10 1: PORTLAND. OREGOJt. Entered at Portland. Oresoa, poetorflce a, Secocd-Claea Hatter. BobacrlbUon Rates Invariably la Advance. CBT MAIL.) Dally. Bandar Included, one year. ......a Dally. Sunday Included, six month. .... Dally. Sunday Included, three monlbJ Dally. Sunday Included, one monttt Dally, without Sunday, tone year.. Dally, without Sunday, six month. ... Daily, wuneui ounuay. inn ....... mn Dally, without Sunday, one month M weeaiy, one year i.50 Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, ona year CBT CAKBIF.R- (J uauy. runuij uciuucu, um- j - - -- Dally, Sunday Included, ono month...-. ; How to Bemlt Send r-oaioince ""-" der. ezpresa order or personal checa on you local Dan, stampa. coin Z..,'Z JAir at tha senders nek. Give poatottlc adore. :ln full. Including county and slate. , I restate Batee 10 to 14 pu J ?"ti" to 2a page. 2 cent; o to u P-- - .TT-V 40 to 6U pace. cant. Foreign postage. j taaBaata- OffloV.rrj , Conjt- e a Tor. roawca. cafO. Sieger bulldlna. Co E- B.niu ftin,. R J. Bldwait ! Market .treat. . . European uince no. a v.a". - W Loudon. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JTEV 10. 191. THE CALIFORNIA CASE. ..it.-. iiiatitv the action of fthe Republican National convention h aA4tin(r t Via t WO California Taft delegates In defiance of the expressed 'will of the people of that eiAta. testily asks a correspondent of me Oregonian. who offers further the fa- .rolUar remark mat me - cases were tried at Chicago -before ,the thief who stole the nomination for ;ilr. Taff . The Oregonian has not sought to Justify the convention in its action as to California. It will not. It has thought that it would have been wise to let California have a solid Roose velt delegation. It thinks so now, for California seems to be aflame with protest over the wrong done the state at Chicago. Somebody is always hurt ing California's feelings. It is too bad. ' But we will offer a few brief state ments of fact for the consideration ot out excited friend. Here they are: First The National Committee is- isued a call foi-a convention, distinctly calling for the election or aeieBi by Congressional districts, except in states where primary laws already in "force provided otherwise, f Second The State of California sub--omiAntlv nassed a Fresldential pri- i-mary law ignoring the historic prin ciple of district representation and i providing for the election, of all dele- ( gates at large. The avowed purpose was to have a solid 'Roosevelt delega tion at Chicago and to override the Taft minority, either m tongreiuiiai 'districts or in state, i' Third California went largely for Roosevelt but one district (San Fran cisco) gave a small plurality for Taft. Fourth The National convention took cognizance of the fact that the Roosevelt partisans had deliberately sought to override and defeat the Na tional convention's rule for district representation, and seated the two Taft delegates, leaving undisturbed the twenty-four Roosevelt delegates, i Fifth If California by its fiat may change the practice of a Republican 1 National convention as to the method of election, why may not California or an- other state change or ignore any "other provision of the call for a con vention, sucn, iur cAamiD, portionment? Sixth Is it California's sovereign right to prescribe the terms, - condi tions, limitations and qualifications of its delegates to a National conven tion, or the convention's right to de termine upon what terms, conditions and limitations California shall elect them? 1 We ask our disturbed friend to con sider fairly and candidly these sugges tions. We do not assert that the Na tional convention was -'holly right or entirely disinterested in seating the Taft delegates. Not at all. But we declare unhesitatingly th t it is a ques tion upon which honest men may hon estly differ. Thy all this wild talk about thieves and robbers because the majority at Chicago took one view of a troublesome problem and acted upon it? THE CALL TO THE PROGRESSIVES. One's first and last impression on reading the call for a convention of persons in sympathy with the Na tional progressives' movement is that it offers no sufficient reason for or ganization of a third party. The only valid excuse for so extreme a course la a. difference of opinion from exist ing parties on some outstanding issue which occupies the puDiic mina hdovo all others. Senator Dixon's call - de fines no such issue.. The call is addressed to those who "realize that today the power of the crooked political bosses and of the pilvileged classes fcemna mm is so ! strong in the two old party organiza tions that no help in the real inter : esta of our country can come out of j either." I The crooked political bosses and i privileged classes are not strong in ; either the Republican or Democratic ', party. By his course since the first year of his Administration, President Taft, the recognized leader of the Re-' niitilican narty. has shown his inde pendence of bosses and his unswerving -hostility to privilege. The Republican 'convention has approved his course and recommended a continuance of It. It has declared its adherence to popular rule as provided, in the Con stitution. The Democratic convention. 'bv its nomination of Wilson, who ex pressly rejected the support of the bosses and the privilege-seekers, and bv its Dlatform, proved its inde pendence of such control. : Before the Roosevelt men brand jthe existing parties as boss-ridden jthey should purge -their own ranks of bosses or stand convicted of hy Iprocrlsy. There are bosses, so called, iin the ranks of both old parties, but they do not control. So there are among the self-styled progressives. New York contributesa Barnes to the Republican party, a Murphy to the Democrats, but a Ward and a Woodruff to the progressives. Pennsylvania has lta Penrose among the Republicans, but it also has its Guffey among the Democrats, its Flinn among the pro gressives. So it goes in other states. It is a mere play upon words in many Instances to call the leaders of the opposition party bosses, for they can 'not hold their position without the jconsent of the party. A to nrivilesre. the party which counts among Its leaders Perkins, Mc- Cormlck, Hanna and Munsey is in a poor position to accuse others of being V.,i.H hr tha nrrvllesred. f The principles defined as those' "which distinguish the men to wnom he call is Issued are so general and hre so commonly accepted that any jnan of any party can consistently sub scribe tothem. : Who does not believe in a National progressive movement? It finds" eaf presslon in the platform of both. -old parties: We .all believe In progress, but we disagree as to what is progress. Who does not believe in "the right and capacity of the people to rule themselves." or that "government by the few tends to become government by the sordM Influences T' ,, Who does not believe in the guiding principles of legislation laid down in the call? They-are so general that either of the old pa-ties can with good show of reason contend that its plat form conforms to them. There is no occasion to talk of industrial revolu tion, for we are all committed to the general principles of industrial evolu tion laid down rr Mr. Dixon. w oil hoiiova in wholesome party government in the spirit of service to the whole country and "none of us deny . obligation to obey the eighth commandment in politics as In busi ness. If the allusion to the eighth .r.mmann'mAnt hAA anV reference to. the charge that delegates were stolen, the simple reply is that no delegates were stolen The varying statement of the number of delegates stolen, ranging from ninety down to fifty- two, discredit the charge in its en tirety. N , A party which comes Into being with no more definite principles than such as are accepted by all parties and with a charge that somebody stole some delegates brands Itself as a sorehead" party and will not go very far. - PORTLAND AND THE ELKS. Combining phrases that have been so much used as to wear off the lus ter but not the glory, the Best People on Earth are in the Best Place on Earth this week. They have landed in our midst, and, following incredu lous, gasp at open-handed hospitality, have become of us, for time being, when they depart and should they re turn. In a measure. Portland has not been unknown to them. The Lewis and Clark Fair seven years ago brought visitors from primal and intermediate noints of the compass, who saw tne city at. the beginning of its second growth, who were charmed by the wel come extended and plea ed by enter tainment that surpassed expectations, but that had an overshadow of the dollar mark, for an ever-present con sideration that year was the price cost. Tet it never obtruded, and nearly all hoped for a return, to visit or locate. " This time there is a difference. The event is Joyous, not sightseeing, or sor did. Members of the order, their wives and their- friends find a city of more than half a hundred square miles, compact In the business circles and with breathing room in which to dwell: its marts of trade veritable can yons deep between towering steel; its public utilities collectively an amaz ing wonder, not the least being abun dance of the finest water on the globe from the perennial shed of Mount Hood: a temperature that could no.t be bettered if made to order, with, sun shine, all day long , to. harmonize the northwest breee from the mouth of the great river; an atmosphere so clear as to show the surrounding peaks in their grandeur; a busy, work-a-day people, yet not so engrcssed to ojnit the smile, the handshake "and the w;ord -of welcome; contented citizens, proud in' their possessions, and5 ready and anxious to share with him who h're casts his lot. These visitors are great people. They-could not be Elks and be other wise, for they are of the- salt of the earth. They are -the-voltage of the, country, an Irresistible, force for good, and In annihilating distance to come to this far corner of the Nation they have conferred on Portland an honor that can be met only by the welcome they are receiving, the best the city has in the simple way it knows..'" , DEATH OF THE CAMORRA. . The conviction and condemnation of the Camorrists proves that organized government can destroy any criminal conspiracy, no matter how powerful, secret or widespread it may be, pro vided the government sets t work to extirpate it at any cost. The Camorra owed its long immunity to the fact that the Bourbon government of Na ples, under which it gained Its greatest power, was itself in essence a crime and was driven to make terms, with the secret band of conspirators, as a condition pf its continued existence. Since Naples became a part of united Italy, the Camorra has survived only because the government was not yet ready to undertake the task of extin guishing this secret government within its own domain. Having put the leaders of the Ca morra in prison for long terms and having branded them . as criminals. Italy has scattered the band of male factors which hs for centuries held Southern Italy in terror, but she- can not safely stop there. A society which has so long existed, fear of which has become traditional with the " people and which thrives on Ignorance, crime and that secrecy which magnifies its power manifold in the popular imag ination, dies hard. The fragments which remain free will have an in stinctive tendency to coalesce. Only by constant vigilance and relentless pursuit of . any who attempt to revive the conspiracy can it be finally extir pated. When that is done, the people of Southern Italy can breathe and speak freely and can live in confidence that their lives and possessions are safe from .the hidden foe. Then Italy can boast that she is truly civilized, truly free. THE CASE OF tVDGK ARCHBALD. ; By proposing to defer until after the election trial of the Impeachment charges against Judge Archibald certain Senators display their utter moral ob tusehess as regards the gravity of the case and their utter Incapacity to gauge rightly the condition of public opinion as to the position of Judges. To palter with such a case at a time when the whole country is full of discussion as to unfitness of some Judges, and as to the best" means of driving them from the bench, is crass Botirbonism .which can only bring upon 'those responsible the fate which befell the Bourbons. If Archbald is guilty of the charges which have been made against him by the unanimous vote of the House committee, he is unfit to be judge and the people have a right to be rid of him with the least possible delay con sistent with full hearing and fair con sideration of the evidence. It mat ters not whether Archbald Is convicted of a crime against the law or not; if the Senate finds him guilty of such conduct as betrays moral obliquity but does not constitute a crime, he is unfit to be a Judge and should be removed. The Constitution provides that Judges shall hold office during good behavior. That implies removal for bad behav ior. "A man may be innocent of crime and yet be guilty of bad behavior. The duty of the Senate is to bear this THE MORNING distinction- in Tnind'and -act -accord- inglr- - - - --" NTof-nnlv are thA neoDle entitled to it; to iat prompt trial of the impeachment A..hhaM htmspif ii pnuallv entitled t ni-nmnt Artion. It -Is intolerable that a 4nH a-n nmmfA rtf misconduct. , should lis under susDicIon a. day longer than necessary. If he be innocent, he antitlAd to nromnt vindication: is if .,n hA ahnnM lrnrvor his fate with nut HpIat. An -lmDeachment . corre- sponds to a grand Jury indictment. . and an lmpeacnea juage is as iuhj . M .rial a a fa a man entitled Indicted LU a -''" - for crime.r- That right is guaranteed by the Constitution. These considerations-have caused an impeachment trial to be held proced n . f thn hicrhest Drivilege, . which tuVu nrfvpdpnpe over all other busi- ness of the Senate. To attempt nAsthnnamont ta to subordinate -the ht. rr hnfh thA Twknnla. and the ac cused to mere political considerations which should have no weight. ' A CHAfcTAUQTJA SUGGESTION. The Oregon Chautauqua season is now open and the various assemblies are running full blast. We are not among those who look with cultured scorn upon these efforts to educate the great public- On the contrary, thv na.va our ardent sympathy. In our opinion it would be the best thing the colleges could do to adopt some of the Chautauqua ideas and open their doors more widely to the, people. There is no good reason why college Kimrui cVinnlrl he followed mainly by young folks. The Btudles are in many cases as well suited to age as to youtn, and it is merely a bad fashion which father and ' mothers from sitting side by side with their sons and daughters in. the college recita tion rooms. , There Is a large and growing 1 body of mature persons in the United States who would find in the college courses exactly the profit- BhUlO ICUluuu tt .livii -' - J who ought to be. made welcome by the 1-..- . . . 1 I Th. ncnnU tn u-hnm vaiiuus xavuiuca. j- i . - we refer are women who have reached a time of life when 'their family cares are no longer pressing and men who have retired from business. What could be more delightful for them than to renew their youth at college, as they now do for a short time each year at the Chautauquas? The benefit of this arrangement would not be all on one side. If the college provided profitable pursuits for men and women it would receive from them as much as it gave and probably more. The companionship of adults in their class organizations and social gatherings would be Invaluable to young students. Much of the wild hysteria of athletics would disappear if there were half a dozen retired busi ng na m An In "pan h college class. To fthese Individuals athletics would exist simply as amusement. 10 tne mis guided college boy they tend to de generate into a business. His elderly companions would teachVhim common sense and moderate his zeal. It may be suggested that college faculties are composed of adults who give the stu dents all the, mature companionship they need. But this Is irrelevant. The faculty is a separate body from the students and between them there is often a sorry lack of sympathy. What we are speaking for is a band of adults actually enrolled in college as mem bers of the various classes. We should expect quite inestimable benefits from it in all directions. THE PARTY OF, BY AND FOR ROOSE VELT. If we understand correctly the spirit and purpose of;' the new pro gressive party in Oregon, the sole rea son for its formation is that Colonel Roosevelt was defrauded out of a nomination for President at Chicago. The new party, under the able and disinterested direction of State Sena tor Kellaher and State Senator Jo seph, proposes to correct the great Chicago crime of 1912 and give him a nomination anyway. It' is only of passing Interest that Mr. Kellaher is a candidate for re-election as State Senator on .the Republican (not the Progressive) ticket, and SJr. . Joseph steadfastly holds on to the Job given him by his enthusiastic admirers within the Republican (not the Pror gressive) party two years ago. ' . - Is the fact that one man rather than another has been nominated 'by a great political party sufficient rea son to wreck the party and create 8i ntnsr? Ta it an issue of nersons rather than principles? Do these gentlemen of the -flowing nanaana ana tne tear ful eyes differ from the great body of thpir feilow-Reoublicans only over the question as to whether Mr. Roosevelt Is a more suitable candidate tnan mr. Taft?' - . "' - ,' It would appear that that Is all. If Mr. Roosevelt had been nominated, they would have remained Republlcr ans.- Now that h has not bsen nomi nated, they refuse to be Republicans. They declare also that the new party must name Roosevelt or nobody. The Progressive party hitches its wagon only to the Roosevelt star, and throws away the reins. A party of Roosevelt, by Roosevelt and for Roose velt, or any other man, cannot survive; A SCHOOL FOR ACTORS. . -In the 'July World's .Work David Belasco tells the public about the new school for actors which he is planning to open. He falls It a class, not a school, but it comes to the same thing. Its purpose Js to give young men and women a suitable preparation for suci cess on the stage. Mr. Belasco's wide experience has convinced him that such a class is needed badly. "Not' many of our younger American act ors," he says, "know how to speak English correctly or even how to ad dress a lady." Recurring to the same theme he adds that fin casting a play nowadays it is extremely difficult to find young men who know how to speak . English correctly, who know how to walk, how to address a lady." In Mr. Belasco's opinion the stage ought to be a school of morals and manners for the rising generation. The reader, is reminded that English, French, German and Italian parents send their sons to the theater to learn how to pronounce their native lan guage properly, how to demean them selves in good society, how to behave in emergencies. Who would think of sending a young man to the theater to learn anything of the sort, in this country? : J. It would be difficult to find a place in the United States outside the re sorts of the slums where the English language Is . spoken with less pro nt.tv than it ! an - the stasre. Even our best actors sin in this particular. Those who are sometmng less man the best glory in the brutal Indignities which they put upon their mother tongue. One of the first things which Mr. Belasco intends to teach in his school is elocution, which in our day has become almost a lost art. Among the principal charms of every really great actor la his beautiful enuncia OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY. tion of English. He can.be heard in every--part of the-theater whether he shouts or whispers and-.every syllable that drops from his tongue is perfect ly formed. The new generation scorns in. sneak distinctly. It mouths, lisps and sputters, tout it does not articulate. Many .people can remember a time when "elocutionists" used to go about the country exhibiting their art. Audi ences gathered to listen to them in schoolhouses, country . churches and public halls. They recited such selec tions as "The Polish Boy," "Hamlet's Soliloquy," "Curfew Shall Not. Ring Tonight" and a hundred more of the soma snrt Mnoh of it was senti mental, but none was bad and-' the beauty of their delivery was genuinely educative to their audiences. It pro vided for the rising , generation of Americans something of that language culture which Mr. Belasco says for eigners obtain at the theater. Of late the "elocutionist"" has disappeared and the .moving picture show, -with other things still less admirable, has tailor. V.4o nlan. Thft Til ft !! m RhOWS are silent, so they So not deprave the speech of the public even n tney iaii tn imnrove it. In this respect they are far ahead of the theater which actually - sets a wretched example. Girls who hear Mrs. Fiskefmumble out Inaudible lines in Rosniersholm must think It fine to imitate her. When hnva hoar n. noDuIar actor sneak like a North End tough they naturally do the same. We are imitative animals, as Mr. Belasco well says, and owing to the -total depravity of our natures we are more apt" to Imitate the bad than the good. .. Mr. Belasco believes that one of the consequences of his actors' school will be an uplift of the morals of the stage. He. does not accept the opinion that "the stage- is Immoral because the public so decrees." He holds that the public . prefers an invigorating moral atmosphere at the theater and that it would be a good investment to present elevating plays, or at any rate plays which do not debauch the conscience. How to do so is the question. Mr. Belasco believes that the key to the problem is the adequate education of actors. Instead of pleading fallacious ly that plays can not rise above the morals of the public his doctrine is that they can not rise above the mor als and manners of the actors. Given a troupe jwho are ignorant of good English, vulgar in their habits and of slipshod ' morals and' it IS useless to think of their presenting a play which can elevate the .standards of the pub lic. -Such a conjpany of actors would make "Ghosts" itself an incitement to vice and Milton's "Samson" low, v Mr. Belasco intends to pay all the expenses of his school. By advertis ing in the newspapers he has collected a great number of applications from which he will select the most promis ing. "If I find a youth of promise," Via mvh "whn must suooort himself while he Is studying, help will be given to him." If any student nas persons dependent upon him employment will be found for him and' It is a fine trait of Mr. Belasco's scheme that this em ployment will always be such as to de velop the student and not retard him. "Wherever he is placed anff whatever work is given him to do, it wlll.be with a thought of its influence upon his development and his future." What a" blessing If would bev if some of this spirit could be introduced into the public schools. By teaching -actors to be cultivated gentlemen Mr. Belasco hopes to improve .their social stand ing. . It is his ambition, he tells us, to bring the day nearer when "the stage will take rank. as a serious profession, the equal of law or literature.!',. ?That day may come , sometime. It can do no harm to work for it. . : - -; -:; - r Reassurance is given by Henry Clews' financial circular to those who see in political conditions a source of uncertainty as to the business out look. Since he finds 'hat the political atmosphere has cleared since the Bal timore convention and that business conditions -are essentially" sound and thA .vnn mitlnnk crood. 'nOBe but the speculators need worry about the lull in speculation. . xne country is in a BtatA nf healthv orosDerity and will continue to be so, no matter who is elected President. , , The ancient tunnel which has been accidentally discovered at Brownsville was dug by the famous pirate Captain WA-mann two hundred years ago as a place of deposit for his treasures. The gold and diamonas win oe xouna at the end of the tunnel under a fin-ntone in an lronbound chest. To raise the. flagstone the seeker must say open sesame tnree times, when it will stand on edge .and turn into a negro slave who will hand over the key to the .chest. s - It was a remarkable instance of the effect of mind upon matter when the clock on Washington street stopped exictly at 11 Monday night. We know of no other example so striking unless it be "My Grandfather's Clock," which stood ninety years on tho floor and which, according to the poet, he used to wind with a lightning rod while he perched on the top of the door. This clock stopped short, never to go again, when the old man died. "7 1 A valuable book of "reference Is "Notables of the Southwest," a re cently issued volume of the Press Ref erence Library. It contains first-class half-tone portraits of the leading men of the Southwest, with brief biograph ical sketches. No newspaper or li brary which desires to keep posted on the men who are in the front rank among citizens of the growing South west can afford to be without this book. ' ' ' The Colonel invites the political lame, the blind and the halt to come unto him and be lathered With the Progressive brush. ' Portland's latest murderer could not get away, and may make, another tally in the dropfest next December. . : The time is between- crops of roses, yet all who have them should bring bouquets for the visiting womenfolk. If there be criminala"n Portland these days, civic pride will Justify their death by torture. . Regrets go to the nainesake on the Atlantic shore, for now there is-but one- Portland. i Three times three for Admiral Rey nolds, who sent the Oregon here. ; Alaskan volcanoes, are giving the Elks a long-distance salute. Nobody wonders any more why pur ple is the royal color. . '. The lonesome man is he who- wears no decoration- JULY 10, 1913. Henry Clewa Flnda Situation ClaartnK and Bnalneaa Conditions Sound. '. new YORK. Julv S. The close of the Baltimore convention and removal of all doubt as to who would be the can didates in the coming election exerted a favorable effect upon business .in general. The tariff feature, however, of the Baltimore platform excited some attention and started a selling move ment wnicn was acceieratca uy yivm.- ... 1.4 ,1.. -uanA ThA Lan iiifi v . b " ..... . Wilson plan of tariff for revenue only is lineiy to prove oisiuroinis, amcs manufacturing . interests often need ,TnA nvrttAttiAn tn AnmlltA thA h i BtK cost of labor. ' Revision may be neces sary, but it should come one scneauie at a time or by some other gradual and conservative method. Technically the market Is unsettled for the time being and any further advance would be likely to bring out additional long stock. Asle from approach of Summer quiet and the vacation period, there are signs of better times ahead. , Essential con ditions are sound. There is-no over expansion in either the financial, com mercial or Industrial fields. The po litical situation continues to clear. Each week makes It more evident that extreme radicalism Is on the wane. The country wants no excesses in either conservatism or progressivlsm. It is evidently going to select at the next election e man who possesses the happy medium between these two policies. Of course, in the battle between two po litical parties a good deal of smoke and confusion must be expected. But thTough the conflict there is reason to hope that we are likely to emerge Into more stable conditions than have ex isted in the last two or three years. Progressivlsm is established; not the kind that tears down and destroys, but the kind that builds up and establishes institutions more in line with the Inter ests and will of the people than has been the custom in the era which is now passing away. Capital has been suffering for Its past misdeeds. The penalty has been severe. In the future better standards of business conduct will be imperatively necessary, and so long I as our great financial leaders maintain a 'closer regard for public welfare they are likely to be less sub ject to the attacks of popular disap proval. In commercial circles more attention is paid' to crops than politics. We have had another week of favorable grow ing weather In nearly all parts of the country, and the agricultural outlook has been growing steadily better for the last three or four weeks. The con fidence thus Imparted will tend to en courage merchants to stock up for a good Fall trade, which is sure to fol low another profitable harvest. The railroad situation shows steady Improvement. Several roads report de cided gains in gross, although net re sults are sometimes unsatisfactory owing to the large Increase in expenses. Probably there will be no strike on part of the operators whose demands for better wages are now In course of arbitration. Bank clearings Indicate a larger commercial activity in all parts of the' country; the weekly Increases being maintained in Bpite of lessened speculative activity. There has been no abatement in the expansion of our foreign trade, which, compared with a. year ago, continues to show liberal gains in both imports and exports. . As an Indication of the revival of enterprise, it may be noted that the ne'w incorporations for June aggre gated over 1280,000.000. as a-Kainfit $250,000,000 last year and 1230,000,000 in 1910 The new security issues In June were also very large, having amounted to nearly $300,000,000. as against 238,000,000 a year ago. This brings the total new flotations for the first half year up to the extraordinary sum of l,557.000.00O, against $1,229, 000,000 a year ago. Some deduction must be made from these figures for refunding operations, but If 25 per-cent were made on this account it would stm show a record-breaking ' demand for hew capital.- The readiness with which this- mass of new issues has been ab sorbed is phenomenal.- The expendi ture of these vast sums means a marked revival in industry and a good demand for labor. No better example could be found of the close community of inter est between-capital and labor. Railroads have shown a smaller ad vance than industrials. - Investors of late have been- turning to the lattei, owing to the excellent dividend record which many of them have been able to maintain in spite of strong adverse conditions. ; , Prospects of continued tariff agita tion check business somewhat, and for the present a conservative policy is ad visable in spite of improving general conditions. We are not yet beyond the danger of crop scares, and any further advance at this time is likely to stimu late the sale of long stock by big hold ers which followed the Baltimore nom ination. A. better trading market is In prospect HENRY CLEWS. A REPLY TO RUDYARD KIPLING. Woman Inaplred to Write Verse by Reading Noted Poem. PORTLAND, July 8. (To the Editor.) On the editorial page of The Sunday Oregonian, June 30, appears Kipling's "The Vampire,'.' published by request As there are generally two sides to a story would you-kindly publish Felice Blake's answer to "The Vampire?" ......... A READER. A WOMAN'S ANSWER TO 'THE VAM PIRE." . By Felice Blake. , A fool thera wa, and aha lowarad her prlda . (Even as you and I.) ' To a binch of conceit In a maacullna hide We "aw th. fauiu that could not b "Hed. But the fool saw only his manly side . (Evan as you and I). Oh, the love she laid on ner own heart's (Witatrhecare of her head and hand). Belonn to the men who did not knows find now she knows that he never could know) : . And -did not understand. A fool there was, and her best "she ave (Even as you and I) Of noble thoughts, of gay and grave (And all were accepted as due to the knave) But the fool would never her folly save (Even as you( and I). . . Oh the stabs she hid, which the Lord for bid Had ever bn really planned, Sbe took from the man who dldn t know (And nowshe knows he never knew why) And did not understand. The fool was loved whlla the game was new r ' (Even as you and I), And when It was played she took her cue (Plodding along aa moat of us do) Trying to keep his faults from view (Even as you and I). Apd It Isn't tha ache of tha heart, or Its break " ' ' . That stings like a white-hot brand; It'a the learning to know that she raised a god. And bent her had to kiss the rod. For one who could not understand. What Every Woman Knows. Chicago Jouraal, That lodge sessions do not always last until -8 o'clock in the rooming. That sudden -and vigorous talk of poverty by her husband means no elec tric car this year. . That she can safely drop into her husband's office any time if she make a regular practice of it That she cannot -sharpen a lead pen cil or trim a corn satisfactorily . with a safety ' razor. , That it is certainly a great mystery what her "husband does with all his money. ,, That" her mother-in-law was really not such a magnificent cook as certain party would have her believe. That the woman next door is ex travagant and is living beyond her hus band's Income. ; ' ( TAxntr4"t-OF"rcATa i s ": advocated Writer Declares Voluntary Hnmane Ef forts Not Adequate. WOODSTOCK, July 9. (To the Edi tor.) After reading an article in The Oregonian Sunday under the heading of "Finding Homes for Stray Cats," I have been provoked to give you some facts to correct the false impression that such a misstatement of the actual con ditions existing at the present day in this city would convey to the general reader. Having been engaged in this rescue work for some years In this city and studied closely the denouement of the-, cat question from a humanitarian standpoint I am afraid, should I at tempt to enter Into detail in refutation of the article In question, that I should encroach too largely on your space, so I will merely touch " on the salient points, taking them up seriatim. Portland has a rescue home for cats. But it is not on the Taylors Ferry road by any means. Some eight months ago the Oregon Humane Society hired Mr. and Mrs. Short to take the homeless cats as they were brought there and "take care of them"; in other words, kill them. Some few were retained occasionally from the general slaughter but that was the exception. xwo months ago the Oregon Humane Society withdrew its support from the Shorts and are at present taaing; care oi the homeless cats wherever they are found. To the beBt of my knowledge there never have been taken to this so-called Rescue Home, all told, 100 cats. Very true, Mrs. ehort should have much praise for the good work she has done with tffe means at her com mand. - The hospital spoken of in the article Is a myth, as the. general publlo would understand the word "hospital," and we lovers jof the feline tribe know verv well and realize! every day that we are mere pigmies in what the writer of the article terms "sclentinc treat ment" how very often our hearts go out to the poor dumb creature, may hap with a broken leg, and we stand Impotent to give it any relief except by an anesthetic, because of our dense Ignorance of even the common remedies that are necessary for their relief. . I have always felt in reading of cat rescue homes In other cities, what a farce Portland's rescue home appears to be. And let me say here that the resoue home for animals and especially cats, is but a subsidiary method ' of dealing with the question of the un trammeled breeding of the common do mestic cat Better far that we should enact some sort of legislation recognising the cat as a domestic animal and then place a tax upon the cat making his master responsible to the city for his proper care and treatment and amenable to the law for keeping an animal that was a nuisance to his neighbor. Returning to the main subject it Is very pleasing to me to know that Portland has among her residents some large-hearted people, (the ladies predominating) who are constantly on the alert to care for these much-abused animals. They are giving their time, their money their sympathy In this cause, and in my humble opinion they surely are nature's noblemen. I Have said that Portland has a res cue home. Yes. it has; and It is a res cue home in every sense of the word. It was founded at Woodstock in July, 1909, and has been in operation ever since. Its founding was the result of a conference between three ladles whose lives are largely made up of this humanitarian work. This home has had some little support from vari ous quarters; the most of the actual care of the cats, however, having been borne by the lady who conducts the home. These few lines are Inspired by the writer because the truth In the matter should be known;' and the honor is due (if we can say there is any honor) to those who are working day by day for the amelioration of the conditions of the dumb animal, working quietly, unknown to the community, at large, but working, and living with the pros pect that some ' day the littie haven they are making will haven the whole group., A CAT LOVER. n. -. .vtiiA nnhllahAd In The OreKO- nlan wag written by one who visited the Short home and took several pic tures. Conditions as he viewed and .understood them were faithfully re corded. . t A NICKEL IN THE SLOT CAFE. Automatic Food-Selling Devices Vued With Success In New York dry. New York Herald. Here Is one place where striking waiters hold no terror, as all the food stuff Is served automatically after the same has been sufficiently coaxed with a 5-cent piece. This new Utopia In foodland Is In Broadway, between Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth streets, on the shady side. It Is known as the Automat , , , If you want a piece of pumpkin pie you drop a nickel in a slot so desig nated and the luscious yellow pastry fairly Jumps out and greets you. Cof fee, soup, cocoa and other liquids which do not require an all-night license to serve squirt out ; like a Yellowstone Park geyser with milk or cream at tached. Food in germproof tissue paper wrap pers flops out from glass inclosures at every angle. Hot and cold lunch. Is served in the Automat and it is pos sible to obtain a dish of Ice cream from the refrigerator slots. If you desire any of the tailor-made food, such as toast omelet etc.. you must show your faith by depositing a coin and waiting for the same to be prepared.. The Automat was opened to the pub. Ho several days ago. It is a preten tious establishment costing more -than $150 000. John Fritscher, of Philadel phia, is the inventor and is here to see that the operation of the food machine Is satisfactory. A Question of Namea. Youth's Companion. In some of the country districts of Ireland It is not an uncommon thing to see carts with the owners', names chalked on to save the "Pense of painting. Practical jokers delight in rubbing out these signs to annoy the owporfl A constabulary sergeant one day ac costed a countryman whose name had been thus wiped out unknown to him. "Is this your cart my good man? "Of course it Is!" was the reply. Dp you see anything the matter wld it? "I observe," said the pompous police man "that your name is o-blltherated.' "Then ye're wrong." quoth the coun tryman who had never come across the long word before, "for me name's O'Flaherty, and I don't care who knowg It" - ' ' The Interval After Scbool. "Goethe," by Joseph McCabe. During his boyhood Goethe shrank from the boys who were his schoolfel lows as he found most of them very rough. One day a few of the boys cut twigs from a broom and beat his bare calves. As his father had strictly for bidden disturbance during school hours, Goethe bore it stoically until the hour struck, and then he fell on the boys with terrific rage. ' A Strategist In' Politics. Washington (D. C Herald. "What do you mean by all this, elo quence denouncing-a-tariff on water melons? I have never heard of any trouble about a watermelon tax." "Neither have L" replied Senator Sorghum: "but you ee I am after the colored votes." . Gasoline Vapor, Air and Gaa. ' New York Press. Simple apparatus for the manufacture of gas from 98 per cent air and 7 per cent gasoline vapor has been Invented by an Australian. j Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of July - 10. 180X ASTORIA. Julv 8. The good people of Astoria and vicinity to the numtoar of about 400. under the management of the teacher and scholars of the free district school of the village, assem bled on the 4th Inst at the schbolhouss at 11 o'clock A. M. and marched to the green on Shively's Point adjoining the town, where the following programme of ceremonies was carried out: Singing bv scholars. "Hail Our Country 8 Natal Morn"; reading of the Declaration of Independence by Master Horace Brown, singing by choir, "America"; address by William L. Adams, Esq.; music. Hail Columbia by Home Band; -mis cellaneous speaking by County Super intendent of Schools, etc.; dinner on the grounds by children first, of whom there were 150 present: singing, -"Star- Spangled Banner," by choir; sports. In the evening we had a fine exhibition of fireworks, a ball and other social gatherings. , Chicago. July 1. The situation be fore Richmond may be explanled as follows: General McClellan determined to change the base line of his operation from the Chickahominy to the James River, in order to bring the troops nearer together and delude the rebels Into a tran. The rebels Improved the occasion to attack the'rlght wing while it was changing the front posiyon. Their fire was strong and its onslaught was made with terrible desperation, but did not succeed In changing, the posi tion of our line and the rebels dirt not gain any advantage. Washington, June, 26. In the Senate court of impeachment in the' case of West H. Humphrey Judge of the Dis trict Court of Tennessee, the accused was today declared guilty and Judg ment pronounced. He is to be removed from office and be disqualified from holding or enjoying any office of hon or, trust or profit under the .United States. We understand that Couch's wharf Is to be extended 110 feet further down stream shortly. SCOTLAND IN SERIES. OF PHOTOS Scenes' in Sir Walter Scott's Books Shown at Eaat Side Library. PORTLAND, July 9. (To the Ed itor.) The fear that many of the ad mirers of Sir Walter Scott may miss the opportunity, to see- the marvelous collection of nearly 200 photographs illustrating his country, leads me to point out that a noteworthy exhibit Is now at the East Side Library, East Eleventh and Alder streets, and will remain until Saturday, being a loan from th American Federation of Art. It was the photographer's happy idea to give careful study to Scott's poems and novels and then to go with auto and camera all over Scotland, Northern England and Wales in quest of authentic Scott landmarks, espe cially of the many crumbling castles which the novelist "rebuilt in his im agination and filled with the children of his fancy," a surprisingly large number of the ruins being exactly ai they were in his time. An example of this is Norham Castla. a visit to which Inspired Sir Walter to write "Marmion." A mere shell of th structure remained standing, but il suggested to the mind of the poet a great beautiful castle filled wltll knights and ladles, and with all at tendant medieval pageantry. A pho tograph of the ruin shows what sug gested the poem. ' - As a boy, Scott had traveled ex tensively, both In the Highlands, and Lowlands of Scotland. There were no railroads and fw coach roads, but Scott was a superb horseman, and could maintain his seat in the saddle many hours without apparent fatigue. It is known that .he once rode 100 miles In a single day and composed a poem on the way. This fondness for riding- enabled him to venture into every nook and corner of his beloved Scotland, and his marvelous memory made it possible for him to store up for future use the stories connected with the scenes which he visited and all the legends and ballads which he heard repeated by thosej with whom he came in contact. The photographer, Mr. Olcott, who had pneviously . photographed the George Eliot and Mrs. Humphrey Ward country In much the same way, began at the little village of Gllsland. where Scott mt Miss Charlotte Carpenter In the Summer of 1797 and to whom he "popped the question" at the famous "popping stone." Their explorations together during their courtship gave Scott material for the "Bridal of Triermain" and some of the Incidents In the "Lay of the) Last Minstrel," "Marmion" and other poems, several of these scenes being, shown In the pho tographs. ".' ' ' The next stop wan at Dumfries, where Is the Midsteeple, the scene of the trial of Helen Walker. - For months Mr. Olcott traveled through this country arid the partial result of his work will delight the eye of any lover of nature or art. - J. J. HANDSAKER. Cold Follows Volcanic Eruptions. .. -nnr vn- Ti a Tn th Kdltor'.) rUAlUVil w lAij v - I noticed In The Oregonian yesterday an article on the eruption of Katmal volcano, and in 1019. uioroins o v.. a severe earthquake' in Alaska. One important point In connection i . - . i .. ,Hni urh, nrd. HAemS to be overlooked; that is, the period of cold or cool weather that Is likely to follow. When Krakatqa Diew up in i", ... .-i. ia.aH arnunrt thA world. firlV- lia iiaiica iiwu.v.. . - - Ing us red sunsets for more than a year, the temperature of the whole earth was temporarily reduced. This was so i. - avA In America- on the ODOO- site side of the earth from the eruption, that Ice one-half inch thick formed In .w. nfi.ai.oinni in November of that HID iU10DlDOtf k" - - year. Only the thinnest skim -of Ice ordinarily lorms in tne jinnniooij'i'i, In the dead of Winter, and one-half Inch had never been known in Novem ber before. ' ' Again, when tne eruption gi . j A o. TlArA another COln r-eiee umuuj - SDell occurred in Eastern and Southern W .1 AAl.V Kftllt United states, i o ui """" - n--. a t that time. Mv ob- tne x-aujuu v' " - --- - servation has been that the tempera ture of the vicinity oi an ci ui"ii always temporarily lowered. And I think we may expect the Summer and ... . ,1.1. n h cooler throua-h- j? ail ui luia j L.. k v out the Northwest and Alaska than It would have been nw nut aunn erupted. . .. ' ' . By another year ma ouu wm u Tiirnllv have restored the thermal equilibrium. J. H. ABBOTT. Innocent Canae of AIL Kansas City Star. It was a windy day in downtown New York and the people who , hur ried along the streets air seemed anx ious to get under shelter. . But some thing had . happened! Just as Jones turned a corner he came upon another man gazing fixedly at a third-story window across the street, and, scenting a disaster of some kind, he, too, stopped and looked. In less time than It takes to tell it the street was congested with people, all staring at the upper win dow. Then Jones, noticing the gaping crowd, turned to the man from whom he got his cue and said: 0 "Would you mind telling me -what you are looking at?" "Oh, I'm not looking at" anything," growled the other. "I've -got -a stiff neck." ' A Man's Electrical Energy. Indianapolis News. Electrically speaking, the average man each day ' dissipates about two and a half kilowatt hours of energy In motions, muscular action,-. mental exertion and heat radiation,