6 THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAX, PORTlrAND, JANUARY - 7, 130b Entered at the Poetofnce at Portland. Or., as Second-Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. E7 INVAIUABLT IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) DAILY AND SUNDAY. Twelve months Sir months...... Three months One month.... Delivered toy carrier, per month 3s time, per week Sunday, on venr ................. .$6.00 . 4.25 . 2.25 . .75 . .75 . .20 2.50 Weekly, one year Ossued Thursday)... 1.30 faunaay and weekly, one year HOW TO REMIT Send poMGfflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OrFICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency New Tork. rooms 43-50, Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-312 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn street. Denver Hamilton & Kendrlck. S06-B12 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 1214 Fifteenth street. Goldfleld, Nev. Guy Marsh. Kansas City, Mo. Ricksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and "Walnut. ' Jxs Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 S. Third. Cievelnnd, O. James Pushaw, 307 Superior street. New York City U Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Fourteenth and Franklin streets. Ogden Goddard & Harrop; D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1CI2 Farnam; Mageath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam; 240 South 14th. Sacramento, CI. Sacramento News Co., 433 K street Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second street South; Miss L. Levin, 24 Church street. San Francisco J, K. Cooper & Co.. 74C Market street; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter and Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. v7. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott. SO Ellis; N. "Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand. Washington, D. C Ebbltt House. Pennsyl vania avenue. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1900. THE NEW METHOD. Of course the Legislature is to elect the Senator of the United State?. But Is the Legislature to Ibe guided by the expressed -will of the people, or to ad here to the old way of traffic, of "bar pain and sale, employed at the state capital, time out of mind? ' This method enabled unscrupulous aspirants, partly "by direct purchase, partly by -promise of office and favors, not only to control the election of Sen ators, "but to corrupt the life of the state in its domestic policy, and to control the official life of the state in its relations to the National Govern ment at Washington, t He -who was responsible, chiefly, for this system in Oregdn has passed away. Had he lived, the abuse could not have been carried much further. The new legislation that Oregon has enacted was the effort of a people to rid them selves of the consequences of this cor ruption. The primary election law, with the obligations it Imposes, was adopted and enacted as a means of raising oun po litical life out of this corruption and degradation. It is not perfect, of course, and it is easy to find fault with it. But honest adherence to it, and enforcement of it, will cut off the old traffic at Salem. As the Salem Capital Journal ex presses it, "There are graft, venality, fraud and corruption on the side of the old way of electing Senators. The office is put up at "bargain and sale, raffled off to the highest "bidder, the greatest corruptionist. This has been the rule, not the exception. Nine times out of ten money and patronage have carried the day, instead of honesty and prin ciple." m r The results of this system its legiti mate consequences have at last over , taken the system and those who have employed it. The results are collapse of the system, disgrace to those who have pursued it, dishonor, infamy and death. ' But a- new light appears. "We shall not say it is a clear and .perfect light. It is easy to find fault with it: easy to say it does not answer every pur pose of Illumination and reform. But at least it will shut off or put an end to the old system of purchase, bargain and sale. There is a plutocratic Influence in Or egon, that has its headquarters in Port land, whose purpose it is to continue the old corrupt regime. It puts up its money -without stint for support of its newspaper organ; it desire is to render the primary law abortive: it believes in the power of money, and thinks every man has .his price. It plays a game between the parties, professing attach-" ment to neither. It has no principles, save the principles of pelf, and there fore professes to be "independent." All It wants is special privileges, from the public Its ambition is to .possess fran chises, control officials, manage legis lation, municipal, state and National, while it poses for philanthropy and rakes in profits. - Under the primary law. this Influence can control neither party, certainly cannot both of them. The people of Oregon are awake, and now and hence forth will cast these selfish and corrupt influences out of their politics. The candidates who receive nominations may not be ' those whom everybody wants, but at least, or at worst, they will not be the candidates of small and corrupt cliques, in alliance with pluto cratic combines. The new method, how far soever-it may "fall short of ideal results, will effect a change; and any change must .be for the better, cannot be for the worse. The unwillingness of midshipmen to give testimony against their brutal tormentors at Annapolis shows the hold which the system of hazing there prac ticed has upon the institution. These students evidently prefer, from their knowledge of the methods employed to harry and torment, to abide in silence the Ills which they have, rather than to incur still greater penalties. It is clearly time that prosecutlbns were conducted under the statute of 1903, which, makes it an "offense punishable "by dismissal ""-to participate in, encour age or countenance hazing." . It is time the prosecutions under the statute of 1874, under which active participation in hazing must be proved In order to secure conviction, was substituted in the trials in progress by the newer statute. It Is reasonable to suppose that only the certainty -of conviction under the later statute has caused the cases thus far to be tried under the old one. A PIECE OF IMPUDENCE. Mr. Malarkey's attempt to -pry into the "private business" of the Ineffable Oregon "Water 'Power Company was presumptuous, to say the least. Few would protest, perhaps, if it were pro nounced sacrilegious. This poking and peering into the sacred mystery of cor poration, profits is "becoming all too common. Mr. Hurlburt. that peerless champion of the higher ethics, did mar velous wisely to rebuke It when he had the opportunity. The opportunity came when Mr. Ma larkey impiously inquired of Mr. Hurl burt, who had condescended to be a witness in the. Anderson case, what share the "Water .Power Company got of fares it compelled patrons of The Oaks to pay to the favored line of re turn -boats. ' "I don't know, and I AvouldnV tell if I did." replied the sublimely enraged Mr. Hurlburt. This was well. Ii was exactly the withering rebuke for a sovereign corporation to. inflict upon the impudently meddlesome public. "What business has the public with the profits of the Oregon Water Power Company? The corporation, it may be said, was created by the public, obtained its right of way from the public and lives by what it can extort from the public; but all this is aside from the question. The Southern slave-owner derived his wealth from the labor of his slaves. Did he owe them any return. Nothing. The slaves were created to make wealth for their masters. Likewise the (public exists to make wealth for the Oregon Water Power Company, and we ought all to be thankful for the glorious privilege of giving our dimes and dollars to such a noble corporation, with such a grand and good president as Mr. Hurlburt. What the corporation does with the money Is -no business of ours. Is it any business of the sheep's what the shepherd does with his wool? What does it matter" to the steer who" gnaws his nicely-roasted ribs? It is sufficient for him that his ribs were made to be gnawed. So the pockets of the public were made to be emptied, and it is sweet to think that the Lord has sent us a corporation to do the emptying so admirably skillful about It as the Oregon Wat,er Power Com pany. A BOLD CONTENTION OI" SCIENCE. Science, wearing the broad cloak of humanity, has frequently in recent years advocated the advisability not to say the duty of relieving intense and hopeless suffering from disease or injury to the human body by bringing painless and speedy death to those thus cruelly afflicted. It has gone farther than this, by including In this effort the congenital idiot and the in curably insane, urging, in the name of common humanity, that a sleeping po tion be administered in such cases suf ficiently (powerful to give eternal quietus to the sufferer. Opposed, to this view is the theory of the sacred ness of human life, which Is held to demand that under all circumstances and conditions the vital spark should be kept alive, however feebly, as long as possible. Most persons of sound and progres slve views, based upon the mission of human life, taking into account the generally accepted views upon its whence, wherefore and whither, agree with the statement which declares that it is cruel and in no sense either logical or merciful to prolong hopeless suffer ing in a human creatureHhat would toe relieved In the name of pity, and hu manity, were the sufferer an animal of the brute creation. But custom is strong and sentiment an unreasoning thing, because, as often as the ques tion has been brought forward. Its con tention has, after more or less stormy debate, met with disapproval. The strongest reason urged against reducing this theory to practice In the case of desperate illness is that no one is competent to say that the recovery of the patient Is impossible as long as the breath of life lingers In his body. The severe and nearly fatal Illness of Jtudyard Kipling- In New York, a few years ago, is cited as conspicuous. If not conclusive evidence of the truth of this contention. Mr. Kipling's life. It will be .remembered, was despaired of for many days from an attack of pneu monia. The most hopeful of his physi cians at times fixed Its tenure at a fetv hours, but were unremitting in their efforts, by means of the most powerful stimulants, to prolong those hours to the utmost limit possible. To the sur prise of all, the sturdy Englishman rallied, recovered, and In due time, went out into the world again, a well man. His case is to this day regarded as a phenomenal one, but it is cited as a triumph for those who proclaim that "while there is life there is hope." and act upon Its bare suggestion to keep an apparently bopeless -sufferer alive as long as possible. This contention fails, however, when the patient has received injuries that are necessarily fatal and writhes in hopeless agony, begging science for the only relief that It is possible to bestow. It also fails utterly In the case of the congenital idiot, and in that of ' the maniac, beating for 3ears the Iron bars that are symbolical of the body that holds him In cruel . thrall. Objectors, however, fall back upon the theory of the sacredness of human life, oblivious to tlie fact that any condition that renders life a burden and a curse to the individual, from which death Is the only ' possible release, nullifies - the theory and makes death and not life the sacred thing the boon to be craved. Among the latest advocates of the theory that the hopelessly insane, the congenital Idiot, the Incurably -diseased and the victims of mutilating accidents should ,be given a quietus by Bcience are Dr. Charles Eliot 'Norton, of Cam bridge, Maud Ballington Booth, of the Volunteers of America, and Miss Anna S. Hall, a humanitarian, of Cincinnati. Dr. Norton was formerly professor of literature at Harvard, and his opinions as a thinker and scholar have weight. Maud Ballington Booth's humanity, sympathy and kindness cannot be questioned, and her work and that of Miss Hall have been largely among the Jowly and the suffering" of -earth. The opinions of such persons as these cannot be put aside s unworthy of attention. On the contrary, they are entitled to weight In a discussion that .deals on one side with the sacredness of "human life, regardless of conditio.-. and on the other- with the human prin ciple -which decrees that It is merciful to put an end to hopeless agony and mental darkness-or terror by helping Nature to cast oa an outworn garment that binds the wearer to hopeless suf fering or imbecility. That physicians, in pursuit of their professional duties, reduce this theory to prac.tlce, unknown to anyone save themselves. In many instances of in tense suffering from necessarily fatal accident or Incurable disease, there can beno doubt. They simply follow the dictates of humanity rind remain silent until their views .upon the subject are asked, when, forjfthe most part, real izing that the time1 Isnot. ripe for open advocacy of thepftnciple involved, they register a protest more or less vehe mentagainst it,v ' ' The time wlll.come' when professional skill will not be devoted to the purpose of adding many hours or few as the case may be to Ibe misery of conscious life by stimulants or surgical opera tlons In the case -of mortal disease or torturing and .necessarily fatal acci dent, but ratberto "Hastening the end. peacefully and 'painlessly. But It Is not yet, and the agitation of the sub ject now In progress will In due time subside not, "however, until It has sown seed for a later effort and a far away harvest."" FREEDOM OF THE rUIJlT. Every nation or people known to his tory has had some sort of religious organization. This organization has, with the lapse of. time, invariably hardened Into a machine, more or less completely destitute of vitality and progressive Impulse. The men In con trol of It, naturally satisfied with the arrangement upon which their power and Influence depend, bave uniformly framed a concept of their duty In har mony with, their Interest, that duty, as they, perhaps with honesty, conceive It, being to perform strictly the cere monial offices of their religion and to hand down to their successors without change for worse or better, the tradi tions, the creed and the literature re ceived from the past. Defending this dubiously precious heritage from at tack, as they must constantly," for, though they stand and beat time, the world never does, the guardians of the religious -machine soon -perceive that the best defense for It is to declare it sacrosanct. The whole apparatus has been established, they "assert, by the decree of the Almighty. The genuflec tions and ejaculations of the ritual he has prescribed, as an Edward or Will iam prescribes the ceremonial of a court presentation. The articles of the creed he has revealed. The holy liter ature he has dictated to amanuenses. Thus an attack upon the religious machine becomes an attack upon the Almighty. To Initiate change, to ques tion the creed, to criticize the historical or scientific accuracy of the literature, is to defy the decrees of God. It Is marvelous how successfully the "stand pat" party In every religion has Im posed this view upon the people, nor need we Relieve that they have taught it Insincerely. Men believe without dif ficulty what their Interest suggests. They defend and teach, without the least hypocrisy, whatever dognias in theology or politics buttress their own power, . But meanwhile the pioneers of thought' Invade the realm of the un known. They explpre the starry heavens and find the planets wheeling In' their, orbits in obedience, not to the dogma of the priests, but to the law of gravitation. They delve Into the strata of the earth and the fossil bones of dead saurians emerge front their aeons of silent slumber to belie. the consecrat ed myths of the creation. They ponder the forbidden problems of right and wrong and face down Jehovah, Zeus or the Anglo-Saxon God with Iron evi dence of his deep Injustice, 'inasmuch as he has set wrong on thrones and chained the bodies rfnd souls of men. They climb to the mountain-tops of thought, where the air Is pure and the light is heaven's own and there they get sight of the true God. nameless and fearless, who dreads no truth and loves no wrong, the God of the chalnlcss pioneer, whose will Is the march of the free Intellect and whose worship Is righteousness. . Thus under every civilized religious cult two theories of the deity develop: one that -he Is the God of what is, the other that he Is the God of what ougnt to be; and parallel with these oppos ing theories of the nature and will of the Almighty -two antagonistic views obtain .of the purpose of religious teaching. It is held, on the one hand, that the preacher's office is to Incul cate with such power of eloquence us he may the traditional beliefs, cus toms, ceremonies, and nothing more. The deity long ago uttered himself completely and for all time the preach er's sole business now Is to reiterate the items of the ancient revelation. On" the other hand. It Is held that all prob lems, present or past, scientific, politi cal or social, are fundamentally re ligious. Inasmuch as ttrey have their roots in the relations between the world and Its maker. And those who adopt this view claim for the preacher liberty to think and utter his thought from the pulpit upon whatever touches the weal or woe of men. Thus the flgbt for the liberty of the pulpit cannot be distinguished, from the ancient and endless war for free dom of thought. Those who -would fet ter the preacher's tongue would fetter also, if they could, the philosopher's mind. Those who have stood for truth in science have also stood, for truth In religion and Its unrestricted teach ing. Socrates contended for the liberty of the pulpit no less than Dr. Wise, for he, too, believed that the religious teacher must solve all human prob lems. This commission from on m"gh was to teach men "to know them selves," since self-knowledge by men Involved the knowledge of the. Al mighty. The philosophers of classic times held In their world the same re lative position as the free preachers and scientists of today, opposed to the orthodox religious machine, to vulgar Ignorance and conservative injustice. The great men who founded the mod ern world all championed the same cause. Luther, Hubs, Cranmer, all staked their lives for liberty of preaching, and some of them " lost. Savonarola went to the stake for a free pulpit. The monastic orders In the iCatholic Church stood originally for .liberty or preaching, in opposition to the regular clergy; nor has the eJdcr church ever gone to the same extreme in fettering -her preachers tongues as the Protestants, so long as they kept clear of dogmatic heresy. The prophets were the free preachers among the ancient Jews. It was they who "kept religion alive In opposition to the dead formalism of the Lcvitlcn! priesthood; and it is one of the bitter ironlec of-fate that their 'poems and philosophies, almost every one a cry of revolt against established wrong, have been consecrated by later ages to the cause of both Hebrew and Chris tian orthodoxy. The Jewish pulpit of the present day is as free as the Chris tian, but both are In general deplorably subservient. To tooth the wealthy pew holder forbids all vital dealing with the sins which have made him rich. Both stand In terror of the ghosts of dead dogmas. Both tremble before the ig norant prejudices of the mob. In gen eral, the preaching from all pulpits .Is adapted to please the worst of the rich church members, and the most Ignor ant poor ones. But to this statement we must admit exceptions. There are free Christian pulpits, there are free Jewish ones and, rare though they, are as yet, the number Is probably increas ing. Upon their continued Increase hangs the problem of regaining for religion Its Just influence In the affairs of the world, for that Influence will never again be conceded, to empty' forms and discredited dogmas. BENEFITS OF WATERWAY IMPROVE MENT. New Tork will expend 5100.000.000 In enlarging the Eric Canal so that It will admit 1000-ton carriers. Vast as 'this sum appears in comparison with any other expenditure ever attempted for Interior waterways, the traffic Involved easily warrants the magnitude of the undertaking. Water transportation Is not only the cheapest, but It Is lso Immune from the designs of the monop olists. New York will undoubtedly get its money back with Interest In the way of Increased (rade with the territory tributary to the enlarged canal, but the greatest beneficiaries under this enor mous expenditure will be the producers themselves. It is announced that the great work has been projected for the purpose of winning back some of the trade that has been diverted to Gal veston and other ports while Nmv York was resting In a self-satisfied manner on the laurels It had won In the past. This trade can be shifted only by of fering better terms to the shippers and producers than they now receive. This was the advantage -which Galveston offered when it began making Inroads on the business which had previously paid exclusive tribute to New York and the Northern ports. It was on the plea that by improving the harbor and In creasing shipping facilities Galveston could offer a better route to the sea than that ending at the Northern ports. Congress supplied the money for mak ing the necessary Improvements. Some thing like 56.000,000 was expended by the Government, nnd- it was a mere bagatelle In comparison with the In creased profits of the producers and shippers In the Immense area of coun try that had previously found an outlet to sea by the more expensive routes. Now, If the enlarged canal proves as effective as New York hopes It will be. some of the old trade and a large share of the new, will drift back into the old channel. The natural growth of the country will carry Galveston along to greatnes. but, even If It were other "wlsc, the Government appropriation has accomplished all that was expected of it, a betterment of the conditions of thousands and hundreds of thousands of producers. Exactly similar conditions exist on the -Columbia River, and the expendi ture of a comparatively small sum' of money will give the producers of a vast empire an unobstructed highway to the sea. River and harbor appropriations are made, not for the benefit of any partlcular seaport where the work be gins or ends, but for the entire terri tory drained by the waterways or their rail feeders. This Is the principal reason why every individual In Eastern Wash ington. Oregon and Idaho Is vitally In terested In Columbia River appropria tions which are now in jeopardy. CORRUPT PRACTICES. Senate document No. S3 for the first session of the Fifty-ninth Congress may be read with more Interest and not less instruction than usually pertains to literature from that fertile source. It Is an article by Perry Belmont on "Publicity of Election Expenditures." first published in the North American Review, and now reprinted and dis tributed at public expense. Mr. Bel mont points out that 15 states- have al ready passed laws more or less effec tively regulating election expenses. Some of the statutes are manifestly de vised to delude the public, having pro visions which either can not be en forced or fall to lessen corruption when they are enforced. Ohio, at the In stance of James A. Garfield, passed a "corrupt practices act" In 1SS6. which, though with undeniable defects, con tained the vital principle which alone can give vigor and effect to such legis lation. This was a clause vacating the office of a successful candidate who had violated the provisions of the law. An effective corrupt pratlces ct Is the Inst thing desired by politicians of a certain class. The Garfield law must hnve been a hindrance to their meth ods, for they did all they could to dis credit it, and finally. In 1902, got It re pealed. Virginia has a good law, to be found In the code of 1901. It requires detailed publication of the expenses of every candidate, both in caucuses and elections, and.-makes void the election of every person who violates, its pro visions. California lias also a law ad mirable as far as it goes. It limits the money a--candidate may spend In an election, but docs n6t vacate the office In case he exceeds the limit. The much vaunted Massachusetts act also shuns this essential provision, -which It re places by fine and imprisonment. The only penalty for corrupt election prac tices which can ever be effective Is to .make elections won by corruption ab solutely void. This stops the practice y canceling the motive for It. At the New York constitutional convention In 1904, Mr. Root, now Secretary of State, argued powerfully for a law which would limit and control election ex penses and, especially, prevent contri butions from -corporations. The Judic iary committee reported an excellent amendment. It ordered the legislature to declare expressly what election ex penses were legitimate; and It forfeited every office when the successful can didate bad "used or promised money or other valuable thing," which the law forbade, to win his election. New York politics fcelng what they are. of course such an amendment could not be adopt ed by the convention. It was rejected on the hypocritical ground, that the legislature already had the power to enact whatever regulations were need ed, for elections. 4 There is no doubt whatever -that all the state legislatures have power to forbid corrupt election practices under penalty o.f forfeiture of office. The dif ficulty Is. to Induce them to use it. Con gress alto has rpwer to penalize the excessive or wrongful use of money in any election at which a federal official Is to be chosen. When state offices are to be filled at the same election the law of Congress may apply to the whole ticket, local and national. Mr. Bel mont proves this by conclusive cita tions from Supreme Court decisions. Thus no authority is lacking either to the state legislatures or to Congress. They may enact laws as severe and sweeping as their courage and their in terest permit. What they have done so far rather encourages Mr. Belmont, who seems of a disposition naturally cheerful One less bouyant by temperament might not find the case so pregnant with hope. The matter of regulating .party elec tion expenses has not entirely escaped the attention of our lawmakers. We can say so much. More we cannot say. Parties and party elections are, however, an Integral and necessary portlon of our governmental machin ery. They belong to It as much as Congress, the executive or the Judic iary. The expenses of the Supreme Court are strictly regulated by law; so are those of the President and Con gress. Why then exempt from the reg ulation of law and deliver over to, an archy and corruption those elections and that party machinery which are the very source whence all the agencies of government are derived? FARMERS' PROFITS. In discussing the agricultural abun dance of last year, as shown by the re port of the Secretary of Agriculture and by the records of every farming com munity, the Saturday Evening Post says: ThU agreeable condition la not altogether due to the farmers themselves. The fact I that American agriculture Is the ptrongest Industry In the world by the grace of Provi dence. It succeeds with Individualistic and competitive methods that everybody eUe has abandoned, only because of the fertility of the eoll and the enormous market. There Is something In this estimate, no doubt, but the fact, as stated farther on that the "farmer simply raises his grain, and sells It" Implies Industry that Is untiring and thrift that Is commend able. Still, it must be .conceded that the farmer gets the lowest price when he has the most to sell. In this respect agriculture stands alone amohg the In dustries. For example, the production of Iron Is now the greatest on record, and the prices are very high. . Mills working as a unit through their trade agreements Increase their capacity only when prices begin to advance. When prices show signs of declining they promptly curtail their output. By this means they get the-hlghest prices when they have the most to sell, thus manip ulating the -hoary law-of supply and de mand In their own Interest. The pur pose of the co-ordinated, unified Indus tries Is to let the demand come first then meet It with supply. They are thus able to fix the price. With the farmer the supply comes first and de mand fixes the price. It will not be forgotten that efforts have been made time and again to place the agricultural industry upon the basis here suggested. Such efforts have almost uniformly failed and brought disaster to all except their pro moters. The painstaking, earnest, ag gressive attempt in this line made by farmers In Yamhill. Marlon. Polk and perhaps some other counties of this state, to control the output of their fields and orchards," some year3 ago, is well remembered. Their plans were well laid, but heavy losses resulted. In cluding that of a steamboat built for the Independent movement of 'grain on the Yamhill River. There are. reasons for this and similar failures that will readily suggest themselves. In-the first place. It Is Impossible to tell a year ahead what the crop output will be and a year Is the shortest time In which the agricultural supply can be worked. The Industry Is not an exact one as to yield. With the Iron Industry it Is dif ferent. The control of the output Is merely 'a matter of banking the fur naces or running them full blast. Sup ply can be depended upon to follow demand promptly, and with an exact ness that insures a profitable market. With agriculture the supply Is In the power of wind and weather, and a de mand which It may not always be able to meet Is possible. There have, however, been some com binations in agriculture, uhd especially in fruitralsing. that have proved pro tective to the Interests of farmers. It has been found impossible In this state for fruitgrowers to handle their prod uct individually, with profit, or indeed without loss. Combination has, how ever, rendered ,lt possible to make fruitralsing pay'in Oregon, even with the disadvantages of a distant market. As cited by the Post, the frultralsers of Michigan were mostly "broke" until they formed associations and thereby kept control of their supply and had something to say as to what prices they should get, and now they are uni formly prosperous. PRIVATE INTEREST VS. DUTY. In the second book of his voluminous "Confessions," Rousseau tells of his first great lesson In morality a lesson well learned and long remembered. He relates that he had inherited property from, his mother, but that during his absence from home his father, who had married again, enjoyed the income from the inheritance. This circumstance made the father willing that his. son should remain away, and Jean lays down the comprehensive rule that "we should ever carefully avoid -putting our Interest in competition with our duty, or promise ourselves felicity from the misfortunes of others; certain that In such circumstances, however sincere our love of virtue may be, sooner or later it will give way, and we shnll imperceptibly become unjust and wicked In fact, however upright In our Intentions." Many a parent has learned by sad ex perience the truth of this rule, for, hav ing confidence In the filial affection of his children, he transfers to them his property with the agreement that they wlll provide him a home the remainder of his life. Perhaps In some cases of that kind the son or daughter fulfills the obligation to" the letter, but In the great majority of instances the conflict between personal Inerest and duty les sens the acts of kindness, and often re sults in an entire repudiation -f what should be a sacred obligation. WTienever a public official lets his own affairs assume such a character that his personal interest comes into competition with his duty, he has start ed upon a career that is almost certain to end in unfaithfulness and disgrace An employe who lets his own interests conflict with those of his employer places before himself a temptation which he has small Intention of resist ing. A young man, starting In the .world for himself, can adopt o safer rule than that of Rousseau's to. avoid putting his own interest in competition with his duty. Admiral RoJestvensky has. through the skill of Japanese surgeons and the excellent care of Japanese nurses In a Japanese naval hospital, recovered from the wounds received in the battle of the Sea of Japan, and comes forward with a report of that great naval con test In which he attempts" to show that he himself planned. the encounter with Togo's fleet, knew from exactly what quarter the attack was coming, had a correct knowledge of .the strength of his enemy and, in brief, ordered the fight from the bridge of his own flag ship. He neglects to state why, under these advantageous circumstances, his fleet. Instead of that of Togo, was not victorious. These assumptions may make It difficult for the Admiral to explain o the satisfaction of the Min ister of Marine thegreason for the sud den disappearance of the Russian fleet from Eastern waters. It Is reported from Washington that an agreement will be signed early this year by Secretary of State Root and British Ambassador Durand providing for a commission to draft laws by which the United States and Canada are to have Joint control over the Ash ing Industry on the Great Lakes. There has been a steady decline In the num ber of fish taken, and the necessity of adequate protection is quite plain. If this commission should prove success ful In its work. It might be well to In clude the Industry In Western waters which wash the shores of both Canada and the United States. The necessity for International co-operation In pro tection of salmon on waters tributary to Puget Sound has long been recog nized, but thus far nothing of import ance has been accomplished In secur ing It. There never was a normal child that didn't . deilght In a good story about animals. With healthy youngsters, nothing so stimulates the imagination. And when the story is told in rhyme, with a rollicking Jingle and has "go" to it all the time, you have something rare even In an age when llterary amusement for children engages the best effort of creative talent. Such a production The Sunday Oregonlan of fers today In "The Roosevelt Bears." the first installment of which appears on page 46. Of course, this is only the start. What happens to the bears when they get into touch with the effete East Is more Interesting and entertaining. These stories will run for many woeks in the Sunday issue. Dr. Washington Gladden thinks America Is In the midst of a great re vival of religion. If by "religion" he means acceptance of creeds and cere monial functions, he Is mistaken. If he means a quickened perception of the difference between right and wrong and a growing preference for right, all, the evidence of recent events in church and state goes to sustain him. To call a revival of common honesty a revival of religion may warp language somewhat, but It Is fine to hear a theologian like Dr. Gladden approve of "mere moral ity" under any name. A Salem Justice of the -Peace con fessed himself guilty of 'forgery and subornation of perjury and. knowing that he cannot be forced put of office, refuses to resign, but passes judgment upon smaller criminals than himself. Here Is not only another demonstration of the laxity of Oregon's criminal laws, but presentation of an excellent oppor tunity for the people of Salem to show what power public opinion has in the absence of law. They say the man Hogan, or Orch ard, charged with the murder of Gov ernor Steunenberg. is believed also to have been the chief of the dynamiters in Colorado. He Is said to be mentally Irresponsible, or a monomaniac. Better hang all such monomaniacs. The arrest of KeUey and Rossman, the two alleged murderers of Thomas Flemmlngst merely goes to show what the detectives can do when they try; and an excellent incentive toward try ing appears to be the liabillay of other wise losing their Jobs. Oculists and opticians find no fault with the Portland Gas Company. The quality of its product creates demand for the specialists' services and the dealers wares. No one can read by poor gaslight and' retaln normal eye sight. Gowrnor Vardaman. of Mississippi, says in hi3 annual message to the Leg islature that "the negro Is deteriorat ing morally every day." What else could be expected with such an exam ple as Vardaman always before him? If the New York Times is correct in the programme it announces for the Empire State Legislature in the mat ter of life Insurance reform. Albany for the next few months will hold place second only to the National capital. The curious thing about the free exits at The Oaks 13 that the only persons who have ever been able to find them are the employes of the company. But of course, they were never Intended for -use except in courts of law. It Is hardly worth while to conjecture what the British would have done to Rojestvensky's fleet. We know what Togo did. We never knew precisely what a free pulpit was until Dr. Wise defined it. It's whatever pulpit Dr. Wise occupies. Difficulties of a midshipman's life are appreciated when one tries to stand on his head and ea,t under a table. The Temple Emanu-El doesn't want a rabbi In Its pulpit. What It wants Is a phonograph. Motto of the Portland Gas Com pany: Quality no object. We want the price. Oregon Is r Great State, and The Oregonlan Is Her Prophet. Tacoraa Ledger. The Oregonlan's New Year number Includes several well-planned, well written and highly Interesting sup plements on the recent progress of Oregon and her ' commercial capital. The new railway developments cen tering at Portland or making that city an objective get a good showing, and the customary plea for Government money to deepen the river is forcibly put. The illustrations are capitally done. Oregon .is a great state, - and The Ore goakut I aer propfeet. THE PESSIMIST. A relief party has been organized on the East Side to search for a mule, which, it la- feared, has been lost In one of' the Water-street bogs. - -, i Until recently the mule was In the em ploy of the Oregon Water Power &, Rail way Company, and when last seen was epgaged In a bitter altercation with the president of the company. No one war, cfose enougli to . hear what tlie troubl", ' was about. It was noticed that the mul. . turned away In a discouraged manner, and walked along the ridge toward. East Morrison street. Jt is not at all unlikely that he threw himself into the quicksands and was lost, . Although Mrs. Fltzsimmons' heart Is still cold, that of th6 Oregon boy-poet beats stronc and true. "Two souls with but a single thought: four fists that" beat as one." The Boy-poet's letter which is printed below shows that his position toward Henneway was slightly misunderstood. Hl3 apology is accepted, anil I will do the best I can to make Henneway see the matter in the proper light. To the Editor. V I sent you a day or two j-ince a poem. Jn which I waa gla.il to see you recognize sufficient worth to Induce yuu to publish It. In your remark you make men tion of the Poet Henneway and seem to think I am trying- to antagonize him. God for bid! I nm. myself, too familiar with the taunts and reproaches poets are forced to en dure ever to bo guilty of Interposing any ob stacle in the way of struggling genius. I " Place no fetters- upon him: give him the freedom of the press, then let the world! verdict 'decide whose vcrnes are ncarst the' great heart of humanity. I am now contemplating a great epic en titled "Grover Cleveland." which I will write ' when suffetently Inspired. Truly yours. The following lyric was inclosed with the letter: I formerly sung Fltzsimmons' woe. HI worry o'er an erring wife. And all the attendant ills which flow From less of honors gained through llte.- I sung in language fit and meet. ' That It matters not how high a man's Rise may be up proud Fame's steep. He may perchance lose diamonds. There yet remains a nobler task: To sing the hero In the ring. To voice the praise of man. for feats Which crowned KItzslmmorw king. There needs should be a bolder pen Than what I yield, to well portray Fltzsimmons battling In the ring N The victor in the fray. But none ha come, from out the eons "To sing the song. so. faltering!. The task I shall essay. Jim Corbett undisputed flood Superior to every man. , When he came through a carnage fierce The vletor o'er John Sullivan. It seemed the heights had been attained. The perfect man of nil was found. And thousands with" a mad delight This victor clamored round. But then. Just rising Into view," Came one He had no statesman's head; His legs attenuated were: Spots on hi? back: hair red. 'Twart Fits, unknown, unused to Fame, Unknown to alt navo might: He with a bold defiance dared " The blustering Jfm to fight. Th-y fught. On history's teeming pag) . Is writ, where all may read who run. How Fltx olar plexus blow Made him at once the champion. The champion? Yes. of all mankind. The world was at his feet. Swift had been his mount, but y. He was not crazy with the heat. Not then, as In the world's young day. When wrathful Xero reigned tn state. Was human sacrifice required, ' t"T '' Some vengeful lust to sate. i ' . 'tX ' " - Ftrr practiced but the arts, of peace, Tb cruelty was a foe, , . .. w4 "Was happiest when he could some gift On suffering want bestow. Endowed by God with giant strength. He never was in sullen mood: In philanthropic deeds rejoiced. And delighted to do good. . Xe'er steeped his ser.ee in fumes of wlne;i On ponies scorned to bet: Was temperate In his taste; abhorred The vicious cigarette. Who would not pause to honor Fits'? Breathes there a man so mean. Not what he 13 or hopes, to be. But for what the old man's been. There was considerable alarm on New Year's day. owing to the appearance in, the residence districts of a large man with an angry glare In his eye. From a few muttered remarks It was judged that he was looking for someone. Several anxious mothers telephoned in to the po lice station asking if any boy had been, hurt. A careful search next day by the entire detective force failed to locate anyone answering to the descriptions sent in. In one of the down town hotels the night clerk reported that a man whom he sus pected to have registered under an as sumed name acted in a very peculiar manner. He was very restless the night before, and in the morning, after he left, his room was found to be in a Btate of wild disorder. Pens were found sticking in the soap, and the floor was strewn with paper torn into shreds. In searching for a clew, the detectives pieced several of the largest scraps to gether and found that they constituted a poem of considerable strength. It was written with red Ink, and, in the main, was Quite unprintable. These are tlie last two lines: "His ways are no more the ways of a poet. Than the ways of a mule are the ways, of a goat." It was thought by Captain Bruin that it was some one from Washougal, as the unused portion of a return-trip ticket from Washougal was found on the floor. A dozen men witnessed tho fracas, which occurred In Flora' saloon, near Clarkla. and. according to their version. "Walshaw, who had been drinking, attacked Franlgan, gouging an eye and biting off an ear, at the sam time .raying: '"I will chew you down to a dwarf." Franlgan rallied, and. after kicking "VValshaw In the head, forced him to cat the ear he had bitten off. though not until he had beaten Walshaw half Insensible In a second affray. Franlgan -p!ced the car with the bar pepper and saltstanda before serving. The above dispatch from Idaho Is of particular Interest, owing to the fact that George W. Henneway, the celebrated poet, was one of the spectators. He la a . brother-in-law of Franlgan, who is Wal shaw's cousin. Henneway is very fond of his relatives and goes to considerable trouble to be present at all family re unions. He in already at work on a madrigal commemorating the event,, and has wlred for apace In next Sunday's Oregonlan. M. B. WELLS. . The American Chameleon. St. Nicholas.' The American Chameleon, a small liz ard. Inhabits various parts of the South ern United States.ft.The little animal has the remarkable habit of quickly and com pletely changing Its colon?.,"varying from brown to yellow and pale green'. Its food consists of Insects. The little animal i.T perfectly harmless to higher forms of life. Is often kept as a pet. and has been worn attached to a chain as an ornament. The toes are provided with adhesive pads which enable the lizard to run upon smooth, vertical surfaces. Jj k wm HHHIi