' . mrr,Ti PTTVTk A V ATUflhVT A T XrvTTT A "VTTb A TTTTST- 7 IQftlt . - , f m d 0.00 2.00 1.50 .50 20c .lc 2c Entered at the Fosfcoffle at Portland, Or., as eeeond-class mattter. REVISED BUBSCKIPTION RATES. By xnall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, -with Sunday, per montn......v. niitr rit Rnndnv Mtpetitad. ner year i.OU Sally, with Sunday, per year . Sunday, per year..... The Weekly, per year Th Tvik1v 3 months. ......... Dally, per -week, delivered, Sunday ex- mnltil ............ 1 .Dally, per -week, delivered. Sunday in eluded POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-P8ze paper -- 10 to 30-page pape. 82 to 44-page paper 'Bnign rates, double. e Oregonlan does not buy poems or series from individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to it lirtthout solicitation. No stamps should be raclosed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S- C. Beckwith Special Agency) New York; rooms 43-50. Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 610-512 Tribune Building. KEfT ON SALE. Atlantic City. N. J. Taylor & BaUey, sows dealers. 23 Leeda Place. rhapa Auditorium annex: PostoIIice Kews Co.. 178 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rick. 006-912 Seventeenth street. Kansas City. Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut. Log Angeles B. F. Gardner. 259 South Rnrinc . and Harry Drapkin. Minneapolis M- X Kavanaugh. 60 South Third; I Rcgelsburger, 21T First 'Avenue South. New York City I. Jones & Co.. Astor House. Oirden F. R. Godard. Omnliii Barkalow Broa, 1612 Farnam: McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th: Megeatb Stationery- Co.. 1308 Farnam. Salt lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Rond South street. St.' LouIb World's Fair News Co.. Joseph frmMnnd. Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th St.; Geo. I. Ackermann, newsboy. Eighth and niive sta San Francisco J. K. Cooper t-o., .aiar- one room, with a "lean-to" for a kitchen. The place -was thronged with children. This maniac fed chiefly upon books that he could borrow (his time being in the pioneer era) and which he had to return In order to get others; hence few books were kept about the house. But in one corner of the cramped quarters a pile of old . newspapers reached nearly to the low celling, and these, when books gave out, he read and re-read with what must have seemed to his striving wife ghoulish zest. His sorely tried wife died one wild night, leaving her sixth child an Infant a few hours old. When the neighbors came the next day to prepare her body for burial they lifted it from a bed which was wet half-way .across where the rains had beaten -in between the logs, and the excuse of the bereaved husband was that he had Intended to chink" the openings with mud before the Fall rains came on It was then midwinter but that he had "not had time." This testimony to the contrary notwithstanding, this man was not a bad man. On the contrary, he was con sldered a worthy citizen, and his ora torical powers, backed by his "fund of information" acquired by much read ing, were In sharp demand when polit ical contention ran high. So far as Is known, there Is no cure for the readme mania, wnatever check can be placed upon it must come In the form of prevention. Once devel oped until It renders Its victim obllvi ous to the common duties of life, it is absolutely Incurable. If free libraries are likely to develop this mania, as seems probable from the number of voune neonle who are seen on the street-cars every day burled in books, the multiplication of these institutions Is clearly not an unmixed blessing. . I . .. - I .vmnntfiv And iha nnt nil. Th kindly-attitude toward the great finan- a most successful short meeting last cuve pastime tor. oruanae, the fevered exhausted brutes clal interests which they haye despaired year. Is now preparing for Its opening ijLT l?SeSH Of Obtaining irom .KOOSeveiL; uuu mcy uaj luuiunuw, nuu lueic niu. mv." 1 , - 1 T,flr tnr human fnnfl Thpsc arp nhftf u . : .. . r j ca i . i, v.ao nprmanont nnmi sit nn. while the num- unfit f or human roou. xnese are pnases hone in similar irame ol imuu ii occ uci uw ul uic jjc&i. iuoiuusuuicu him succeed to the Presidency. It Is on the Pacific Coast stabled on Irving- oer or summer visitors increases uu.v nosslble that Mr Boot is unconsciously ton Park track, ready to compete for lly from -year to year. The agricultural nleading for those Interests in nis aa- me purses given Dy tne associanoii. v-"""-' vocacy of a larger function for the The same management that character- tween Seaside and Tillamook are per-Vlce-Presldent. ed the 1903 race meeting should give haps not as favorable as those In some And yet there can be no -doubt that the better sport in 1904, for the reason that oiner poruuiis oi uw atuie, uut. trend of our National theory and rac- there is a largely Increased number of are many mue vuneys ana piuieaua horses to draw upon, ana tne same tlce is in the direction of the homog enous Administration which Mr. Root has In mind. Our statecraft Is less and less concerned with the rights of man and the inculcation of Ideal principles and more and more concerned with the economic development of the Nation and the employment of Its productive agencies to the highest possible power of efficiency in a word, with business. And business, demands conservatism, continuity, peace. Business does not care so much what policies prevail, so that they are consistently followed. One customs tariff or one railroad tariff Is approximately as good as another only we must have Its consistent enioi;ce- Sent. What kills business Is uncer inty and the labor and perils of con stant readjustment. 'Shis is why every disturbing factor in a Federal Admlnlsr tratlon is viewed with Increasing aver sion. This is why it would not be sur prising to see In twenty years or less thePresident and Vice-President named by the same ruling coterie, for the very reason that they were in absolute accord. to promptness and businesslike manage ment which made last season's meet ing successful should produce the same result again In even greater degree. THAT ARMIES SHOUUJ HAVE STAGE MANAGERS. In the old days, before statesmen had discovered the nebula of International law, two nations that felt like fighting proceeded to do one another up without a thought for the feelings of "eminent jurists," college professors or advocates of universal disarmament.- In their struggles they did not mind in the least if they stepped upon a bystander's corns,.and did any worthy, born In ad vance of his time, exclaim "You cannot do that, you know," they did not argue, but went ahead and did It. The rights of neutrals were unheard of In those days; the neutral was jumped on or left alone as the belligerent was strong on weak, or as he happened to get In the way, and the neutral did not scruple to chip In with a friend If convinced that victory was possible. Did England engage in a little scrap with France, AIX FOR EACH AND EACH FOR ALL. Scotland found the moment opportune striking in its timeliness Is this run. for knocking upon England's back door on the Drovers' Bank at the height of with a few demands; and In later times HOPE rOK THE "VICE PRESIDENCY. No fact is better attested in our po- the great labor conflict at unicago. What could more forcibly bring to the mind of embattled and arrogant capi tal how absolutely dependent It is upon the favor and the confidence of the humblest? It is the old lesson of inter- No ioct is oeiter auesieu xu uux yu- d 0 trite a tneme o dIaac. Indeed litlcal history than that in practice the P ' principle in tlcated Vice-Presidency has fallen grievously 1 strike fteelf is earInff re. play a Napoleon, far from worrying over dam age to neutral commerce, attempted with a stroke of the pen to place a con tinent in blockade. War Is a different matter today. Neu tral commerce must not be interrupted." Indeed it might appear to the unsophls- newspaper reader that neutrals far more Important part In the which will prove highly productive when their present growth of timber has been coined into money and re placed by fruit and dairy ranches. When the rich Nehalem Is reached, still greater possibilities await the road, fpr the soil of that Isolated region .pro duces not only magnillcent timber, but about everything else that can be grown Jn the state. As a developer of natural resources the Astoria road has been -a great success, and, while Its. extension would draw away few if any of the "beachers" who have fallen in love with the beautiful natural sur roundings at Clatsop, it would open up new resorts which in time would be come as popular as any of those which it now brings into such close touch with Portland. While affording the Portlanders an opportunity to get out and enjoy themselves and spend their money, it would also offer an oppor tunlty for homeseekers who are not afraid of work to carve out a home In an exceptionally favored locality With river connection for more than forty years and rail connection for about twenty-five years, the big coun try east of the Cascade Mountains has been brought In fairly close touch with Portland, but with that country lying over near thevcoast we are almost as unfamiliar as though it were, shut off by an impenetrable wall. Portland is under lasting obligations to Mr. Ham mond for giving -iis transportation right up to the gates of this unknown land, and we should now like to have him open the gates and turn In his Iron horses of the great' strike which are not taken Into consideration by the warring fac tions of the packing-house business, but they appeal to humanity as worthy of first consideration. Men accustomed to slaughter are perhaps callous to the suffering of animals in the snamme3; nerhaDS also men who regard tne dusi- ness entirely "from the standpoint of profit and loss do not take Into account the unnecessary suffering inai me strike entails upon animals awaiting slaughter In the yards or clumsily dis patched by unskilled men. uut xnis is a noint uoon which the speedy settle ment of the strike should be urged by men of influence in the councils of labor and Industry. The strike is deplorable in all of Its phases; in these it is pitia ble and indeed indefensible. ket. near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. away from, its ideal state as nxed in tne ,nrt of mutual deDende ncy to many present war than do the belligerents. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros but- mmds of the Founders. That omce was Q t financlal institutions "Don't hit Ji tert L. E. Lee. faiace .aoiei ows ""'i e Pitts. 1008 Market: Frank Scott, SO Ellis; N. Wheatley. 83 Francis' News Stand. IVashincton. D.C Ebbltt House News Stand. grouped with the Presidency as of al- . - ; nt,ta chrtnvini? r.- atralnst me." says one neutral to Rus- Stevenson; Hotel the point of profitable operation, sla and aot phra5e .. IF "WRITERS WERE READERS. A writer In the current number of The Critic lays claim to the authorship TESTERDATS "WEATHER Maximum tom- perature. 79 deg.; minimum, 58, Precipitation, none. today's "WEATHER Fair; northwest winds. PORTLAND SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, 1804. THE READING MANIA. ' Mrs. Thomas Wallln, of Elkhart, Ind.. a cousin of the later Walter Q. Gresham, has been for many months In the habit of reading one book a day As a result of this dissipation since excessive reading is one of the most pernicious forms of what may be called the milder dissipations this woman is now insane. Assuming, says the Hart ford Times, that the books to which Mrs. Wallln devoted herself were nov els. and that they were of average length, her Insanity is not surprising. The excessive reading of novels in these days of public libraries and of cheap editions of all kinds of books is a very common abuse of what may be called voracious minds. A great many minds are weakened and practically ruined, without being made entirely daft, by the mania for reading stories This form of what may be called use lessness Is easily and unconsciously de veloned where books in any number may be simply had for the asking. The reading mania begets, as every one knows, in women of the middle class, upon whose forethought and per qualifications were identical. The orig inal idea is also revealed in the early Incumbents. Nominees for Vice-Presi dent Include such names as Thomas Jefferson, JoKn Adams, James Madison, James Monroe and even In a later time Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun. The place to which these men gladly aspired is curtly declined by second-class statesmen of today. Ex-Secretary Root's address to Mr. Fairbanks at the notification ceremo nies Is a thoughtful and suggestive pre sentation of what must have occurred to many minds. His hope that the Vice-Presidency might be restored to Its old station Is one that every patriot miKt enhn and the arguments he brines to Its support are strikingly sim ilar to those advanced last year by Mr. railroad earnings fall lower and lower, while discharged employes everywhere rush to take the strikers' places. Neither labor nor capital holds a mo nopoly of the selfish and self-centered mood. There are purse-proud employ ers who regard the laborer as a mere machine from which to wring a certain amount of results with the least possi ble cost in wages; and there are work- lngmen who see in the employer only a machine from which to wrest wages with the least possible return In ser vice. On the one hand there is the packing trust, grinding relentlessly on stockman and consumer alike, often unfeeling at heart and brutal In method; on the other hand there Is the union, straining every nerve to reduce the amount of labor performed In a J. C. snaner. a pronunem P""'""" flnv tn n1lni,i. th(l tnn-fflnlPnt work ChJcaco. In an article which command- . tn . 1rtri i d universal attention. At that time Mr. Shaffer's proposals seemed chimer ical, but the nomination of Senator Fairbanks, who Is well equipped for the Presidency itself, lends practicability to the idea, as Mr. Root's admirable ad dress shows. There Is another aspect of the Vice- Presidency which is usually lost sight of. Tjut which is of perpetual moment, in view of the occasional vacancies through death In the Presidential chair, and also In view of the growing power of the Senate. It was incontestably the view of the Fathers to make the Vice Presidency Independent of the Presi dent.' The original manner of his se lection shows this plainly. They had in man and to terrorize the nonunion la borer with every resource which heart less and violent cruelty can suggest. The need of all these is to look not every man on his own things only, but also on the things of others. Bitterness is engendered in the heart of the capi talist as he looks back on his early struggles and reflects that though he won his way by painful toll and heroic self-denial; though he came up from the ranks that now hate him, yet from which others may In turn rise like him self; though he has conquered difficul ties almost insuperable, and benefited mankind by his organizing genius and his multiplication of creature comforts; though he has given liberally to churches and charities, schools and col- knock Russia up against my fences. It is as If a squad of policemen were sent to keep order at a prizefight and each member of the squad constituted himself a judge of what was a foul blow. Jaoan and Russia may fight, some of the other nations are even glad to see them go at It; but they must never forget that neutrals have rights, and that the war must be carried on without Inconvenience to the peaceful trader, who not infrequently seizes the golden opportunity to ship a few car-r goes of contraband. It Is thus generally accepted that war must be conducted with every def erence to the feelings of those not en gaged In it, and that neutrals have cer tainand uncertain inalienable rights. This being the case, something should be done to protect the rights of the great newspaper-reading public. Our shippers of flour have already set the machinery of the Government In mo tion, but no protest has been filed on behalf of the vast body mentioned above. The war is being shamefully mismanaged. The American citizen picks up his paper in the morning in the reasonable expectation' of finding some account of a bloody battle to oc cupy his attention as he eats his pre dlgested breakfast food. Instead he learns that Kuropatkin has fallen back upon NanshanBhan and that Kurokl, who Is at Bangblngbang, may proceed to Pingpangpong after the rainy sea son, If not before. There is noth ing Interesting in this, and the American citizen. abandoning his Whoever originated this useful desig nation, it is one that will live, and must in time replace that outworn expression,- "the reading public," as the writers themselves have displaced the readers. , The number of persons in Amrica engaged in the manufacture of fiction is enormous, and the studied ne glect of the Department of Commerce and Labor cannot always retard their progress to industrial power. The yearly output of novels in this country makes an average of three a day. There are thus 1095 writers successful in plac ing their goods upon the market, not a weak army in themselves Certain forms of swindling, like fash Ions for women, have their cjcies. Here Is an old one revived, as reported by the Topeka Capital: The confidence game was recently worked to the limit near Wathena. A preacher was approached by a couple who signified their Intention of getting married. Th reverend gentleman performea tne ceremony and his wife and himself affixed their signatures to a certificate as witnessse A few days aco the preacher was informed that a note acalnst him for $1000 was aue. It developed that he and his wife had signed a note for f 1000 instead of a marriage cer tificate. The note had been discounted by the swindlers. . Curiously, there is a story in the last mimiw nf "NreClure's Masazlne by u. Henry wherein a confidence man re lates a campaign of similar swindles. Mr. Henry makes it a three-handed game. Sharper No. 1 and a girl con federate eloping from angry parents stop at a farmhouse and Inquire for the nearest minister. Of course he lives miles away. Within a few minutes Sharper No. 2, dressed in clerical garb happens along and ties the knot. Farmer and wife as witnesses sign the marriage certificate, which turns out later to be a note. A skillfully pre pared fold in the document holds the obligation. This confidence game was played throughout the Middle West thirty years ago, usually by presenting what appeared to be some legitimate transaction for signature. It breaks out now In fact as well as fiction, and may be expected to flourish among q cerjain class who have no use for the newspaper. NOTE AND COMMENT. Hold-ups make the Loop resemble a noose. Judne Parker may have some reason of his own for exchanging the bench -for a back seat.' - ' Old General Ma is creating as much trouble for Russia as if he were a mother- in-law instead. A bis button company is up against it. If that isn't heart-rending luck, just as the campaign is to begin. - . "Sure." says America to Russia; ''every thing you say is contraband of war Is con traband, except what we say Isn't." In Tacpma a performer was badly in jured In looping the loop. In Portland you're only liable to lose your money. others, however. A leading publisher dclared the other day that his house read 150 novels for every one accepted, Thus In a single year 164,250 persons are employed In grinding out fiction, whether they work in such centralized factories as Indiana or in Independent shops such as Oregon Vast as is the number of writers, it is being constantly Increased, so that in time every person out of work at any other trade will turn his hand to the typewriter" and typewriter girls, by the way, have the principal qualification for successful authorship the ability to write fast. When this culmination Is reached, and It Is being hastened by the increased attention being paid to technical schoqls, what is to become of the writing public? Must Its members. as the people of St. Kllda's did with washing, eke out a precarious existence by reading each other's books? Or will the pendulum swing back, and a read- The condition of the Black Mesa for est reserve, in Arizona, consequent upon eight years of drouth, is the sub ject of a paper recently issued by the United States Geological Survey. This reserve comprises an area of about 2786 There are sqUare miles, and lies principally on the al' endeavor in household duties the mind that the second office should not iegQS and pUrp0ses to do still more yet rights as a neutral, turns to an article ing public come Into existence once north slope of the Colorado Gila divide. Richly endowed by Nature In every thing but moisture, the reserve Is likely to become barren of even the yellow pine, alligator, juniper and Arizona cypress, which as a rule stand dry weather very well. Nothing can be more desolate than a region drained of moisture, and nothing more dishearten Ing than the long-deferred hope of the ranchman for rain. A region in which people cannot live, but from which the hapless settler, when once established. can hardly escape, these dry lands of Arizona, though matmlficnt in their scenic beauty, should be shunned as the domain of desolation Itself. In the judgment of even the optimistic men of the Geological Survey, this forest re serve In Arizona must be deserted by cattlemen and sheepmen, who a few years ago found rich pasturage there for their flocks and herds, unless the long drouth Is speedily broken, The street-car robbers, it' is said, are thought to be ex-gamblers. Men taking such chances are insulted by. the "ex." As military., critics the Germans aro universally acknowledged to excel. Ia South Africa they are hiring Boers to whip the Herreros. Considering the number of times we've had to scare the Saltan, wouldn't it be cheaper just to send, him a photograph of our battleships? Five French girls wearing corsets en tered a walking race against five Ger man girls wearing no corsets. Of course, the belles Francaises gave out when the pinch came. Another news item from Russia "The battleship Slava was accidentally torpe doed.' 'If the Russians want to make their navy last they should put all their ships in rubber " drydocks and all their officers in padded cells. " It will be Ho! for the Races tomorrow, but don't forget this little tip from the Seattle Argus: Another "old adaje" proven untrue. Money does not always make the mare go.- The thou sands which have been placed on many of the favorites at the Meadows didn't make them go worth a cent. For some time the Chicago Journal ha3 been running a "daily gook," as a take off upon the "idiotorlal page" of the Chi cago American. Lately the Journal has been veering round to the same kind of mental food for its readers, and if it be comes more Americanesque, It may easily put its own "Idiotorlal" in the comic col umn and run tne "uany gooit - as its own emission of thought. Man is accustomed to have woman stand in the spot-light. He never becomes sweet boy graduate or a June bride groom, but mtnerto ne tnougnt ne nau some show in the gloaming, when the lights are dim and low, and there Is a chance to get out of the public gaze. But lo! even this is to be taken away from him. If he Is caught in the south Plaza Block It will be a case of "off to coop with the cop." Poor man! ho is born to trouble a3 the sparks fly upward, and ho may thank his stars that he's not made to keep within the Arctic Circle, so that woman may have an undisturbed prome nade In the temperate and tropic zones. comfort of the family necessarily de pends, a thriftlessness that ignores the domestic duties, causes children to suf fer from neglect and results In personal untidiness, the effect of which is to ren der Its victim unlovely as a woman, wife and mother, a scandal to her thrifty neighbors and a reproach to her bringing up Examples of this form of mania are". unfortunately, not uncommon. The writer recalls one of these a well- known and in other respects a most es be a mere instrument and tool of the- , ,t f thl hl . blInd to first, idr. ixoot, it seems to us, wuiu- olates an approximate merging of the Vice-Presidency into a sort of ranking Cabinet officer, in harmony with the Administration in all things and pre pared to preserve its policy unbroken in the event of his succession to power. That Mr. Root thoroughly under stands this is shown by his reference to the frequent occasions when -the Vice- Presidential nomination has been util ized for a mere coup of political expe- all he has done, unsympathetic with his point of view and interested in him only as they may grind out of him a few cents more for a few hours less. Bitterness is engendered in the work- ingman, on the other hand, as he re alizes how very little his hopes and am bitions and desires as a human being are accounted In the counting-room of the stockyards or the palaces along the boulevard. How often are his appeals for a fair discussion of differences dls- tlmable woman, whom the reading dlency. The practice is not so senseless missea cavalierly with "Nothing to ar- hablt reduced to a nervous slattern while yet In the prime of her years. The fond wife of a patient husband, the mother of half a dozen or more sons and daughters, witty, vivacious, well or mischievous as .Mr. Root seems to think, for there Is real merit In Its op erations. The Cabinet Is chosen by the President himself, with a view to Its nfM-feet sunDort of his policies. The informed she would lounge all day long Vice-President Is not, but is usually put in a soiled wrapper upon a grimy, dls- j ordered couch, her feet in slippers, her hair uncombed, a book In her hand, perfectly oblivious to the fact that her appearance was untidy, her children as unkempt as herself, and the household economies at loose ends in every de partment of the home. Her mania ex tended no farther than this, and those 'who knew her Intimately loved her In spite of the pernicious reading habit that possessed her, but who can wonder that the children who went out of this home did not care to return to It for Thanksgiving reunions or Christmas festivities? Or that their love for their mother was not attended by admira tion for her womanly qualities? She possessed many such qualities, for she was kind, forbearing and gentle, did not spare herself In sickness, and shared the "poverty which in times of stress befell the household with cour age and without complaining; but through all she clung and still cllngs,-a listless slattern, to books, periodicals, novels anything "to read," In season and out of season, sane upon other sub jects, but devoid of reason upon this. When the victim of the reading habit Is a man-with a family, the domestic economies suffer quite as severely as this, though In a different way. - We re call an example in the case of a young man who possessed a bright mind of the voracious stamp. He Inconsider ately married when quite young a girl several years younger than himself. The wife wanted things about the house made comfortable and attractive, but cared nothing for books. The com bination, as the years went on, was a distressing one. The reading habit grew and grew upon the husband until he became practically oblivious to the wants of his family. While the rail . fence lasted around their little pasture lot they had wood for the fireplace, the rails being carried in, full length, and burned as they were, one end in the fire, the other extending out across the hearth until It was gradually shortened In the process of combustion. The spec tacle of a man sitting In the corner, book in hand, perhaps without his shoes, a rail thrust Into the open fire place, one end burning merrily, the other within easy reach of the mild maniac, who gently pushed It along as it was consumed, would nave been a ludicrous one had it not been for the restjess, anxious, sometimes scolding wife and two or three half-clad children who were victims of the dis comfort that resulted from his mania. Another instance is recalled in which a voracious reader lived in a cabin of upon the ticket with a view of Insuring the support f interests which nave been Ignored In the selection of the head of the ticket. Arthur, for exam ple, represented the stalwarts, who were opposed to Blaine and Garfield. Stevenson was In many ways the an tithesis of Cleveland; and Sewall could by no possibility be conceived as a Cab inet adviser of Bryan. The Impossibil ity of Theodore Roosevelt as an ad viser of William McKlnley Is manifest to any one who reflects upon the psy chological transformation of the Ad ministration from the suave to the strenuous mood. It Is perfectly certain that Mr. Roosevelt owes his present popularity very largely to the fact that he represented and represents a school of Republicanism that was dissatisfied with McKlnley and especially with Hanna. If he had contented himself with following In the" steps of the Hanna regime, instead of proceeding against the corporations as he has done, nothing could prevent a Democratic victory this Fall. The Independence, the Isolation of the Vice-Presidency, Is not an unmitigated evil The office as now bestowed affords us, in fact, some such repository of inde pendent power as modern municipal methods secure in the election of Con trollers, Treasurers; Auditors or Re corders By separate popular vote. The accepted theory is that it Is safest to Introduce a certain balance or restraint in the Federal organism, Tather than to gather every element of power In the hands of the Chief Executive. Such an Independent repository is the Senate; such another is the House; such an other is the Vice-Pcesidency. Orig inally, Indeed, the Constitution dis tinctly contemplated a Vice-President of different ideas from the President, inasmuch as the man receiving the sec ond highest number of votes for Presi dent in the electoral college became Vice-President. Thus Jefferson became Vice-President to Adams, his opponent for the Presidency. This method was abandoned, yet the Vice-President was still vouchsafed a separate election. The President has no power over him, and the Senate has no choice, as the House has. to select Its presiding officer. It must take the Vice-President. What Mr. Root says about the benign and creditable ausplqes of Mr. Fair banks' nomination Is true; and yet, as he must know perfectly well, the lnflu ences that wanted Fairbanks and got him were precisely not the influences that wanted Roosevelt. They are trust Ing today In Fairbanks to achieve In lthe Administration a conservative and bltrate"! How often he and his are disdainfully regarded by the man of power at his desk or the woman of fashion from her carriage, equipped with every device of vulgar ostentation! How few employers, as they look at the petitioner before them, .give a thought to the actual needs of his family, to his desire to give his children a decent edu cation, -to his worthy desire to rise in the world !- There are those who delight to call us a Christian nation; yet nothing Is far ther from the teachings of Christianity than this selflsh disregard of one for another. It Is rebuked, not only by the author of the Golden Rule himself, but In the pages of Corinthians where Paul's apotheosis of charity is perhaps the finest piece of homiletical literature extant; In John, apostle of ' Love; in Perer, urging brotherly love and char ity, aiid In the self-sacrificing counsels of James. How far the nominal Chris tians among employers and employed have departed In these days of bitter and violent strife in the industrial world from the Master's gentle com mands, is not an Indictment of the re ligion they pretend to follow, but only indicates how serenely men will hold professions in diametric opposition to their practices. on "How to Develop Harney County." The entire campaign Is being shame fully bungled, and the American public would be justified In de manding the appointment of a Broad way stage manager, Belasco being evi dently the man for the place. When we leave a play, what do we remember? Not the brilliant dialogue, or the powerful plot, but one dramatic scene. The greatest plays would be so much jumbled dialogue without the guiding hand of the stage manager, and it Is the same when the drama Is acted with the sky for canopy. Look at the business of the Three Hundred at Thermopylae. "The Spartans on the sea-wet rock sat down and combed their hair" something like Mrs. Car ter's powder-puff In the prison scene of Du Barry. The man at the break fast table remembers the combs, al though the glory that was Greece is not even a faded memory to him. He re members, too, the boy that stood on the burning deck, although the thousand gallant Frenchmen that were blown sky-high when the Orient exploded have passed into oblivion. History, when she does set the stage, gives a picture that cannot be forgot ten; but she has unfortunately too many cares to devote her time to the work. What does the man at the break fast table remember, for instance, of things so recent as 1898? He has a hazy Idea that Sampson or was It Schley? licked the Spanish fleet some where off Cuba, and he remembers that Dewey did some shooting at Manila. Hobson, howver, he remembers clearly, and San Juan Hill and Its Rough Rid ers. It Is such incidents as tnese tnai go well with coffee and rolls, and such Incidents the great neutral Amer ican 'public has a right to expect In the Far East. The sooner a stage man ager Is appointed the better. INCREASING VOGUE OF THE THOR OUGHBRED. During the past twenty years pub lic Interest In the breeding and racing of thoroughbred horses has Increased enormously and this Is largely due to the efforts of such breeders and sports men as Pierre Lorlllard, J. B. Haggln, MR. HAMMOND'S DEVELOPER. There is a revival of the old rumor that the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad will extend Its line down the coast to the Nehalem or Tillamook. The principal reason given for this exten sion Is the tapping of a fine belt of tim- James R. and Foxhall Keene, John A. ber along the Upper Necanicum, as and Alfred H. Morris, E. R. Thomas, well as other timbered districts lying the late Marcus Daly, William C. Whit- farther south. It was the timber re- ney and a host of other wealthy men. sources of the country which it trav- Through their untiring efforts the sport- ersed that made the Astoria road a has been purified and regulated, and profitable enterprise, but incidentally millions of dollars each year have been ,its construction brought Into existence paid to breeders for yearlings and two- a passenger traffic of large and steadily year-oids that were bred in the purple but had never faced a starter. Ten years ago, -if $20,000 was paid for a running horse it was thought that the man" who had paid that price had suddenly gone mentally astray, but to day that much is paid for an untried yearling. The breeding of thoroughbred jracers In this country was thought to have reached Its limit and it was also believed by veteran breeders and train ers that the limit .had been reached Increasing dimensions. It made acces slble to thousands of Portlanders one of the finest seaside resorts in the country. Its extension on down the coast would open up more of these resorts, at the same time that it was developing the timber resources and opening up agri cultural districts along the line. The building of this road was one of the few Industrial enterprises which have been undertaken in this state not to take care of a business that was more? It Is Impossible to foretell. Of course, as the writer to whom we have already referred, says in his article, "the trade of writing is a perfectly re spectable one. Reporters, space writers, those who compile useful books for the market, all have their impor tance as public servants." These wa shall have with us always. It is, how ever, curious to speculate on the state of affairs that would result should there cease to be a writing public and the reading public become once more a fac tor In the world of letters. Imagine the many-sounding presses stilled, and the three novels a day cut off. Imagine the hundreds of thou sands of employes in the mills of fic tion asking for their time-checks, ex changing the itch for writing for the itch for reading. What are these le gions to read? It is possible that the neglected 1095 novels that have been turned out each year for the past decade might be dragged from the dusty shelves, but It Is to be feared that the reformed writing pub lic would be too thoroughly inoculated with the spirit of modernity. Last month's book Is as dead as yesterday's newspaper. Andrew Lang, who Is wont to give his sportive fancy reign, "At the Sign of the Ship," in Longman's Magazine, .suggested in a recent num ber that old books might be palmed off upon the public as new. Says Mr. Lang: Like the person who lately reviewed ""Wutb. crlng Heights" eo a new novel, the public simply does not know what books exist. "Wlrl the aid of posters and tralnboys, "Tom Jones" and "Pamela" might bA brought back to the troneral knowledge and 'admiration. Were an American capitalist I should begin by fu riously advertising Mrs. Radclllfe. "The Ital ian" and "The Romance of the Forest" would sell like "David Harum" If the public thought that they were this year's" books. Portraits of Mrs. Radcllffe (represented by a pretty young lady with a fringe) and Interviews with Mrs. Radcllffe would keep up the delusion that she was not a dead person; for such the public "has no use." The citizen who lately wrote to Mr. David Hume to correct an error In hla history would be easily taken In. There Is something to be said for this scheme, and for a time, no doubt, It would prove successful, yet the re formed writing public, If its reform were more than in outward appearance, would abjure the advertised. Left without a modern book, the readers would be forced to open the ancients or none. Mpst of us, at one time or an other, have picked up some classic In sheer desperation, and found to our surprise that It was more absorbing than adventures hot from the bat of the romantic novelist. The reformed writing public would undoubtedly have the same experience but speculation is idle, the millennium Is far away. The fate of the heroic swimmer who attempts to save the lives of helpless and frantic persons who find them selves in deep water overtook Michael Riley at Alton, 111., Friday. With seven little girls who had, with him, inad vertently stepped from a sandbar on the Mississippi beach at that place Into deep water clinging desperately to him, Riley went down and all were drowned. This Is the largest number of Summer bathers yet reported to have been drowned at one time and place during this season of many accidents of this class. The story is a sad one, but It conveys no note of warning that, had not already been sounded many times. At a time when so many thousands of people are taking chances in the water the loss of many lives is inevitable. when $40,000 was paid for Hamburg, but already built up, but for the purpose of they could not see into the future of the American-bred racer. Only within the past week: W. B. Leeds offered J. R. Ifeene 5100,000 for the unbeaten two-year-old Sysenby. -These are just a few of the racers in which small fortunes are Invested. The Multnomah Fair Association, developing something new Evidence of the wisdom and the enterprise of Its promoters is now shown in the numer ous prosperous little towns which have sprung up along the line, almost from nothing. The poor excuse for a service between Astoria a-nd the beach resorts long ago gave way- to a schedule which The suffering Inflicted upon livestock by the packers' and butchers' strike is simply Indescribable. Crowded, fright ened, at times wild with thirst, hungry, panting with the heat one can hardly conceive of greater animal misery than is represented in the congested condl tion of the great stockyards at Chicago, The fate of the poor brutes Is wretched enough when speedy dispatch awaits them at the end of their long, hot, dusty journey on the cars from the shipping points on the great ranges to the stock pens. But wnen aeiay ana aaaitionai overcrowding awaits them there, their jrhlch was organized and whici gave made "going "to the beach" a very. at-J mute misery appeals strongly to human Experience seems to have taught the ranchman, the camper and the hunter nothing in the matter of forest flres. To the north and southeast of us fierce fires are raging, threatening homes, de 8troylng thousands of feet of valuable timber and loading the air with smoke, The fire fiend does not in such cases take the form of lurid flames, but of careless settlers applying the torch to slashings or Inconsiderate campers who leave smoldering embers of campfire3 to be fanned Into a blaze by evening winds. For this type of fiend there is neither prevention nor punishment. If the City Courfcil listens to the ad vice of substantial property-owners who are interested in the matter, there may yet be two good wooden bridges built across Sullivan's Gulch by the end of the present year. The situation of this bridgeless portion of the city Is ex asperating in the extreme to business men or men who are trying to do busi ness in that section. The dilatory tac tics that have prevailed in this matter are Indefensible on any ground of pub lic policy, and they should be termi nated and suitable bridges built as soon as possible. When tho motorman and the conductor and most of tho passengers are armed with "six guns?' who will be daring enough to hail a Portland street-car after sunset? The poesesslon of a gun impels the inexperienced to shoot, and shooting on Impulse Is likely to result in damage- to the Innocent bystander. It is not hard to imagine the motorman taking a pot shot at some would-be passenger. And then the conductor will rush to his com rade's assistance. And those with guns in the car will have to join in, or what usa would their guns be? People near Port land Heights may be expected to report heavy firing in the distance any evening now. If the cable companies had any regard for the suffering American public they would refuse any dispatch mentioning a refugee from Port Arthur. Every person, from a European official to a Chinese huckster that Is disgorged upon tha wharves of Chefoo by a junk Is Inter viewed and his opinion on the strength of the fortress cabled all the way to America. " A Chinaman running aDout the streets of Port Arthur knows less about the Russians' chances of holding out than a newspaper reader in Alblna. Tho business should be stopped, espe cially as today's "refugees" report Port Arthur's garrison to be starving, and to morrow's will say that the place Is en tirely unaffected by the siege. W. Maw, Printer, of Snohomish, Wash., publishes a booklet entitled "Conquest, containing a poem written by James Lemuel Yager. "Conquest" Is dedicated to Ralph Waldo Emerson and Mary Baker Eddy, who are, in the author's opinion. 'the two- greatest religious writers and teachers of this continent." The point of view of theso verses," says the author, "13 eternity," and on a printed slip ho adds, "No other lyric production of tho age excels this, either in beauty or force." And all that is asked for the right to pub lish the verses Is a "reasonable royalty." And yet the author saws wood, for a frontispiece shows him, In company with another sturdy logger, about to tackle a Snohomish tree. "Conquest" concludes with these, lines, which show that the author hears more than the rustle of leaves In the woods: Above the power of all events They move who heed the Voice Divine. Let billows heave and tempests sweep. The pestilence o'er dead cities creep. For them who faithful vigil keep A friendly light forever shines. Emergency telephones for use at res idences where persons are critically ill and have no regular telephone service Is a new feature of the telephone busi ness In some of the Eastern States. Companies are prepared to install such service whenever requested to do so by the attending physician, at a special rate. This phase of the business will be duly appreciated by physicians and nurses, in whose hands, literally speak- A recent paragraph in this column re ferred to a Delaware decision tnat lead pipe, being an Integral part of a house, was not subject to larceny. The decision was based upon the English common law, which applies, It now develops, to fruit and vegetables in the State of Delaware. An attorney explains the situation to a Philadelphia paper In this way: Suppose you were to go into a watermelon patch and cut a melon from a growing vino ing, are not Infrequently the issues of I and carry the melon away. You would not bo life and death. Wholesale cremation Is practiced in order to clear the battlefields of the Far East of their dead In the shortest and most sanitary way. This Is wise. Sentiment cannot stand long before conditions that menace human life In the most revolting manner. The fu neral pyre cannot be lighted too quickly when from 200 to 1000 bodies of men killed In battle are exposed to the burn ing sun. Judge Parker has relinquished a com fortable certainty for a harassing un certainty. He Is no longer Chief Jus tice of the Court of Appeals for the State of New York, and he is a long way off from the Presidency of the' United States subject to larceny under the common law. But If you should become frightened after sev ering the melon from the vine and should lay It on the ground and return later and carry it away, then you could be arraigned for lar ceny. The fact that you do not remove the property by a continuous operation changis the property from realty, not subject to lar ceny, to personal property, which can stolen. This recalls an English decision. A thief swiped a parcel from a counter and bolted down the street. The string around the parcel was uncut and kept reeling out of the box as the thief ran. When the man was brought up for trial he was acquitted on the ground that he had not severed the connection of the owner and his property, an essential feature of lar ceny. Now and then the law, as Mr. Bumble observed, "Is a hass." WEXFORD JONES..