THE SUNDAY 0BEG0XIA2T, PORTLAND, JULY 13, 1902. rntered at the Postofnee at Portland. Oregon, as oecond-class matter. IlEVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall ipostajre prepaid. In Advance) Dallr. 'with Sunday, per month pj Bally. Sunday excepted, per year " Dally, with Sunday, per year J Sundnv. Twr war .......... yU The Weekly, per year............... JThe "Weekly. 3 months 1 so so To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered, Sunday exceptea.ljc Dall), per -neck, delivered. Sundays lncladfidOC POSTAGE RATES. . United States, Canada and Mexico: 30 to M-page paper............... 14 to 25-page patter .10 Forelcn rates double. JCews or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the nanw or any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." Eastern Business Office, 43. 44. 45, 47. 45. 40 Tribune building. New-Tork City; 510-11-1-Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Pal ace Hotel new stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Butter street: F. TV. Pitts. 100S Market street; J. K. Cooper Co , 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand. Frank Scott. B0 Ellis street, and 2. "Wheatley. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 530 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 205 Bo. Epring street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 429 JC street. Sacramento, CaL For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 517 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, S3 "Washington street. For cale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co, 1203, Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake 2 Co., 77 W. Second South street. For aale In Ogden by C. H. Myers. For sale In Minneapolis by B, G. Hearaey & 3Co.. 24 Third street South. For sale in "Washington, D. C., by the Ebbttt House- newa stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Eenfirlck, 906-012 Seventeenth street! Louthan Mb Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. ICth and Lfewrence street; A. Series. Sixteenth and Cur tis streets; and H. P. Hansen. TODAY S WEATHER Fair, "with, northwest Ifcxiy -winds. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem $erature, 73; minimum temperature, 64; pre clpllatlon, none. PORTLAND, SUXDAY, JULY 13, 1002. 2SIOKEY AND MORALS. It is a sound philosophy that of Mr. 'tWatterson "when ho teaches that the 'yoijng man should he brought up with a higher ideal than that of money-making; that he should bo taught there are 'things in this "world more important rthaa bonds and mortgages, and that happiness after all seeks not tha envl ous palace. any more than the squalid hut. It reminds us of the marble pile 'on Fifth avenue described by Mr. Elbert Hubbard, from -which happiness fled away and entered a mud-thatched cot tage in Ireland, where six rosy children Blept Boundly-at night on one bed of straw. "Wo shall not call in question the soundness of the Wattersonlan phil osophy, which seems, by the way, to inform this year's annual addresses of the college presidents; but there may be a question aa to tho urgency of its bearing. Is the average young man, as Mr. "Watterson seems to think, in danger of becoming a miser? Are the temptations that confront American society, as the college presidents seem to think, those of devotion to money-getting? Is avar ice our National sin, and are the really dangerous pitfalls in our -way those that inordinate -wealth has dug? Not to prolong the inquiry needlessly, let us say at once that tho average-young man seems to us moro likely to turn out a spendthrift than a miser; that more Americans suffer from improvi dence than from stinginess and that the maxims of Epicurus are in less demand for the National safety than tho say ings of Poor Richard. Our rich men are scattering their millions in spectac ular and often undlscrimlnatlng bounty, and one reason they do so is that if they don't their heirs -wilL The passion for -wealth is rarely strong enough to in duce its victims to practice the neces sary self-denlaL Acquisitiveness is proverbially the source of multitudinous -wrong-doing. Tet if these forboding college presidents of New England -were required to educe a historical demonstration of their the ories, they might find themselves in awkward straits. The New England ITankee was a model of acquisitiveness, not to say sharp practice, but his mor als have been highly regarded. The passion for money-getting Induced in hJm. assiduous toll and rigorous self denlaL He got rich, but if his riches led him astray, his descent to profligacy has escaped record. Morgan is very rich, but his church record is exem plary; so is Rockefeller's; so is John JWanamaker's. Carnegie's" millions have left him untainted with suspicion of moral lapse. It is possible there is some disciplinary force in the earning 'and saving of money Jhat imbues the mind- -with self-control. Inheritances .and lottery winnings are apt to undo their beneficiaries, but the decay of society may bo long deferred if it waits on the moral collapse of those who earn their own fortunes, however vast. All the old saws about the evils of wealth were largely based upon the theory and partly established fact that great possessions were once the mark of violence or fraud. Before the advent of highly developed commercial life and the evolution of credit, immense for tunes represented the proceeds of con quest Jn war, or palace intrigues, or feudal abuses, or ecclesiastical oppres sion, or common brigandage, or cruel usury and chicane. When Shakespeare was written and the Bible was trans lated, great wealth was not acquired in the honorable ways through which our commercial civilization obtains it. Tho proverbs accordingly, are mal apropos If not anachronistic. The rich man is not necessarily the enemy of the human race he was once accounted. It is a most impressive fact that tho Jewish race, whose sacred writings teem with denunciation of wealth, from the assertion that the love of money Is the root of all evil, to the apotheosis of the poor and the qualified denial of paradise to the rich, has itself demon strated that the commercial passion can go along with the highest personal and domestic virtues. The Eblonism of the Hebrew Bible could find no more de structive antithesis than the rich and upright American Jew. In the death of N. K. SItton at his home near McMlnnville a few days ago Yamhill County loses one of its oldest and most respected citizens.- A resident of that county since 1843, Mr. SItton had seen the development of a savage into a civilized community, and the passing of a territory scarcely known, even by name beyond Its borders to a state the resources of which are at tested In thousands of happy, prosper ous homes. Settling in Yamhill County hut a few years later than Fletcher, and Cook, and Crawford, and Bailey, and Martin, and Newby, and Bird, and Perkins he survived all of these by many years, and, a cheerful old man, passed, serenely -to his rest as the la turn had passed to theirs. Many tender memories of pioneer life in Yamhill County cluster round these names and others that personal knowledge ot those early times suggest. "With the passing of each pioneer some of these memories are revived only to "fade again Into the mists that presage eternal eclipse. THE REIGN OF HUGGER-MUGGER. The most cursory observer of public life must often have been struck with the falsity of much that passes for trustworthy information concerning the conduct of measures and Ihe acts of men. Ostensibly we have a true and faithful record of what goes on, but the surface account is generally recog nized as an inadequate Interpretation of the real motives and causes In opera tion. Then we have an inner circle of professedly "Inside" Information, upon which certain favored correspondents pride themselves, but which escapes the inveracity of the perfunctory narrative only in degree. The bottom truth is seldom or never told, till long after the death of the active participants. The cause of Napoleon's aversion to Jose phine, the source of Carlyie's. domestic infelicity, the reason why Sumner was retired from the head of the Senate committee on foreign relations, the use of morphine by Poe, the differences be tween Dewey-and Anderson at Manila are a few of the things which fatuous courtesy conceived must be concealed throughout the substitution of some harmless or mischievous Action. Politics is full of these humbugs. The Minnesota delegation is home from Congress and seeking to excuse itself for its opposition to Cuban reciprocity, made doubly odious from the act of their Republican State Convention in strongly indorsing the Administration's proposals. A great many high-sounding explanations have been givei, but all shrink, except In private, from an nouncing the true one, which is that nothing could bo done with the so called sugar Senators, and the whole thing consequently went by the board. Of course, this true explanation should be given freely .and jfrankly to the world. This Is not done, because the Minnesota Senators hate to incur the enmity of the sugar Senators; and upon the altar of this misguided courtesy they suffer themselves to be under the cloud of havitfg opposed the President, and to labor, together with their party throughout the campaign, in a tariff reform state, under the suspicion of having betrayed tariff reform. Our public life is full of just such mistaken notions, and the interference thereby offered to progress and justice is most serious. Society needs a deliverer from the idiocy and injustice of its polite lies. Every event of any magnitude is the signal for a small army of persistent busybodles to arise and Insist upon per version of the truth. If a married man runs away with another woman, any and every statement but that must be concocted to serve for the truth. If a man commits suicide, the 'actmust be explained as accidental. Friends will swear to" all sorts of lies in order to save the feelings of the survivors, regardless of what injustice lo done to the memory of the helpless dead. Much, as Murderer Beldlng's crime is to be deplored, there is a refreshing and commendable can dor with which he denounced a caller who offered the conventional suggestion that he must have been Insane. Is it creditable to the young fellow who shot himself on his marriage day to ask the community to believe that he did It for no graver reason than that his father kindly asked him to go home, as his mother wanted him? Is It kindness to the husband and father who heroically went to death so that his life Insurance might benefit his impoverished family to assert that he died of heart failure in a bath-house, or Is it just to the careful keeper of the baths? In the millennium, of course, these things will be differently ordered. Then we shall get the facts, and on this wise: PRESENT STYLE. There was no meet ing of tho Lonelyvllle School Board yester day, owing to tha un MILLENNIUM STYLE Chairman Reservoir, of the Lonelyvllle School Board, was out all night drunk Monday avoidable absence of, night, so tne scnooi Board meeting; fell throuch. Chairman Reservoir. Mr. Willieboy left! Mr. "WIMeboy has yesterday for Metropo llsvllle. whero he will encaco In business, ac skipped for Metropolls vllle. He can't come Back, as ho Is an em bezzler, and has ex hausted the patience of his high-toned friends. Mrs. ifob Hill has run companied by tho re grets of his many friends. Mrs. Nob Hill left yesterday for Florida. off to join her lover, where she will remalnl Billy smootnsysiem. some months In search of health. Nobody knows where they have gone. The nomination of Colonel Jsonesucn was crammed down the throats of the unwilling Colonel Nonesuch was due to the unanimous desire of the delegates that be would serve. Mr. Smith declared delegates In order, if possible, to save- the ticket. Smith had to support Brown, for the latters friends had evidence enough against .him to put. him in Jail for Ufa. Talkative Is for Emp tyhead because Empty head Is engaged to his wife's sister, and he can't offend his mother-in-law. The Jury were all for the plaintiff, but would not agree till they got their supper from the county. that Mr. Brown's su perior fitness for the omce nas set au oojee tlons to him at rest. Mr. Talkatlvo de clared that the public! welfare demanded the! renomlnatlon of Mr Emptyhead. After supper, the foreman convinced Mr Thriftless that the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. It's a queer world we live In, but It will not be so queer when people will permit tho truth to havo some show in its contest with fiction. When the actual facts can be printed without pro voking massaqre. men In the public eye and everybody else, for that matter, will be more circumspect. INDEPENDENCE OR. UNION T Mr. Schurman journeys to Minneap olis to assuro the teachers of the coun try that Filipino independence li the goal we should aim at. Yet there are certain current goings-on that cloud the certainty of his conclusions. Which Is hetter off today Pqrto Rico, with free trade, or Cuba, with Its comparatively profitless Independence? Which would the Philippines prefer to look forward to free trade under American sover eignty or Independence under the Ding ley law? We must positively find out with some degree of accuracy what In dependence carries with it and what It denies. President Schurman himself must agree that independence may be an empty name worth nothing of actual value, unless economic conditions are supplied which afford trade and Indus-J try a chance to llve.v There are two practical considerations that Imperii the Independence programme. One con cerns the domestic tranquillity of the Islands and the other their foreign com mercial relatlcna Observe that the disquietude, appre hension and brigandage prevalent in the Philippines, and not wholly eradica te for a period Indefinitely long, abso lutely require a strong government. T.hls Is strikingly exemplified in Aguln aldo's fear of attack from his enemies. The fear he' feels would be general If the only bulwark of order there were a native government. The situation la much the same In this respect as it was at the fall of Manila. The whole Phil ippine revolution was soaked with Jeal ousy and mutual hate, fear and suspi cion. Had It been left alone. It would have crumbled into anarchy after a bloody riot of mutual conspiracy, rebel lion and slaughter. The only safeguard against this now is the sovereignty of the United States. The only protection of the native leaders Is afforded by American troops. It was well said by one of the returning officers that the Americans have saved more lives In the Philippines than they have de stroyed. Yesterday's dispatches state, and no doubt truthfully, that the friars are gathered, in Manila. Why? Because there only are they safe. They must have American protection or they would be murdered and their holdings seized. Nothing could more clearly demonstrate the necessity of American rule than this extremity of the religious orders. These bodies own a great deal of property In the islands, which the insurrection would have stolen without compensa tion and dissipated In riot and extrava gance. The United. States is going to buy this propprty and put It at the dis posal of the Philippine people for use in their Industry. It comes out again In the negotiations at Rome that the friars of the religious orders would be slaugh tered If they returned to the Islands. The United States Is protecting those who remain there, and providing for their peaceable removal without sacri fice of their property by arrangement with their religious superiors. Mr. Schurman doubtless assumes without argument that the United States would afford the Filipinos the same advantages In our markets under Independence as under political union. This will not do. Our Cuban imbroglio shows how hard it Is to get Congress to grant even moderate concessions to a quasi-Independent land situated right at our doors. How much harder It would be in the case of the Philippines! Mr. Schurman and all those who stand with him, and all those who have acted I as If freo trade with Cuba were to be given for the asking, need to be re minded that free trade la not this Na tion's policy. We have a political sys tem on which protection of our own producers is an established principle. We may give free trade to our own Islands as we have to Porto Rico, but those not in our political union cannot expect commercial union. Before Mr. Schurman demands Independence so confidently for the Philippines, he should advisa himself thoroughly whether It Is worth while to buy them a glittering bauble with the price of sustenance and comfort. PRACTICAL MEN FOR COLLEGE WORK. Hon. Hanls Taylor, lawyer of -dlstlnc-tlon, author of notable works on Inter national law, late United States Min ister to Spain, has been elected to the chair 6f English constitutional and common law in the School of Compara tive Jurisprudence and Diplomacy of Columbia University. Mr. John Hays Hammond, of California, late engineer-in-chief of Cecil Rhodes' mining opera tions In South Africa, and probably the most distinguished working mineralo gist of the time, has accepted a pro fessorship in Harvard University deal ing with the science ahd practice 'of mining. These announcements are very notable, for they are suggestive of a new spirit In education. It means something when two schools and two among the greatest in the United States or elsewhere have by their invitation of these very notable and practical men into their teaching bodies Illustrated a respect for practical and working suc cessfor the man of affairs as distinct from the. man of pure and Ideal schol arship which has not commonly marked the attitude of the academic world. It has been the habit of the law school to select its Instructors not from among successful practitioners, but from students of abstract law who for the most,pajt have failed to make head In practical life. And pro fessors of mining have most commonly been book, men pure and simple, full of academic knowledge about geology and chemistry, but never by any chance familiar with operations pursued with less consideration for theory and for mulae than for practical results. The working world understands that the only man who really knows things Is the man who can do things; that no man is really skilled and wise whose whole knowledge has been got out of books. Nobody who wants to win a lawsuit seeks out a student of legal abstractions to take his case. Profes sors of geology or chemistry are not In demand to manage mining properties; landowners are not hunting professors of agriculture to operate their farms; tho state Is not seeking students of the Ideal to put in charge of the practical operations of government. The work ing world understands that while these abstractionists and Idealists contribute something to the materials with which practically capable men operate, they are commonly 'something worse than worthless as guides In practical busi ness. But the schools have not yet generally recognized this fact; and in the organization of their teaching forces th'ey oftener than otherwise reject the man of working knowledge for the smoother, more mannerly but less ef- fectlve man of purely academic type and experience. This has come to be ridiculously the practice of late years, since the demand for teachers has been so stimulated by the multiplication and growth of schools under the double Impulse of private en dowment -and state support. Of the teaching body in what are called the great schools, only a small fraction have had any experience of life outside of academic halls and lecture-rooms. Nothing Is more common than to dis cover In visiting a modern college that the men who do the teaching have not one in ten ever In a working sense had anything to do with the things which they are teaching. The professor of law and quite possibly the author of half a dozen text-books never had a case in court in his 'life. The professor of ag riculture never operated a farm. The processor ot mining- irever womea in a mine excepting In a small way perhaps during vacation for the sake of what he call3 practical experience. And so all the way through the ranks are filled UP with students and theorists, charming fellows many of them, but absolutely unfit to teach because they have no acquaintance with practical things lit tle true knowledge, little real wisdom. , The "academic world Is full of Incom petents and mischief-makers, men like Professor Ross, of Stanford, and his kind, men really amiable and well meaning, men of considerable scholar- ship, who have no qualification as teach ers beeaupe they have not had the practical acquaintance with life which enables them to determine where the sphere of Ideal or abstract truth leaves off and where the sphere of practical truth begins. To this type of academ ically instructed but really ignorant mind there is but one kind of truth, and It Is to be maintained though the heav ens fall. The practical mind the mind Instructed by contact with the .real things of life knows that there may be several kinds of truth; that while the surveying Instrument may say truly that It Is fifty miles to Mount Hood the stagedriver may with qual and prac tically more precise truth say that It is sixty; and that while Johnnie may eat one apple in sixty seconds, he may not In spite of the logic eat sixty apples In an hour. Education the world wants as It never did before, but it wants the sort of edu cation which will enable him who re ceives it to see things as they are. And the thing as It Is the real thing Is not an academlo -theory, not the Ideal fact, but the practical fact. For while- the Ideal fact may be vastly helpful and usefuMn Its way, the practical fact Is the real thing. To the working world to the man with a pack on his back It Is sixty miles to Mount Hood, though all the scientific Instruments In the world may declare It to be fifty. The movement which hasrbrought Mr. Taylor. Into the faculty of Columbia and Mr. Hammond Jnto the faculty of Har vard, if it may be said to be a move ment, looks toward a greater scholastic recognition of practical as distinct from abstract truth. These men have learned to bend theory to fact, not to'inslst that the fact must accommodate Itself to theory- They have not won their rank in the practical world by holding fast to theories, no matter how fine, which cannot be made to work in harness, and as instructors of youth they will not waste much time or moral force in vainly , Insisting that things are not what they are but what they might be or ought to be. They may stir up spme dry bones and play havoc with some venerable traditions-,' but their ministrations in the world of education are likely to do good. HANDICAPPED DY NUMBERS. The man-hunt that has been In prog ress In and about Seattle for the past fortnight has developed nothing new In human nature or official acumen. At the first sound of alarm the usual host of Inexperienced men and pugnacious youth sprang up and out Into tho field, each eager for a chance to distinguish himself" for bravery and Incidentally to earn the offered reward for the capture or killing of the convict. Cupidity joined to the fighting instinct in men and- boys of the more boastful class jumps eagerly to the front, regardless of the fitness or unfitness of Its sub jects to become useful In an emer gency. A wholesale demonstration of this fact was seen when the late Span ish War broke out. Boj-s by the hun dreds presented themselves before the military authorities for soldier's duty who did not know how to handle a gun without danger to themselves and their comrades; who had not the least training In the practical school of phys ical endurance; whose hearts- were weakened by the use of cigarettes, or excessive bicycle riding, or both, so that they could not run 200 yards with out fairly gasping for breath In brief, who had not a particle of stuff In them out of which emergency soldiers could be made caught the war fever in Its most virulent form. Many of them were rejected by men of experience In mili tary life, but others passed muster and In due time (which was In the nature of the case a very short time) filled the cots of hurriedly Improvised hospitals, from which, if they escaped with their lives, they were "Invalided home" to form the basis. In later years of an enormous pension list Some of this was avoided by the rejection of the more" palpably unfit; much more of It was avoidable, but yielded to the pres sure of Influential friends. The pension roll a generation hence, big with the names of "Spanish War veterans," will tell the rest of the story, making plain the fact that, regardless of physical un fitness and utterly untutored In the simplest details of taking care of their bodies, many young men were permit ted to "go to war" whose eagerness should have been restrained for their own and the country's good. In a "small but still perplexing way Sheriff Cudlhee, of King County, Wash ington, has been brought up against this spirit of eagerness to be In the fray which possesses the unsuitable, as well as the efficient and able-bodied. A sort of"go-as-yoU-please" hunt, the re sult of which has been to thwart repeat edly the carefully matured plans of the officer and permit the quarry to escape, has followed. A few men, steady of nerve and of well-proved marksman ship, who were on duty not to chal lenge Tracy, but to shoot him on sight, would have prevented the tragical oc currences that have been features of the encounters with the outlaw and the posse thus far, and would have prevent ed the escape of the latter at different times when surrounded and brought to bay. The more Inefficient men who are engaged, In a chase of this kind the less probability of capture. Men taken at the Sheriff's estimate for fitness are tho men that he 'needs. Near Ger vals. In this state, the hunt took on "go-as-you-please" features, with a squad of 'state militia as an element. In Seattle the pursuing force has con sisted largely of well-meanlng citizens whoso eagerness has outrun the Sheriff's prudence and upset his plans. Every man to his trade, and no trade Is mastered without some training. In recognition oT this fact, Sheriff Cudlhee, we are told, has reduced his force, and with "tried men" will continue the pur suit of Tracy as long as the outlaw remains in the vicinity of Seattle. Upon this showing, a reasonable hope that the murderous convict will be taken may be based. The heavy handicap removed, the goal may be won. As between a husband and wife, the one drunken and both disreputable, who were last week before the court In this city contending with the represent ative of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Soci ety for the custody of their children, and tho pair outwardly moral, pro fessedly Industrious and manifestly able-bodied, who came later before the court and testified to their complete willingness to give up their three little children and "never see them again" because, forsooth, they "could not agree" In domestic life, the first are In finitely superior In character. The public, through Its various Institutions, is too ready to assume parental author ity; too ready to relieve irresponsible parents-from the care or their offspring. In taking charge of the- children of this last-named pair, the community should at least be in a position through a law covering such cases to exact a guaran tee that It would not be saddled later on with the maintenance of any more of their progeny. Charity, too often blind, should not be trusted to engineer such matters. Sturdy, justice, dominat ed, by practical common sense, would be a much better guide. The precedent es tablished by relieving this man and woman from the care and maintenance of the fruits of their union, simply be cause they were tired of each other and of their children, is, if not danger ous to the public weal, one of at least very doubtful expediency. It need not be a matter of surprise if parental Irre sponsibility thus encouraged shall ren der a commodious addition to the build ings of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Solcety ap. absolute necessity within a year or two. It Is the part of wisdom to check a pernicious growth In Its beginning. To this end it would have been well for the court to dismiss these parents with a sharp reprimand and a pointed suggestion that they adjust their differ ences and go to work for their children. Tho injunction might not have been heeded, but It would at least have shown the keen temper of the judicial mind In contrast with the easy-going, Indulgent temper of charity, and per haps have sent one pair of parental shirks out In meditative mood while conveying a wholesome warning to oth ers. Johnstown, Pa., seems to be sched uled as a theater of horrors. Its name has passed Into history as representing disaster to human life, the destruction of property and the annihilation ot homes. The great flood ot May 31, 18S9, made the term "Johnstown sufferers" a synonym of the world's sympathy and the Nation's charity. Except In name and site, the place had scarcely an ex istence after one wild night of storm and swirl of waters. Subsequent disas ters of lesser magnitude have followed the rebuilding of the town, and again It stands face to "face with a calamity that, searching many homes, has found a glut of victims for its wrath. While this was caused by an explosion In a mine and does not differ either In cause of results from others of Its class, it yet shadows the namo of Johnstown with another cloud of human misery. The loss In this case will be heavy, not only in human life, but in property and in the; payment of money, which, ac cording to the custom of the Cambria Steel Company, owner of the mine, will amount to $1000 for each family who lost an earner In the explosion. The scene at the pit's mouth, around which i distraught women and walling children are gathered, Is the usual one In such cases. Between 100 and 200 blackened bodies have been drawn from It, while the missing number twice as many more. No appeal will be made to out side charity in this Instance, but human sympathy, shuddering at the name of Johnstown, is awakened .at the voice of this walling and responds to Its call in full measure. Building operations, so seriously In terfered with by the mlllmen's and sympathetic builders' strikes the first of May, have been resumed, though neither side In the contention admits to having capitulated or even to hav ing made concessions lodklng to an amicable adjustment of differences. Large sums have been lost in wages through this unfortunate strike, and the business affected has suffered In a sim ilar manner, while the public in various ways has suffered from delay and other Inconveniences to an exasperat ing extent. In the meantime, two months have been wasted the two best months in the year for building. If any good has been accomplished, it is not apparent to the public. Many work men have, it is said, left the city, some In defiance of their unions have gone to work, and others are still out of work and In anything but a cheerful frame of mind. The situation Is not less regrettable than In the beginning of the trouble. Settlement of industrial differences, achieved by wearing out the patience of one side or the other, 4s not an Intelligent or permanent settle ment. It leaves suspended In the Indus trial atmosphere the element of discon tent, that at any time- may alight upon Industry and paralyze It. The tragedy enacted Thursday night, In which a vengeful man took three lives and deplores the fact that his vic tims did not number twice as many, is more than shocking It Is sickening. This murderer came Into a family, seeemingly on his own, plane in social and Industrial life, became a violently and viciously disturbing 'element therein, and, meeting with resistance, coolly and deliberately determined to exterminate It root and branch. There are two sides to the domestic story, of course. But both by his atrocious act and his boastful tongue A. Li. Beldlng has proclaimed himself a member of that most dreaded and diabolical class composed of men with whom wives can neither live nor get away from. In sane? , Perhaps so, but his is the type of Insanity which should and usually does send Its poseessor to the gallows rather than to the Insane asylum. He himself has sense enough to see the flt nes of this and scouts the remote sug gestion of defense on the ground of In sanity. Choice of Mr. Henry E. Dosch as the executive head of the Lewis and Clark Exposition Is eminently wise. In Mr. Dosch there Is combined business thor oughness and habit, great personal ac tivity, a very considerable experience In connection with the special work to be done, .and a loyal enthusiasm for Oregon and the Northwest. There Is no vice of the politician about Mr. Dosch, as his management of 'Oregon Interests at Omaha, Buffalo and Charleston has shown. His administration of the Lewis and Clark Fair will be a strictly busi ness affair; under him there will be no jobbery and no waste due to Inattention or to shiftless and loose methods. On the'whole, we belleve-the- very best man for the place to be found In the whole Northwest has been chosen. On Ilia Belnjr Arrived at the Age of Twenty-thre e. John Milton. How soon hath Time, the subtle thief of youth. Stolen on his wlnz my three-and-twentleth year! My hasting days fly on with full career, But my late Spring no bud or blossom shew'th. Perhaps my semblance might deceit o the truth That I to manhood am arrived so near; And Inward ripeness doth much less appear That some xnore timely-happy spirits endu'th. Tet be It less or more, or soon or slow. It shall be ztlll In strictest measure even To that same lot. howover mean or high. Toward which Time leans me, and the will of Heaven: All Is. If I have grace to use It so. As ever In my great Taskmaster's eye. THINGS LOCAL AND OTHERWISE Tracy Is still holding his place on the first page not only of Pacific Coast papers but of conservative Journals aa far East as Portland. Me. He arrested the coun try's attention Ave weeks ago, and has held It, with brief Interruptions, ever since. Interest in him Is deeper now than ever. Extra sales of Portland and Seat tle dailies are much larger than they were during the Spanish-American War, or when McKInley lay dying In Buffalo; so great is the deslro to learn of the out law's movements. Tracy knows that he Is the "cynosure of the eyes" of the whole country, and he proposes to be a "hero" until his career is ended by hot lead. It Is easier to accept this theory than to believe he Is Insane. The real criminal loves notoriety. Tracy has won more of It than' any other murderer of his day and age. And his story is not yet finished. Perhaps he is getting ready to hold up a train In the Cascades and force the engineer to detach the engine and carry him over the mountains. True, he will not be safe wherever he may choose to enter the woods, because he must have food sooner or later, but he will have created a new sensation. Except on the theory of notoriety,, how else can one account for Tracy's sailing voyage from Meadow Point across Puget Sound to Port Madison and his return the next 'night? If a criminal were among friends at Tongue Point, above Astoria, what motive could Induce him to sail over to Knappton and back-track to Tongue Point by way of Lower As toria? His piracy at Olympla Is another Instance. Impressing a vessel and her entire crew, single-handed, In broad day light. Is such a unique act of daring that people in London, Paris, Constantinople and Portland wduld read It almost with equal Interest. Tracy must have consid ered the eager public, not his own safety. Love of notoriety Is no -new phase of crime. English law books tell of a case 200 years ago where 12 men, acting inde pendently, each confessed to a myster ious murder which baffled the London po lice. It was proved that not one of them had the least connection with the crime. With friends and relatives In the wilds near Seattle, Tracy could have secreted himself for an Indefinite period, but he could not do that and get on tha front page of the newspapers at the same time. Tracy is a menace to the community in more ways than one. He is certainly awakening the murderous Instinct that we know from experience is latent In the minds of many- men. He Is the spark that Ores the brain. I believe that Beldlng, the latest murderer. If he confess the whole truth, will say that Tracy "In spired" him to shoot down his victims. Suicide generally begets suicide. Mur ders beget murders No metaphysical an alysis is needed to demonstrate that cer tain minds on a balance under ordinary conditions are seriously disturbed by the recital of bloody deeds. These seem to destroy the poise, and disaster of some sort follows. It will be neither strange nor surprising If within the next month there should be a succession of homicides in Oregon and Washington. Tracy's trail of blood may not be confined to the State's Prison at Salem, to Bothell and to Wood lawn Park. It Is astonishing to hear the number ot law-abiding, decent people who speak of Tracy with admiration. They seem to classify him with Funston, Walnwright, Hobson and Dewey, and are incapable of drawing a distinction between an un selfish, noble act of bravery and a. deed of murderous daring. Tracy Is left to a choice of death between the bullet and the halter. He naturally prefers the lees Ignoble form. In either case he dies "In his boots." Unfortunately, the penalty Is no greater for murdering 60 men than six. He has shown great Ingenuity and he has proved himself a skillful marks man. The best that can be said of him is that he Is no coward; but a coyote will fight when he Is cornered. John Fleming Wilson, a Portland young man, has written a short romance,-set at the mouth of the Columbia. It Is pub lished on another page In this Issue. In a collection of short stories which came to me recently, there appeared "Malva," by Maxim Gorky, the new Russian writer, with the publisher's declaration that it was the most popular of Gorky's produc tions. Mr. Wilson's story, like Gorky's. deals with flsher-folk, and the Oregon man's is easily the better of the two. Public speakers ought to remember lo cal conditions when these are used to illustrate the subject in hand. Last Sun day, Miss Maud Allen, an Oregon woman, who has served as missionary In India for several years, addressed the children of the First Presbyterian Church. Sho compared the environment of Webfoot youngsters with those of England's Ori ental possessions and dwelt briefly on tho suffering occasioned by famine which fol lowed drouth. To Taring It home to her hearers, Miss Allen asked: "Now, chil dren, suppose here in Oregon, In tho course of a whole year, not a drop of rain fell, and" That was as far as she could go. The Illustration was too much, even for Dr. Hill's staid congregation. Everybody, young and old, began with a smile and ended with audible laughter, in which Miss Allen Joined. Judge McGinn tells this story. Two days after the last election, when the re turns showed a very close race between McGinn and Dr. Harry Lane for State Senator, two Irishmen met. One asked tho other: "How Is It, Mike, that in so manny votes it should bo nick an' nick atween Hinnery an Dock Lane?" "Well, I'll tell ye." was the answer. "They're bo-oth very onpoplller roln, an If ye knowed wan, ye'd be certain to vote fur th other, an' bo-oth av thlm are d d well known." But to enjoy the story, hear McGinn tell It. You can't put the unction Into cold type. L. The Old Conntry. Josephine Daskam In Harper's. "Where's the land o Dreamland? How should I know? On the moon's further aide, "Where the drift clouds ride, And the stars hang low. What's the look o' Dreamland? How should I cee? All the air's silver gray. Glinted with star spray. Here and- there a tree. What's the sound o Dreamland? How should I hear? Bell tone from far below, Night's haunting cockcrow. Olden songs and dear. "What's the speech o Dreamland? How should I say? Great eyes that fill the heart. Soft handa that clasp and part. Calls from far away. Where's the gate o Dreamland? How should I tell? Sudden you stand before. Slip through the, qult door Ah. but all's Weill SLINGS AND ARROWS. Thoughts oa Vacation. There's a murmuring brook In a mountain re treat. That over the boulders Is Cowing. "Where the scent of the hemlocks Is spicy and sweet. And the llfe-glvlng breeses are blowing. The grass Is like velvet beneath the tall trees. The squirrel Is Joyously calling. The high branches whisper ot far-away seas. And the needles like snowflakes are falling. And there the mosquitoes are blsger than dogs, ..Tnd never stop work for a minute. And tho hillsides are sprinkled with treacher ous bogs. Each one with a rattlesnake In it. There each stretch of woods Is exactly alike. And the camper, for exercise yearning. Who starts out at dawn for a half a- day's hike. Must spend the next week In returning-. There's a surf-circled beach by the side of th sea, Where the billows are tossing and combing. Where tho tall ships are leavlnc the rocks on the lee. And the skies are aglow in the gloaming. The campflres gleam on the sand, dunes by night. And the night birds to seaward are screaming. And tho moon rides above while Us broad belt of light O'er the uneasy ocean Is streaming. And there the hotel bills are half a mile high. As Is also the fl3h that they feed you. And unless you do utterly nothing but buy. The sweet Summer girl does not need you. There Is nothing to do but meet each dinky train That brlnrs crowds to the four-by-nlne sta tion. So when I consider these places again X guess I'll not take a vacation. A Family Affair. V Tampa, Fla., July 12. David Merrill, tha Oregon convict, passed through here to day, on his way to Key West, to visit his sister-in-law. He carried a gun, and was followed by a bloodhound. Martinique, July 12. The Oregon escaped convict, David Merrill, Is at present visit ing his mother in this place. He says peo ple hero do not know anything about a hot time. Washougal, July 12. Merrill, the partner of the notorious Tracy, was seen near "hero last night at the farm of his sister. He looked tired, and when asked the cause said It was a superabundance of rela tives. Nome, July 4. David Merrill, whose brother lives on his claim 10 miles north of here, was In the city today looking for work. He found it, but made his escape immediately. Nagasaki. July 12. David Merrill spent the last week In Nagasaki, visiting his uncle. He denies that he Is dead. Johnstown, Pa., July 12. Among tho victims of the mine tragedy was David Merrill, who was positively identified by his cousin, who Is a resident ot this city. Berlin, July 12. David Merrill, the Ore gon convict. Is due here tomorrow to visit his brother-in-law, who promises to turn him over to the Emperor. Black Diamond, July 12. David Merrill, recently shot by Tracy, expired here at 1:55 this afternoon In his mother's arms. Yuba City, Cal., July 12. David Mer rill has no relatives In this city, which has achieved a National fame in conse quence. That Baby. It ain't no trouble now to And Tho things that used to be A-scattered round about the house. Or hid away from me. The paper's alius right to hand. The tidy's on the chair. My hat don't leave the front hall pea 'Most 'foro I bang It there. r An everything Is orderly. An Just the ay It's put. "Without a raft o cuVus truck A klckln' under foot. But when I look around the room. An see the chairs Jus so. An' all the things a settln la The place they ought to go, I'd give the rest o this ol' life If I could only see That baby strewln' things around The way they used to be. Keeping Down Expenses. "So you want your wages raised," said the trust magnate to his office boy. "Let's see, what are you getting now?" "Two dollars a week, sir," replied tho boy. "And you want how much?" "Two dollars and 10 cents." "Well, my boy, you go back to work and think it over. We. pay our employes ail that we can afford to, and feel that we are dealing very liberally with them. This corporation only made $64,407,153 In the last six months, and we are not going to cut down our earnings by any extravagant measures.. You may rest assured, how ever, that as long as you do your work faithfully your salary will not be re duced." An Optimist. , Jus had a sort o' quiet way O' sowln sunshine, ev'ry day. He always could skeer up a smile. An" kinder b'lleved that life's wuth while. The folks that lives ten miles an ay Ain't never heard o' him today. But when we laid him to his rest A lump was in each feller's breast. An' I'm mistaken If he ain't Bight now a Joy-dlspensln' saint. Just the Thlnsr. "I don't know what to use to raise my bread." said the young wife, petulantly; "I've tried everything." "Judging by the samples I have seen," suggested her inhuman husband, "I should think a couple of Jackscrews or a derrick ought to do it." And Ee wondered why he got a cold supper that night. Concerning the Chnse. The posse came down like the wolf on the fold. With rifles and pistols and shotguns untold. And the roll of their musketry rattled, around. Like the roll of the aurf on the shores of the Sound. ' Like police on the street when the town, la seren". That death-dealing posse at sunset was seen; Like police on the street at a general fight. That posse at dawn had departed from sight. For the convict came forth from the brush with his gun. And the posse decided It safer to run. And there rode a Sheriff direct to the rear. With a bullet uncomfortably close to his ear; And there went a Deputy back Into town. With a sturdy distaste for reward or renown. And the sound of his panting was heard through the glade. Like an engine ascending a five per cent grade. And the convict departed, unmarked and alone. His movements unquestioned, his doings un known. The bloodhounds are plaintively loud in their wail, Kor they never sot half of a chance at the trail. And the convict continues at pleasure to roam, "While the powe sings softly: "There's no place like home." -J. J. MONTAGUE. The Year's at the Spring. Robert Browning. The year's at the Spring And day's at the morn; Morning's at seen; The hillside's dew-pearled; The lark's on the wing: The snail's on the thorn: God's In his heaven AJl's right with the worldl