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Goidtleld. Nev. Luls Follln: C E. Hunter. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. . PORTLAND. SUNDAY. FEB. 8. 1908. THE VERDICT IN THE HALL CASE. Tho judgment of the jury lii the Hall case Is. an expression of the gen eral disapproval of the methods that have been pursued In office and In politics In Oregon, and of the deter-, initiation of the people to amend them. Mr. Hall stood as an example and exponent of a system that has been pursued these many. years. It has come to an end, and, though he is less guilty than many others, the . penalty has fallen on htm. It was Mitehellism in office and fn polities and In government. John H. Hall is not a bad man. He is a better man than many others who go unscathed; just as John II. Mitchell was convict ed at last of tho least of the crimes of his career. It will bo said that Mitchell and his followers were no worse than many who opposed them, and their methods no worse. This must be admitted. But who started the game? Who was its original proprietor? To fight It and beat it others used tho same or sim ilar methods. Yet they didn't beat it. The original game was secure and triumphant, till an executive appeared at Washington who was susceptible to no influence from the gang, and not only wouldn't call off the prosecution, but urged it on. Most of the offenses are buried in time long past and done. John H. Hall, not so guilty as many more, is caught in the last or latest sweep of the broom. He is a victim of the sys tem which he used as he found it. And yet there must be victims or there never can be reform. Lord Bacon (not to compare great things with small) Lord Bacon, on his trial and conviction for corruption in office, said, "There has been a great deal of corruption and neglect, for which I am heartily and penitently sorry." "I was the justest judge," he said, "that was In England these fifty years, but it was the justest censure in Parliament that was these 200 years." It is beyond question that Mr. Hall, in a former time., would not have been convicted of these offenses; but a time comes when honesty, fair dealing and truth, in public as in private affairs, must have their innings, and new marks must be set for the advance towards political and official morality. Yet all men who pursue the course that Mr. Hall pursued know they do wrong. They are not deceived, even by "the system." The fat-t that it is "customary" doesn't make it right, and they know it. Hence the efforts for secrecy and concealment. Mr. Hall wished to take care of himself in office. Hence the sinuosities of his course and- his neglect or postpone ment of his official duties. Hence his interest with a political faction, in the election of Senators. But the public conscience has been awakened, and methods are changed. As to Francis J. Heney. It is easy to criticise his methods. It is easy to denounce him-for granting immunity to some in order to get testimony for conviction of others, higher up. Bui that Is a necessary and universal method, which Bociety must employ to protect Itself when occasion re quires. It seldom hurts a man beyond his deserts. Mr. Heney, it must be said, has done during the last three or four years, what no man of Oregon, in the office of District Attorney, could have done. He had no connec tions here; he pursued his duty abso lutely without fear or favor. Sym pathy, social influence, family connec tions, personal or political feeling, could have no weight with him. No man of Oregon, therefore, could have done the work that he has done; and no one would have been incited to do It or permitted to do it, had not a strange chance or tragedy that every one deplored made Theodore Roose velt President of the United States. Nothing in the universe is so mysteri ous as the movements of human life and of human society. Even crimes and calamities turn t'o results that no one could have foreseen. Oregon gets a cleaning up, the old corruptions of her politics make an exit and- find their grave through ways that could they have been foretold would have been deemed faify tales. SHALL WE ABOLISH EQUAL TAXATION? Among the arguments, or state ments put forth by those who advo cate 'amendment of the Constitution in order to change our system of as sessment and taxation is the follow ing: One hundred feet square sold in Portland on January 22 for (SUO.OOO. or at the rate of more than 82.00U.O0O.W0 for 640 acres. The latter amount is about ten times the assessed value of the farms of Oregon. Such city values, as well as the values of railroad rights of way, are made by tribute paid by the producers of the state. This measure will shift the taxes mainly to site values, such as the above. Such stuff is a fair gauge of the, thought that offers this amendment. The specific instance is not true. It is at immeasurable distance from truth. The 100 feet square, referred to, was not sold for $800,000. It has not been sold at all. It would not bping 8200,000 today. Even this. It is true, is a large sum. But it was not "made by the producers of tho state" except in small degree, and that in directly. It was made by a man who has concentrated the hard work of a long life in Portland, and has done his full share . toward making the city what it is. The values of Portland have been made by those who came here at the beginning of settlement in Oregon, worked hard, stuck to the place through all discouragements, concen trated trade, commerce and manu factures here, and paid back for sup port of the state all they ever derived from the state, and still are doing so. Of course, the general progress of the state has contributed to the progress of Portland, and in turn the growth of Portland has correspondingly as sisted and promoted the growth of the state. It has not been one-sided at all, but a mutual and reciprocal re lation. But Portland stands and has stood in nearly the same relation' to two other states as to, the State of Ore gon. From Washington and Idaho Portland has derived more trade than from Oregon; and so far as a city is the creation of a tributary region, Portland owes less to Oregon than to Washington and Idaho. Far less; for Portland these forty years and more has paid one-third of the taxes of the State of Oregon, and to Washington and Idaho nothing. Wealth, of course. Is concentrated chiefly in the cities. It is a necessary consequence, as well as cause, of active business and social life. The wealth of the cities doesn't hurt the country, but Is helpful, and even indispensable to the country. A big tax roll in Portland is mighty good for Oregon. And what fairer basis for a t,ax roll than that now provided by the Con stitution and laws of Oregon? Is there any better rule of taxation than that "all taxation shall be equal?" Any better method of assessment tTian that "all property shall be assessed at its. true cash value?" "Again, let us ask: Do you. want better bread than wheaten? Better water than Bull Run? We think the people of Oregon will not wish to abolish the principle of equal taxation. The press of the state, so far as it has yet spoken, is talking gravely and sanely about this business. We finish for the present with this from the Albany Democrat, to. wit: "It is vexy doubtful if' our people are ready to. make land the solo basis of taxation, exempting im provements and personal property. Is there any good reason why one kind of property should not bear its pro portion of the burden the same as an other? Why should not the ma chinery in a factory and the building on it be assessed just the same as the land itself? The basic principle of taxation is to make the burden equal according to the wealth of the tax payer. Some people have all their wealth In personal property, in money and stocks and bonds. Should they be free from taxation? A man has all his wealth in cows and horses which produce a large income. Would it be right to exempt him from paying his share of the burdens of government? These things need to be thought about." "HARD LABOR." In the report recently rendered by a Joint committee of Congress, ap pointed to codify the Federal laws, the suggestion is. made that the words "punishment at hard labor" in con nection with imprisonment penalties passed upon Federal convicts be dropped. As a matter of fact, these words in this connection have been meaningless, except as they have con veyed ' a false impression, for years. Whether convicts under Federal law are held in states' prisons under con tract from the Government, as is not infrequently the case, or are confined in Federal penitentiaries, they come under such regulations as obtain in these prisons. In most of these "hard labor" is but a figment of the imag ination a decree which the court has not tho power to enforce. Indeed, the labor rules in prisons make no tech nical discrimination as to hard, light or moderate labor, the custom being to put the convict (where it is possi ble to work him at all) to-such labor as he can perform to the best advan tage to the institution and himself. A good accountant, committed for for gery, for example, is profitably and properly put to work on the books; a blacksmith convicted of a similar crime is sent to the forge, and so on. The industrial system of any prison must be conducted on this basis, re gardless of discriminations or alleged differences between hard and light labor. The work that a convict can do the best is the work that he can do the most profitably to the state. In recommending that these words be dropped from the sentence im posed upon Federal "prisoners the Congressional committee explained that while they "were practically meaningless, a serious . question has not Infrequently arisen where a Judge has failed in Imposing sentence to name "hard labor" as a condition of the imprisonment imposed. The point has been raised in some cases that this omission practically invalidated the sentence. Hence the very practi cal suggestion that these unnecessary and sometimes embarrassing words be omitted from tho decrees imposed upon Federal prisoners in the future. The theory that labor is a curse is utterly without foundation in act. This is especially true- in the case of the prisoner of the higher order of intelligence. A penalty of "absolute idleness" would be far more appalling to the man or woman of acti-e ener gies than would be that of "hard la bor." Carried to the extreme, a con vict condemned by conditions to a life of idleness is a most pitiable object. Imposed to the letter, the condition of imprisonment in utter idleness has almost certainly led to the convict's insanity. Such a . condition is com parable in a state of liberty only to that of a sheepherder on a wide range who follows his bleating, senseless flocks about -they intent only upon feeding,' he upon watching them un til he sinks to the level of their bab bling unreason. No man or woman convict was ever so averse to labor even though trained in the doctrine of the "primal curse" as to regard without terror a decree of commitment for a term of years to a prison cell with nothing to' do. The dread of the scaffold, the in definable horror of the electrical chair, dwindle into insignificance ,in the presence of the terror of absolute, companionless idleness. It is thought that Congress can hardly fail to strike from the Federal code words that at best are meaningless, indicating as it does an idea of penalty at a time when labor was held to be a curse in stead of, as now, a blessing. A TEXT ITIO MEDFORD. Sometimes a deck of cards is harm less and sometimes not. It depends on circumstances. Wis9 parents rath er incline to permit their boys and girls to play with cards at home of an evening, partly because the am'use ment they supply is innocent in itself, party in the hope that familiarity will lessen the baneful attraction of the forbidden and destroy that seductive charm "of mystery which lures many strictly nurtured youths to their ruin. But it is safe, to say that whenever parents feel the faintest intimation of guilt in permitting their children to play cards it is better for both young and old to forbid It. Ttie harm comes, not at all from the game, which is neutral like any other, but from vio lating a rule of conscience. Even when the rules of conscience are illog ical and. tyrannous, they must be obeyed so long as their binding power Is acknowledged, no matter how slightly. To defy one's conscience is always harmful, even when its com mands are foolish. It is only when conscience offers no objection that a person can dance or play cards or frequent the theater without moral guilt. Such recreations ! are only for the - emancipated; but there is a lurking danger even for them. It is the danger of excess. Be tween the Puritanism which forbids all amusement and the libertinism which makes life nothing but a quest for amusement there is a sane middle course where serious and trivial things are assigned their proper places. One may say without reservation that the place for piaying cards Is not at school. The Medford boys who sought to pass their noon hour in dealing and shuffling were violating not only a universal rule of every de cent educational Institution, but they were also in personal rebellion against their teacher. A boy who takes cards to school knows that he is doing wrong. He knows that he is outrag ing a sentiment of both teachers and parents, and that he is , setting a scandalous example for his school mates. The atmosphere of guilt which surrounds anything like card playing at school doubles its attrac-, tiveness, makes It irresistibly fascinat ing, so that it spreads among the scholars like a contagious disease. Lessons will not be thought of so long as the lure of the game exists. Those who are in the secret of the play are necessarily united in a guilty con spiracy against the teacher and the school becomes for them a hot-bed of vice. j If parents support their children in defiance of school discipline and- the better- moral sentiment of the com munity, it makes matters all the worse. It is hard enough to hold boys under authority when the home works in harmony with the school, but when the home allies Itself with the unruly will of the boy, then his ultimate ruin is almost certain. Parents who up hold their children in rebellion-against rightful discipline have much" to an swer for in our day. The terrifying increase 6f Juvenile crime may be traced directly to this cause. Still sadder is the almost certain sorrow which the ungrateful youth brings down upon the head of his foolishly Indulgent parent. One may guess that at Medford there are two factions in the district. One of them is per haps unduly Puritanical; the other is more or less emancipated. The chil dren of the latter have heard much at home about the tyranny of Puritan ism: they have heard how innocent cardplaying is and how foolish it is to forbid harmless games. They then argue that if cards are harmless at home, so they must be at school. But the argument Is illegitimate. Boys may do many things at home which are wrong at school. Cards are inno cent at home if they violate no rule of the home; but at school they do al ways violate a rule, and a very essen tial one, and therefore they cannot be harmless. For growing boys the rules of the school are quite as impor tant as those of the home, and often more so. However innocent cards may be in themselves, they are not a proper amusement for the school. Boys at school ought to spend their recesses In active exercise out of doors. Both their bodily and their moral health demand this. The youth who sits within doovs when his comrades are out at play Is usually a boy to be shunned. There is something awry in his moral nature. The chances are ten to one that his mind is occupied with unwholesome' thoughts. Of course he may be a genius brooding over, an immortal poem, but it is much more likely that he is conjuring up those imaginings with which Satan is always ready to fill an idle brain. The games of cards, which rebellious boys play at school are first cousins to these unwholesome visions of idle ness. - They are tainted, not only with the guilt of revolt against proper authority, but,- what Is much worse, they are rank with the infection of in cipient vice. These illicit games are part of that drama of guilt which be gins in a morbid imagination, merges gradually into deeds, and ends in the penitentiary, or would .end there if the penitentiary had not been virtu ally abolished by the scholastic senti mentality of our higher courts. One is fain to dwell upon this seem ingly trivial affair at Medford, where the school directors have sustained some boys in rebellion against Hheir teacher, because it is typical of a moral disease which seems to pervade the whole countcy. It Is the same disease which broke out at Athens in the period of her decadence and which Socrates lost his life in trying to correct. An exaggerated individu alism is the best name for it, perhaps; an individualism which holds that every person should be a law unto himself,' be bound by no rules except his own desires and ambitions, and acknowledge no rights in . others which conflict with his own appetites. "This is the old gospel of Gorgias and the sophists at Athens and of Dr. Day and his colleagues in America. Of course it is anarchy of the most de structive typfe, but they disguise It un der fine names and preach it with al luring speciousness. Still anarchy is anarchy, and it is Instructive to. see it showing forth now at the head of the great Methodist University at Syra cuse, now In the little village school at Medford. The virus has 'infected the Nation. Can it be eliminated without 8urger-? LET VS WAIT AWHILE. The northeast part of Portland is growing with great rapidity. It may be conceded that it is desirable that every reasonable facility be provided for communication with the West Side, but it is doubtful if the pro posed scheme for a ruew bridge across the Willamette River ought to be un dertaken at this time. A high bridge, terminating on the West Side about Fourteenth street and on the East Side somewhere near Russell street, or in its vicinity, is suggested, so that river traffic may not bo interrupted and vessels of all descriptions may pass up and down the river. It is re alized that another drawbridge at this point, or probably at any other point in the river within the city limits, is open to strong objection and should not be built. "Hence the high-bridge plan. . But such a structure would cost in the neighborhood of $3,000,000, for it would necessarily be very long and very high. To add such a sum to the present large bonded indebtedness of the city" means to increase the mu nicipality's fixed interest charge by $150,000 per year, and, besides, it would take $50,000 more per annum to maintain and repair the bridge. It Is not wise at this time to -increase the heavy burdens of the taxpayer by such a large amount. Let us wait. We are able now to get across the river with reasonable dispatch. The capacity of the steel bridge and the Albina ferry is taxed, to be sure, but they will do for a while. The northeast section of Portland will continue to grow, and later1 perhaps the city may feel able to add a $3,000,000 bridge to the present four trans-river structures. But-not now. v IT IS HUMBUG. . Since the Statement No. 1 method of nominating candidates for United States Senators does not nominate the men the people want, how can it elect the' men the people want? Why should a man nominated by a minor ity, against the will of the majority and defeating another man nominated by another minority, be designated the "people's choice," whom members of the Legislature should be obliged to elect? Why should a Republican, rejected by the majority of his party at the primaries, but nominated by a minor ity, and a Democrat, nominated by! a party that constitutes but one-third of the voters of Oregon why should these two men be the only ones elec tors can vote for, and why should the one receiving the larger number of votes under such circumstances be called the "people's choice"? Obviously the winner is not the people's choice. Were the range f choice free from the confines of the primary law, each party would nomi nate a man the majority of its mem bers wanted for Senator. In the Repiiblican primaries of 1906 12,877 Republicans nominated Bourne for Senator. The votes for other Re publican candidates numbered 29,991 Bourne therefore was nominated by 30 per cent of the Republicans who went to the primaries. The number of Republicans who went to the elec tion in June was between 50,000 and 55,000, as shown by the vote for the Republican candidates for Supreme Judge, Secretary of State, State Treasurer and State Printer. In Ore gon there are probably 65,000 Repub licans. Bourne therefore was nomi nated by 30 "per cent of the Republi can vote in the primaries, 25 per cent of the Republican vote In the election, and less than 20 per cent of the Re publican strength of the state. Mr. Bourne evidently was not wanted at that time for Senator by the people of Oregon 60 per cent of whose vot ers are Republicans. The result of the election confirms this view. The Republican plurality, normally 30,000 or more, dwindled to 3121 in his case. But for the fact that the people of Oregon did. not want a Democratic Senator though they accept a Demo cratlc Governor and numerous Demo cratic Judges, Prosecuting Attorneys, Sheriffs and . Mayors Mr. Gearin would have defeated Mr. Bourne. But when the 50.000 or 56,000 Re publicans, who constitute the majority of this state, went to the polls in June, 1906, to elect a Republican Senator, they found on the ballots the names of two men, neither of whom they wanted at that time for Senator one was Gearin, Democrat; the other Bourne, Republican; the one nomi nated unanimously by the Democrats, who number not nany more than 30, 000 all told and are a minority of the voting population; the other nominat ed by 12,877 Republicans out of a total of 6,000. These matters are stated merely for the purpose of pointing out that. the people are likely to fail again to nom inate their choice for Senator, under the primary law, and to designate truly their choice to the Legislature. Scarcely anybody approves the present method of electing Senators by Legislatures. It has produced many evils and has outraged the pub lic in every state. But it will not suf fice for the element that adheres to the 8tatement-No.-l method to de clare the opponents of that statement foes of the direct election method. The Statement-No.-l system does not designate the "people's choice," and is humbug. It does not matter much, perhaps, for the policies of the Na tion, whether Judges, District Attor neys, Mayors and Sheriffs are, in each case, under the primary law, the "peo ple's choice," since one man can per form the duties of a local officer as well as another, whether he Is Demo crat or Republican. But when the people of Oregon take part in the af fairs of the Nation they must elect on party lines strictly, or they will cool their heels outside the councils of the Nation. For this reason the scheme o put up a minority Republican can didate for Senator against George Chamberlain, Democrat, and make Chamberlain the "people's choice" by Statement No. 1, is. humbug. Some persons say, "Well, if Republicans cannot put' up a 'good, strong man, they ought to be defeated." But what Republicans should or will put up the strong man? Do any of them dare? Does any candidate dare to have them do it? Would not that be called ring" and machine politics? Was not the direct primary law framed to prevent that thing? COLLEGE ATHLETICS AT WALLA WALLA. . While there seems to have' been a pretty wide -representation of the col leges at the Walla Walla conference upon athlctijs, still It might have been wiaer witn aavantage. ino ocnouia at Newberg, Forest Grove and Mc- Minnville, as well as the denomina tional colleges in Washington should have sent delegates, but Whitman alone of such institutions did so. The higher Institutions under denomina tional control need regulation of ath letics nuite as badly as the state schools do. They should have par ticipated in the effort to adopt uni form rules for clean, and wholesome sport. If our Coast colleges can suc ceed in eliminating that commercial ism which infests and perverts inter collegiate athletics, they will do a work which - the country will grate fully - Imitate. Swarthmore College thought it worth while to reject a gift of $3,000,000 for the sake of retaining its competitive athletics. This indi cates that among the colleges the sub ject is deemed Important. The out side world takes it more jocularly, but it is undeniable that the moral and physical health of the. best part 1 of our population Is intimately de pendent upon wholesome sport in col lege. The new rule that a student must reside a year In his new college after a transfer before he can play on an Intercollegiate team is one of those ef forts to evatle a difficult duty by sweeping legislation which generally do more harm than good. When a man changes his college for the sole purpose of playing on the team, of course he' ought to be balked of his purpose, because such practices would open the door to commercialism of the worst sort. The college which could raise the most, money to buy men would always have a winning team, while its scholarship would de teriorate. But it ought to be possible. on the other hand, to detect these cases and punish them without penal izing all changes of college residence. One of the defects of our college system is the slight interchange of students and teachers which takes place among them. Movement from one school to another should be fa cile; faculties would do well to en courage it. Each school has some singular merit which students from other places might share with advan tage. A residence of one year at Mc Minnville, one at Forest Grove, one at Corvallis and. one at Eugene would probably give a better education than' four at either placet and the rules of the faculties would display a broader Interest in the student's welfare . if they recognized the fact. Do what we may to avoid it, every college left to itself tends toward provincial nar rowness. The great merit of the elec tive system in studies is the competi tion it sets up among professors. The incompetent man is sure to be elimi nated. It is the dread of this which underlies the opposition to the elec tive system in mossbaek schools. Just as election among studies stimulates teachers, so election among colleges would stimulate entire faculties to make their work broad and progres sive. An overemphasis upon amateurism is noticeable in this conference as in almost every other of the same kind. There is an excessive effort to prevent students from playing for money dur ing the Summer vacation. The sup position is that playing for money taints a man Indelibly and makes it Impossible for him to play honorably on the college team. This supposi tion is, however, wholly mistaken. There is no good reason why a college boy should not replenish his purse by playing professional baseball in Sum mer. The game is clean and healthy and the pay is good. No manly fel low would be tainted by it, nor would it make him one whit less desirable for the college team. The Oregonlan has observed that college men play professional baseball in the long Vaca tion under assumed names without injury to their standing on - college teams, and it cannot understand why It should be worse to do a thing open ly and honorably than to do it clan destinely. Much of the talk about amateur standing is pure snobbery. .It is al lied with ap effort to draw a distinc tion between college games and other games which is almost wholly imagin ary, and, in so far as it is real, wholly pernicious. The college boy is not built of a finer clay than other youths. If he has acquired expert ness in football or baseball, it no more degrades him to earn money by his skill than to earn it by waiting on the table at a Summer fesort and pocket ing tips from plutocrats. . Most peo ple would say it did not degrade him so much. A taste for aristocratic ex cluslveness still lingers around our colleges and whatever it controls it makes absurd. , With commendable zeal, the citi zens of East Eugene have decided to plant a thousand shade trees to bor der streets leading from the railroad to the foothills. They have selected maple, walnut, linden and chestnut. While each of these varieties is beau tiful, the inquiry suggests itself. Why was the elm ignored? It is conceded by observant visitors that Portland has a wealth of shade trees greater than any other city in the land. Among theni are Included the four chosen by Eugene; yet the elm out numbers all other trees except the maple. If left to a vote by home owners who have set out shade trees and watched their growth, the elm would probably receive in Portland as prime favorite a handsome majority. It is especially well adapted to the mild, moist climate of Western Ore gon. As to- the particular member of the elm family for first choice there are at least twenty to select from individual taste must govern, but the community that neglects yie elm robs itself of distinct arbored beauty. In structural form and richness of foli age the elm has many rivals, but no peer. The transformation of Kings Into ashes Is much tess frequent now han it was in the old days when the poet aptly wrote "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown," but even in this enlightened twentieth century most of the monarchs of the OK; Vorld have ever before them the fear of sudden and awful death. "The boast of her aldry, the-pomp of power," appeals to some natures, and there will never bo any shortage in the available tim ber for Kings. And yet If good-natured, gourmandizing, fat Carlos, who was borne to the tomb in Lisbon yester day, had any time for regrets in -the last few awful moments before the bullets of the assassins completed their work, he undoubtedly wished that he could have changed places with the humblest of his subjects, and the mourning Queen, wife and moth er, will for the remalnfler of her life suffer a grief too passionate for ex pression. Royalty has its drawbacks, and Its gilt soon tarnishes. The American "muckraking" is very pleasing to our "nice" neighbors across the pond. - Paris Temps says that "financial, administrative and political corruptions in the United States un doubtedly have attained astounding proportions." We read similar ex pressions a few years ago- from the English papers when the Chicago packing-house scandals were being, advertised throughout the world. Sub sequent investigation disclosed the fact that the Chicago institutions were nice, clean and admirably man aged In comparison with similar ips- tablishments which turned out "the roast beef of old England." If Temps published all that was "finan cially and politically" rotten In France the showing might be no more favor able than that in this country. The United States presents the unique spectacle of telling all the world how bad conditions are with us. Other countries keep their troubles to them selves. ' Ex-GovernorPennypacker, of Penn sylvania, one of those self-anointed moralists who are profoundly dis tressed at the wickedness of the world In which they live, has been drawn into the State Capitol fraud in the Keystone State. Testimony at the trial of the grafters who robbed the state shows that the Governor joined in a letter administering a coal of "whitewash" intended to cover up the shortcomings, of the architect. This highly respectable ex-Governor is the same Pennypacker who a few years ago attempted to muzzle the newspapers- of Pennsylvania with a libel law which made the old blue laws of New England look pale and white by comparison. Perhaps Pennypacker, even in those days, . had a vision of some coming event that -was already casting its shadow before. Beach Hargis, who murdeTed his father. Judge " Hargis, at Jackson, Ky., is said to express no regret over the tragedy. This in a degree is sur prising, and yet it should not be for gotten that the young man knew full well how long his father's death had been overdue. If Satan has kept in close touch with the affairs of Breath itt County, Kentucky, it is question able whether( Hargis pere is resting today where religiously inclined peo pie think he Is, for nothing that has ever been credited to Satan and all of his aggregation exceeds in "devilyfy the crimes of this twentieth-century monster. The ruler of the lower re gions might well reject Hargis as an "undesirable citizen" even for a place not noted for its pleasant surround ings. .. . 1 The final settlement of the immi gration question between Japan and the United States is held up on ac count of a . wide discrepancy in the statistics of the two countries show ing the number of Japanese entering the United States. An investigation is now under way to determine whether or not fraud has been pryc ticed In making immigration returns. That Japanese have been illegally en tering the United States from both northern and southern boundaries has long been an open secret, and, as thousands of the little brown men have entered this country by fraudu lent means, it is expecting too much to suppose that tho statistics bear ing on the matter would be strictly accurate. The repprt that Bryan made $52, 000 last year from his lectures Is seized upon by Harper's Weekly as the subject for a cartoon represent ing the peerless leader as a bloated plutocrat. And yt, with all his faults, Bryan was .well worth $52,000 to the people of the United States. If he did nothing elee, he made such men as Fairbanks, Knox, Foraker and Cannon impossible Republican nomi nees for the Presidency. And that alone was worth $52,000. Ten years hence there will be many a clean, thrifty and productive apple orchard where today there are old, diseased and worthless trees. Each of these orchards will be a living tes timonial of the value of the work of M. O. Lownsdale In teaching the farmers of the Willamette Valley how to rejuvenate old and neglected trees. Heney has now convicted every man in Oregon he lias prosecuted. The remaining land-fraud defendants will doubtless regard this information as both interesting and important. To a mere spectator, the auto race through Alaska and Siberia looks like a hot-air proposition. But maybe it will need that quality to get through this time of year. Taft's chances ' would be immeasur ably, improved if the Philippines had as many votes- as New York in the Chicago convention. They who take unto themselves tra ditional leap-year privileges should not overlook the exceptional week ending on the 14th. President Roosevelt cut the coat for dishonest business men. None should put it on unless it fits them. No complaint is heard this week about weather Interfering with work on the farm. Depositors in Morse's chain of burst banks may properly call him Re STANDARD VERSE i AXJIABKI, MSB. It was many and many a year ago. In a kingdom by the sea. That a maiden lived, whom you may know By the name of Annabel Lee; And tills maiden she lived with no oiiier thought Than to love, and bo loved by I was a child and she was a child. In this kingdom by the sea; But we loved with a love that was more than love, I and my Annabel Lee. With a love that the winged seraphs of heaven Coveted her and me. ' And this was tho reason that lon;j-ago. In tills kingdom by the sea. A wind blew out a cloud, chilling My beautiful Annabel Lee; So that her high-horn kinsmen came. And bore her away from me. To shut her up in a epuli-hor. In this kingdom by the sea. The angels, not so happy in heaven, Went envying her ami me. Yes that was the reason (as aUl men know). In this kingdom by the sea, That the wind came out of tho. cloud by night. Chilling and killing my Annabel Lre. But our love it was stronger by far than the love Of those who were older than we. Of many far wiser than we; And neither the angels in heaven above. Nor the demons down under the sea. Can ever dissever my soul from the soul Of the beautiful Annabel Lee. For the moon never beams without bringing me dreams Of the beautiful Annabel Lee, And the stars never rise, but I feel tho bright eyes Of the beautiful Annabel Lee. And so, all the night-tide I lie down by the side of my darling, my darling, my lifo and my bride. In her sepulcher there by the sea. In her tomb by the sounding sea. Edgar Allan Foa. THE 4UARREL OF FRIENDS. From "Christabel." Alas! they had been friends in youth; But whispering tongues can poison truth; And constancy lives in realms above; And life is thorny; and youth Is vain; And to be wroth with one we love Both work like madness in the brain. And thus it chanced, as I divine. With Roland and Sir Leoline! Each spoke words of high disdain And insult to his heart's best brother; They parted, ne'er to meet again! But never neither found another To free the hollow heart from paining. They stood aloof, the scars remaining. Like cliffs which had been rent asunder; 'A dreary sea now flows bctwe.au. But neither heat, nor frost, nor thun der Shall wholly do away, I ween. The marks of that which ones hath been. S. T. Coleridge. HISSING'S NO srx. Some say that kissing's a sin; But I think it's name ava. For kissing has wonn'd in this warld Since ever that there was twa. O, if it wasna lawfn". Lawyers wadna allow it; If it wasna holy, Ministers wadna do it. If it wasna modest. Maidens wadna tak' it; If It wasna plenty, Pulr folk wadna get it. Anonymous. LAV. Laws, as we read in ancient sages. Have been like cobwebs in all ages. Cobwebs for little flies are spread. And laws for little folks are made; But if an insect of renown. Hornet or beetle, wasp or drone. Be caught in quest of sport or plunder. The flimsy fetter flies In sunder. James Benttle. GOLD. Gold! gold! gold! gold! Bright and yellow, hard and cold. Molten, graven, hammered and rolled; Heavy to get, and light to hold; Hoarded, bartered, bought and sold. Stolen, borrowed, squandered, doled: Spurned by the young, but hugged by th old To tiie very verge of the churchyard mould: Price of many a crime untold: Gold! gold! gold! gold! Good or bad a thousand-fold! How widely its agencies vary, To save, to ruin, to curse, 1, bless, As even its minted coins, express, j Now stamped with the image of g"5 Queen Bess, I And now of a Bloody Mary. Thomas Hoo ADVlt'K. Take the open air, The move you take the better; Follow Nature's laws . To the very letter. Let the doctors go To the Bay of Biscay, Let alone the gin. The brandy and the whisky. Freely exercise. Keep your spirits cheerful; Let no dread of sickness Make you ever fearful. Eat the simplest food, Drink the pure, cold water. Then you will be well. , Or at least you oughtar. Anonymous. A SUMMER EVKMXO. ' How fine lias the day been! howj bright was the sun! How lovely and joyful the course that he run, ! Though he rose in a mist when bis1 race he begun. And there followed some droppings of rain! But now the fair traveler's come to the west, His rays are all gold, and his beauties! are best: He paints the sky gay as he sinks to his rest. And foretells a bright rising again. Just such is the Christian; his course he begins, Like the sun in a mist, when he mourns for his sins. And melts into tears; then he breaks out and shines. And travels his heavenly way: But when he comes nearer to nnisn his race. Like a fine setting sun, he looks richer in grace. And gives a sure hope, at the end of his days, Of rising in brighter array. Isaac Watts. Sneezes Oui Two Xntural Teeth. Wlnstcd (Conn.) Dispatch In New York World. C. J. Ssj?e, of New Boston, his friends assert, is the hardest sneezer in New Kngland. George Snow says he actually'' shakes the building when lie sneezes'. He has just sneezed so hard thnt he lost two teeth and they were not false ones, either.