' THE SUNDAX OKEGONIAX, PORTLAND, 3IAT 26, 1907. tertian SCBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLY IS ADVANCE. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, ona year. .. . . .$8.00 Pally, Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 Dally, Sunday included, three months. . 2.25 Rally, bunday Included, one month.... .75 laily, mlthout Sunday, one year 6-00 Jally. without Sunday, six montha.... 8-25 Dally, without Sunday, three montha.. 3-75 Ually. without Sunday, one month 60 Hunday, one year 2.50 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... Sunday and Weekly, one year....... 3.&0 BIT CARRIER. raily, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 Dally, bunday Included, one month 75 HOW TO REMIT Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check: on your local bank. Stamps, coin .or currency, are at the sender's risk. Give postoffice ad dress In full, including county and state. POSTAtiE RATES. Entered at Fortland, Oregon. Postoffice an Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pages 1 cent .1 to 23 Pages 2 cents 30 to 41 Pages 8 cents 8 to 80 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 BrStNESS OFFICE. The 8. C:. Beckwith, Special Agency New Tork, rooms S-5l Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 6 10-512 Tribune building. KEPT OS SALE Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postoffice News Co.. ITS Dearborn St. St. Paul. Minn. N. St. Marie, Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton St Hendrick, 806-912 Seventeenth street; Pratt Hook Store, 11114 Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen. S. Rice. Kansas City, Mo. Rluksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut; Sosland News Co. Minneapolis M. J. CavanauB. BO South Third; Eagle News Co., corner Tenth and Eleventh; Yoma News Co. Cleveland, O James Pushaw, SOT Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Ebbitt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. Ryan-s Theater Ticket office; Kemble, A. P., 3735 Lancaster ave nue; Penn News Co. New York City U Jones Co., Astor House; Broadway Theater News Stand. Buffalo, N. V. Walter Freer. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson, Fourteenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oak land News Stand; Hale News Co. Ogden D. I- Boyle, W. Q. Kind. 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omaha Barkalow Bros., Union Station; Mageath Stationery So. Sacramento, C'al. Sacramento News Co., 439 K street; Amos News Co. halt Lake Moon Book & Stationery Co.; Bnsonfield & Hansen. Loa Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons. Son IHesjo B. E. Amos. ' Long Beach, Cal. B. E. Amos. Pasadena, Cal. A. F. Homing. Santa Barbara, Cal. John I'rerhel. San Jose, Cal St. James Hotel News Stand. Fort Worth, Tex. F. Robinson. San Franciseo Foster & Orear; Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; I.. Parent: N. Wheatley; Fairmount Hotel New Stand; Amos News Co. (iolrifleld, v. I.oula Pollin. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, A a. Jamestown Exposition News Stand; Potts & Roeder; Schneider & Kaiser. Pine Beach, Vs. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, MAY 26. 1807. r THE NEW THEOLOGY. Theology differs from religion as a corpse from a living man. Theology smerges Into prominence as religion de cays. Religious phenomena compose the most significant portion of history. Theological phenomena are but pale ghosts with marrowless bones and icy blood. Still they, too, have their im portance. Religion has ever been a bond of unity among men, softening manners, perfecting! Institutions, beau tifying life. Theology has been a source of endless discord., having more strife, crueity and bloodshed to its account than ail other agencies of misery taken together. Plain as the difference Is be tween theology and religion It has al ways been the effort of the priestly class to identify the two, denouncing criti cism of themselves as sacrilege and at tacks upon their creeds as atheism. Yet there never has been a priesthood that would not have been better for criticism, and there never was a creed that could ' withstand attack by its sheer merit. The apostles of the so-called New Theology spare neither priest nor creed. They say that the common statements of" religious belief as used in the churches are mostly rubbish and that our ecclesiastical teachers have for the most part failed In their duty to both God and man. This most significant and Interesting movement pervades the whole Christian world. Sometimes it appears under one aspect, sometimes under another. Here it incorporates it self in the watchword, "Back to Jesus"; there It stakes all upon the doctrine of the "immanence of God." In France and Italy it is an unrest within the fold of Catholicism, a cry for new light and a more thoroughgoing harmony be tween the church and modern thought. The great Italian novelist, Foggazaro, a man of deep piety, has voiced its as pirations in the shadow of the Vatican. Dr. Campbell, of London, and Sir Oli ver Lodge, the distinguished scientist, seem to be its most prominent apostles in England. In America, so far as one can discern just now, the newspapers are preaching the new doctrine more boldly than anybody else. The New Theology throws emphasis upon conduct and decries the impor tance of belief. "It is ridiculous," says Dr. Campbell, in the Hibbert Journal, "to preach that salvation is obtainable by believing something." It is obtain able by deeds, alone. The uprising of the ethical .consciousness, we are told, will "sweep away the common mislead ing and inadequate statements of be lief." It is "In conflict with the popular theology of the churches." It will "adopt articles of . practical ethical value" and no others. "It admits no dissonance between religion and sci ence." Now, all this Is interesting, but it is not new. Ifhas been the theology of many sensible men for a great while. They will naturally rejoice to see it pen etrating at last within the ecclesiasti cal preserve, but they will not concede that it is novel in the least degree. Who outside of the theological machine ever did admit that the Almighty would re ward or punish us for our intellectual conclusions? Who has ever attached any importance to creeds except those who- found creeds useful in maintaining their control over men?" Who have ever denied that conduct was the sole criterion of excellence except those who had some scheme of Immunity to offer from the consequences of evil conduct? What is this all-conquering dogma of the immanence of God? It is the exact opposite of what our theological in structors have been preaching for a thousand years or more. They have taught us that the Almighty, who made the universe, sits outside of it some where on a throne and rules It as a monarch rules his kingdom. Here on earth we are In exile from his presence; when we die we shall appear before the throne for judgment. To die. in the common belief, is to go into the pres ence of the Lord. The New Theology teai-hes that God does not rule the uni verse from the outside. He is within it. The laws which science discerns, of raviLy, of liiht, of rrjajrDetism axe his. laws.- They are expressions of his ac tive will. When we learn them we learn about the Almighty. Every nat ural phenomenon i a manifestation of the indwelling deity, a revelation of him. Every event Jn history is part of his biography. When Shakespeare wrote that there are sermons- in stones he stated the truth inadequately. God himself is In "the insentient clod which the rude swain turns with his share and treads upon." The old theology taught with vague Inconsequence that God Is everywhere. The New Theology teaches it with vital insistence. If he Is every1 where he is necessarily everything. "So where I go he goes," Whittier makes Tauler the mystic exclaim, "I cannot lose the presence of my Lord." He Is the energy of the world, its form and Its purpose. He is tho grain of sand and the human soul. The immanence of God implies the unity of men with him and with one another. The dogma gives new mean ing to the scriptural phrase that all the nations of the earth are of one blood They are of one substance and that substance is identical with the Creator. "Unity." says Dr. Campbell, "is the great word of the New Theology." It teaches the unity of science and re ligious belief. Science is the effort of man to understand the world; religion Is his feeling of the purpose of the world. They are the two sides of the same shield. It teaches the continuity of life. There is no solution of conti nuity between earth and heaven. The kingdom of God is an earthly kingdom, but its rule is within the heart. "The church has nothing to do with getting men into heaven," writes Dr. Camp bell; "her work Is to get heaven Into this world." It teaches the social brotherhood of man. And finally it teaches the unity of man with God. The tollers of the world have forsaken the churches, says Dr. Campbell, "be cause the churches have Ignored the divinity of man." The New Theology reasserts this noblest of truths, thus re uniting the humn race with the Sa vior. Since the kingdom of God is earthly, to advance It we must cure the radical causes of evil. It is not enough to tell men that they will be happy In heaven, if they ever get there; we must work at the problem of suffering until they have become happy here. The task which the New Theology has un dertaken is clearly no light one. but it Is certainly better worth doing than to discuss the geography . of Paradise or investigate the" temperature of Hades. JTST A FEW WORDS TO ASTORIA. We do not say that the Astorian (newspaper) speaks for Astoria, for we don't know that It does. Doubtless much of tie population of Astoria would say hay. The Ast6rian (newspa per), however, objects and long has ob jected to the efforts of the people of Portland to make Portland a city. Not much success has attended the objec tion, it is true; and perhaps it should be noticed no farther. The efforts of Portland have been devoted largely, during many years, to the plan and work of opening the Columbia River to deep-sea vessels. The main points of this work have been the improvement of the entrance from the sea, the deep ening of the channels and the reduction or elimination of the burdens of pilot age and towage. We think these are all worthy ob jects .though; somehow the Astorian (newspaper) Imagines they are against the interests of its town; we sup pose for the reason that it hates to see Portland make progress as a city. Hence "lean-faced envy In Its loath some cave." While we cannot suppose the Astorian (newspaper) can or would be induced to take a different view of things, or that its view of these things can matter much anyway, we should be glad nevertheless to find it exerting itself to make a city at Astoria, con vinced that . Portland Is to go right ahead, whether that peculiar newspa per continues its snarling or not. The obstructions at Astoria have at times been serious, or at least annoy ing; but henceforward they will be less so, for the people of the great Columbia basin Portland included will not stop till they get rid of the last of these also. Astoria herself will take on new life and make new and mighty growth as soon as she quits the tactics of obstruction and kicks off the clogs of her ancient fossillsm. Towns get ahead as men do, not by trying to check others, but by making opportunities for themselves and using them. A PRACTICAL PHILANTROPY. Not all sermons that find voice are preached from pulpits, nor are all les sons learned in early life given from text books approved by educational boards. This statement is none the less true because it is trite, and not the less to be indorsed when its examples are presented under the guise of amuse ment and recreation. A striking illustration of the truth of this estimate is shown in a beautiful and practical philanthropy conducted by Miss Minnie 'Herts in the great lower East Side of New Tork. City. This ef fort takes the form of a "theater beau tiful," and ' it represents the energetic work of its gracious patroness. To it the children of a district that literally swarms with childlife flock by hun dreds every Saturday -evening and Sun day afternoon ' to witness wholesome, well-staged' plays, for which they pay an admission price of 10 cents a seat. Tickets to these plays are all sold long before the opening hour to a restless throng that watts eagerly for the doors to open and the play to begin! The hall of the Educational Alliance, in which it Is held, seats 1,000 children, and hun dreds of disappointed ones besiege the men at the door at every performance for admittance, which is necessarily re fused. The scope of this work, as noted by a correspondent , of the Pittsburg Dis patch, is not limited to the apprecia tion of good, clean drama and high class Ideals Instilled into the minds of the children, though these alone would make the effort well worth while. This theater's greatest educational value lies in the training It affords those who may take part in the performances, teaching them pure, grammatical English, the discipline of obedience, that can be learned no where to greater advantage than on the stage, the accomplishments of graceful bearing and gentle, refined manners. The actors in the children's theater are the young men and women of that quarter of the city. Most of them are of Russian-Jewish parentage and have been in this country but a few years. When drawn into the theater for the first time by a sign outside asking for a volunteer speech and action class, their whole knowledge of English is such as they have picked up on the streets or from their half Americanized associates- Jn the schools or sweat shop"- - A great thaiUTa-. indeed, a. radi- J cal transformation follows their volun tary attendance for a few months upon the speech and action class, candidates for -which must be at least IS years old. There are also junior classes in the set tlement from which children are drawn when it is imperative to have them in yie play. This, briefly outlined, is the work of the "theater beautiful" to which Miss Herts is devoting her life. Its lessons are those of every day, carefully staged and presented in language and 'action, which introduce these waifs that have drifted hither from a foreign land to the best that lies within the compass of their lowly station. They, are not exhorted to rise above the conditions that hamper them, but are by the ex ample of a clean drama, the correct use of the English language, the reflected discipline of good manners and the re quirement of a door fee which Is within their ability to compass, given the les sons that are needed as a groundwork for useful American citizenship. The effort is gracious in Inception, generous in pursuit and practical in application. Of It It is truly said that in a great city noted for its benevo lence, as well as for some things not so gracious, there Is no philanthropy more unique or that gives greater promise of lasting results than that which has found expression in this conception of the "theater beautiful," as worked out by a young Jewess through a practical understanding of the needs of the swarms of children of ' her race who have crossed the sea and settled there. FLATTKRIN'G THE SOUTH. The disinterested spectator, wrapped in philosophic calm, observes with amusement the contortions of the anti Bryan Democrats. Their once luminous countenances are "dimmed with ire, envy and despair." Hopeless of strik ing a responsive note among the intel ligent voters of the North, they turn with frantic appeals to-the reactionary prejudices of the solid South. Even in the South they do not dare to address themselves to men of active, though perverted, intellect, like Tillman and Vardaman. These men, with all their dire savagery or spirit, nevertheless move with the times. They are aware of the dawn of a new day and the emergence of new issues. Hence the reactionary enemies of Mr. Bryan avoid them and turn to the flotsam and jetsam of the old rebel hierarchy, the stranded wreckage of a bygone and tempestuous era, the men who learn nothing and forget nothing, the genuine Bourbons of the bucolic South. One paper, bitterly hostile to Mr. Bryan, quotes with approval an absurd letter from "an old-time, simon-pure, rebel Democrat," which calls Mr. Bryan "a lunatic who hasn't political sense enough to get in out of the rain," and surmises that this "letter states "the convictions of a vast number of South ern Democrats." If it does, then Mr. Bryan Is not tho only Democrat who has developed well-marked, symptoms of lunacy. The ancient, long-haired, slouch-hatted, pistol-fjting element in tho South, who seem to be the last hope of the anti-Bryanites, are naturally elated by the purely factitious prominence which the exigency of the moment has given them, and they respond to the voice of the flatterer with no little enthusiasm. One gathers that they actually fancy themselves to be an important factor in the next Presidential campaign. It seems to be almost a public duty to undeceive them. Certainly it is a work of charity. Suppose soma necromancer were to summon the ghosts of the sheeted dead from their graves andi tell them that their votes would decide who was to be the next President of the United States. Would it not be unkind to the ghosts? And would not he de serve their gratitude who informed them of the deception and urged them back to their quiet Tepose? The opinions of this element in the South are important only to them selves. They cannot guide the great body of the Democratic party; much less can they guide and control the whole country. And the very simple reason is that their opinions deal with matters which nobody else cares about and are based on events which every body else has forgotten. This fraction of the Southern people, happily grow ing smaller as intelligence permeates the backwoods and sylvan hamlets, sits perpetually under the weeping willow gazing pensively upon the creeping ivy. It "shrouds itself in enamels," with its eye forever turned longingly upon the past. "The beauteous now, the divine to be," have no charms for it. The only thing which it cares to achieve is to compel the negroes to ride in Jim Crow cars. The only thing it cares to prevent is the marriage of its daughters with "niggers." Upon these two exalt ed purposes all the forces of Its intel lect are directed, and they seem to ex haust all its resources of statesmanship. How can such people expect to lead the rest of the country politically? This is the element in the South which listens to the voice of the pluto cratic charmer and derides the opinions of Mr. Bryan. It derides them, not 'be cause it has studied and understood them. Such people never study any thing and they understand nothing but the two or three little parochial matters which they have most at heart. Even those they do not understand very well; not half so well as they might if they would enlarge their outlook a trifle. Of course there are strong objections to Mr. Bryan's theory of Government own ership and to the National Initiative and referendum which he suggests, but the benighted voters to whom his ene mies appeal do not know what they are. They object to these things simply and solely because they were not part of the programme of Andrew Jackson. To their minds'it is inconceivable that any thing should be excellent which was not made an issue before the war. They dwell in an enchanted realm surround ed by chimeras. The living questions of the day have no significance for them. Barrett Wendell, explaining' the ante bellum literary sterility of the South erners in his Literary History of America, says that their minds were so occupied with slavery, its dangers and difficulties, that they could think of nothing else. The prolongation of the same subject has doomed, them to polit ical sterility since the war. It may not be uninteresting to quote one of the arguments against Mr. Bryan which has been concocted by his Northern plutocratic enemies- solely for Southern consumption, Just as a special and inferior grade of calico 1b manufactured to sell to the Hottentots. The Atlanta Constitution, an able news paper friendly to Bryan, says in his favor that "every policy of constructive reform now under way in this Nation originated with the Nebraskan." and that he is therefore the natural leader of the Democracy. The damning reply is, not that his policies are dead, not that they would injure the common wealth. biLtmerely .that Populists taught them before he did. What dif ference does it make to any sensible man who first taught a doctrine? The oply rational question is whether the doctrine is w-lse and true or not. Do we think any the less of Mr. Roosevelt because he has put in practice some of the best of the Populist theories? The efficient statesman takes a correct pol icy wherever he finds it, and every sane citizen praises him for doing so. But any nonsense is believed by the North ern plutocrats to be good enough for the South. All that is required to make it go down is a whoop and a yell, a sug gestion of race hatred. and a spice of state sovereignty. Why not try a small, experimental dose of common sense upon the Southerners? Is it quite certain that they are such fools as the Northern corporation bcguilers take them for? LET THEM TRY THE INITIATIVE. Termination of the university refer endum proceedings by a technicality preventing filing of the petition is to be regretted, because it will be unsatis factory to those who have fathered the movement and will quite likely result in litigation which cannot aid in reach ing a conclusion upon the real question involved. A suit over the petitions at tacking the university appropriation must also involve the validity of all other petitions filed, thus engendering feeling and controversies entirely un related to the merits of the numerous questions primarily presented by the petitioners. The Oregonian has opposed the movement for the referendum on the university appropriation bill, and Is still opposed to it, but would have preferred to see the petitions withheld by the promoters rather than see them thrown out on technicalities. As this paper views the matter, the filing of referendum petitions will injure " the university, discredit the state abroad, and result in no saving of money, for it is quite certain that the people will approve the appropriation. If the referendum petitions are fatally defective, as the Attorney General be lieves they are, the friends of the uni versity should not rest upon this tech nical victory over those who have de manded a popular vote. The question Is one of which the friends of the uni versity need not be afraid. Let them prepare an initiative petition fixing the appropriation at $125,000 a year, as the legislative act fixed it, and submit the question to a vote of the people upon Its merits. If assurance be given that this will be done, the advocates of 'the referendum may be satisfied to let the matter rest for the present, even though their petition has been thrown out upon a technicality.. They have secured the number of signatures required by the constitution and may be expected to insist upon a popular vote being had. Friends of the appropriation should be willing to concede them this right if they will refrain from taking intovourt the question that has been decided against them by the Attorney General. The Oregonian has always insisted! that the initiative presents the proper agency for settlement of the normal school question, and it believes that by resort to the initiative the university question can best be settled without in any way impairing the efficiency of the institution while the controversy is pending before the people. ' BONDS FOR A FIREBOAT. The Portland waterfront and con tiguous territory are entitled ' to ade quate fire protection. The present in efficient flreboat and other Fire Depart ment equipment do not give the desired protection. Nearly all the heavy fires in recent years, and, indeed. In the en tire history of Portland have occurred on the river bank, or near it. A first- class flreboat ready at all times for service, might have prevented some, or perhaps most, of these disasters. Un doubtedly it would have prevented some of them. By an ingenious mechanical arrangement through the so-called "dry" mains, it is possible for the flre boat to reinforce powerfully the ordi nary fire-fighting equipment In confla grations at a distance of many blocks from the river. Sueh mains it is pro posed shall be laid through the business and industrial center of Portland If the new bond issue of $275,000 shall be voted. A flreboat, too, or two fireboats. in case of failure of the water supply, such as was threatened in Portland yester day through the accident at Gresham. would be indispensable. The only avail able means of fighting Are anywhere in that event would be by water from the river. The only way to get vwater in quantity from the river, either directly or through the dry mains, would be by fireboats. (Here is an Important con sideration that the Gresham accident to the Bull Run pipe line enforces on pub lic attention. It -may be questionable whether bonds are the most desirable way of securing funds for construction of a flreboat. We think' it is not. The cost of a flreboat ought to be paid out of the current rev enues of the city. A long and persis tent effort to persuade the city admin istration to build another flreboat from such funds failed, however, and the ex pedient or bonds was resorted to. We seem to be going into the bonding busi ness on a very large scale, and we might as well let the tall go with the hide, and build the flreboat and con struct the mains; for there is no doubt wnatever that such an adjunct in the. Portland Fire Department is urgently needed. . A SUGGESTION'. The struggle between Governor Hughes, of New Tork, and the Senate of that state over the retention of the Incompetent Kelsey and the nubile service bill has worthily held the atten tion of the whole country. It has evoked comment from the press every where. Erven the religious periodicals have found it a fit subject for edifica tion. Among them The Outlook. Dr. Lyman Abbott's magazine, has distin guished Itself by a column of comment which presents unique features. Writing in a melancholy vein. The Outlook says: "The attitude of the Governor had much to do in Influencing Senators to vote for the retention of Mr. Kelsey. From the first the Gover nor has refused to use his powers of re moval and appointment to strengthen the hands of those who support his poli tics and weaken, the hands of those in opposition. He has consequently in spired few public office-holders with the spirit of loyalty, and has not yet put much fear into the hearts of the un scrupulous." And 'The Outlook adds mournfully that "as a politician in the sense in which that term may be ap plied to Abraham Lincoln or Theodore Roosevelt, Mr. Hughes has yet to prove his mastery." This was written, of course, before the Senate, made iLs.lncIarlQus submission to the Governor and acknowledged it self beaten in every quarter. It is in teresting now only as an illustration of the ethical standards of some of our leading religious periodicals. The secu lar press, almost without exception, commended Mr. 'Hughes for refusing to barter with the recent Senators and predicted that his trust in the power of public opinion would be rewarded with ultimate victory. And they were right. It remained for a great religious jour nal to bewail his uprightness and la ment that he did not prostitute his pow ers to buy a temporary and ephemeral triumph. Which was the better politician. Mr. Hughes or the writer in The Otlook? Which took the nobler view of the is sue and the one that led to the higher success? St. Theresa in her day prayed for the conversion of the Pope. Would it not be well for the churches to ap point a week of prayer for the conver sion of the religious newspapers? The world's rice crop in 1905 aggre gated 170,000,000,000 pounds. The great bulk of this enormous yield was pro duced and consumed by the people of Asia, the Chinese taking the lead both in production and consumption. A peo ple dependent for food upon a single staple, as are the millions of China, Japan and large portions of India upon rice, axe under constant menace of famine from failure of the crop. The enormous crop of 1905, followed by fail ure due to the inundation of the rice fields by the overflow of the Tangste last year, counted its famine victims by thousands. - It is impossible in a country of diversified interests and agriculture to be overtaken by disaster to human life so terrible as this, or for its people to understand from mere recital of events the awful conditions that have prevailed among rice consum ing peoples during the past half year. To crouch before this menace and beg for relief is the only resource of people who are as absolutely dependent upon one product of agriculture for subsist ence, as were the North American In dians upon the spoils of the chase. The voice of their wailing is heard per iodically throughout the world, and, since they seem to be unable, from the sad lessons of experience, to revise their economic conditions, there Is a prob ability that it will continue to be heard at intervals for an Indefinite period of time. The silence, unbroken for a third of a century, that has for charity's sake brooded over the name of Theodore Tilton, has at length been broken by announcement of his death. The oblo quy that attaches to the name of a man who, from any motive, whether of Jeal ousy, revenge or for alleged conscience sake, brings odium upon the name and fair fame of the wife of his youth, the mother of his children, a woman withal who was honored in all womanly ways, has long darkened the name of Tilton and drained his self-enforced exile of the sympathy of his fellow men. It was thus that oblivion became the portion of Theodore Tilton, thus that he lived in seclusion for more than a genera tion, his very name forgotten and the fact that he once lived recalled only by the event of his death. It may be said to his credit that he chose retirement after his stinging rebuke by a jury of his fellow men, courted silence, and wrapping the tattered mantle of self respect about him, waited patiently for the end, which came but yesterday. Perhaps it is too much to say of Theo dore Tilton In passing that he lived and died a "hated man." He was simply ignored forgotten. The Anti-Smoke League of New Tork City, acting in concert wJth the Depart ment of Health, has succeeded in abat ing to an appreciable degree the smoke menace that has hung for years like a pall over the city. Several large fac tories on the East Side, which consume soft coal, are using patent stokers and smoke consumers, with the result that their chimneys emit no smoke. A de vice that would abate the smoke nui sance as arising from the furnace flues of city homes would be an Incalculable and duly appreciated blessing. The fuel question, in conjunction with the smoke nuisance, forms one of the costliest and most vexatious problems of urban life. Uncle Sam put lands into the hands of railroad and wagon road promoters nearly 40 years ago, on condition that they should sell them to settlers for not more than $2.50 an acre and take the money for their own. But now the pro moters and their successors claim own ership of the. land and spurn the $2.50. That's nerve and gall. Isn't It? Doubtless the obtalnment of fran chises at San Francisco cost more than obtainment of franchises at Portland, for the prizes were larger; but he would be credulous indeed who could Imagine that one of the proceedings was less corrupt than the other. Mayor Lane says, truly, that the taxes on private property in Portland would be much Ices than they are If the. franchises covering the public utilities of Portland had not been looted. Tes, indeed. And we all know who looted them. 'Harney County residents are said to be sure that Harriman plans soon to build the railroad across Oregon. Such con fidence merits reward, and Harriman should not lose sight of his friends In Harney. Pink and green are the official colors for the fiesta next month. We violate no confidence in announcing that these hues will also predominate in Portland's rose gardens. . The weekly table of bank clearances is the best sort of evidence to outsiders that Portland is the most substantial city on the Pacific Coast. The candidate for Mayor who will promise to make the "bummers" in the plaza move on will receive a grateful quantity of votes. The steamer J. N. Teal Is busy and lets us know about It even before going on the route. And the Joyous feature of Heney's Indictments is that he makes them stick. It's too bad that those Fourth of July speeches Will be too late for the elec tion. The umpire really must be the man to blame. We' can't think of any other. ' Flour goes up in price again, and the wheat seller gets the profit, of course. This kind of weather brings on the strawberries; also the files. SYMPOSIUM OF CURRENT STATE TOPICS How One Yoong Man "Made Good" in Fubllc Life Why the Grange Is Holding Up the Armory Appropriation Timber and Its Value to the land Actual Ket- -tiers and the Southern Pacific's Lands Cows' Troubles in Linn County Story of the Ashland School Clapper Fetr West's Many Divorcee Automobiles on Country Roads. ' OSWALD WEST, formerly State Land Agent and now a member of the Railroad Commission by virtue of ap pointment by the Governor, is recognized all over the State as a young man who has "made good" in public service. This recognition he has attained by the ag gressive spirit he displays in taking up any work that may be assigned him. Where many others in official position would have been content to let affairs drift along in well-worn ruts and in ac cordance with out-of-date customs, he has been prompt and persistent in efforts to establish a better order of things. Be cause he found practices In force was not the slightest reason why be should con tinue them. If they were good, very well; but if not good they must make way for the better. Whether the desirable thing can be done he seldom, if ever, stops to Inquire. He proceeds upon the theory that a thing can't be done without try ing, and he makes the effort. Everybody told him he couldn't secure convictions in the "State land, fraud cases, and he didn't, but he made a try at It and at least brought to light the facts as to the manner in which the State lands had been purchased. The only reason he didn't secure convictions was that the criminal laws did not cover the violations of the land laws. His aggressiveness dis closed the laxity of the criminal laws. West is an aggressive member of the Railroad Commission. He docs not worry himself over the question whether the commission has the power to take pro posed action for the benefit of patrons of a railroad. If it' Is something that ought to be done, he believes in doing it, and letting the .other fellow do the wor rying. Legal obstructions have no ter rors for him. If shippers make a com plaint he believes In trying It on the mer its first, leaving the railroads to Talse the question of law if It be found that a cause for complaint existed. There are scores of young men In official positions In Oregon city, county and State offices who could win recognition as West has If they were willing to undertake reforms which they admit should be Inaugurated, but which they hesitate to attempt be cause they doubt whether anything can be done. GE. Spence, the Clackamas County farmer, who was one of members of the Grange having charge of the armory and compulsory pass referendum peti tions, has a very forceful way of putting things when he gets Into an argument. He was very milch in earnest In the movement for the referendum on the $100,000 armory appropriation bill. When he and Jacob Voorhees presented the petition , for filing, the papers were taken to Governor Chamberlain's office as re quired by law. "I think the Grange is making a mistake in demanding the ref erendum on the armory bill,' remarked the Governor, in the course of the con versation. "I believe we should have a strong National Guard for service when needed and that this bill was a measure of economy." "We have nothing against the National Guard," responded Mr. Spence, "but there were several things we took Into consid eratlon. We wanted laws passed that would compel the corporations to pay their share of the taxes. Measures of that kind were defeated, and then this bill was passed taxing the people $100,000 to aid a National Guard that is called out only when the corporations are to be pro tected." IT IS difficult for the people of this state to get over. the pioneer Idea that timber detracts from the value of land. A few years ago the owners of timbered land in the agricultural re gion were troubled over the problem of getting rid of the trees and etumps, and they slashed the trees and burned them on the ground. It was an ex pensive operation, but it had to be done to set -the land under, the plow. Conditions have vastly changed In the last few years, and now many a man owning land near Portland. Oregon City, Salem, Eugene and othej- West ern Oregon towns can look back less than a dozen years and see where be incurred great expense to get rid of timber that would be a source of wealth to him if he still owned It. And many men still fall to see that the timber, too small for lumbering, nevertheless adds value to the land. Here, for example, is the Eugene Reg ister telling of the sale of 933 acres of land less than four miles from the city. The land contains 40,000 coeds' tf wood and it ft a down-hill haul all the way to Eugene. While the price is not given, the Register says that at 25 cents a cord stumpage the wood will just about pay for the land. And the stumpage is doubtless worth two, three, or even four times 25 cents a cord. It Is not likely to grow less valuable as the years roll by. LINN COUNTY COWS must be of ac robatic proclivities, if one may judge by certain legislation in their behalf. At least, there is reason to be lieve that they are expected to walk a tight wire or an imaginary line. Such is the inevitable conclusion from the language of Senate bill 156, which was enacted by the last Legislature and which is now known in law as chap ter 90 of. the session laws. That act says that stock may run at large in the following portion - of Linn County, to-wit: "Commencing aX the point In Linn County where the Willamette Meridian crosses the North Santlam River, running from thence south to the northeast corner of section 1, township 11 south, range 1 west, of the Willamette Meridian; thence west three miles; thence south six miles; thence west three miles; thence south to south ern boundary line of Linn County." It was the intention that stock should be allowed to run at large east of that line, but the law contains nothing to that effect, so stock can run at large only on the line. MANY of the people who are so eagerly endeavoring to secure some of the Southern Pacific's timber land under the terms of the grant re quiring that it be sold to actual set tlers, are likely to suffer a severe Jolt when they run up against the "actual settler" proposition. When the Southern Pacific has been beaten out on every other issue, it will still have the right to insist that the purchaser shall be an actual settler. In fact. It will have no right to sell to others than actual settlers. And proving one's self an actual -settler to the satisfac tion of an antagonistic railroad cor poration is likely to be a vastly dif ferent matter from establishing the same fact to the satisfaction of an easy-going Government land officUil under old practices. If an applicant be not lit fact and intention an actual settler, the railroad people will be pretty apt to And it out. They will' make it their business to find out what claim the applicant lias to their land. The applicant who is now putting up his good money for a contest on the questions of law will therefore be wise if he looks well to the question' of fact whether he is or is not in a position to prove himself an actual settler. What constitutes an actual settler is not definitely known, but It is safe to say that the settlement must be a little more actual In a contest with a railroad than In a homestead entry which goes through witlJt any contest at all. CALLING to their books two gener ations of school children has worn out the clapper in the boll on the new High School at Ashland, and a new one has been substituted. The bell was first swung in the belfry of Ash land Academy in 1869, and since that time it has sounded the call to school for Ashland College and Ashland Nor mal. When the new High School was established it was" removed to that structure but a few days ago the clapper broke from its hinge. Though the ball of iron on the end had been battered amost fat, it gave good serv ice until the hinge was worn asunder. Because of fond memories this old bell revives, the people of Ashland asked that the clapper be laid away among other historic relics in the archives of the school. SEVERAL attempts have been made Oregon to substitute automobiles for stages drawn by horses, but In most instances the experiment has been found unsatisfactory, chiefly because of the roughness of the roads. Bad roads cither prevent rapid traveling or rack the machines to pieces and in either event the auto has proven in many cases an unsuccessful rival of the old hack stage. But a few successful ex-' pcrlments have been made. An autd running between Eugene and Spring field last season was found profitable "v, to its owner. Two or three years ago an auto line between Independence and Salem was abandoned because toe wear and tear of the machine, together with the cost of operation exceeded the revenue; but this year a machine is running between Dallas and Salem and giving satisfaction to its owners. In dications are that systematic and thorough improvement of main roads running east and west across the Val ley to connecting towns on the three lines of the Southern Pacific would" make automobiling so easy that In a short time all the stages would be superseded by the machines and more rapid transportation would be provided. ALL through Western Oregon the , small towns are urging the estab lishment of creameries In the place of shipping cream to other towns where creameries ro already in operation The argument is that if the community produces enough cream to supply a small plant, it will be better for the town to have the butter go out with the local brand on it and have nil tho profits of the manufacture of butter stay in the community. Farmers take the view, also, that the more creamer ies there are the less danger is there of the formation of such harmonious relations as will result in the lowerlr-' - of prices of butter fat. When trly have their choice between Belling to (lie local creamery or shipping to Portlaid or to some other center, they feel mre confident of getting the best price ie market will warrant. The present ynr will see a half dozen new creamers in Western Oregon. ' JURORS in the Circuit Court will hereafter draw $3 per day Install of $2 as in the past. The new fee wll Just about let a farmer out even whin called for Jury duty. It will be faliiy profitable to the average town man f leisure who delights to serve on tie Jury. To tho retired "captalist" t,e $3 will be clear gain, for he can lie at home, but the farmer will be oit about $1 a day for board and will hue to pay about $1.75 a day for a man r take his place on the farm. It Is alt gether probable that the change in tie amount of the fee will makn a differ ence in the number of excuses offci f I and the zeal with whicTI they u'e pressed when men are called to jujr duty. i ONE of the remarkable, things aboit the legislation placed upon th) statute books by the recent session f the Legislature was that the new ouaii antine law which might easily t necessary for the preservation of tlii public health and safety, contained ni emergency clause, while a number of) acts having no other purpose than thai raising of salaries were put Into effect) immediately by declaring them neces sary for the preservation of the public peace, health and safety. PETER WEST, of Pendleton, prob ably has the world's record in the divorce business. He is an attorney, and has tried 307 ".divorce cases in Umatilla County. More than that, he has himself been divorced eight tirnc3, and is now living with his tenth wife. He is rather an Interesting character In the Eastern Oregon town, and not at all averse to discussing his specialty in legal practice. First Aid in Broadirsy. New York Globe. The passing throng on Broadway is aH ways ready for a little excitement, and when an ambulance that had been racing down the street with strident clanghW gong the other day drew up suddenly the curb in front of a popular confer tioner's shop and a trim-looking yoiiii surgeon hopped out and. with the serin air of one who meant business, hurried entered the premises, there was a grri twisting of neck, and In a couplo minutes a good-sized crowd had collect some oi tnose witn a specially w4- developed taste for shockers at first hifd followed the young surgeon Inside Id gathered about him to hear the quesjm that he evidently desired to a.sk of i of tne employes. rsreainiei--siy they s- tened as the words fell from his llpsf "W til you let mo navo a pound of etio lates? was his query. The crowd laughed. The young snrinn looked around, puz.led. Finally the auon aawneu on mm ana ne laugneuJoo. - ;t i v $ : ?' -