeks justice by violence. This ten dency excites universal apprehension everywhere. Lawyers and judges, however, securely hidden in their of fices and courtrooms, seem unaware of the feeling of the public or indif ferent to it. In either case the con sequence will be the same. To show that it .is not mere vain talk to say that the condition of af fairs excites universal 'apprehension, let us recall a few facts of current knowledge. One of the magazines for June publishes an article headed "The Cruelties of the- Courts," in which are recounted the fortunes of a long list of suitors. Their causes were tried, appealed and retried, and then the whole process was repeated over and over again. Instances are cited where the same suit was tried seven times In succession, the various proceedings covering from five to twenty years. Some the jury would decide for the plaintiff and the higher court would favor the defendant. In the next trial probably the jury would find for the defendant and then the Supreme Court would be disposed to decide for the plaintiff. Thus the interminable and senseless proceedings were strung out year after year unttl everybody con nected with them was sick and dis couraged. Not quite everybody, how ever. In almost njl these suits a cor poration appeared either as plaintiff or defendant. Now a corporation does not die. It does not fall sick and it never gets discouraged. The ordinary suitor has to hire a lawyer for the special occasion of his trial and pay him a heavy fee. . The corporation employs an array of lawyers by the year and the salaries go on just the eame, whether there are suits in court or not. The consequence is obvious. Thus happily situated, when the cor poration has a good case it hurries on the trial and naturally wins. "When It has a bad case it delays the trial from ten to twenty years and again it wins, or at any rate it seldom loses. Again, the President of the United States, who is not an alarmist, has said emphatically that the condition of American Justice is a reproach, to civilization. To illustrate the timet riess of his remark, the Saturday Kvening Post publishes this week an other of those lists of Interminable lawsuits which make Dickens' Jam dyce and Jarndyce look like speedy Justice. One of them is the case of a poor working girl whose hip was Injured by a streetcar. She sued the company for damages in February 1908, and in spite of all her lawyer's efforts the cause had not been brought to trial in May, 1910, more than two years afterward. Meanwhile the poor thing has developed tuberculosis and no doubt before her suit is decided she will die. hat excuse can organ ized society make for tolerating such tragedies? But the public knows the facts connected with our futile court proceedings well enough. Everybody admits the existence of the evil, but nobody seems able to propose a rem edy which can be widely adopted. Kew Tork has introduced great re forms in its court proceedings, but it still takes two years or more in that city to try an ordinary ci-i suit even If there are no appeals. Philadelphia has not thought it worth while to attempt to reform its courts, which are the most indolent and inefficient in the whole world Nothing to equal them can be found even in Turkey unless the accounts are misleading. The judges do not take bribes, and that is all that can be said for them. They do not take bribes, but neither do they decide causes, and if a judge does not do that pray what is he good for? The best example we have in this country of a tribunal which really functions, that is which tries causes and decides them, is to be found in the Municipal Court of Chicago. There an ordinary civil suit can be brought to trial within ninety days after pro ceedings are begun. Taking into con sideration the further fact that in the year ending December 4, 19 09. this court finally heard and disposed of 48.4 90 suits, we perceive that there Is nothing inimical to Justice in the atmosphere of the United States. We can get our lawsuits ended when we really set about doing It. The writer in the Saturday Evening Post, to whom we have referred, believes that the persons most to blame for the de- lays and denials of Justice are the Judges. The Oregonian has previously expressed a similar opinion. He cites the instance of a New Hampshire Judge who by his sale authority, with out the aid of any statute, reformed the judicial processes of his state. Other judges might undoubtedly move far in the same direction If they were not too timid. However that may be, the condition is becoming intolerable, and If it is not remedied there is -no reason to hope that the public can re spect the courts a great while longer. "COXSERVERS". OF THE SAME STRIPE. There is -effort -to defend the policy of the Government in withdrawing large areas of land from public settle ment by the contention that if the United States doesn't "conserve" the public lands, the corporations will. "What is the Southern Pacific doing with the more than 2,000,000 acres of the land grants that It gobbled by re fusal to obey the terms of the law under which the lands were granted?" asks one troubled critic. The Southern Pacific is doing noth ing. Nor Is the Government. There is the trouble. The Government not only pursues a policy of desolation. Isolation and inertia as to its lands by keeping settlers off, but for forty years It has permitted the Southern Pacific Railroad to do the same. It is no justification of the United States in driving the homebuilder out by having the plea offered in its de fense that the railroads have done it and will do it if the Government doesn't step in ahead of them and do the same'. If the Southern Pacific has "con served" 2,000,000 acres of land, Jt does not solve the problem of the state to have the Government "conserve" 20, 000,000 acres. The United States should offer its own lands for settle ment in accordance with its historic policy. Furthermore, it should require the Southern Pacific Railroad to open its lands for settlement in accordance with the terms of its land grant. The course and duty of the Government are clear In both Instances. SPECULATING OR GAMBLING 7 A Portland grain-buyer a few days ago purchased 27,000 toushels of wheat from an Eastern Washington farmer at 60 cents per bushel in the interior. Nearly six months earlier the same buyer had offered the farmer 98 cents per bushel for the wheat. When it was . ready for market last Fall it would have commanded from 90 cents to 9 5 cents per bushel. Not Including Insurance, interest charges and ware house expenses, this . mer has lost more than $10,000 by holding his wheat long, after It was ready to sell. This loss would be a tidy sum for some small wheat-pit operators to drop by remaining tco long on the bull side of the market. Forgetting that for every speculator who loses money by his poor judgment in select ing the winning side of the market there is another speculator who has won, . some of our moralists exclaim that it "served the gambler right" for trying to force wheat prices up to extravagant heights. For this reason, speculation has less effect on prices than is generally sup posed. The man who buys or sells wheat is backing his judgment as to the size and condition of the crops, the prospective demands of the con sumers, and other price-lnnuencing factors in the game. The Eastern Washington farmer held his wheat oft the market because he thought prices were going higher. The effect of his speculation was neutralized by some Russian farmer who .sold with a rush at the high prices that were aided by the withdrawaf of the American sup plies from the market. Tho European market is the world's market, and it is the foreign consumers who in the end fix the prices. The Palouse farmer can buy or hold and the Russian farmer can sell. The Chicago bulls can buy and the Chi cago bears can sell, but in the end some one must consume the product. and it is on the extent of this con sumers' demand, and not on specula tive manipulation, that the price will be fixed. Speculation is bad for the speculators, whether they are farmers or Board of Trade men, for the spec ulative game resembles all other games of chance, inasmuch as the man who is playing it cannot win all the time. The American farmers have paid rather dearly for their experi ence in learning that the American Society of Equity is powerless to con trol the price of wheat unless it ex tends its scope to include all of the wheatgrowers on earth. Then the monopoly would be so strong that bread riots would figure in the pro ceedings. ALASKA'S POSSIBILITIES. Alaska, still in the mining camp stage of its history, is a country that is but little understood by: the outside world. Enjoying the distinction of being the "last frontier" In the new world, it has attracted within its bor ders' an adventurous tribe from all parts of the world. With such a rest less, cosmopolitan population, "contin ued 'political turmoli is not surprising. Nor is it surprising that the people of the United States are unable to de termine at all times which, if any, of the numerous factions are in the right. The air of mystery that still hovers over so much of Alaska, together with an absence of hampering facts, has enabled the muckrakers to give their fancy free rein, so that there has been a vast amount of misinformation printed regarding our marvelously rich northern possession. Along with that great output of the muckrakers' mill has appeared in con tradiction much in the way of relia ble information which is opening the eyes of the Eastern people to the pos sibilities of our undeveloped possession in the north. That "Alaska must ul timately benefit from the Federal in vestigation of her affairs" is the opin ion of Daniel Guggenheim, head of the syndicate whose operations in Alaska have drawn the attention of the world to the wonderful resources of the country. "The Federal investi gations," says Mr. Guggenheim, "have brought to the attention of the peo ple of the United States as nothing could have brought it that there is a great sleeping empire of enormous wealth at our very doors. Now it is time for the Government So stop talk ing and do something which will give the people the opportunity to go to Alaska and take part in the work of development." Mr. Guggenheim asserts that "Alas ka is not one man's land" or a set of men's land, but every man's land. It is an empire without people, and is waiting. The thing to do Is to stop talking and act. To have large unde veloped quantities of goldsilver, lead, copper, tin, zinc, coal, oil, etc., at our very doors and to refuse to avail our selves promptly of this . proffered wealth is to hold the country back.' Whatever designs the Guggenheims may have on Alaska and its resources. it is quite plain to all who are famll lar with the situation that there is plenty of logic and sound sense. backed up by facts, in the statement ! of the senior member of the firm. ' In advising "enterprising young men, anxious to succeed, willing to work and having backbone and stam ina," to go to what he terms the "magnetic north," Mr. Guggenheim is corroborating 'the views of nearly every shrewd observer who has ever made even a casual study of the coun try and its resources. The United States never made a better investment than the purchase of Alaska; but it was not bought for a National park to be used as a Summer outing district by the Pinchots and other enormously rich conservers of our natural wealth. THE GASOLINE ENGINE. The power behind the aeroplane is the gasoline engine. The record breaking flight made by Curtiss this week has again called attention to this comparatively new' motive power which has revolutionized land travel and made aerial navigation possible. In nearly all of the flights made since the Wright brothers first kept the heavier-than-air machine off the ground, the principal difficulty has been with the power. Aeroplane en gines, quite naturally must be con structed so as to have the lightest possible weight. In their efforts to secure the minimum of weight, the engines were made so frail that they were continually giving way under the strain that was placed on them. The success of Curtiss is undoubtedly due In a large measure to his expert knowledge of the motive power of his aeroplane. Long before his ingenuity was directed toward aerial craft, Cur tiss was experimenting with gasoline engines, his efforts being directed to the production of light-built high speed machines. So successful was he in this work that in ,1907 he produced a motorcycle with which he estab lished a new world's record by cover-in- a mile at Ormond Beach, Florida, in forty-six seconds. Since then he has built engines for dirigible air ships, for submarine boats, for rjotor boats and for aeroplanes. Aerial navigation is not yet far enough along on the road to success to - admit of accurate modeling by which builders can guard against the varying currents of wind; but the pro pelling power seems so satisfactory that the room for improvement lies in increasing the load capacity of the aeroplane, so that it can carry greater supplies of fuel for long trips. The automobile and the airship would still be among the coming inventions were It not for the gasoline engine. SEEKING A COLLEGE. The father and mother of a young man who will enter college next Fall have written to The Oregonian to ex press their apprehensions on the sub ject of hazing, football and the like They seek an institution for their son where these erudite branches do not form an important part of the cur riculum. Their letter will be found elsewhere in the paper. Here it is mentioned merely to give point to our fears that they will seek in vain. Foot ball Infests every instltuticn of learn ing that we have ever heard of. Or perhaps ths reader may prefer to say that it adorns them. At any rate it is there, and, so far as one can per ceive, it Is likely to stay. The boy who goes to college must fortify his mind to meet the tempta tlon of football, baseball, track ath letics and all the rest of the cirels so-called sports, and he must also muster up- the courage to stand the ordeal of hazing. The faculties all declare that they are opposed to haz Ing, but we must understand them in a modified sense. They are opposed to it when some student is maimed and there is a public hullabaloo. Hazing is believed by some colleges to warm up the "college spirit" and make students loyal to their alma mater. The alumnus when he gets out into the icy world remembers nothing with so much zest as the times when he hazed or was hazed. The act of sitting with his hands tied be hind him under the pump on a Win ter's night while his dear comrades 'deluged him with water takes on roseate aspect under the enchantment of memory. He delights to recall the time when he was kicked downstairs in a sack and stood on the roof naked for three hours in the rain. These things are Joyous for the alumnus to remember In after years when he sits by his ripe fireside, and the faculties know it all too well. So they fight hazing with paper swords and would not really banish it for the world. Upon the whole, we do not be lieve the parents in question are wise to look for the kind of a college they speak of. In our opinion. they could find it they would not like it, for their son would have no companions there but milksops and mollycoddles. THE LIBRARIANS. At the meeting of librarians on Wednesday evening Dr. Arthur Bost- wick, of St. Louis, talked about books like a sensible man and a scholar. Among other notable things he said that we ought to be careful not to let children dissect in school the poems and stories which we expect them t love in later life. He wittily empha sized his point by telling the librarian that a person who could deliberately analyze Gray's Elegy into Its elements would be likely to cut up his grand mother. Whether he would devour her afterward the doctor did not say, but we think he would. ' The empha sis of the modern librarian Is thrown upon the problem of inducing people to read. For this purpose they open their stacks to the public and permit Tom, Dick and Harry' to go into the sacred recesses at pleasure and handle the volumes with grimy fingers. What is the virgin whiteness of the margin of a book to the flame of high incen tive in the mind of a man? The modern library goes to the reader and besets him with all the persuasiveness it can command. Its spirit is no longer scholastic or reoluse, but missionary. It has realized its educational potency and determined to make the most of it. The person who fancies that the free public library in Portland or any other city is mainly occupied In deal ing" out trashy novels to silly women needs information on the subject. He ought to go into the reading-room and note the serious men. young and old, who habitually resort there to read scientific periodicals: In the cir culating department on any day a lit tle after the noon hour and in the evenings he will find young working men studying books on mathematics, engineering, electricity and the like. Novels exert but a small portion of the true literary and scholarly In fluence which the library exerts on , the community. More novels go out. than books of poetry or works of science, but that does not signify. The public library is deeply and strongly educative and its man agers everywhere realize their oppor tunity and zealously seize upon it. The jurisdiction of H. M. Adams, traffic chief of the North Bank road, has been extended to cover the Oregon Electric and United Railways lines. recent additions to the Hill system in this territory. This will give Mr. Adams full sway in one of the great est traffic-producing regions west -of the Rocky Mountains. Through his ong association with both the Harri- man and the Hill railroad systems in the Pacific Northwest, Mr." Adams is exceptionally well qualified for the added duties that have been placed on him. He not only has a perfect knowl edge of the varying local conditions in the wide territory covered by the steam and electric lines for which he will seek, traffic, but he also has a large acquaintance and high standing with the people who will supply this traffic. Mr. Hill does not seem to be overlooking any of the essentials to success in the new field which he has so recently invaded. Forest fires are raging in Idaho and a considerable loss has already result ed. This Is about two months earlier than we have been accustomed to ex pect these annual destroyers of forest wealth. The Idaho fire started in a slashing made by members of the For estry Reserve service, and, like prac tically -all of these blazes, was due to carelessness. There is one feature of the acquirement by big syndicates of so much of the timber that must ap peal to all, and that is the precaution taken - by the owners against fire. There are at least a dozen large tracts in this state where the owners main tain a fire patrol system which is so perfect that losses are almost un known even in the height of the dry season. This vigilance is,- of course. not possible where the timber is held by small owners, but there is no ex cuse for most of the forest fires which annually cost the country millions in timber wealth. Wise men among the Grangers note in the inrush of politicians and pro fessional men upon the Grange as members a Just cause for apprehen sion. Nothing Is clearer than that such men do not seek affiliation with the farmers' organization from disin terested motives. They see, or think they see, in a body, full hilf of the voting strength of which is made up of non-voters at general elections, an organization which they can swing for personal and party aggrandize ment. There is no other reason, than this why professional politicians from the cities seek membership - in the Grange. What .care such men for the matters that occupy the attention of rural members at the regular meet ings of the lodge? What for the sim ple entertainments, the recitals, the music, that are given for the "good of the order" ? What for the initia tion ceremonies, with their pretty sym bols and salutary lessons? Nothing, of course. Foreigners in Blueflelds seek pro tection under the Stars and Stripes. That is because we are a world power. In the olden time, it will be recalled, Americans were prone to seek shelter under the Union Jack, and always found it, of course. But when Secre tary Whitney, under Mr. Cleveland, began to build the White Navy, there was a change in foreign affairs. Now, at home or abroad, the Red, White and Blue stands for something. The Bank of England reduced the bank rate to 3 i per cent yesterday and gold is pouring into London in such quantities that easy money is assured for the present. A few mil lions of this gold that has been flow ing into the old-world metropolis was sent from this country to pay for rail road . securities which disgusted for eign holders had sold through fear of too much anti-railroad legislation. Charity to the dead Is always touch ing, but sometimes it is not wise. The late Mr. Havemeyer seems to need the mantle as much as anybody we can remember, but reverence for his saint ed memory should not be permitted to smother the truth about the - sugar frauds, and from present indications it will not. A speaker at the Baptist Association meeting Wednesday night condemned present-day preaching as dead plati tudes. Perhaps so and possibly; but as the comet has come and gone, some sulphurous doctrines, so effective of yore, produce little terror now. About the time General Secretary Scullin, of the National Peace Indus trial Association, hits Portland, some local body goes on strike. Yet Mr. Scullin is as gentle as a dove bearing an olive branch. Fourteen cars of Nebraska hogs were unloaded in the Portland stock yards Wednesday. It is little wonder prices rule high when the corn-fed animal is brought such a distance. If the State of Washington has reached the degree of "badness1 wherein daylight saloons are a neces sity, as Governor Hay thinks it has. the state is in a bad way. The news that contracts will be let to extend a railroad 170 miles into Alaska will cause maiy to look up the territory on the map who never sup posed it was so broad. After all is said, there are only four Important news centers at this time. namely, Washington, D. C, Ben Lo mond, Cal., Reno, Nev., and the Colonel. Mr. Hearst cables some caustic words on Mr. Roosevelt. The inci dent will close with "You're another!" A United States surgeon has found Jeffries to be in as good condition as Johnson. How good is Johnson? There seems now to be no doubt that the war in Nicaragua has got beyond comic opera belligerencies. Will Charles D. Norton rank James Schoolcraft Sherman in official and social circles at Washington? It may turn out that the Govern ment, not the Havemeyer interests, will "take care of the boys." Perhaps Taft will employ the As sistant President to receive and confer with the Insurgents. of course, CAN THEY "COMB BACK"! Several Imq izli-f - Sncaresrted by m Na tional Athletic Contest. PORTLAND, June 2. To tha Editor.) It is reported the most popular selling question of the season is: "Can Jeff come back?" This is provincially narrow. It is class monopoly. The ""question should include: "Can Bwana come back? Bwana Turrvbo of the first page! Can Jonathan come back? Jonathan who made the speech but didn't make the appointment! Can the Hydrocolickys come back? That bunch of turbulent ldiocratics hereabout whose fathers before them were "dacent" Democrats but who now are calling them selves non-partisans, non-politicals, non entities, non "the dlvll," and what not! For the most part, the literary prizefight ers seem to agree that Jeff can come back if he can stand the punch; the political forecasters are unanimous that Bwana's wind is good; he can enunciate four col ums of international thrills, any morning before breakfast, dlctafe an enormous cor respondence between the ham and eggs and hot cakes and coffee, wrestle with Kings. Emperors. Dukes. Lords ano. Am bassadors from 10 to 11:55 A. M.; deliver a philippic from -2 to 4 P. M. without the slightest exhaustion, a rubdown at 6 P. M., and after dinner take on authors, dramatists, philosophers, statesmen, gen eralissimos, and small-beer nobility until 11 P. M. and go to bed as fresh as a daisy in dewy morn. That Jonathan is great at shadow-boxing, he can stave a hole through the con stitution, statutes, precedents, and settled Governmental procedure with a pamphlet punch, wallop a windbag until it will squeal and shriek for the initiative and take the count for Statement One, skip the rope for Aldrich and sprint over the fence for the people, and through his in fluence with the powers enjoin the . en croachments of Halley's comet. But the poor hydrocolickys or local nonentities what of them? Over there in the old country a turncoat was something awful, yet everybody knew where to place him. Not so with those boobyheads who were neither flesh, fowl or good red herring, called here in America non-partisans and non this and non that.- Would any good Democrat marry his daughter to a man who didn't know what he was? From such the good Lord de liver us! What is there to be ashamed of In the name Democrat? Isn't it rich with pa triotism, ripe with honors and noblo in character and achievements? Isn't it the 6ire of constitutional democracy or rep resentative government and all the glories and born of American citizenship? Isn't something to be peddled about, swapped sold, exchanged, bargained and delivered in Job lots in the marts of a Machiavelian political mediocrity of has-been brokers and hungry Micawbers to elect to office the appendicitis end of Republican fac tions and a few apostate Democrats for whom St. Peter is awaiting at a partisan gate with an uplifted chair! Out with them, carpet-baggers, ozone merchants, weather cocks, flip-flappers. and mother of pearl patriots, who are ashamed of the memory of Jefferson and Jackson and the sturdy democracy of Harmon, Gaynor and Champ Clark, which Is carrying the banner of democracy pure and undeliled up to the parapets of victory. Can the local Democrats come back? Sure they are coming back to the old fighting form as Democrats in name and Democrats in principles. They will pull down the three-ball sign over their head quarters and let the non-partisans start a pawnshop of their own. J. H. M. IMPORTANT NEWS BOILED DOWN, How Reports Would Have Appeared After the Copy Editor Fixed Them. New York Mall. Miss B. Frietchle, a spinster of Fred erick, Md., narrowly escaped being killed this morning. A troop of Confederates, General T. J. Jackson commanding, were marching down Fourth street, when Miss Frietchie unfurled "a flag from her attic window. The men were about to Bhoot when General Jackson ordered them to desist, under pain of ignominious death. George H. Cassabianca, 15 years of age, was burned on a steamer this morn ing. The vessel was burning and young Cassabianca refused to leave it before being ordered so to do by his father, who. however, had already perished. The boat was demolished, partly covered by insur ance. Three fishermen, all married, who sailed away at sundown last evening, were drowned during the night. The bodies were found early this morning. AUGUST 4 Edgar Wilson Nye, a news paper man, assaulted Ah Sin, a China man, here late last night, in an alterca tion over a euchre game. Nye was un der the impression, he alleged, that the Chinaman had attempted to cheat. He declares that 24 packs of playing cards were found in the Mongolian's long sleeves and that his nails were waxed. Nye was discharged. Waistcoats of Edward VII. Le Cri de Paris. It is well known that King Edward dic tated the fashions in his kingdom. But there may be general Ignorance of the fact that he sometimes borrowed his pat terns of sovereigns who had preceded him on the throne. In these later days, the waistcoats of the King, that all gentlemen made It their duty to copy, were quite simple. The - collar was sufficiently open to per mit the appearance in all its elegance of the sailor tie; the last button at the bot tom was not buttoned. These waistcoats were exact copies of those worn by Charles II. the cut of which was described by Samuel Pepys. And Charles II had himself reproduced his waistcoats from that of a personage who figured in a fresco In the cathedral of Winchester, a painting of the date of 14S9. So Edward VII was pleased to re store a style more than four centuries old. These waistcoats were formerly worn by women as well as by men. King Edward only changed the material. In the time of Charles II they were of silk or of brocade. Edward modestly wore them of gray cloth. Same Old Game. " Eugene Register. Leading Democrats of the state are centering on a plan to nominate Jeffer son Myers as candidate for Governor. How can they do that and not violate the direct primary law, which they claim to hold in such reverence and venera tion? These self-jconstltuted Democratic leaders are doing what they would con demn a regular delegated body of Ore gon Republicans from doing but, of course, that is different. Any snap judg ment Democratic leaders take on the people and the direct primary will be condoned and indorsed by independent papers, which are, really. Democratic to the core and work the independent racket for all it is worth in behalf of the Democratic party. Elimination by Electricity. Toronto Globe. Edison says there is no reason in this age of electricity why horses should be allowed within the limits of cities. Some day when real progress Is made in the adaptation of electricity to our needs there may be no reason for cities at all. Lobx Acquaintance The Tattler. "Aw will you give this note to Miss May de Sylphington, the aw pretty little blonde creature with the violet eyes, don't you know, who dances in the ballet?" "That'll be all right, guv'ner. I ought to Know her; I'm her son. VICE OF" SMOKING IN PlLIC. lMseuaalou of the Vnlwrsal Practice : From Many Points of "View Chicago Tribune. The waste of money paid for drink is accompanied by the still greater waste of moral force and standing, and followed by the disease, misery and crime so often the consequence of the liquor habit. The matter of smoking can not be dis cussed on the same grounds, nor does the correspondent nor many other critics hold that the habit entails any such results. Save a few fanatics, no one objects to a reasonable consumption of tobacco by those who have attained their full growth, but there is no doubt that smok ing in public places has approached the point where it is not only a nuisance, but may even become a menace to health. One has only to stand upon the street and count the number of men who pass with cigars, pipes or cigarettes, blowing into the air clouds of smoke containing who knows how many million bacteria, spitting on the pavements, or throwing butt ends of cigars into the gutter with the same possibilities of spreading dis ease, to realize the truth of this asser tion. Tobacco smoke is constantly puffed in the faces of men. women and .children to whom it Is most offensive. It is al most impossible to enter a restaurant of any standing, without beelng greeted by a tobacco-laden atmosphere so dense that all but strong stomachs quail at it. In streetcars, especially in warm weather. the passengers must often ride for miles with the tobacco fumes of the front plat form smokers blowing in their faces. Offices reek with the stench of burning tobacco or extinguished cigars. There is no one quite so selfish as a man addicted to tobacco. As a writer in the Outlook recently said, the man who smokes a cigar detests one who smokes a cigarette or a pipe, and the others re turn the feeling. They do not seem to realise that the person who does not smoke at all has good reason for hating all their tribe. The person and garments of a smoker are redolent of tobacco, and this odor, offensive to so many, is some times so pungent as to be distinguished at a considerable distance, sickening those who have-to endure it. Reform in this matter will not come until every man realizes that it is Impo lite to smoke, in the presence of non tobacco users without asking permission; that It is bad manners, to say the least, to pass through crowded streets puffing smoke in others' faces: that a restaurant, an elevator car, or an office much fre quented by the public is no place to smoke at all: in short, that he should not in dulge in a habit which will put any other person to inconvenience or discomfort. It is a, question of good taste, of consider ation for the feelings of others, of chi valry, if you will, and gentlemanly in stincts. SHALL ITS NAME BE CHANGED f This Question Submitted to the M E. Church South. The Methodist Church in the slave holding states adopted a separat and In dependent organization in 1845 under the name of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. That name has been retained lor 65 vears. Now it has been decided by the General Conference of the church, in Bession at Asheville. to submit to the next General Conference, which will be held in 1913, a resolution changing the name of the church. This resolution asks the bishops "to submit the old historical name, 'the Methodist Episcopal unurcn of America.' " To adopt this suggestion will require the approval of three-fourths of the members of all the 45 annual con ferences. after which the resolution will be submitted to the General Conference n 1913. It seems that the demand for the change came largely from the church in the Western states. The optn ion appears to be that the necessary majorities will not be obtained Churches are usually extremely con servative, and men do not take kindly to any changes, especially in so m portant a matter as the name. The division of the Methodist Church was not occasioned by any question of theological doctrine. About the time or the division there was a constant and very bitter agitation of the policy of slavery. In 1844 there was a move ment in the General Conference to de Dose Bishop James O. Andrew because his wife owned slaves. It was believed that the deposition of Bishop Andrew would work a urreat injury to the church in the South ana tnat tne cnurcn in the North would be Injured If tn bishop exercised his offioe in that sec tion. Besides- this, the constant agita tion of the slavery question in the General Conference was creating heart burnings and bitterness. In lS4o, when the separation took place, the Southern church had about 4ta,uoo memDers, oi whom 124.000 were negroes. In 1908 the membership had increased to 1,735, 576, with nearly 16,000 churches, worth $40,000,000. Looking Out for Insects. Garden Magazine for June. No good garden can be run without the use of a good spray pump. Watch for blight insects and pests of all kinds and spray all the vegetables that are subject to blight with Bordeaux mix ture twice during June, n tne weatner Is either very dry or excessively wet, spray every week. Do not wait for the blight to show ltseii, as in most, cases It Is then too late. For eating insects of all kinds poison must be used. I alwavs mix the poison with the Bor deaux, which helps it to stick to the plant. Be careful when using tnis; ao not spray it on well-advanced vegeta tables, such as cabbage which has head ed. If cabbage worms are troublesome after tlje, heads have attained any size, I usually pick them off by hand. For aphis, use any of the tobacco prepara tions as a spray; but above all keep the Bordeaux going, as it is the greatest of all garden savers. Or you may use Paris green, about half a pound to 60 gallons of water, first mixing it into a paste. Arsenate of lead can be used in the same manner. For quick work, white hellebore powder dusted on the plants is effective. Reflectlona of a Bachelor. New York Press. The time people are surest about the ioys of matrimony is just before they get into it. Cheerful idiocy can make a man surer of the success of his plans than the profoundest wisdom. A man knows it isn't necessary to Jingle a few silver coins in his pocket when he has plenty of bonds in the safe deposit. A woman keeps her ideals Just the way she, does her old love letters, even when Bhe has known for years not a bit of It all was true. There's hardly anybody a girl can- ad mire so much for his truthfulness as a man she can kiss and then have him pretend to her own face she wouldn't let him. Another Cause of HlKh Coat of Living. Virginia (Minn.) Enterprise. The idea of teaching every girl to thump the piano and every boy to be a bookkeeper will make potatoes worth $8 per barrel in another 20 years. And Still Another. Philadelphia Inquirer. The price of meats may be less, but It seems as though the brown paper that goes on the scales with every pur chase weighs heavier each week. The Return of "Our Immortal. Christian Science Monitor. We may miss the big- comet that sails through the sky, ' Likewise the eclipse of the moon. But the best show of all we won't let it get by When Roosevelt sails homeward In June. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE Attorney-General Wirkersham. at a din ner in Washington, aald of a wrong-headed financier: i "His methods aro so deplorable that, when he tries to defend them he goes to pieces. "In fact, he reminds me of an old man who was brought up before a country Judge. " "Jethro. said the Judge. you are ac- cused of stealing General Johnson's ehick ensu Have you any witnesses?' " 'No. sail.' old "Jethro answered haught ily. 'I had not. sah. I dont steal chick ens befo witnesses, sah.' " Minneapolis Journal. A well-known attorney of this city had a client whose case presented a mass Of technicalities, of which his lawyer took every advantage. Before the final argu ment and handing down of opinion, how ever, the client was forced to take a jour ney of some hundreds of miles and was compelled to be absent for several weeks. He arranged with his attorney to flash him by telegraph the result of the trial, but told -him so to word his telegram that the addressee alone would compre hend its import. The result was the awarding of a ver dict In favor of the litigant in question, and his delighted counsel sent him the fol lowing message: "Justice and truth have triumphed." What was his amazement at receiving a few hours later a telegram from his client which said: 'Yours received. Hard lurk. Appeal Immediately." Philadelphia Times. Mrs. Pennington looked down the sravcl walk and saw the newly hired cook com ing toward the house with a bed spring and mattress on her back. Why have you brought your bed. Mar tha?" asked Mrs. P. "Don t you know that your room here is completely lur nished?" Well, hit's dis way. Mrs. Pennington, you see, when you sleeps on jour own bed you sleeps like you wnnts. but when you sleeps on odder folkses' bed you mtis" sleep kinder particular." National Monthly. see A lawyer once asked a man who had at various times sat on several juries: Who influenced you most the lawyers. the witnesses or the Judge? He expect ed to get some useful and interesting in formation from so experienced a juryman. This was the man's reply: I'll tell yer. sir, 'ow 1 maKes up my mind. I'm a plain man. and a reasonin man. and I ain't influenced by auyimrc the lawyers say: no, nor by what the Judge savs. I Just looks at the man in the docks and I says. 'If he ain't dene nothing, why's he here?' And I brings em all in guilty.' "snort atones. An Object Leason. Atchison Globe. Picture No. 1 shows a young man and a young girl all In white standing In the gloaming beside a lily. "What a superb lily." said the girl. "Isn't It?" said the man. He was going to marry her. "Let me show you something," he said. Picture No. 2 shows the young man bending over the lily and the girl watching him In startled fawn fashion. "I am going to tie this string around thii lily," said the man. "But why?" asked the girl.. "You'll hurt it. won't you?" "You'll see," said the man. In Picture No. 3 the man Is leaning against a garden wall with his arms foiled. He looks sad and the girl Is also looking sad. Both are looking down, as dejected as if they had opened a potato hill and found no potatoes In it. The next day the girl and the man came back to the lily. It was dead. The juice could not rise to the flower and it starvtd to death. "Oh, what a shame." said the girl. But that corset! evening she loosened her More Popular Fiction. Chicago Tribune. "I Just Adore Grand Opera." "I Don't Care for the Nickel; It's the Principle of the Thing." "Yes, Mabel: I'd Love You Just the Same If You Were as Poor as a Church Mouse." "No, Sor, the Young Leddy Isn't at Home." "I Haven't the Money With Me Now, but I'll Pay You Next Week. Sure." "He's Not Five Years- Old Yet, Con ductor." "I . Don't Want It for Myself. You Know; I'm Buying It for a Friend." "I Detest Liquor, but the Doctor Ad vises Me to Use It." la There Such a Colleger PORTLAND, June 2. (To the Edi tor.) As we have a boy who will at tend a university In September will you kindly Inform us If there Is any such institution on this Coast where baseball, football and hazing are not considered ,a part of the studies, but where hoodlumism is prohibited? PARENTS. IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN OUR UNMANNED PACIFIC COAST DEFENSES Who will man the guns at the mouth of the Columbia in time of invasion T Timely article by an officer of the United States Army, who declares our only hope lies in the militia. FEDERAL SUPREME COURT AS HUMAN BEINGS Not supermen at' all, but gTeat lawyers with fads, fancies and red blood, like the rest of mankind. ADVANCE NEWS OF THE COLONEL'S DEPARTURE The Japanese schoolboy reports the tributes from Europe when T.. R. leaves Southampton for home. JEFFRIES TELLS OF HIS HARDEST FIGHT This was the second battle with Fitzsimmons. It is interesting to compare the story as told by the victor with the stories of sporting writers. ORDER EARLY FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER