THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, MAT 19, 1907. so SCBSCRIPTIOJf BATE8. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. , (By Mall.) Daily. Sunday Included, on, year 18.00 Dally, Sunday Included, six months. .. 4.25 Dally. Sunday Included, thme month!.. 2. 25 Dally, Sunday Included, one month.... .75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, six month,.... 3.25 Dally, without Sunday, three months.. 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month HO 6unday, one year 2.50 Weekly, one year (issued Thursday).... 1.60 Sunday and Weekly, one year 3.60 BY CARRIER. Daily, Sunday included, one year 9 00 Dally. Sunday Included, one month 75 HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dress in full, Including county and state. POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland, Oregon. Postofflce as Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Faces I cnt 16 to 2S Pages cents 30 to 44 Pages 8 cents 46 to 60 Pages cents Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwith, Special Agency New Tork. rooms 48-50 Tribune building.. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON' SALE Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postofflce News Co., 178 Dearborn St. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marie, Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton & Hendrlck, 906-012 Fevcnic-cnth street; Pratt iook Store. 1J14 Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen. S. Rice. Kansas City, Mo Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut; Sosland News Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugh 60 South Third: Eagle News Co., corner Tenth and Eleventh; Yoma News Co. Cleveland; O. James Pushaw, 807 Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Kemble, A. P., 3735 Lancaster ave nue; Penn News Co. New York City L. Jones A Co., Aetor House; Broadway Theater News Stand. Buffalo, N. Y. Walter Freer. Oakland, Cat. W. H. Johnson. Fourteenth and Franklin streets; N- Wheatley; Oak land News Stand; Hale News Co. Offden D. L. Boyle, W. G. Kind, 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omaha Barkalow Bros., Union Station; Mageath Stationery So. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co., 439 K street; Amos News Co. Salt Ijike Moon Book & Stationery Co.; Ro.ienfleld & Hansen. 1a Angeles B. E. Amos, managerseven street wagons. San Diego B. E. Amos. Long Beavh, Cal. B. E. Amos. Pasadena, Cal. A. F. Horning. Santa Barbara, Cal. John Prechel. San Jose, Cal St. James Hotel News Stand. Fort Worth, Tex. F. Robinson. San Francisco Foster & Orear; Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. Parent; N. Wheatley; Falrmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co. Goldfleld, Nev. Louie Pollln. Eurekn, Cal Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Vs. Jamestown Exposition News Stand; Potts A Roeder; Schneider & Kaiser. Pine Beach, Vs. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, MAY 19. 1907. INTERNATIONAL, 6ENTIMENTAUSM. From the peace conference that Is to be held at The Hague fine sentiments may be expected. Nothing more. That grand eirenicon will not be wholly a farce or sham, since there is a high phllanthropical purpose behind it; but it will not effect anything of importance, because the nations that are strong and feel able to defend themselves, or to be aggressive when their interests require it. will not enter into bonds to reduce their armaments and to keep the peace in all circumstances. War, indeed, is not likely to be undertaken now or here after on trivial pretexts, as formerly; but crises between nations will arise which will precipitate war between them, in spite of all protests and re straints which other nations may Beek to employ. No nation that feels able to defend Itself, or to support its claims in important matters by war, will will ingly tie its own hands, or consent to have them tied by International con vention. Hence Germany will not be a party In the peace conference. Nor is Japan ready for it. nor Russia willing. Ger many feels strong enough to stand out and stand alone; Japan and Russia know that there is but a truce between them, and that further conflict Is inev itable and merely postponed. Great Britain, protected by her insular posi tion and powerful navy, is virtually free from the fear of attack; our own country,, through its remoteness from great powers, is in a like situation. Great Britain, therefore, can talk for universal peacV; yet you will not find her remiss at any point in providing means of defense or even of aggression. The United States wants peace and will do everything possible to maintain it; yet is spending more and more and more every year on armament, and will continue to do so. After all the Instinct remains, and it will still prevail, every where, that the best guarantee of peace Is fullest possible preparation for war. Small nations have little apprehension; but each and every strong nation feels and believes it can only hope to exist by becoming stronger. 'Hence it is that international ' peace meetings, held with a view of causing reduction of armaments, exhale merely in fine sentiments. Sentimental lltera ' ture, therefore, is about all we are to expect from the peace conference soon to be held at The Hague. - OKLAHOMA'S CONSTITUTION. The constitution of Oklahoma, re cently adopted by its voters, awaits the signature and the proclamation of President Roosevelt in order to become the organic law of that progressive commonwealth and add another state to the Union. Owing to its advanced position upon many questions .of the times the Attorney-General is carefully scanning the instrument to see if it will pass muster, legally speaking, before he advises the President concerning it. It it stands the test of Mr. Bonaparte's Judgment, the President will at once issue the proclamation admitting Okla homa into the federation of states. The constitution as adopted by a vote of the people provides for the Initiative and referendum; for the nom ination of all state, county, district and township officers by primaries; for the prohibition of succession in state of fices; for the submission of the liquor prohibition question to the people of the whole state; for an elective state corporation commission; for two-cent passenger fares; for the fellow servant law; for commissions in agriculture, oil, gas and mines, labor and arbitration and to negotiate the purchase of the segregated mineral lands in Indian ter ritory, valued at many millions of dollars. The constitution fixes the rate of legal interest at 6 and contract rate at 10 per cent, forbids corporations to own more lands than are absolutely necessary In the operation of their busi ness; prohibits the Issuance of watered slock and provides that the books of corporations shall be open to inspection at all times. To amend this constitu tion a rriajority vote of the people 1s required. As it stands this constitution is said to be the most advanced Instrument of, its kind that has ever been adopted by a state seeking admission into ,the Union. HENEY'S PROPHECY. On November 4. 1905, during the mu nicipal campaign In San Francisco, Francis J. Heney made a speech there in which he said: I say to you. moreover, that I personally know that Abraham Ruef Is corrupt. And I say to you that whenever he wants me to prove it in court I will do so. I say to you further that if Schtnlts is re-elected Mayor for another two years grafting will become ao bad. owing to the renewed cour age they will have, that the people of the City of San Francisco will send for me in whatever part of the United States I am and , beg me to come back here and put Ruef In the penitentiary, where he belongs. As compared with the task which I un dertook In Oregon, among a people to whom I was a. stranger, the conviction of Abe Ruef for grafting In San Francisco would be an easy task. I will guarantee that if I take charge of a grand Jury in this city it will return lndiotments against Ruef for grafting Inside or a week. And I now here tonight pledge myself to the citizens of San Francisco that if 8chmltg Is re-elected and this grafting continues, I will devote my best energies to sending Abe Ruef to the penitentiary. Schmitz was re-elected. Ruefs do minion as boss was not disturbed. The Infamous United Railways deal and all the other colossal corruptions followed. Ruef and Schmitz had taken "renewed courage"; they stole right and left, and defied the world to prove them guilty; and the people of San Francisco sent for Heney to come back and put them in the penitentiary. Heney first came to Oregon, where his great work is yet unfinished, and caused a few more land thieves to be started finally on the road to Jail; then he returned to San Francisco, and made good. A CREATION AND A GROWTH. Every great business house is the growth of years, directed by human in telligence and sustained by continuous human effort. Some kinds of fortunes are almost accidental, as those gathered from the resources of nature mines, forests and the like which particular individuals were the first to appropri ate. Not so with great business estab lishments, in which the personal ele ment, with Its adjuncts of skill, pa tience, industry and management, has been the factor of success. At this moment we have in mind ,the business house of Lipman, Wolfe & Co., which today in an extended series of advertisements commemorates, as It celebrates the completion of its fiftieth year. Just fifty years ago It started In Sacramento. Its principal business was, and for many years has been, in Portland. Its success here is alike due to Intelligent direction and effort, and to the progress of Portland and the Northwest. In this kind of gTowth and in this degree of success there is noth ing accidental. The result is due to in telligent use of opportunity, to honor able service of the public and to the steady progress of the country. CHARLES USSE. Charles Linne, the founder of the science of botany and one of the chief glories of the Swedish nation, is better known by his Latin name of Linnaeus. He was born on the 12th day of May in 1707, 200 years ago. In the course of two centuries his pioneer work has been enlarged and in great part superseded, but to him remains the merit of having first divided plants into natural orders and having defined the physiological functions of their organs. His birth place was the village of Roshuet, in the province of Smaland. His father, who was a minister, sent him to a private school at Vexioe, but he profited little by the formal instruction of his teach ers. Like most men who have done great original work in science and lit erature, he owed more to the strong bent of his genius than to schooling. He was a persistent truant, devoting his days to rambles in the fields, where he studied flowers instead of books. And he did well, for in books there was not much to be learned at that time about botany. Burckhardt, the German, had defined the sex organs of plants and Levaillant, the Frenchman, had pub lished some observations upon the stamens and pistils before Linnaeus wrote, but otherwise little had been done except to collect great masses of disorganized facts. Botany before Lin naeus was like biology before Lamarck and Darwin. The truant schoolboy received no en couragement from his reverend father. To punish his truancy he was taken out of school and apprenticed to a shoe maker when he was 17 years old, but his genius was saved from extinction by a Dr. Rothman, who befriended the boy and lent him books. Hail to the men who lend "books to boys. They are benefactors of their kind and do more good than all the Carnegie libraries in the world. By hook and crook, by the sheer invincibility of genius, Charles Llnne prepared himself to enter the university and found his way to Upsala, the great national school of Sweden. Here, like Samuel Johnson at Oxford., Llnne nearly starved. He underwent what his French biographer calls "de dures privations." (He solved the sys tem of the living universe in rags and followed the secret thoughts of God on bread and water. But he seems to have had a genius for friendship as well as for science. Wherever he went some body soon learned to love him. At Up sala it was Celsius, the professor of theology, who took the gifted boy to his heart and gave him a hand on the road to fame. Celsius, like our own Profes sor Condon, united the love of science with his theology. Through his kind ness Linne was made director of the botanical garden and presently, though still a youth, he succeeded Celsius in his chair. But envy blighted his early prospects. His colleagues pursued him with malice so malignant that he was forced to leave Upsala, and accepted a mission from the Stockholm Academy of Science to collect flowers In Finland and Dale carlla, the home of the copper miners, who rallied to the standard of Gustavus Vasa and restored him to the throne of his fathers. This employment finished, Linnaeus was without further means of livelihood. Like Giordano Bruno, he be came a wanderer, visiting Denmark and Germany and finally settling in Hol land. Here, also, he found a powerful friend, Boerhaven, who introduced him to Clifford, a wealthy gardener", under whose protection Linne dwelt for three years and composed his epoch-making books. Then he returned to Sweden. His difficulties being conquered, he was received with acclamation in his native land. Professor Rowland, the late fa mous American physicist, used to say that he had to go abroad to win recog nition at home. It was so with Linne and with many other scientists. ' The King and Queen now showered favors upon him. Learned societies crowned big work. He became professor at the university which had driven him into exile, and passed the last thirty-seven years of his life in peace and happiness. Linnaeus was the first man to classi fy plants with reference to their organs of sex. Premising that the stamens are the male organs and the pistils female, he divided flowering plants into the an glosperms and gymnosperms, those with a floral envelope and those with out. Then, according to the number, form and arrangement of their stamens, the anglosperms fall into the great nat ural orders, while according to the ar rangement of the pistils the natural orders are subdivided into the suborders and these again with reference to the form of their seeds, the number of sepals, petals and so forth into genera and species. Scientists now study plants upon other lines and the work of Linnaeus has been superseded; but it was a necessary step in the 'progress of knowledge. It served to bring sys tem Into botany where system had never before existed and it provided a basis for further study. Among the pioneers of science Ljnnaeus has a fore most place. What Kepler did for the planets he did for the vegetable king dom, and, like his great compatriot Swedenborg. he was eminent in more than one field. The work of Linnaeus in animal biology and In mineralogy Is overshadowed by his botanical re searches, but it is of high rank. His countrymen do well to commemorate his fame. ORCHARD'S CREDIBILITY. Th iiirnr who said he would not be lieve Harry Orchard in any circum stance probably put .the matter a little stronger than his state of mind really warranted. Undoubtedly he would be lieve Orchard if there were strong cor rnhnratlrLor evidence. The law does not expect a Juror to believe Orchard's tes timony unsupported. On the contrary, it ia expressly provided that his evl-Auryr-a chnii nnt hv itself be sufficient. Few men would believe anything be cause Orchard told it. Any reasonable man would believe it if nis statement were borne out by other evidence that corroborated it in such a manner as to indiontn that he had told the truth. Any man who commits a serious crime and confesses to it is not entitled to full 'credit, not only because he is ad mittedly vicious, but also because he may have a stflsh motive in his con fession and may for that reason tell a falsehood. A man who confesses a crime will very likely try to throw as large a part of the responsibility upon others as he can. But when his state ment coincides with the testimony of others, he Is entitled to some degree of credit, the extent of which the Juror, of course, must decide. - When a juror says he would not be lieve a witness In any circumstances, he Is manifestly unfit for service in the trial of a case. Whether he will believe tho toKtlmnnv is a Question which the Juror should determine after hearing It, ana not before, ir ne manea up mind in advance, ne is certainty unm for Jury duty. . WHY FARMERS ARE WILLING TO SELL. How is it, asks an apparently sin cere inquirer, that Oregon assures Eastern people that farming is profit able in Oregon and at the same time Oregon farmers are offering their land for sale? If farming is so profitable, why do they want to sell? If present owners didn't desire to sell, there would be no opportunity for newcomers to invest. If they do wish lo sell, is it not an Indication that they are not making a fair profit? These are pertinent ques tions and may be candidly answered. There are many circumstances which render It entirely consistent for Ore gon to invite Easterners to come here and Invest in farm lands at the same time that some Oregon farmers are of fering to sell. But at the beginning let us not assume too much. While there are some farmers willing to sell out entirely, they are comparatively few In number. The greater number are well satisfied to continue as tillers of the soil, though desirous of selling part of their holdings because their farms are too large under modern conditions. Those farmers' who wish to sell out en tirely and quit agriculture are of sev eral classes those who have become well-to-do on the farm and are able to retire, those who prefer some other oc cupation and desire to Invest in some other Industry, though maJtlng a good profit at this, and those who have made a failure of farming. There are some men who make a failure of farming as of other lines of work. That the num ber of men who are making a failure of farming is inconsiderably small is evident from the rarity of farm mort gage foreclosures. In every county in the state men have bought farms and have given mortgages to cover part of the purchase price and have paid oft the mortgages from the profits of the farms. Probably the greater portion of farm land offered for sale is held by men who desire to reduce their acreage. They have been farming 160 to 640 acres, or even more, and have found that they can make as much money on smaller farms y changing their meth ods. Hence they are willing to sell the land they do not need. Many a large farm contains land enough to make half a dozen small ones. Oregon's farming population could easily be mul tiplied by four without a family now on a farm quitting It and without new homesteads- being taken. The cutting up process accounts for much of the sale of farm land. Again, many a farm has unused land wfclch in recent years has been cleared of stumps and is coming under culti vation. This means an increased acre age, and the landowner who sells part of his holdings under such circum stances is neither selling out entirely nor even adopting the small-farm plan. He has practically created a new farm, and this he has sold, or kept for him self, and sold an equal acreage of land he formerly cultivated. ' In addition to this, many new homes have been made by people who have taken Government land in Eastern and Western Oregon in the little valleys of the mountain ranges, on the plains or in the irrigated districts.. Homesteads taken years ago, but never improved, have been offered for sale by owners who are city residents. Then the state has been selling landi, part of which has gone to homeseekers, though the bulk of it has evidently gone into the control of speculators. Governmeit lands suitable for homebuilding are still to be had, and when Oregon in vites the-'atranger to come here .there is no necessary, inference that some Oregon farmer is anxious to sell out. When one looks at all these circum stances, the natural drift of wealthy farmers to the city, the tendency to cut up large farms Into smaller tracts, the clearing of new lands, the reclamation of arid lands and the taking of home steads on the Government domain, it is perfectly clear that Oregon is not in the least inconsistent when it urges the Easterner to come here to engage in farming. Besides, we have never claimed that this is the greatest place in the world to make money farming. No comparisons of that kind have been made. It has been shown by actual results that agriculture in Oregon yields profits entirely satisfactory to those who engage in it and attractive to those who contemplate a new loca tion. We are making no effort to con vince the Eastern farmer that he Is on the way to the poorhouse so long as he remains outside of Oregon. Perhaps he can make as much money raising wheat in the Dakotas or corn farther south as he could make farming in Oregon. But we don't believe that on an average he can. make any more. The special message Oregon has for the Easterner is that he can make as much money here as he can In the East and get a great deal more out of life while he is doing it. Oregon's climate and soil give the farmer a wide range In the choice of the branch of agricul ture he will undertake. He is not lim ited to grainraising, as in the Dakotas and Minnesota. He can raise fruit, hops and other products. Here he suf fers from no blizzards and need fear no cyclones. Life is enjoyable in Oregon twelve months In the year. No where can a man live as well for the same amount of money. The newcomer can make as much money farming In Oregon as in the East and get more for it. A ROYAL ADDRESS. President Patrick Calhoun, of the United Railroads, of San Francisco, has issued an address "To the American People." This Is, Indeed, a condescen sion. Usually rulers jommunicate with their subjects through secretaries or Ministers or Lord High Executioners. The gracious sound of the royal voice itself is reserved for solemn occasions. Since Magnate Calhoun permits his own anointed Hps to speak to us, we per force conclude that he thinks the pres ent contingency to.be solemn. The frowning aspect of the front door of the Jail has awakened his mind to profound emotion, and in the plenitude of his love for his loyal and docile subjects he ad mits them humbly to participate in his royal perturbation. Usually it beseems the subject to receive the communica tions of his monarch In respectful si lence. It Is improper for him to dis cuss them or make reply. But since the vouchsafement of his majesty of the United Railroads is in the nature of an Indictment against certain persons whom his loving subjects have been de luded Into trusting, possibly he may not take It amiss if some considerations are humbly submitted in mitigation of his wrata- If, then, one may speak and live, it is dutifully suggested in the first place that Mr. Calhoun has made his address slightly absurd by trying to Imitate too closely the language of Zola's famous attack upon the persecutors of Dreyfus. Zola began each paragraph of his in dictment with "J'accuse." Mr. Cal houn, with astonishing lack of origin ality in a man so versed in wily subter fuge, starts each one off with "I charge." Are we doomed to see our corporation magnates become plagiar ists as well as pirates? The worm will turn and the poor thing has a right to turn; tut for a man accused of infamous conduct, with the evidence against him dangerously strong, to pose as a persecuted martyr and use the language of righteous in dignation against the officers of the law provokes a smile. Mr. Calhoun should remember that this is a well-worn de vice of the criminal classes. They have never "done nothing." They are al ways extremely virtuous; and the' pros ecuting officers are invariably fiendish ly malignant:- One would be surprised to see a person of Mr. Calhoun's in genious subtlety taking this futile tack were it not so common of late with per sons of like dignity in similar plight. The railroad presidents, when the rate bill was under discussion, shrieked that rebates were a forgotten nightmare of the vanished past. They were innocent of any such transgression. Neverthe less before the echoes of their denial had died away the New York Central was convicted of rebates to the Sugar Trust; It was proved In court "that the sanctified Standard Oil Company had accepted them literally by the thousand, and only the other day one of the Minne sota roads was haled lgnominiously into court for the same offense. Of course, we are all in duty bound to give Implicit faith to the statements of our heaven-iborn rulers, but we beg of them in mercy not to make the duty too diffi cult. Mr. Calhoun "charges" divers terrible things against Mr. Heney, Mr. Rudolph Spreckels and others; one of the worst being that Mr. Spreckels conspired with other persons who had not the fear of God In their hearts to organize a street railway company independent 'of the sacred United Railways. If this was not lese majeste, what was it in hea ven's name? Has it not been foreor dained from all eternity and perhaps longer that the United Railways shall enjoy a monopoly of the streets of San Francisco and every other city on the Pacific Coast? Mr. Spreckels may not have Intended to commit a mortal sin when he imprudently intruded on their preserves; but neither did Adam intend to bring death Into the world when he ate the apple. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. We join with Mr. Calhoun In reprobating the awful deed of Mr. Rudolph Spreckels, and we con jure that sinful man by all he holds sacred never again to think of building a street railroad where it will Infringe upon the holy privileges of the United Railways. Mr. Calhoun further charges that "The District Attorney has been willing to purchase testimony with immunity contracts purporting to grant immunity to self-confessed criminals." Shocking conduct. Of course, this is the accepted method of getting evidence against or dinary thieves. Oftentimes the only way to break up a gang of criminals Is to Induce some of them to peach on their pals. But when the pals are men of Mr. Calhoun's social dignity and those who peach are mere offal like Lonergan and the rest, some method more soothing and less vulgar should be applied. Indeed, it is very doubtful whether the officers of the law ought to try at all to obtain evidence against these exalted personages. It savors too much of sacrilege. It is like laying pro fane hands on the ark of the covenant. We are confident that when men like Mr. Calhoun have plundered the publle of everything it possesses they will stop plundering of their own accord: WTiy, then, harass and worry them by these prosecutions? Why interrupt the course of business by such annoyances? Why limit thrift and enterprise by such short-sighted proceedings? Mr. Calhoun asks from '"the Ameri can people fair play and candid consid eration." 'He asks them "to withhold their Judgment freed from the bias nat urally created by sensational charges." Without hinting that the streetcar mag nate is' Inflated with self-importance and hysterical conceit, it is, perhaps, proper to remind him that his cause is not on trial before the American peo ple. It is not a national issue. It is a criminal case in the courts of Cali fornia, and only- one among many oth ers of the same kind. The American people have too many other cases of grafting on hand to pay more than pass ing attention to Mr. Calhoun. If he is guilty they would gladly see him go to Jail. If he is Innocent they, of course, congratulate him, though with some natural surprise. But the American people do not believe that it is any worse for Mr. Rudolph Spreckels to employ a corps of "hired detectives to ferret out crime" that it is for' a street railroad magnate to hire a corps of su pervisors to commit crime. Nor do they concede that It is any worse for "Mr. Cornelius, president of the carmen's union," to be "a leader of anarchy and lawlessness" of one kind than it is for the president of a corporation to be a leader of anarchy and lawlessness of another kind. Both are bad, and they are equally bad. The time has passed when a criminal on a great scale can hypnotize the public with magnificent phrases. It is quite likely that Mr. Cal houn, in spite of his fine language and righteous pose, will have to take his chances with Ruef and Schmitz In the Criminal Court; and he may rest as sured that his plight will not disturb the serenity of the Nation in the least degree. The promise of a rose carnival of un surpassed magnificence is budding upon tens of thousan&s of rose bushes in this city. There never was a finer prospect for roses, whether viewed from the standpoint of "beauty, or variety or abundance, . than now. It is manifest that to reaiize perfection in roses, dis budding must begin at once. It is sim ply beyond the power of Nature herself to bring to perfection ot bloom all of the roses that are in bud. We are to have a rose carnival. Let us have per fection as well as a symphony of color and of fragrance in this carnival that will surpass even the vivid imagination of Elizabeth Stuart Phelps-Ward as re flected in her word picture of the de lights that await recognition "Beyond the Gates." The young Prince of the. Asturias was baptized with solemn pomp In the private chapel of the royal palace at Madrid yesterday at high noon. The ceremony was grandly impressive. It committed this Infant son of His Most Catholic Majesty Alfonso XIII of Spain to the church and Its dogmas with pomp and solemnity in which a people born and bred to ecclesiasticism delight and which those bred to independent religious thought can but dimly com prehend. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Protzman of this city, mourn in the sudden .death of Margaret Protzman, a daughter of amiable, affectionate disposition and a young life full of promise. Miss Protzman was a teacher in Couch school, and had been absent from her class less than a week when her death occurred. The community suffers with her parents a grievous loss in her un timely death. While an occasional case of spinal meningitis is reported, it Is evident that 'the hold of this disease upon this community has been broken. -A guest mysterious and unbidden, this scourge appears without warning and disap pears without its departure, so far as is known, having been hastened by the challenge of medical science. The Coreys having left the country, it Is difficult to understand why Provi dence should longer afflict the land with green bugs, grasshoppers, cater pillars and other pests. It must be admitted that the country deserved some scourging, but there should be reason for it no longer. Many or the "show" places of Ore gon are off lines of travel and miss be ing seen by tourists. At Skull Springs, fifty miles southwest of "Vale, in Mal heur County, there is a shearing plant at which over 300,000 sheep will be shorn this season. When the Presbyterian general as sembly condemns the Sunday news paper, it censures 99 per cent of its membership. A resolution against the Sunday breakfast would be equally ef fective. . Eugene Schmitz, late business asso ciate of Abraham Ruef, is reported to be a physical wreck. And it may be added, politically and morally he isn't in first-class shape. A public utilities corporation that spends its revenues in legitimate ways seldom needs to retrench in improve ments and wages in a time of unparal leled prosperity. The advantages and attractions of Honduras as a place of residence have, we suppose, not escaped the notice of various San Francisco magnates. Readers of "Mr. Dooley" will be glad to learn that he has recovered his health, as evidenced by a characteristic letter on page 42 bf this issue. Ruef says Schmitz received stolen goods; Schmitz calls Ruef a liar. When certain professionals fall dut, ordinary citizens get their dues. Mortgagees press poor old Judge Marquam for $2100 court costs. Doesn't $800,000 profit on that foreclosure satisfy their Inordinate greed? "Mr statement was made under oath, says Ruef, "and can be depended on." No gentleman would make a false statement under oath. General Kurokl has expressed prefer ence for American brunettes. Perhaps he is excusable; he hasn't seen Lillian Russell. " Despite the recent famous interview, opinion seems to be divided as to whether Orchard is a peach or a lemon. Once more Portland leads all cities in- increase of bank clearances. Seattle and Los Angeles papers please copy. In protesting his innocence, isn't Mayor Schmitz putting up a feeble bluff that Heney will call? This World. Baltimore Sun. Lots of people growling all the time about the world; It doesn't seem to suit 'em and It keeps their tempers churled: But when It comes to summing and to counting up the bliss It's mighty hard to find, another world as good as this. SYMPOSIUM OF CURRENT STATE TOPICS Proapects for New Summer Resorts o the Oo" Flararlaa: the Fees of the Secretary ot State Conductor Conser's Tender Heart One Way to Get Around the Fuel Fsmln Text-Book Dealers Have Few Griev ance Identifications In the Army Tramping- Through the Mountains. CONSTRUCTION of new railroads to the Coast, reaching salt water at Coos Bay, Siuslaw. Tillamook and Nehalem. will afford many opportunities for far-sighted men to make good money by establishing new Summer resorts. While there is no particular fault to be found with the Summer resorts already well known along the Oregon Coast, growing population and Improved trans portation will create a much larger Sum mer travel and supply patronage for a number of additional recreation places at the beaches. To determine in advance which points offer the largest possibili ties In the way of atractlveness, to get control of the tracts of land that will be inevitably needed for hotels, business houses and residences, and to advertise the new resorts, are the problems con fronting those who are studying the Sum mer resort situation. The new railroad- to Tillamook Bay is expected to open up a large Summer travel to that part of the Coast, especially since the trip to Tilla mook, It is believed, will require consid erably less time than the trip to Seaside. The over-Sunday visitor to the beach, going down Saturday afternoon and re turning late Sunday night or Monday morning, would find the saving of an hour or two on the road a very impor tant consideration. To the residents of Portland the founding of a resort at Tillamook will be of special interest. If, as has been often suggested, a road should be constructed from Sheridan through the Grand Rondo gap to Tilla mook, the latter point would be con venient for residents of the central part of the Willamette Valley also. Comple tion of the Falls City, Dallas & Salem road to Yaquina Bay, in addition to a road from that part of the Valley to Tillamook, would give the people of Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties close connection with two important Coast points. An electric line now seems as sured between Roseburg and Coos Bay and "there Is a movement on foot fpr the construction of a similar line from Eu gene to Siuslaw. A road is projected, too, down the Coast to Elk Creek and Cannon Beach, already well-known as beautiful resorts, but little patronized because of the lack of transportation facilities. With all these lines building or in con templation, there Is abundant oppor tunity for the speculator to figure upon the relative advantages of particular lo calities which might be made into at tractive places. It is said that a syndi cate of San Francisco capitalists has bought a large tract on Tillamook Bay. including all of the spit between the bay and the ocean, and contemplates expend ing an Immense amount of money In making It the great Summer resort of the Oregon Coast. If the promoters have hit upon the right location they will stand a good chance to make a large profit on the venture, but not to the exclusion of other promoters of other resorts. What constitutes a best location Is a matter upon which opinions differ widely and so long as they do differ there will be op portunity for the successful establish ment of many resorts. But those who desire to make fortunes out of Summer resort property will need to choose loca tions ahead of Tailroad building. OREGON'S flat salary law has now been in force four months, hav ing taken effect at the first of the year. At that time it became the duty of all state officers to turn into the treasury all fees theretofore collected and retained by them, and this require ment they have observed. But the only officer who has been turning any fees into the treasury is the Secretary of State. During the four months he paid to the Treasurer $4658.60 In fees which were retained by the Secretary before the flat salary law went into ef fect. If the same rate should prevail throughout the year the total fees would amount to about $14,000. But since the Insurance companies pay their annual license fees early in the year and the bulk of the Income from this source comes in the first four months, it' is scarcely probable that the same rate will be maintained through the year. It Is more likely that in the remaining eight months the fees will but little exceed the receipts for the first four months, making the total for the year about $10,000. In addition to fees to this amount, the Secretary of State has heretofore re ceived compensation to the amount of $1350 a year for serving on various state boards and a profit of about $1000 a year on copying the session laws and Journals. These Items, to gether with his constitutional salary of $1500, made a total of about $13,850 a year. Now the Secretary is on a flat salary of $4500 a year; all the other fees and perquisites have been cut off, effecting a saving of about $9350 a year from that office. While these figures are only approximations, they are as near correct as it is possi ble to compute them from sources of Information now available. The State Treasurer has heretofore collected a fee as custodian of securities deposited by insurance companies, but this is not collected until the end of the year, so , there will be nothing from that source until November or December. The law requiring the Treasurer to loan the surplus public funds has not gone into effect yet and there will be little information available this year upon which to base an opinion as to the revenue from that source. Appar ently the net result of the fiat salary law has been, however, a saving of about $9350 a year, as shown above. CONDUCTOR FURNELL, of the South ern Pacific, is a tender-hearted man, but' not sufficiently tender-hearted to get caught by conscienceless people who try to play upon the sympathies of a railroad conductor. And a conductor is almost dally subjected to some plea from either an unfortunate or a crook who desires to ride from one station to another without paying fare. Probably no other class of persons hears so many pathetic stories as a railroad ticket-taker, and In his many years of service Furnell has heard his share. But he has become a pretty good Judge of human nature, and he hardens his heart at the right time to save his pocketbook. He has never been "caught." A short time ago a young man and woman got on the north-bound evening train at Aurora and the man handed up two tick ets to Oregon City. Then he followed Fur nell to the rear of the car and explained that he was bound for Portland, that he had paid his last cent for tickets to Ore gon City, that he was a stranger In that piace, out had friends In Pnrtl.nrf mnA that he would be stranded If dropped off at me rails, would the conductor let him and his newly married wif rM nn to Portland and trust him to pay the fare tne next day. Fernell asked a question or two, sized the man ud. then oiH v,tm k. he couldn't let him ride free, but would buy him some tickets. At Oregon City Furnell went to the ticket office, bought the two slips of cardboard, and when he handed them to the young husband he felt sure from the look of relief that passed over his countenance that no mis take had been made. The price of the tickets was left at the Union Depot for him next day. And doubtless the -bride will never know that she married a man so completely "broke" and that she cam near having to walk more than half the length of her wedding trip. UCH a fuel famine as that with O which Oregon Is now threatened Is iiKeiy to place some limitations upon the old saying that a successful wood chopper must be a man with a strong muscle and a weak mind. The man who has made the greatest success as a woodchopper this year was he who had strong enough mind to foresee the scarcity and therefore cut the largest supply. Many a man has been expend ing his muscle on other work when ha could have made more money chopping wood had he realized the scarcity that would certainly exist, and while mus cle Is still the most important essen tial it la not by any means all. go far as chopping for wages Is concerned, those who did not chop probably exer cised the best Judgment, for the pay of woodchoppers. has not kept pace, with the pay of other forma of labor and with the price of wood. But labor has been eo scarce this year that men could have cut wood on shares of cut It on a Atumpago agreement, giving the owner a Hen to secure him. By that means they could have profited by the high price of fuel this Bummer. Thf fuel shortage exists not only la Port land but throughout the State, and it will be seriously felt this Fall. Many a farmer will find his wood lot his greatest source of income this year and his chief regret will be that he did not farm less and cut wood more. DEALERS In public scTiool text books have planned to meet at the same time and place as the State Text book Commission. At that time, June 8, all the leading text-book publishers in the United States will have their representatives in Oregon seeking to have their books adopted by the Com mission, and they will be submitting bids which will contain their prices. And this is where the dealers are In terested. They assert that the pub lishers do not allow them a sufficient margin of profit, and if the matter of prices has anything to do with it they want the publishers to take that into consideration. At any rate, the deal ers will get together at the same time that they have ths representatives of the publishers together, and see if they cannot arrive at some agreement that will give them a larger share of the profits. They are now getting 12H per cent, which would not be so bad were it not for the fact that publishers quote a copy-book at 6 cents and the dealer has to sell It for 5, becanse the child brings no extra penny. And other prices are made in such a way that the dealer must either lose money on some or be set down by his cus tomers as "small." The dealer loses all the bad credits, pays the taxes and store rent, and shoulders the blame for the cost of school books. At least, the irate parent voices his complaint to the dealer and the dealer can listen or not as he likes. Whether the dealers will try coercive methods is not known, but they will be present in a numerous body when the Text-Book Commission meets some two weeks hence. ARMT authorities have recently es tablished at FortStevens a. more complete system of records for Identi fication, according to Astoria papers. The usual measurements are to be taken, scars and marks noted and pho tographs secured. In addition, finger prints will be taken hereafter as a final and surest method of identifica tion. Printers' Ink will be spread upon a smooth steel plate, the thumb and fingers pressed upon the ink and then an impression made upon a sheet of white paper. As no two men make the same Imprint an identification of this kind will be absolutely certain. Ordi narily the army authorities are not particular in their search for deser ters and this precaution is not for use in ordinary cases. A man who will de sert Is usually a detriment to an army. But in extraordinary cases it is essen tial that the- identification of a man charged with an offense be complete. It is sometimes desirable, too, to iden tify a man who is not charged with crime. If a soldier should be killed In battle and his head torn off he could be Identified If one thumb could be found and enough were known as to his regiment or company to enable the survivors to compare the thumb prints With the proper records. LONG tramps through the moun tains for a Summer vacation are to the liking of C. A. Malbouf of the Southern Pacific freight department, and he will take such a tramp this year as he has a number of times be fore. Sometimes he walks alone and sometimes with a companion. He takes a trip of 200 to 300 miles, sleep-, ing out in the open air" wherever night overtakes him, eating where he can and changing his course ,to suit his pleasure. He is hampered by no lug gage, has no horse to feed and no auto mobile to get out of order. He walks 25 to 30 miles a day, wears off his soft flesh, hardens his muscle, builds up an appetite, gets a very Intimate ac quaintance with the cpuntry he trav erses, and enjoys It as much as any young man enjoys a vacation lounging around a Summer resort. He thinks this, all things considered, the best way to take a vacation, and he will continue it every summer. Speaker Casses's "Pokes Oarar. Kansas City Star. Among other objections to Speaker Cannon, he wears his cigar at an angle that ought to be prohibited anywhere except in a poker game.