6 THE SUNDAY OKEGOMAN, PORTLAND, JAfiURY 27, 1907. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. y INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. X3 i (Br M.U. Dally, Sunday included, one year S.OO Dally, Sunday Included, six months.... ii'i Daily. Sunday Included, three months., 'i.'i't Xxally. tjunday included, ono month.-.- .73 I .ll . without Sunday, one ye" O.OO Dally, -without Sunday, lx months .-. Dally, without Sunday, three months.. 1.75 Daily, without Bunday, on month 60 Sunday, one yew - --- Wec-kly, one year (Issued Thursday)... l-OO Sunday ana WeeKly, one year 3.30 BV CARRIER. rally. Bunday Included, one year. ..... .00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 HOW TO REMIT Sond postofllce money order, express order or personal check on your loc-al bank. stamps, coin or currency r WLt the tonder1! rial. Give pofitofTice ad- dresa in lull, Including county and Biat. POSTAGE KATES. Entrrrd at Portland, . Oregon. 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Nothing- startling; aa developed in the Interstate Commerce Commission hear- ing In this city; or at least It preecnted no features that could or " would ooca- sion surprise tn Portland and Oregon, The attorney for the prosecution seemed f u rpr 1 sed ease -with which lie proved the case he sought to ee llsh. and yet all facta brought out at the h earing have been known to Ore coniana for the paet five years. "When the "Pacifies" were amalgamated, un der the llarrtman management and all The money paid .fey Orepon to any and all of the roads was parceled out In d ivi (lends or for Investment by Mr. Har- rlman alone. It was quite obvious that 3W r. Harrlman would not Jeopardize the size of dividends or the amount of the profits by permitting competition that would redound: to the 'benefit of the men "wlio ptitd the freight. What everyone In Oregon already knew was quickly ascertained by Attorney Sev- eranoe before he had examined one- half the witnesses. .Mr. Miller, of the railroad forces, made a very clever witness, and by hi testimony presented the case in the beet possible light for the railroads; but. when Mr. Miller, general freight agent of the Southern Pacific, and per. force obliged to make the beet possible financial Tetuni9 for that road, at tempted to show that re was in active competition with Mr- Miller, of the O & N., or. in other words, with him 1 self, and was also expected by com petitive tactR'S to take business away from tils Southern iaeltlc. it wa. 1m- possible lor Wm to maKe a satisfactory explanation. To use an expression of The street, the Harrlman roads seem to hav been "caught with the goods on them." If there was anything novel In the alleged expose. It was In the fact that the people of Oregon have -for more than five years remained patient and passive under this monopoly. We have witnessed the shifting: of the Oriental flour trade from Portland to Pugret Sound simply' because the 'Harrlman .syetem, in Its blind deter mination to build up San Francisco at the expense of the Northern ports, failed- to iuipply tis with the necessary tonnage for taking: care of the Duel ness. That this short-sighted policy failed to accomplish the object sought " is quite clearly demonstrated toy the nresent, condition of a IT aire ; for, while the business ni rained lor Portland, it failed to ro to San Francisco, but dnstead do-ifted. Into the hands of M r Harrlman'B .greatest enemy, Mr. Hill. Vfl havft vltncfised In the attempt of the Southern Pacific to force business b y ral 1 the -practical arandonmen t of the .waiter route, no effort being made to rtecure now and up-to-date steamers for the run. although our chief com jx?tItor In the Northwest trade, Seat tle, to provided with new steamships vhich hnvft been built since the HarrU man line was. left with only one fairly satisfactory, steamer on -the route. ' 'Here ag-adn- haa trie short-sigrhted Harrlman policy failed to work, for the business, instead of beinsr forced to the railroad, by lack of water facilities,. was taKeu up py a ecore of smaller vessels, all of whch havo .made money out of it. 'while eome of the paesenger traffic which insisted on the water trip by a good, boat has .been forced to go by way of Puiret Sound.' where still more of It will K as won as- several rriiiK- nlficent new steamens now under con struction are completed. Another re suit of elimination of competition is Khown in the abominable train service between Portland and the East. With the shortest route and the best facili ties of any road for making fast time between Portland and the East, the train service has been subordinated to that of California to such an extent that travelers who knew by experience or reputation the wretched connections made by the Oregon Short Line and the Union Pacific, are many of them going over to the Hill lines. Coming west, this has resulted in thousands of straugers stopping at Puget -Soand. who, had there been an adequate train I service to Portland would nave taken the short route, and at least have had an opportunity of seeing Portland, and Oregon. These serious fihorteominpa have, of course, been tiishly exasperating to the people of Oregon, but all might nave ue-en home with that mild bud- mission which is characteristic of Ore- gonlans, had not the amalgamation of these lines stifled competition in rail road extension as well as in the opera- tion of the lines already built.. No one who haa witnessed, the aggressive man- ner In which Mr. Harriman "got buey" as soon as Mr. Hill, began building a line down the north bank: of the Co lumbia River, will believe that, if the Southern Pacific and Union Pacific had remained in competition with each other, one or the other would not long ere this have entered. Central Oregon. With these great transcontinental roads competing with each other for business, the building of a railroad Into such an enormously rich' trade field fld the Tillamook and Ne-halem country would never have been left to a pri- vate individual like Mr, Lytie. who during the past ten years has displayed Infinitely more enterprise than Harrl man in 'the opening up of new territory. It is not at all clear .Mat punigh- ment can be meted out to Mr. Harrl man. even should he be found gruilty of this combination in restraint of trade, but it Is clear that, no matter what the result may be, or wha.t changres may come with a possible .re adjustment which would naturally fol low a dissolution of the merger, Port land and Oregon can get nothing- worse in the way of railroad-building. or train atnd steamship service than we have been forced to accept for several years. since all competition ceased between the two great branches of the Harri man system, which have held Oregon lnfa vise-like grip. EVANGELISTIC PROGRESS. Persons who can remember back some forty years often find it instruct ive to contrast the methods of the modern "evangelist" with those of the revivalist' who was then the active recruiting agent of the church militant. That there is a contrast cannot be de nied. The very change in the name of the officer 'proclaims it. "Evangelist" is a more elegant appellation than "re- vivalist." It is lees startling to the sensibilities. It implies less of etorm and fury and more of those grentle breezes which insensibly waft the soul to salvation, while it enjoys all the de- lighte of sin. "With the inelegant term "revivIIt" went also many of those disturbing and vulgar beliefs which would look out of place in a modern oongresation of taste and refinement. We stiri have a hell, of -course, but what a contrast it presents to the old- fashioned abode of the unblest. The lake of brimstone, Satan with his rod hot pitchfork, the cunning little -doviJs who rolled the wicked about on the coals all. all have vanished, and in their place we have nothing? mor terri ble than a somewhat overheated parlor, tastefully furnished, where the .unre pentant sinner Is permitted to meditate In solitude and make food resolutions for the future. The revivalist used to exhort the un- converted in a powerful voice, pictur ing vividly the unpleasant -features of their future dwelllngr-place while he pounded the pulpit for emphasis and t he elect re enforced His remarks with ehrleks. groans and tears. All thte is changed, The evangelist doei? not ex hort: he would do nothinpf so common and vulgar. Me argues in tha t limpl y sentimental style which is so soothing' to many church members of the gentler sex; he relates pathetic anecdotes culled T rviTi a lare book full of them prepared expressly for hiB ue; he pic- tures the modified joys of a refined and chastened heaven, but he Ka.ye nothing unpleasant. Nor would anytbody be caught groaning and shouting "Amen" for any imaginable consideration. -A discreet sigh . fully expresses his relig ious emotions, and he does not need to sigh often, . The old revivalist would exhort the congregation to join in sing ing one of those rousing hymns, "Come, ye sinners, poor and needy," or "Come, thou fount of every blessing," urging them to efforts more and .more ener getic until the whole "building was one mass 6t sound fraught with burning passion; then, while the singrJnfi: pro ceeded with increeslns vigor, he would raise his voice above the tenor and the soprano, high, vibratory, almust preter natural in its weird energy, and issue 1 tic call to the unconverted. The evangelist till luee$ music, but he uses it ametically and with re. straint. He delights In soft tones, wail ing harmonies and twilight cadences. Purveying music for evangelists is now a distinct art, or profession, like the manufacture of artificial flowers ; and manicuring. The hymns which led the South and the Middle West to salva tion 'half a century ago were "pitched by farmers and eung by carpenters, blacksmiths and hunters with their wives. The hymns which allure, but so seldom lead, the modern congregation to forsake its sins are pitched by a paid professional and sung by his paid at elwtants, while the call to the uncon verted I0 delivered with graoefHxl elocu tion in soft and chastened tones. ' Thus tha world progresses.- In rellg- ion aa in everything else there are style changing with the season. But the more observant student perceives presently that the changes In evangel- tr !-. .fjuhionA n.re nuiRtlv miri(rfliIn 1 The purpose of the -evangelist, with all his elegance, 13 identical with that of the rough old revivalist: aiid he uses the same store of fact, argument and fiction to accomplieh. h,is end. The trimmings are somewhat altered ; tbp garment itself la the same. To the re- vivalist nothing had happened in the world since the fall of Jerusalem. Mod ern ntotory did. not exieti -modern life, with Its problems and difficulties, was of no consequence; modern men, with their . examples, the lessons and the warnings of their lives, , were pure chimeras. Nobody worth 'mentioning: in a. sermon had 'been 'born since Abra ham; no deed worth recording had been done since the Hood. Thus It was WltU the revivalist and thus It' remains with the evangelist. Xo both of them alike modiern life -has no meaning, no prob lems. . Every question worth answering was answered by the Jews 3000 or 4000 years ago. To do our full duty in every particular we need only imitate Mel ch.lzed.ek. Preachihjr about "Fools" the other night, Mr. Geil did not look around him and select his types and example Irom the abundant material at his disposal he went 'back to ancient Jewish litera ture and selected nine more or lets& illu- sory types from those venerable books Why? Can Mr. Geil possibly believe that we have evolved no new forms of folly since the day 3 of Noah which re quire new classification and analysis? X 5 'hen shall we have an evangelist who will cease talking about the fool of the days of Abraham and tell us something about the fool of the days of plutoc racy? The - old stories and instances are like squeezed orangee. Mankind cries out for something that is alive. Religion is not necessarily dry bones a nil .Mm hunk. T"Vij a 1 !.-.. I vi husks. There is .plenty of vi- tality in it if gome one would find a way to bring it out. "LET THE nUMAirV LAW ALONE. The Legislature should let the direct primary law alone. No doubt it will. The law was enacted by the people, and the people desire that it shall have a full and fair trial. If it shall transpire that it has serious defects, or is wrong in principle and disastrous in opera tion, the people will themselves correct it. Of course, if there are obvious blunders or oversights or omissions in the law, the Legislature might be jus- tifled in taking: action. Not otherwise. State Senator Bailey, we observe. deslnee to -do away with Statement No. 1. Why?r. Because it is "subver- slve of -party,' he says. But it needn't be.v A Candidate Tor office who does not like Statement No. 1 need, not igrn it. If he Is not prepared to observe its terms and conditions, he should not fxtrn it. Alirl- Iff hn 1a c-n hi rnom.tl .mxT-i he will not. Thereis no compulsion about " accepting:' Statement Ka, 1 or btatement- ro. 2, or any otner state ment. The law says the candidate may" inclucfc Statement o. 1 or Statement No. 2 in his petition. He mil y. of course, subscribe to any other statement or announcement or declara tion' on the Senatorial question that he desires to frame for himself. Or he may make none. In Multnomah. County last year a number of Republican candidates framed their own statement, under which they agreed to vote for the "Re publican voters', choice." They did o. They fulfilled their pledge as faithfully and honestly as any member who sub scribed to Statement No. 1. It is fortu nate, perhaps,- that members who had accepted Statement No. 1 were not put to the supreme test under its terms of voting in the. Legislature for a Sena torial candidate of opposing political faith. Any future Republican candi date for the Legislature- who desires to avoid that dilemma may easily do eo by himself adding: a qualifying clause to Statement No. 1, committing himeelf to vote for the people's choice "provided he shall be the Republican nominee." So with the Democrats. We think no candidate for the Legislature will lose a solitary vote if he makes that condition. He can make euch a condition, or any other condition he pleases, under the law as it stands. No one, of course, will take with much seriousness Senator Bailey's pro- posal to nominate estate officers in con vention. There oa-n be no objection to a state convention, however, for the purpose of framing and promulgating a party platform and considering and discussing -party autairs. It should have no other function. GENKRAL ROE !RT K- LEK. When we remember that war has been one of the principal occupations of mankind for many thousands of yeans, - it is surprising that military genius should be so rare, The num- ber of really great -Generals who have appeared since the records or history began Is pitiably; emttll. Antiquity supplies some half dozen names; mod- ern times not many- more. Napoleon mate master of attack, Nhile neither Rome nor Greece produced such a de- fenelve strategist as Frederick the G reat. The aggressive campaigns of that marvelous man were for the moet part failures, but the united armies of Kurope were insufficient to break down his dt'lcnfv at home. The evident ten- dency of evolution Is to eliminate war by withholding the ability to lead armies to victory. Most wars have been fought by blunderers, and the re suite have depended more on chance than on foresight or calculation. Wa terloo was an accident. 'Our Civil War was for the first two years a continued series of mistakes on the part of North ern Generals and failures to profit by them on the part of the Southerners. Neither side produced more than two or three leaders above mediocrity. The North finally m-t Grant and Shrman over the heads of the Incapablea who had been leading Lite Union armies to slaughter, and the South -had General Robert B. Lee to pit agrainHt then. Which of these men was the greatest military leader history has not yet de cided. X-e lost every aKgrewlve move ment that he undertook, while neither Grant nor Sherman failed in a single one. But the odds against the Con federate commander were immeasura bly greater than either Grant or Sher man had to meet. Marching through Georgia, Sherman found little effective opposition. There was but the shadow of a defense, and no attack worth men tioning. On the other hand, when Lee invaded the North the opposition : to his advance accumulated at every step, and by sheer weight would have forced him back even had he not been de feated in pitched battle. But Judgment ia an essential element of military ccnftifi and one, ia rnmnelled to award he palm for judgment to Sherman rather tnan jee; tor tne rormer accu- rately measured tha chances of defeat and victory In his invaHon of the South,- while Lee's calculations Invari ably came out wrong:. On the defense, Lee was at his best and- historians are disposed to ' rank: him among the greatest -masters of de fensive strategy. But since. In the end, he was overcome by Grant, hie glory only increases ' that of the man who finally conquered him. The great er Lee was as a master of defense, the greater still must we reckon Grant as a master of attack, for he finally broke down Lee'e defense and captured his army. The disposition of mankind to judgd leniently thosa to whom for- tune has been unkind probably has loaded the balance tn favor of Irfe's military capacity. - Unbiased criticism must assign him a place below both Sherman and Grant.- but even thus his rank is no mean one, for the-. latter were very great commanders, while the tendency of opinion is to number Grant among the greatest. Perhaps the beet thing- that can be said of Lee as a military man is that he knew when he was defeated. Me had the sense and courage not to prolong a bopelese etruggle by guerrilla warfare, and did an Incalculable service to both North and - South by surrendering his army to Grant when effective fighting was no longer possible. This decision on his part involved both -military Judgment and - ethical temperament. A. man of character less fine than Lee'e would have sought grlory in resisting to the last extremity, no matter at what cost of eulterins to his-8oldiers and people. On the side of personal character Lee. was without flaw. Tha civilisation ot the old South JL Droduced no better tvne of man than he wag, though the types which It pro- diuced were various, and many of them admirable. The anecdotes related of Lee while he was leading the Southern armies show that he had a soul of sin gular .gentleness, an extreme rectitude of spirit, and that hl0 faith in divine providence was deep and genuine. The writers who knew him speak of him as a "lovable" man. After the war his influence as a teacher did much to sweeten' the bitterness of defeat to his students at ' Lexington, and, through them, to the entire South, while hia philosophy was thoroughly optimistic. "Look not mournfully Into the pat; it comes not bade again. Wisely, im prove the present; it la thine. Go forth to meet the shadowy future without fear and with a manly heart." Such was Lee'B doctrine, and his teaching of It sanK deep. In commemorating the hundredth anniversary of the birth of this great man, the natural disposition to praise m superlatives may be Indulged with a good conscience. Still the harp is not quite in tune. One or two strings jar -a little. JL.ee possessed that com- trtnation of faculties whlcn lias been, perhaps, more dangerous than any other to the welfare of the human race. an inexorable conscience with a bjyl Judgment, fib conscience made him in-fl3cibly loyal" to an indefensible ?ause which with a sounder judgment he woujd: never have chosen, tiia de feat ivas one of the great historic tri- umphe of righteousness, yet Lee him self was a good man, who believed that he was fighting for righteousness. Un doubtedly he chose what eeemed to him the beet, but it is impossible to forget that his cause was not the best, and that he devoted great abilities and pro foundly admirable qualities of heart and soul to the perpetuation of evil. For this we must blame, not the man, but his environment; and we account for the complete sway which his en vironment exercised over him by that flaw In the intellect which made his military calculations! go awry and viti ated his Judgment upon a fundamental question of right and wrong at the critical moment in his career. THE RABBITVILLE S.IGK AGAIN. It is not easy to discourage Editor Bennett, the Rabbitville sasre. He broke a lance with the people of Ore gon on the Senatorial question after it had been settled by, them. But that didn't settle him. Now he bobs up serenely with a powerful argument for the Gubernatorial prerogative. "We would far rather trust the fair judg ment of the executive than-the voice of the people or the whima of the Leg islature,' in naming a Railroad Co(ji- mission, he says. The Governor knows what he about. The people don't. The Governor has good sense. The people have not. The Governor is a Democrat, but he will arise above poll- tics. The people cannot. ' Such, in ef fect, is Brother Bennett's argument. Let us see. The Governor of Oregon Is firat of all a partisan. When a Re- publican United States Senator died he appointed a Democrat - to his place. It may fairly be eaid that the people wanted a Republican Senator, but the accident of death preven ted the com plete fulfillment of their desire and purpose. The Governor seized his chance by sending t Democrat to the United States Senate. We cannot criticise him for his action, fur every Democrat In Oregon expected and de manded that he do that, very thing. If he had desired to rise above politics he could not have done so, There can be no nonpg rtteanshlp in such an ap pointment. The Governor was and is a Democrat, and he will be a Demo- crat if he shall have the appointment of the Railroad Commission. Why cannot the people be truKied? Every candidate for Railroad Commis sioner before them will be required to declare where he stands and what he will do on the great question of reg'u lation and control of railroads and other public-service corporations. There is no chance that any -person who de sires to nullify the effective operation of the Railroad Commission will se cure nomination from the people. The campaign in the primary between in dividuals will necessarily lead to scru tiny of the promisee and pledgee (f every candidate. No csndjdale who declines to make promises and to tie- fine absolutely his position will stand any chance of nomination. L't the railroads put Up a candidate i r they desire to Know where the people of Oregon stand on the question w rail- road regulation and control. THE MOCKER. Alfred Russell AVallace. who was a. moderate user of linuor in hi younger days, became a teetotaler in his old age. This he tella ue in his ponderous but Interesting- autobiography. He had discovered, or thought he had. that strong, drink is peculiarly injurious to the agred. Walt Whitman, on the con trary, enjoyed the bottle, and put it to the lips of his neighbor up to the day of his death: but Walt was an invalid for many yeans of his old. age. and h example is not quite safe to follow. Dr. Osier writes himself down on the &ide of abstinence, with the remark that we should air better off If our sTore of alcoholic beverages were caet into the sea. Medical opinion is, In fact, a unit -that strong drink does us but. little good, and .may do us a great deal of barm. The fact that medical practice aW not quite Jibe with this opinion may be set down to the frailty or Human nature. The flesh is weak, though th spirit willing. Alcoholic liquor is not a food, we are taught, but it may in some caaea stimulate the body to make use of food that would otherwise go to waste. It supplies no strength, but it sometimes enables m to call up unsuspected resources of strength, and therefore helps occa sionally to pull through in an emer- gency. A man who W too exhausted to do a piece of work: which must be done may sometimes gets through it with the aid of-strong: drink: but such an one is like a person Who lives beyond his in come and dra we upon his -capital. The income is forever less than before, and the tendency to nibble at the capita! growfl stronger. If one could use alco holic drink, entirely as a servant, he might profit by it at many critical points in life: but few can do this- The servant quickly 'becomes master with most men; or, if not quite that, he ad vances to the position of a dearly cherished Intimate. Upon the whole, alcohol i3 too insidious a friend , and too deadly a foe for most men to deal with. The entirely safe, motto is to let it alone- tn the . days when.lt was good form to bicycle, philosophic ridero used to observe with amusement the effect of a single glass of beer upon the nerves of t heir friends. A bicycler must aim almost a accu rately as a rifleman. One glass of beer in many, case a would destroy- the 9teadlnesB of his hand and land him in a ditch, though otherwise the effect was not noticeable. Scientists have a ; machine- called the sphygroo graph. ; which traces the heart beats on a sheet of paper and shows whether they are regular or not. It takes only a few drops of alcoholic stimulant to make the trace on the sphygmogTaph look like the edge of a saw. For a boy, one cigarette .-will do the same thing. though he may feel no evil result from t at the time. The ruinous effect of alcohol l to muddle .the relations- be tween the thought centers and the muscles. It perverts the reports of all the eense organs, and thus causes the brain to act upon fakie information, while it destroys the capacity of the muscles to obey the orders that they receive. How much alcohol will pro duce this' effect upon any individual depend, of course, upon hte constitu tion. For some a little will act disas trously: for others it takes a good deal to do much harm; but with every man the proce?s of disturbance between mind and muscles begins with the first drop be swallows. For this reason, alcoholic drink is singularly dangerous for railroad em- pi o yes. whose sense must be acute and whose muflclea muvt be strictly obe dient. There Is, therefore, excellent reason why the companies should for- bid their liands to drink either on or off duty. This is one speclee or safety de vice which the companies have not hesitated to employ, because it costs them nothing:. Total abstinence on the part of employes contribute? to the safety of the public almost as much as the block system of signals, while It takes nothing from dividends. How much it would help to avoid accidents if the great railroad barons who issue orders would themselves consume less champagne and devote more thought to their duties hae not been accurately as certained. The relation between cham pagne emppers In Mew York and the car shortage in Oregon is a fascinating: subject for speculation. Of one basic truth we may be certainthat if strong: drink is bad for the busineee of an em- pJoye It is worse for that of his em ployer. The stress of modern life requires a sure brain and an inflexibly obedient hand. The tendency of alcoholic drink is to muddle the brain and lead the hand astray. Therefore the - chances are against him who uses it. He may succeed in epite of the alcoholic handi cap, but it will never aid him. What ever we hope for at some time in the future, and whatever we may work for, the simple fact is that our present life is a struggle where victory jroes to the best fighter. It is a fool, therefore, who niil.q Into his .mouth an enemv that will betray him at his moment of direst need. For an old man who has nothing more to ask from the world, it if -per h apt? excusable to taste the cup that intoxicates. For a young man who has no battles to fight and noth- S to cnntrlbuto to the good of man kind, drink 1s advltw bio, since it will hasten his exit from a world where he is in the way. Rut for the thinker. the worker and the helper, strong drink is an evil with only the most shadowy mitigations. Inquiry in the case of tvlna Slinger- land, the 11-year-old girl of the East Side, w how nerves were being1 played upon .-ruolly by cosirse and brutal -fanatics in the name of "religion de- veloped a slate of' affairs that war- ranted Judge Frazer in taking the ehild from her ii rents- and sendi ng here to the detention home oC the Juvenile Court. The diH-losures may well arouse public ind ignation and should be suftlcient to cause a closer watch to he sot upon the fanatics who babble nonene in the name of the Lord and tndul ge 1 n grosp ind ecencl es under the cloak of religion, to the bodily debasement and mental wreck of innocent, helpless children. The small grafter never did have a fair chance. Here now are two Road Supervisors in Baker County arretted for padding their accounts $25 each Prosecution should be suspended by proclamation of the Governor until .some steps have been taken for the prosecution of the former superintend ent of the portage road who padded his aocountr several timee 25. Then perhaps some blggrer grafters who have ateo claims to prior prosecution could be found, chance. Give the little . fellow The Oma'ua Juajre who finds the works of Hubens. Van Dyke and other master? ''tndeeent" presents a curioua subject for speculation. Where did he go to school to acquire ideals so de based? What books did he read in his boyhood to grather his' groveling: im purity of thought? The "indecency" of a work of art invariably lies in the mind of the person who looks at It. A normal, healthy-minded human being: nndet nothing abhorrent in any of the Creator's works. A joint memorial, asking Congress to remove the tariff from the Importation of jute and jute cloth and bags, was unanimously adopted by the Oregon State Senate, composed of twenty-three Republicans and l3c Democrats. Now , If the farmers can get Vhcaper bags by the removal of the tariff, and it is best for them to do bo. why not give them a few other things cheaper by removing a few more tarirfo? The Oregon Sen ftU Is evidently In favor of tariff re- vision. - Certain famous pictures, or copiC3 thereof, by Vandyke, Rubens and oth- era of - the old masters tnuat have clothes painted on them. Otherwise they cannot be soI3 or carried by the art dealer of Omaha. This is the log- ioal deduction from the decision of the courts of the metropolis-of Nebraska. The question whether or not Thaw committed murder seems likely to dis appear In the spectacular preliminaries of his trial. Criminal procedure Ji8- playfi a discouraging inability to stick to the main point. The dissenalone and Infelicities In the Thaw family ft re euch as may be ex pected to exist among people who as sume that wealth Is a screen for moral delinquency, social dishonor and mari tal unfaithfulness. . To our ,409,000.000 annual dYink bill the average workingman's family contributes 25 cents, a week. The reat of It comes from champagne uppers to the demi monde and monkey dinners the semi baked. "We shall never get the true version of the Swettenham incident until we hear from Mr. IooIey. Mergers are like Canada thistles. From the pieces of the old one. a dozen new ones grow. COMMENT ON CURRENT OREGON TOPICS How the Normal Schools Are Working for Appropriations Committee Chairmen and Their Influence Need of Committee Rooms at the Cap itol Tree-Spraying Not General How to Establish New Counties. JU AJAIN L oy rne manner in wincu some of the Normal schools are asking that their appropriations be made by the Legislature, they are beginning to appreciate the Importance of making figures look small, it has always been the practice to make ap propriations for two years in one lump sum, but the proposal of the Iriends of some of the normals now is that the appropriation be made an annual one. An annual appropriation of ) does not look nearly so large in print as a biennial appropriation ot V45.000, though it Is exactly the samo to the recipient and the taxpayer. Some of the institutions learned this plan of - making appropriations loo It small several years ago, but others are just waking to its aflYantap. CUSTOM seems to have caused some embarrasing situations at Salem it the time of the organization of the irlnlnt ure oartlcularlv In the ap pointment or the chairman or one of the important committees. According to reports It had been arranged that a certain melflber of the house should ntroduce a resolution for appointment of a committee, and, In accordance with custom he would be named chair man of the committee. The plan would have worked well but for the enter prise of another member who rushed a similar resolution to the clerk's desk and had it read and acted upon first. thereby securing for himself the pres tige the well-recognized custom aies. There was nothing in the rules of pro cedure that prevented the presiding officer frot appointing another mem ber to the chairmanship if he so de sired, but lie evidently considered the obligation to follow custom more blnd- lnK than that carrying out a pre-ar ranged plan. This custom is one that has caused trouble many times anil ill many assemblies, yet it has become so firmly established that to Ignore it would be a pergonal affront to the man who moved the appointment of a com mittee. ' Probably no presiding officer In a legislative assembly will under take to overthrow this unwritten rule and it will remain in force unless each body formally abrogates It by adoption of a written rule. . IT has been nuite generally believed that the eagerness of the members of the Legislature to haye special in- YCStlgatlns COiumiUees appointed at the opening of the session has been due to their desire to provide ciorK- slilps for their friends. While this has in sonic- measure Mounted for the promptness with ' which the resolu tions are Introduce! for appointment Of investigating committees, there is another advantage the framer of the resolution can obtain. By soruilns the chairmanship of the investigating committee a member gains" the power to direct the investigation. If the re port oC the committee be favorable, as U IS In nine cases out or ten, the head of the institution or department so commended feels grateful and will al ways he ready to do a favor tor the chairman of that committee. This feeling exists even was no more thai though ' the report w as . morlt ed . 1 n any institution there are some things that could be criticised if the Invcs- tljyator were dispose! to lak an un favorable view of the mans gement. Regardless of the justness of the com ment, one man feels grateful for the public commendation received from another, and in this way the chairman of an investigating committee may secure Influence with the head of an Institution. IN matters of legislation in jrencrat the chairman of a committee pos- sesses more power than, all the other members of the committee combined. This is liio general rule, to wl. leh there are exceptions. Ho ions as a chairman does not arouse the antag onism of the members of lits commit tee and a ts with ordinary fa 1 mens, lirutii Is left to his judgment and (lis- cretion. lie calls meetings when he thinks best, and reports bills wlif n ho gets ready. Very often the report of the committee is practically the re- port of the chairman.' In important committees and in transaction of bus iness that has attracted attention and discussion this is not so generally true, for the questions ' involved come he fore the whole committee and receive their particular attention. But if a chairman undertakes to conduct the work of his committee arbitrarily, ignoring the other members, the re lations between hltn and tho other members are likely to heeome so strained that he will be compelled to consult them upon every subject, call meetings of the committee when they mo reo u est and report bills when they direct. The dictatorial chal rman Is usually borne "with patiently aa lon as patience continues to be a virtue. but when t lie otner memo upon a revolt tne time xo: onioun action has passed. chairman at outs with lils committee Is usually at outs with the whole assembly. IF this session of the Legislature falls to make arrangements for con- structlon of more committee-rooms in the Capitol. It- will not be because of a lack of knowledge of the need of such improvements. The most impor tant committees of the Senate. Judi ciary and revision of laws, have been working under very adverse condi tions. They occupy a small room off the Senate chamber, which must also be used in part for a cloakroom, for the reason that there is no other room available for that purpose. U num ber of stenographers also use the room, and the committee works amid the confusion of rattling typewriters and the interruption of persons enter ing to Bjet their coats and hats. This is a subject that has been called to the attention of several Legislatures, but has never been attended to. Both the cause-of srood legislation and the com fort of the committees could be pro moted by construction of several rooms on the third floor In the north wing of the Capitol. ONE or the interesting and .valuable state reports that has been published this year is that Issued -by the State .Board, of Horticulture. The report of this board Is always a source of useful information to the fruitgrower. The pam phlet has a number of excellent pictures, showing typical orchard, scenes in Ore- gon, and contains a number of Instruo tlve articles on the care of fruit trees. L the eradication of pests and other topics in which every orchardlat Is or should be interested. While 1 docs not pretd to be a guide to fruitgrowing, it will serve to lead, the intelligent reader around many pitfalls of the fruitgrowing Indus- try. IN THI5 connection It Is appropriate to repeat an assertion that has been made by a Valley fruit inspector to the effect that the agitation in favor of sprayinc of trees Is not producing the aggressive action that had been desired and expect- ed. While many growers are spraying their trees, as they have done from time to time in the past, the number of thope who have adopted spraying: an a feature of their orchard work and are golns a t it In a thorough and intelligent manner. is comparatively small, Agitation and education have had some effect, he says. but the great majority of the ownr of trees that are most In need of spray in gr are neglecting the work tills year, n they have done in the past- When a,- . proached upon the subject. they admit the need and declare their Intention of obeying the law, but they procrastinate until it will be too late In the MCiison and their trees will bo uncleaned another sea son. All are enthusiastic over the clean-Ing-up movement, but tha trouble Is to get the spray pumps started. o NE of the difficulties in the enforce ment of the horticultural laws seems to be the neighborly relations of the ruitgrowers and the fruit inspectors. The inspector lives among the people whose orchards -need clearing of pest. He likes to be on good terms with his neighbor.. He wouldn't like to prosecute one of them, nor try to cut down their trees. Neither will he po to them In .1 commanding way and give them direct personal notice that the law must be com plied with or there will bo trouble. If the growers are disposed to let matter? drift along in the samo old way, so are tlio fruit inspectors, aa a rule, for they do not take the aggressive action that will be necessary to bring the desired results. It may be doubted whether Inspector sent into a community in which they are 4s tranRtrs would accomplish much . more. for the growers of almost any commu nity would resent interferenee of a stranger who tried to tell them how they must run their orchards. Observance of the law by comparison would lie iiett' r than none at all; but the work would probably not be very thoroughly lon. Tlie problfni of necurlns obrervainc f ihe horticultural 1-iws. is one yet to he solved. ESTABUSHMKNT of new rutin H.-s like the enactment of city charters, of purely .local interest. yet the subject eeniH to ie conll:retl one upon which the legislature may still tiike action. In view of the f.ict that the Supreme O'mirt has declared :l routity to be munlripnl corporation e :d the constitution has ben amended so ir !o forbid the pa.-'s.ige of a siccial act for t he ereat ion of a corpora tion of any ktnii. it hUM been t ri o 1 1 c 1 1 1 t' some that the lt-;;islRture has no power to create a county by. special law. 'ev- ertheless. advocates of new counties hit ve been lobbying at 5ak;n, and one bill has been introduced for the creation of n county. Kit her fTuim const ItutionM 1 Rroundn or of public p".:i-". number f members of the LeRlsla.turc have forum- lated a plan by which ti:c new county contests can be settled out of the l-,eris-lature, and by the people wlm arc tlio mopt interested. The plan Us to piss a general law proscribing tlio manner In which the people of a portion of a county may proceed if they wish to have them selves set off into a new subdivision of the state. The law will provide for pub- mittlng the question to a vote. aiul. in order to prevail, the proposal must re ceive the affirmative votes of 73 per cent of those voting in the proposed mw county and 25 per cent of those in t he remaining portion of the old county. The plan takes cognizance of the fart that the people of a proposed new county are HKely to favor it for ! 1 renmiiw. and the people of tle old county to oppose it. licncc, In order tu piwil iwai cmim- siasm from snallling the expense of a new county gDvern incut upon o w ncrs. 1 1 7 IV per required, and, on the t lie irievty nt vol.- tri other hand, that !i 2.1 It Is to be provide! ner cent vote in the renin inder of the old county snail '- necnsMiry in order to prevent the formation of the. new county. This plan, it is Relieved, will se cure a fair expression of public opinion aa to the need of the entabliHlimf-nt of a new county. If such a genpral law Hhoulii be passed, it will save the members of future Lginlatures some annojancc anil will place the nucHtioii of new counties in the power of the people most interested.. ... THE present session of the lvsislaturo bids fair to redeem the reputation of Legislatures in general, in till state, end to lessen the general dltrut In which law-making bodies are held. Whother the opinion be well-founded or not. there has Ions been a feellnj? that the Lofrislature misrepresents the people. Tills Idea has found frequent expression not only in the newspapers of the state. but amons the people who take an Inter est In public affairB. This I:gifflature Im different in several respects from any that has preceded It. Its members wefa nominated and ejected by the people and not In a convention controlled .ty a boi. The Legislature was organized without the presence of any of the men who havi been active figures in the preliminary HtruKsrlB In years prone by. The I--im-l.ture elected Senators on the nrt bal lot and without any candidates at a- loin maintaining expensive hoadqiiartors where liQtior and cigars were provided for all vis i tors. The two houses hv been working two weeks and have gotten along fairly well without the presence ot "House bill 104," tn other words, a. sun- Tl- of whisky at a convenient place. It Is asserted that there Is no linuor to bo had in the Capitol, and that there will ho none throughout the session. Tlio Lecis- lature has manifested from the start a disposition to eliminate the extrava gances that have brought criticism upon its predecessors. There is no talk wtiat,- ever of clerkships held by women of doubtful character. The legislatures of years gone by have been the ruin of many of their members. Going to Salem from quiet towns where they lived respectable live?. the members were thrown into the company of lobby- ists and employes of Senatorial candi dates, and were wined and dined as they never had been before. In forty day of last living many of them acquired new ideas of life and were never of uso to themselves or their families afterward. Many a man who went to the IeiarlMature rich In reputation, returned to h is home a sbankmpt. Boodle and booze did tho work. This session seems to have start ed out on a high plane, with no linuor in evidence and no one entertaining- lavish ly or trying to exert an improper influ- ence upon the members. This session i likely to be a creditable one to its mem bers and to the stale.