lO THE MORMXIi. OREGOMAN, TTTTTRSDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1910. t (Dmrcmhm Jim1 t rrt nV. Oron. postortScs. tubacrUua liais Invariably ta A4M tBT MAIL). Paftv. Snsftay t-clortM. ysar. rl.. 'ir4r Ineludrd. ,s nor'ht Iillf. tuadtv la--j.trl. tr-r months... SJ lui'v -.... t. .... . r ... I'a'iy. without ua1ar. 'moot--- tal. tl B ou I (turdar. hr mnlbs.. I ". wichoui .id. axe month w:i. year. Suedar. an, yar. ....... Suaaajr u4 w-kl. ! rr. S t-T (FT CARRIER). Patty. Saoo,aT In -!!.!. yaar -J laly. Iits(( lnrlu4J. ona month.-.. - Hm ta. KnUl-Mnit j-o.toftu mon'T rdsr. tipraaa orJrr or psrsnaj cbsa local kaah, stamp, torn or aro al tha a-cdrs run. tila poato.nea adttrw la fall. lo'ladlns county and ' fio Iiim 1 to 14 paa. 1 : ta It . 1 tuu. 14 to J pa coa.a. to o paaoa, cob La ria postasa aoublo rata. w toKtn HaolaMO OfTWo Vrro A C"""- -Now Tor. Itrur.ioUk buliUlEo aoo. stsr Lal:d:nf. roRTLANn. TUl'lt&D.tY. NOV. tt. HHt O.N-r.VKTIANMIIt r.UU3t. The effort for a "non-political" cr "non-partisan" Judiciary i not to bo abandoned In Oregon. ile.-pite Us em phatic "repulse at the recent elec tion.' Lho so we hear. It was not so much non-partisan" movement that waa repudiated on November 8 as It aj the humbug and deception sought to bo practiced on tho ours by a bogus non-pirtls.-insh!p in the nomina tion of two candidates who bad been conspicuously identified with tho Itomocratlc party, und for whom the non-partisan scheme had been worked up from tho beginning, through tho devices and or".i:ic of practical poli tics. Tho trote for the four successful can didates for Supreme Judge was: Fcan, 43.i; Burnett, C3.307; Mciiridc. 60. ISO; Moore, ST. 067. Bean and Burnett were the nominees of tho Re publican party; Me Bride und Moore were the nominees of the Republican party, and were likewise indorsed by the "non-partisans." Tho results would, cn their face, seem to in dicate the "non-partisan recom mendation cost Judges Moore and McBride from 3000 to S000; yet The Oregonlan does not seek to make that explanation, or any explanation, of the pointed stgr.lrirance of these in teresting Azures, except that the con spicuous merit of Judge liurnett, and doubtlevs of Jude Heau, brought them many votes. If the voters of Oregon make up their minds that a Democratic nomi nee for a Judge is better than tho op posing Republican candidate, they wilt elect him. Judge J. W. Hamilton has thrice been elected Circuit Judge in the Second Judicial District. Judge Kradshaw three or four times rfi tho Seventh District. Judge Calloway twice or more In the Third District, and so on. Judge Gatens has now been over whelmingly elected in Multnomah County. A Democratic nomination has In no Instance been a hnndlrap to llrap to did not") lo It. It I these worthy judges. They did fear It. or repudiate it. or evad la no reproach to them that they are Democrats. We have no "non-parti- nn" Judiciary In Oregon, and probably will not have. But we have and will continue to have a bi-partisan Judi ciary. TUANKSf.IVTNO DAY. Ard w maka and kp Tanklvtnr With tho bl tha houa affards, Flnro. If w livo. or If o tli. w kaow w4 ar tAa Lurd's. Allca Cary. Away back In lS6i, when the coun try was In the throes of the Civil War. the matter of a National Thanksgiving day was brought to the attention of President Abraham Lincoln by a body of eamevt. devoted women, led by Sarah Josepha Hale, then editor of Godey's Lady's Book. It is related 'that the tired lines about the eyes of the patient, sorely-tried President relaxed and Into them came an expression of true gratitude as he expressed him self as duly and devoutly thankful that things even in that dark hour of the Nation's life were as well with it as they were. We can well believe that no argu ment was necessary to Induce him to Issue the Thanksgiving proclamation of that year for blessings received And promised, cnler or w hich was a con tinuance of our National life. ' Nearly fifty years have passed since that Thanksgiving proclamation, wet with the tears and the blood of civil strife, went out over the land and each year It has been repeated its continuance Justified by the fullfilled promise of National peace and happi ness, and prosperity that were fore shadowed In the flr Thanksgiving proclamation of President Lincoln. Each and every year since then the Governor of every state of the great North And West has followed the Na tional proclamation of thanksgiving with a state proclamation Indorsing the day named by the President as "a day of thanksgiving and prayer." "Fasting and prayer" our Puritan forebears had It; feasting and prayer It has come to be with ua, with great stress laid upon feasting, even as In the olden time it was laid upon fast ing. Today Is the glad day. and among , the many blessings that await ac ' knowledgment upon that day the blessings of peace and prosperity are Chief. ABCXDAlrtTB OT SnTPTTXI. Two large coasting craft have been chartered to load wheat at Portland for California, ports at $1.50 per ton. For more than a year vessels coming- north from California have been carrying low-grade freight at II per ton. Steamers for the Orient have been carrying whoat across the Pacific at IS. and recently a sailing ship brought cargo out from Europe at a shade less than IS. SO per ton. These figures do not indicate that Portland Is experiencing any severe handicap for tonnage with which to move either Inward or outward freight. They do Indicate that Portland has an enorm ous and rapidly growing maritime business and such good facilities for handling It that vessels are willing to come here and handle the traffic at remarkably low rates for the service. So long as the great Inland Empire, which to a steadily Increasing. extent. Is making use of Portland harbor as a tidewater port, has products for which the world beyond the seas offers a market, and so long as our people demand the products which the ships will bring to -us at such low cost for freight, there will be no shortage of facilities for handling it. Transporting freight by water as well as by land Is a business proposition. 'Wherever there is business there will be ships. The owner will At all times endeavor to secure tho highest pos sible rates. They will accept free docksg if the people are willing to give It to them. They will also accept tree fuel or anything else that will in- creaxo their profit?, but all of the 'free" privileges, conveniences and ne resslrles which w could saddle, on the Portland taxpayers would not attract an additional iffl here nor would It decrease the rates on frlght. Mayor Simon has appointed an ex ceptionally comitent public dock board, but It would be. unfair and un reasonable for the taxpayers to ex pect that any use to which they ran put the $2.500. 000 appropriated for public docks will ha vi? the slightest effect In Increasing the shipping busi ness of the port or In reducing rates. If the experiment enn be held within the. $;.300.0no limit It will dmon strate the futility of the plan so suc cessfully that we may save the much greater sum that would be loi-t If we perilled In believing that we could tax ourselves rich, even for public dock. the wiiiTr. suini". Tho "white slave" business la likely to lose some of Its attractiveness in consequence or tne laic experience In the Federal Court In this city. It . . . .... - ! .......Kin. T A V ' uiutrmi to imagine .. . v...... ..... I than the characters ol mo wretcnea who have been tried and. some of them, sentenced. A creature who Is willing to live upon the proceeds of his wife's shame. or his children's, cannot be spoken of as a man. Some tern) of peculiar Infamy ought to bo invented to apply to him. He is a social horror. There l no excuse for his existence and It Is a pity that the law knows of no wav to put him out of the world Next to extinction, the best way to dispose of such moral monsters is to imprison them. The long sentences which Judge Wo'verton Imposed were Justified in every way. Our only re great is that lie did not sco his wiry to make them longer. In a civilized and Christian country "white slavery' cannot bo tolerated. mrvLAR ELECTION OF SENATORS. Apparently a fair degree of hope Is found by the friends of popular election of United States Senators in a new plan for bringing about such reform which will be. presented to the "House of Governors," us the voluntary gathering formerly known as tho "Governors' Conference" at tho com ing meeting in Frankfort. Ky. In recent years no material diffi culty has been encountered In a ma jority of the State Legislatures in ob taining the adoption of resolutions favoring popular election of United States Senators, but the failure of the Legislatures to take concerted or even similar action Is pointed out by William George Jordan, secretary of the House of Governors, in a recently Issued pamphlet. Legislatures In twenty-nine states have adopted resolutions on the sub ject and in all but two of the remain- jo, in ft, g seventeen states some form of proval of a change in Senatorial election methods has been indicated cither through adoption of primary choice laws or the Incorporation of popular election planks In party platforms. But among the twenty-nine states that have adopted resolutions the plan suggested for bringing about the re form h:is not been identical. Numer ous states have Instructed their dele gations In Congress to favor an amendment to the Federal Constitu tion providing for popular election of Senators while other states have adopted a form of resolution or re quest which. If concurred in by two thirds of the State Legislatures, would compel Congress to call A constitu tional convention for the purpose of considering amendments. These resolutions have attained re sults in the House where in the past sixteen years four resolutions calling for the submission of the amendment have been passed by the required two-thirds vote, but In each instance the Senate has refused or failed to vote on the resolution. It Is perhaps well to recite the two methods provided in the Constitution for adoption of amendments. The Congress, by two-thirds vote, may rropose amendments, or on applica tion of the Legislatures of two-thirds of tho states Congress Is required to call a convention for proposing amendments, which. In either case, become valid parts of the Constitution when ratified by the Legislatures of three-fourths of the several states, or by conventions in three-fourths there of, as one or the other method of ratification may be designated by Congress. Mr. Jordan in his pamphlet virtual ly concedes that the Senate Is hope lessly opposed to an amendment pro viding for popular election of mem bers of that body. He finds that seventeen states that have adopted applications ror tne calling or a con stitutional convention have disquali fied through some detail In their reso lutions or applications. Some of these details are technical, but he concedes that the Senate ' would throw them out on account of the technical dis qualifications If all applications were of a number equivalent to two-thirds of the states. It Is now proposed that the House of Governors draft a resolution for submission to the several Legislatures which. In form, will be attack-proof by Congress and (whlch will call for the summoning of a constitutional convention to consider amendments. Forty-two State Legislatures meet In. 1911. and conceding the' organiza tion of Arizona and New Mexico, thirty-two State Legislatures, by adopting; the proposed resolution, may make calling a convention to consider framing an amendment mandatory on Congress. On Its face the plan appears feasi ble, but possibly too great reliance has been placed on the good faith of many Legislatures that heretofore have adopted resolutions Indorsing the proposed amendment. Just what percentage of the members of the legislatures have acceeded to public opinion because of a reasonable certainty that " the United States Senate would disregard the reso lutions Is not known. Members of the Legislature In many states through the adoption of a method of popular election would surrender a right valuable from a patronage, po litical organization and sometimes monetary standpoint. When a man datory resolution Is presented, these Legislatures may disregard their own precedent. Some doubt even may be expressed that the voters In general would ap prove the calling- of a constitutional convention unless its labors could be confined to consideration solely of a popular election amendment. In any event, herein lies a plausible excuse for opposition to an application for a convention bv the learlslator who Is jppoed to popular election of United States Senators for ulterior reasons. If the House of Governors is suc cessful in drafting an attack-proof resolution probably one -of tho most Interesting results to watch will bo the "trimming" of Legislatures In states where there Is now no sem blance of popular choice of United States Senator. M Vtil.NO TIUN3 "FKIIE." 'Free" dentistry in the public schools, not a costly thing in itself. pursues the modern plan of making officluls. Instead of parents, respon sible for the physical and the moral welfare of children. Free medhTil at tention, free books, free luncheons, are now among the things demanded. These and more are Included In tho Socialist programme. Mr. Harzee, secretary of the Oregon Socialist party, defends tho "freo" system, in a letter printed elsewhere. His arguJ ment logically calls for free food, freo clothing, free homes, in addition to free schools. The socialistic scheme is that of relieving parents from the burden and the expense of their off- sj.rlng and of making others pay: of allowing parents to be mero breeders and of compelling officials to be the caretakers; of installing tho state as monitor and guardian and of making the Individual nothing. Education of children at public ex pense Is one thing; but feeding and clothing -and supporting them at pub lic expense is another. Tne two aro not at all parallel. Mr. Barzee drifts off into discussion of "wage system," repeating tho fa miliar assertion that workeps cannot solve the problem of existence by thrift and frugality and that they must have "all the fruits of their la bor" with "profits" eliminated. His error lies In his supposition that labor is the source of all wealth. It is the organization and the di rection of labor that produces wealth. The man who furnishes the plan, the brains, the machinery, the capital, is the chief producer of wealth. With out him laborers can do nothing. If they can. why don't they? Opportuni ties in this Western country are wider than ever before. The rule holds good, now as ever, that the men wjio have done things in this Western country, whether laborers or direc tors, have not been soap-box orators. The director not only Supplies tho plan and the capital and the material, but he also studies the markets, at tends to the cash, and the credits and pays the labor. He assumes the risks of failure. The laborers are necessary to the scheme of course; but more necessary is the man with the brains to direct them. Labor alone does not produce all things, although without labor nothing would be produced. Nor would things worth while be produced without skill and foresight and Intelligence In planning them. The man who plans is entitled to his share of "profit," no matter what So cialist agitators may say to the con trary. Men must have profit, present or prospective, or they will not be producers. Mr. Barzee s criticism should be directed, therefore, not so much at the "system" as at the basic trait of human nature. Men will not produce for use, unices for profit first. Reverting to "free" things and pub lic schools It may be added that pub lic schools have been defended hereto fore on the ground that they teach children to become self-supporting and self-reliant citizens, respectful of the foundations of society which are private property rights. But the tend ency nowadays Is to make the public schools similar to free foundling asylums, whither fathers and mothers may send their offspring for free things. The old-fashioned virtues of personal Industry and self-dependence are rendered otisoietewitn certain classes. The citizen Is taught that he need not depend upon himself any more: government will look .after his health, food, shelter and rament and may soon endow him with an old-age pension, so that he need not save for a rainy day; also tho Government will or should shield him from pitfalls of Improvidence and drink. This Is the criticism of the public school system In the direction the sys tem is now going. Tho Oregonlan knows that criticism Is useless, but it deems the drift an evil one and de serving mention. TICK COMING DlSSOLl'TION. British politics under the impulsion of Lloyd-Georgo and Mr. Asquith, with some notable help from Mr. Red mond, has become more "frenchy" than it ever was before. French par ties usually profess to follow some ab stract thesis to Its logical conclusions in practice. They are nothing if not rational. The English, on the con trary, never have made much pre tense of logic in politics. They have been unabashed opportunists, doing what the exigency of the moment seemed to require and little more. It has been their statesmen's boast that they cared a great deal more for the Immediately practical than for the re mote and theoretical. Burke was in the habit of lauding this British char, acteristlc In his speeches. He thought It was one of the main reasons why the British government was so much more stable than the French. Tenny son finds an opportunity to ring it into his verses. He calls upon w to ad mire the excellent British way of broadening liberty down "from prece dent to precedent" in contrast with the "red fool fury of the Seine." But now one of the great British parties, the Liberal, has somewhat abandoned the traditional insular rev erence for precedent and betaken It self to logic. There was nothing in English history to warrant Lloyd-? George's attack upon the tax exemp tion of landed estates. The Idea of compelling the aristocratic landlords to help bear the burdens of govern ment was one which In Its Irreverent rationality might have come hot from Paris. In truth It came from America, but, as Cousin Charlotte would say, the principle Is the same. The entire Liberal programme of paternal benev olence to the laboring man and the poor Is exotic to England. It Is an Importation from the Continent, from France In part and still more from Germany. The deterioration of the British population demanded revolu tionary measures of reform and Lloyd-George seems to have been providentially provided' to discover what to do by studying the legisla tion of other countries. Apparently what he has already accomplished is only the beginning. The new legisla tion to be passed by the Commons be fore the expected dissolution of Par liament will extend the principle of old-age pensions no as to Include new beneficiaries. Later a bill Is promised granting salaries to members of Par liament and the war against the House of Lords goes merrily on. There will certainly be a dissolu tion unless the Lords promptly agree to resign thir veto power over bills coming from the Commons. Should they do .so the British Parliament will become virtually a single-chamber legislature. The Lords will be lit tle more than a chimera. They can not bo expected to absent gracefully to this sort of extinction, but it Is hard , , now tn(v can e(icape jt. if they cling to their prerogative there will be an appeal to the country in which they are sure to lose. England understands the issue now as it never did before. The voters recognize how- useless it Is to put a Liberal govern ment in power so long as the majority of wooden reactionaries in the House of Lords can block everything it tries to do. Mr. Redmond predicts that the ref erendum will be decided overwhelm ingly In tho Liberals' favor. Accord- ng to him the English vote is safo j while for once Ireland will forget her factional quarrels and fight as a unit for the great cause of democracy The extension of old-age pensions and the proffer of salaries to members of Parliament are of course bids for tho favor of the laborites. The recent Osborn Judgment, which forbids the unions to assess themselves to pay thodr representatives in Parliament, has embarrassed the labor forces and excited their bitter resentment. They demand Immedfafo legislation to re verse the courts, but Asquith's prom lse Is all they can hope for. No doubt It will be sufficient to keep them faithful to the present government since from the reactionary party they have nothing whatever to expect. Preparations for the new election have begun already and it promises to be one of the most Important and hardest fought ever seen in England, The Government has let the con- tract for six torpedo-boat destroyers, two of which are to have a speed of 30 knots per hour and to cost 1654 000 each. All of the contracts were awarded to Atlantic Coast yards, a proceeding which would Indicate that the Government had abandoned its former policy of encouraging the es tablishment and maintenance of yards on the Pacific Coast. Boosters for the New Orleans-Panama Exposition have been endeavoring to create a senti ment against San Francisco by clrcu latlng the report that union labor had ruined the shipbuilding industry in that city and would also ruiri' the ex position. It might have been a good plan to offset the influence of this story by making a special effort to se cure at the Bay City yards the build ing of at least one of these big de stroyers. Every county in the state must be gratified over the get-together spirit that will be in full blossom at the meeting of the Oregon Development League in Salens next week. The coming year Is fertain to mark the longest progressive step in the states history. In the matter of exploiting our resources and bidding for more people to make their homes with us. we are almost free from local jealous ies. When the great transcontinental lines whose publicity equipment cov ers the whole land, and every com mercial organization work hand in hand to one purpose, the results of their effort cannot help but be very large. More money is likely to be In vested In Judicious advertising during the next 12 months than ever before, and it will be paid back with com pound interest. We dare sny the Washington state officials need all the protection against book agents they can obtain from the Board of Control or any other source. This pest takes an extraordinarily vir ulent form in the young woman who entreats her victims to buy a book In order to help her through college. It would be cheaper to give nor the profit she expects to maka and let her keep the rubbish she tries to sell. With all the agitation against to bacco and whisky the revenue they yield steadily Increases. If the pro hibitionists were ordinary, sensible neople this would discourage them. But nobody would think of calling them ordinary and some say they are not sensible. So the war goes on. Football a a "promoter of amicable relations between colleges" shines with a brilliant radiance this Fall. The love -which Is interchanged be tween Eugene and Corvallis Is enough to make the reputation of the game forever. The two" big leaders of radicalism In each jfurty have been cast down and out and have nothing to say. Bryan sees his rival brethren win and Roosevelt sees his rival brethren lose, although each wrought his mightiest. Viewed in the light of the suffrag ette mobs in London yesterday it Is no wonder that Mrs. Pankhurst found the United States too slow and too conservative a community for her spe cialized devotion to the cause. October receipts of the Internal Revenue Department showed an in- crease of 1500.000 In taxes on fer- mented liquors. Voting more terri- tory dry does not check the consump- tlon of Deer. Tf 60 ner cent of the boys over 1Z In Colorado use tobacco, as is alleged, their mothers should eschew politics for awhile or make a vigorous cam paign for enforcement of tho laws. Press associations and special cor respondents have disappointed the reading public by failure to send out the Colonel's Thanksgiving pro gramme. Already there are Indications that the Democratic party would be In bet ter working condition if It had a small majority In Congress Instead of 63. Oregbn today has reason to be thankful for abundant harvests and Industrial peace. A jury can be depended upon to make a fine distinction of the many kinds of murder.' Just being an American citizen is a good reason t be thankful. WHAT THE STATES ARE DOING. Far Ahead of tbe t!on 'in Practical Conservation. New York Times. It was the editor of" the Outlook not Its contributing editor who defined what he called the New Stateism. as contrasted with the "New National ism" of Theodore Roosevelt, and who recognized Woodrow Wilson ns Its champion. Governor-elect Wilson, of New Jeriicy. Is not opposed to Increased efficiency in the exercise of Federal power. Hut he wants their efflciencv Increased, not their number. Tho temptation to In- crease their number has arlson from the Inefficient exercise of the powers reserved to the states. Tim problem will be solved to the people's atlnfac tlon when the states reassert thlr powers In all their vlcor. Just now the Government at Washington, In seeking to direct too many affairs in widely scattered portions of the on- t,s.rtr, t;,. l,o. ..rinltterf lis own affairs to be managed extrava- eantlv. It la todav in as bad a condi- tion as any of the states In worse con dition, even. While the attention of the Federal uovernment nag Deen uisiracie.. Its proper concerns, the attention of the states has been concentrated upon their own concerns. Thev have cleansed ,,i -.lo-noir,,- th1r Wislatlva halls. , . , uovernors oi states nave jui u elected upon platforms that pledge them to initiate, or, if already in progress, to make more eirecuve mo necessary reforms which Mr. Roosevelt urged along Improper lines. Governor elect Wilson's platform mandate to secure "tho careful conservation for tho benefit of all the people of the state of all water rights and nil natural resources utiil witHn the control of the state, by provisions which will effectu ally prevent their control or exhaustion by private corporations," Is repeated in the platform of Governor-elect Dix, of New York; of Governor-elect Foss, of Massachusetts, of Governor-elect Plals- ted, of Maine; of Governor Shafroth, of Colorado, who Is also Oovernor-elect; of Governor-elect Hawley, of Idaho, all Democrats; and of Governor - elect Eberhart, of. Minnesota; of Governor- elect Johnson, of California; of Governor-elect Oddie, of Nevada; of Governor- elect Vessey, of South Dakota, and of Governor-elect Mead, of Vermont, who are Republicans. By their platform pletlges, by the efforts of bodies of public-spirited citizens, and by direct affirmative legislation, it is evident to day that the individual states have forged far ahead of the Federal Govern ment In measures of effective conserva tion. In the National preserves not even an efficient fire-fighting service has been provided, while a sale of pub lic lands was made last month, equal to a strip three-fourths of a. mile wide across this continent, not to small set tlers, but to syndicates of rich land holders. Like comparisons may be made of the active tendencies in the states toward securing what Governor-elect Wilson calls " pitiless publicity " of corporate affairs; the personal responsibility of corporate directors; equal and just taxa tion; Juster employers' liability and workmen's compensation laws, and primary and ballot reform and corrupt practices acts all strictly state con cerns which Mr. Roosevelt In his speech at Osawatomle lumped together under the head of the "New National- sm," as matters Justifying amplifica tion of the powers of the Federal Gov ernment, with the Executive as the steward of the public welfare." The new and strong leadership of the Governors will make for harmony of action among the states. The House of Governors, which will convene at Frankfort, Ky., on the 29th of this month, should be immensely strength ened by the presence of such men as Plalsted of Maine, Baldwin of Con necticut, Harmon of Ohio, Bass, of New Hampshire, Dix of New York, Foss of Massachusetts, and Wilson of New Jersey, who are expected to attend. The recommendations for strengthening the organization of their states, which it is proposed that the Governors shall embody in messages to their respective Legislatures, will have a steadying ef fect upon the more radical states, while they will urge the apathetic states to necessary action. For conflicting, mis chievous and ill-considered laws which have largely hampered the relations of the states and their citizens measures will be framed and presented that will take account of the varying needs of states and communities, while applying harmoniously principles supported and demanded by the sentiment of all the people. By such measures, and executed in such a way, Woodrow Wilson would bring to bear the hearty co-operation of all the states In the work of governing tbe Nation. Republic and Democracy. ORCHARDS, Wrash., Nov. 22. (To the Editor.) In a recent Issue of The Ore gonlan you published an article in re gard to the womenjfc suffrage victory in this state. The arlliie closes with the statement or hopewthat there will be established In the Pacific Northwest "a true republic and real democracy." Will you kindly explain the relative meaning of the words republic and democracy as used In the above connection? Are they synonymous7 1 E. B. R. A "republic" is any government In which the suppeme power belongs to a body of men. Instead of belonging to one man. thus eparta was a repuonc though it had two Kings; Rome also. though Its senate was an oligarchic body and hereditary, and Venice in spite of th B ' nntt.r belongs t0 tne people and they may ex- erclse it directly or through representa tives. The United States is a represen tatlve democracy. Switzerland. In some cantons, has the pure, or direct, form, Not Gallantry After All. Manchester (N. H.) Union. There is, of course, room for question as to whether the State of Washington, which has Just adopted woman suffrag forbade smoking at tho polling places through deference to the feminine "ele ment among the voters, or because, con sidering current reports that women themselves are becoming inveterate smokers, the men are atraia ot being smoked out. So. PORTLAND. Nov. 2. (To the Edi tor.) Is a foreign-born male person eligible to hold the office of President of the United States, after having taken his full citizenship papers: r. R. Just What Taft Thought. Richmond (V'a.) Times-Dispatch. Things do not appear to be going Pin- chot's way nowadays, and the view Is growing that the country can get along very well without him. SOT READY FOR TOLSTOYISM. Practical World Will Xot Accept Xoted Russian! Doctrine. PORTLAND, Nov. 22. (To the Edi tor.) Your editorial in Sunday's edi tion anent "Tolstoi's Pessimism" ap pealed to the writer as a very force able presentation of that great Rus sian's life. His characteristics embodied in a lesser intellectual light would have hen termed frross eccentricities, but like Napoleon, Socrates, Alexander and I many Gf the wrold's mental giants, ( the light of genius mellowed those ! characteristics into virtue, ' The great P.us.slan, Whose life has passed to history, had searched the realm of human activity, so he thought, for peace of soul and had found none. hid delved into the life led by the young nobility of his class, and found It, like Solomon of old, to be vanity and venation, f Turning to the simpler life, he would have us o'er-leap ourselves and revert to barbarism. For that is the Inevitable, destiny of the race that refns'-s to cultivate tho brain. m tne peafantry ne round mat tnose w"" strove jor peace anu jirsLic ...v who strove for niin.rilutannf iralnnH nnlv nnnri-imlnn , . . ,...,,, h.nH '.,, ,,nn,rols puny man allowed the mighty and wicked to oppress without interven tion. ) The world Is rtt ready for Tolstoi's doctrine, nor very probably will It ever . . . hllman race has a mission to yujfn that no ecessitates resistance and the continual employment of the nnnu. Ills advice to the youth to ror- aK hf studies. If followed, carries us back to barbarism- places the shackles of slavery on our race and steeps the mind in Ignorance and superstition. Liberty is gained through knowledge by the masses despotism is fought by stupidity. We do not propose to dic tate to a mind like Tolstoi's, but if the grand old man of Russia had real ized more thoroughly that life is real, that life is practical, that laws gov erning man are as immutable as the world itself, he would have chosen a different view of the things that be. W. A. THOMPSON. EVIDENCE ADEQUATE TO CONVICT Cripprn Would Have Been Found t.uilty on Same Testimony Here. Washington Post. "There seems to be a general Impres sion among the people of the United States that Dr. Crippen was convicted of murder on inadequate evidence, but I do not think there is any foundation for that belief," said Georfte B. Tig ham, of Manchester. England, at the Shoreham. "I was in London at the time of the trial, and I read the accounts of it very carefully. The testimony in a big trial is published in detail in the big London papers. "I believe Dr. Crippen would have been convicted in any court in this country on the evidence offered. It is true that the evidence was circumstan tial, but It seemed to be none the less convincing. I didn't meet a man while I was in London who questioned the verdict of the jury. Since I have been in this country I have read of the con viction of a murderer in a Chicago court, I think on the evidence of his thumb prints In the house where the crime was committed. That was cer tainly circumstantial evidence, and no stronger, I am convinced, than the evi dence which was deemed sufficient to send Dr. Crippen to the gallows." Solving? the Normal Problem. Yakima Republica. As the result of the referendum vote In Oregon that state will have one nor mal school to support hereafter instead of three or four. The referendum is a clumsy affair, and is distinctly a step backward from the system of putting legislation in the hands of representa tives of the people especially qualified for the work; but sometimes we think it should be adopted in a qualified form in tills state. It may be applied to ap propriations, under such circumstances as prevail in Washington, to the great benefit of the public treasury. We have several institutions In this state which are unnecessary, and which owe their existence and expect to depend for fu ture maintenance upon a log-rolling sys tem which is now firmly fastened upon the State Legislature, but which would be closed up for good If the people could pass on appropriation bills. Among these institutions are two state normal schools. Hundreds of .thousands of dollars of the taxpayers' money have been expended on these utterly useless and enormously expensive institutions. One good normal school Is all the state ought to be asked to maintain. Becall tVorka Well Philadelphia Record. Sometimes unfit men are chosen at popular elections to positions of respon sibility through professional control of primary selection, sometimes as a mat ter of errant choice on the part of the voters. It is to provide a remedy fur such intentional misdoing or uninten tional mistake that the doctrine of "the recall" finds popular favor. There are many who think that the sovereign people in a state should have the like privilege with the individual employer to dispense at will with the services of an unfit servant. The recall seems to work very well where It has been tried. The fact that a bad egg can be rejected when Its quality becomes known ope rates as .a fine deterrent in, the process of original choice. Parents t S3 Have Ten Children. New York Tribune. Race suicide is not fashionable in Batiscan, a small town in the Province of Quebec. Edouard Jolicoeur, of Batis can reached Montreal a few days ago with his wife and 10 children. The number Is fairly large, but the fact that they are five pairs of twins and the parents are only 23 years old is stran ger still. Those Funny London Editors! Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Commenting on the statement that "Bryan doesn't care whether school keeps or not," a London paper expresses surprise that even a political defeat should rendi"r such an Intelligent man indifferent to the progress of education in his country. ' As unconscious humor ists the London editors continue to lead the world. Cause and Effect. Life. 'What went wrong with your auto we ask of while your wife was away? our acquaintance. 'I did," he replied, sadly. Dnnamto' the Proofs. Washington Post. The report that Peary is to be Min ister -io Denmark is not backed up by proofs. To Sarah Bernhardt. From the French of Edmond Rostand. in the Theater Magazine, In those dull decades, you alone. O fair, Pale Princess, yueen oi siuiuae, nave skill To wear a lily, wield a sword, and still The heart a moment, treading a broad stair. Tou rave and stifle in our neavy air You poetize, and aie oi love, ana Kill, And dream and suffer, working your hot will On helpless hearers, bound with your bright hair. Avid of suffering, you wound us all; Your plaints are echoed through a troubled nan. And down your cheeks 'tis our salt tears that steal. And sometimes, Sarah, when your fervent lips i Ppell magic, furtively you feel Tha kiss ot Shakespeare on your anger tips. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE The wit of Bishop Seth Ward amuses Nashville frequently. Bishop Ward, In company with twq Senators, came forth from a Nashville reception the other day and entered a waiting motor car. "Ah. Bishop," said one of his com panions, "you are not like your Master. He was content to ride an ass." "Yes, and so should I be," Bishoji Ward answered, "but there's no such ar.imal to be got nowadays. They make them all Senators." Detroit Free Press. Professor Blander Matthews, of Co lumbia, in one of his addresses on the I drama, said of an unimaginative and prosaic dramatist "He it was, I am sure, who in his youth, on being asked In examination what Shakespeare meant by the phrase, "Sermons in stones,' wrote in reply: " ' When passing by a tombstone you may learn the name and the-dates of birth' and death of the departed one, and also from the inscription a valu able moral lesson from his or her life. Walking along a road you may see from the milestones tho number of miles to the nearest towns, and thus acquire geographical information. Heaps of stones by the roadside indi cate that repairs are to take place, and so Indicate a lesson in neatness." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Musical Doctor stepped into the shop. His hair stuck out like stiff straws, and his joy of life was under his arm. Also, two buttons on his waistcoat were undone, so there was no doubt about his being a genius. "Aha, ahem, ahum!" purred the Mus ical Doctor, "E string for a violin, please." The man behind the counter looked flustered. He went to the shelf, took off a small packet, examined it care fully, examined it again, and then hesitatingly returned to the customer. "I beg pardon, sir," he began, dif fidently, "but this 'appens to be my first day In the shop, and yer might give me a little 'el p. The, fact is, there 'ere strings look all alike to me, an' I can't tell the 'es from the shes!" Tlt Blts. "X" Beidler, whose namo was John Xenophon Beidler, or something very much like that, hut who always was called "X" and who was one of the fa mous Montana pioneers, as well as a vigilante, was out on the plains one day with Liver-eating Johnson, an other well-known Montana character, when they were chased by a band of Indians. Johnson had a better horse than "X" and was soon ahead. He turned sev eral times and urged Bellder to hurry up. "Hurry up, 'X'," he yelled. "Get a move on!" "Dod-gast you, Johnson!" shouted Beidler as he spurred his horse; "do you think I'm trying to throw this race?" Kansas City Journal. Bishop Charles Wr. Smith, at a har vest dinner In Portland, said of the harvest spirit: "The harvest spirit is one of thank fulness, but there are some crabbed old farmers who couldn't be thankful if they tried. "I said to such an old fellow, as he conducted me over his farm on a golden Autumn afternoon and showed me a record harvest: "'Well, sir, this year, at least, you've got nothing, nothing whatever, to com plain of.' " T don't know about that. Bishop," he answered, with a shake of tha head. 'I'm afraid there'll be no spoilt hay for the young calves.' " Detroit Free Press. Pointed Paragraphs. Chicago News. It doesn't take a very sharp man tfl! cut a figure in society. The knocker usually gets his when the hammer rebounds. A boss girl may be all right, but SJ boss wife may be all wrong. A superior manner is one thing; a sus perior person Is another. Only a woman can enjoy being unn happy because she Is misunderstood. Some women can look swear words just as forcibly as some men can say j them The average married man often won ders how his wife can have so much faith In him. A woman may forgive a man for beating her If he did it because he was jealous of her. Advice to a girl who would be a housekeeper: First catch a husband possessing a house. Any man can make a fool of himself, but with a woman's help the job can be finished much quicker. States' Rights a Possible Issue. Toronto Globe. The great Issue In United States poli tics during the next decade will be states' rights. It is not likely to lead to any serious trouble, such as that which followed the assertion of states rights in regard to negro slavery. A dispute as to whether the National or the state government shall have the last word to say regarding the organi zation and control of Industrial corpor ations will not be settled by civil war, but it may result in years of party bickering and much heated discussion. The result of the duel, no matter which side wins, cannot fail to be good, be cause it will stir up the interest of the people and arouse the National con science. The greatest bulwark of lib erty is an awakened, informed and en ergized public opinion. The Best Literature. James Russell Lowell. One is sometimes asked by young people to recommend a course of read ing. My advice would be that they should confine themselves to the su preme books in whatever literature, or, still better, to choose some one great author and make themselves thorough ly familiaj- with him. For as all roads lead to Rome, so do they likewise lead away from it; and you will find that in order to understand perfectly and jveigh exactly any vital piece of lit erature, you will be gradually and pleasantly persuaded to excursions and explorations of which you little dreamed when you began, and you win find yourselves scholars before you are aware. Southern Women Trust Husbands. Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser. Washington state has gone on record as favoring woman suffrage, but it Is far enough off for the effect to he harmless In these parts, where . the dear women have enough confidence in their noble husbands to turn the affairs of state over to them. New Problem of Polling Booth. Boston Herald. The State of Washington, having ad mitted women to the suffrage, is likely, for the sake of the ladies, to prohibit the smoking of tobacco in polling places. But what of the women who insist upon the privilege of smoking "Just like men"? "Crackers" Too Busy for Initiative. Augusta Chronicle. Under the referendum system of Ore gon the voters had to vote on 32 ques tions of public policy. Men in Georgia, however, have to give their time and study to making a living. , m t !ame Sounds Like Hissing. Philadelphia Inquirer. It is entirely probable that Dr. Cooli doesn't like the sound of Knud Rass mussen's name any more than we da ourselves.