6 THE SUNDAY OREGOMAX, PORTLAND, MAY 10, 1908. wt &tm vmmx SUBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLY IX ADVANCE. (By Mall.) Tially, Sunday Included, one year 8 .00 Dally. t-'tHiday Included, six months.... 4.5 lally, Sunday Included, three months.. li.jjJ Ially, Sunday Included, one month i Ially, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Iiaily, without Sunday, six months.... 8.23 lally; without Sunday, three months., l.i J Ially, without Sunday, one month -0 Sunday, one year r-y Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... 1-S0 Sunday and weekly, one year 8.j0 BY CARRIER. Dally. Sunday included, one year 9.00 Dallv. Sunday Included, one month "3 HOW TO REMIT Send postortice money order, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's rink. Give potonice ad dress la full. Including; county and state. rOSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce as Fecohd-Olass Matter. io to u yg i en; in to ax pages 3 cen;! 80 to 44 Pages ? cents 40 to B0 Pages . . cen" Korelpn pontage, double rates. IMPORTANT 'The postal laws are trlct. NewMpapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The . f. Berkslth Special Agency New York, rooms 4.S-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms &10-S12 Tribune building. KEPT UN -SALE. f'hirairo Auditorium Annex: Postofflce Neww Co.. 17S Dearborn street; Empire News island. Ht. Paul. Minn. N. Ste. Marie. Commer cial Station Colorado Springs. Colo. H. H. Bell. Denver Hamilton A Kendrtck, 006-012 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book 6tore. 1214 Fifteenth street: H. P. Hansen. 8. Rice. George Carson, Kansas (lly, Mo. Rlrksecker Cigar Co Ninth and Walnut; Yoma News Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugb, SO South Third. Cincinnati. O. Tons News Co. Cleveland. O. James Pushaw. 30T Super ior street. Washington, n. C. Ebbltt House. Four teenth and F streets; Columbia News Co. Pittsburg-. Pa. Fort Pitt News Co. Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Office, Penn News Co.; A. P. Kemble. 3735 Lancaster avenue. New York City Rotaling's news stands. 1 Park Row, 3Sth and Broadway. 42d and Broadway and Broadway and 20th. Tele- 5 hone . 63T4. Single conies delivered: ones & Co.. Astor House; Broadway The ater News Stand; Empire News Stand. Ogden. D. I,. Boyle; Lowe Bros.. 114 Twenty-llfth street. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. Union Station; llageath Stationery Co.; Kemp & Arenson. Ies Moines, la. Mose Jacobs. Fresno, CaL Tourist News Co. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co. 430 K. street; Amos News Co. Salt Lake Moon Book & Stationery Co.. Bosenfeld & Hansen; O. W. Jewett. P. O. corner; Stelpeck Bros. Long Beach. Cal B. E. Amos. Pasadena, CaL Amos News Co. Pan Diego. B. B. Amos. San Jose. Emerson. W. Houston. Tex International News Agency. Dallas, Tex. Southwestern News Agent. 844 Main street; also two street wagons. Fort Worth, Texv Southwestern N. and A. Agency. Amarilla. Tex. Tlmmons & Pope. Sun Franclaco Foster Orear: Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Btand; I.. Parent;' N. Wheatley; Fairmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co.: United News Agency. 14V4 Eddy 'street; B. E. Amos, man ager three wagons; Worlds N. s.. 2025 A. Sutter street. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson, Fourteenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; B. E. Amos, manager Ave wagons; Welllngham, E. G. (...l.ldeld. Nev. Louie Follin. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1908. DEALING WITH A WHIMSEY. Mr. Walter Thomas Mills, arguing for the proposed tax amendment, says that valuations now for purposes of taxation are unequal, since "the bulk of the wealth is in the cities, but that farmers of the country pay three fifths of the taxes." This will not bear examination from any point of view. It is inconsistent with the facts, and inconsistent with the main argument of the proponents of the amendment. To assert that but two-fifths of the taxes are paid by the cities is a serious error. The assessed values of Port land alone are almost two-fifths of those of the state. And the assess ment is right up to actual values; In many suburban districts, above them. Many tracts in various directions, around the outskirts of Portland, are; assessed at prospective, city values. Then, besides the assessment of property in Portland, amounting to one-third to two-fifths of all the as sessed values of the state, there are the valuations of other cities and towns; as Astoria, Salem, Eugene, Ashland, Baker, Pendleton, The Dalles and many more, which would carry the total much above one-half the en tiro valuation of the property of the state. At present valuations of prop erty in the cities and towns, as com pared with valuations of country lands, the former now are paying fully a just share. Moreover, the argument of Mr, Mills is inconsistent with the main contention of the single-taxers, since their avowed object is to place greater burdens on unimproved country lands; in innumerable instances held by own ers who have not yet found means to Improve them. A farmer has a tract which he has but partially Improved, but which he holds with intention of cultivating all of it when he can. He doesn't wish to see it confiscated by taxation. Exemption of his tools and hullding3 would be no compensation for confiscatory taxation of his unim proved land. Tr!e argument for an oppressive land tax is the argument of theorists who look only at one part of a subject and distort everything to meet their pos tulate; or It is the old agrarian argu ment of those who have no land, have not had the enterprise to acquire any, and cultivate an envious disposition towards those nho have had the fore sight to get land and have endured the sacrifices . necessary, to keep it. Of course, wo are not including among these land owners the beneficiaries of large grants, which were got by per version of the intent of the laws; but we are including the lands granted t actual settlers and held rightfully by them, or descended to their posterity or lawful assigns. Owners of these lands, in country or city, demand fair treatment for their 'property and will have it, since they have right and jus tice on their side as well as fair in telligence and sufficient numbers. The members of the granges throughout the state are right on this business. They see at once through the sophis tries of those who propose the new method of taxation; which would be not only unjust to all land owners, present and prospective, but would completely upset the general tax sys tem of the state a system based on the Justest of. all principles, namely. equal taxation of all' actual values, Such, indeed, has always been the rule of the law in Oregon, and the prac tice year by year, in all parts of the state, is coming into close and closer conformity to it. The theorist, the projector, the promoter of a fad and whiitisey, '.will not be permitted to overthrow, it. Land holding is lawful nUX honorable, and necessary to civil! zuiUD,,'.and to. devise means to rob the land owner is no more justifiable than to devise means to rob him of "his movable goods. -. "BY DIVINE THRUSTING ON." v The phrase is Shakespeare's. . It means simply that there Is a divinity within us. which moves us to action, but which, under free will, it is our privilege and duty to direct for our selves, this way or that. The doctrine of free will is the hard est of all metaphysical problems; yet hard and difficult only in proportion to the firmness or weakness of the in dividual mind that tries to deal with it.' Still, it may be said that this begs the question. For if the mind is weak, then free will is out of the question. It was the woman that misled the man. Whisky was responsible for his fall. Such pleas are entered every day, Bui they are very contemptible. Most of those who plead "weakness" for their faults and crimes are. themselves responsible for that weakness. And all must be held responsible. Man is nothing at all, if not superior to all "the mortal Instruments" that he would blame for his .lapses or his downfall. It is a false philosophy to assume that there can no more be free will in human conduct than chance in physi cal affairs, and .that by predetermined necessity there is a fixed quantity of crime in every society, which the strug gles of the individual will not be able to change. Example and habit do, in deed, go far; yet there always is, in reserve, some quantity of choice. Else every principle of virtue would soon disappear from the world. There is. no basis for human law except in the moral order. This moral order must be assumed. It is sug gested by Nature and confirmed by reason and experience. Thus, the les son of bad actions, even more than that of good, confirms and supports the moral law. Human sympathy makes allowance for apparent necessity, which seems to drive on towards evil. But human laws cannot. Opium and alcohol can not be treated as moral agents, or held to accountability. But man can be so treated and so held to account; and he must be. Yet man continually fails to realize his ideal. Nevertheless, everywhere, in our conscience, in our physical na ture, in the sentiments of associated men, there are indelible marks and proofs of a morally constituted world, moving towards righteous ends. Still it is true that nowhere within us . or out of us do we find the fulfillment of this idea, but only, as Martlneau says, "the incipient and often baffled ten tatives for realizing it by partial ap proximation." We are here in the very center of the doctrine of deter minism and free will, which in' one form or another, through all ages, has fascinated the human mind. It has been especially the problem of Chris tian theology; and a great writer has truly said that "in Western Christen dom it is the Catholic Church alone, especially in its Dominican and Jesuit schools, that has Baved any ability in man to obey the will of God; while the Augustinlan theology, whether shel tered in Port Royal, or breaking forth into branches of the Protestant Ref ormation, has merged all human power in Divine grace and foreordina tion." Hence the celebrated Proving cial Letters of Pascal, with all their acuteness and brilliancy, and notwithy standing their general service in clear ing up theological subtleties, were written on the wrong side of the ques tion. MAKE NO MISTAKE ABOUT TAFT. Mr. John C. Young is correct in his statement that the vote of Oregon In the National Republican Convention at Chicago, being less than 1 per cent of the total, will have small influence in its proceedings. It would appear, then, to be of no great importance as to whether Oregon shall send to Chi cago an instructed 'or uninstructed delegation. The Taft men in Oregon will want a Taft delegation because they desire to be on the Taft' "band wagon," while the opponents of Mr. Taft, and even those friendly to him who feel he may not be successful, will want to leave the delegates' hands un tied, so that the vote of Oregon may be trafficked ' wherever it will "do the most good." This is about the situation as The Oregonian understands it. Yet it would seem that there is an .unneces sary lack of Information, as to the real strength of Mr. Taft. The Oregonian print3 today a letter from Mr. Walter Wellman, the well-known correspond ent, which it believes gives the truth as to the various state delegations to the Chicago convention as nearly as it may be given by anybody at this time. Mr. Wellman thinks that Mr. Taft will have enough, or very nearly enough, instructed delegates to nominate him, and his resources among the unin structed delegates seem to guarantee absolutely his success. This Is, of course, merely an opinion from a well informed newspaper correspondent. Yet it is not an opinion, but a matter of record, that Mr. Taft has instructed for him at this time 4&0 out of the necessary 491 delegates. He needs. therefore, about 91 more. To get them he must depend on the unin structed delegates, numbering about 200, and on the delegates yet to be chosen, which are somewhat less than 200. In this latter number are Ore gon, "Washington, California and Ida ho, all unquestionably for Taft. Among the uninstructed delegations are states like Massachusetts,- where the state convention by a resolution recognized the fact that its delegation was large ly for Taft, but distinctly refrained from instructing them in deference to time-honored precedent in that state. The Taft managers claim that nearly 100 of the uninstructed delegates so far elected have publicly announced themselves for the Ohio candidate. There is no question that their conten tion is well founded on fact. - There Is another condition quite helpful to Mr. Taft that would in a close contest greatly aid in turning the issue in his favor. He is unquestion ably the second choice of several im portant delegations Instructed for "favorite sons" like Cannon and Hughes. It is notorious that the New York delegation, ' nominally , for Hughes, is very largely in the hands of Taft's friends. With Illinois, too, the situation is very much the same. When these delegations abandon the candidates of their respective states, if they ever get a chance to abandon them, where are they'golng? To Taft undoubtedly, unless meanwhile the long-anticipated Roosevelt stampede shall have occurred ami Mr. Roosevelt shall have been nominated. But the stampede that everybody expects rare ly or never occurs,, for the element of surprise is missing and the delegates are completely fortified against it. The Roosevelt stampede suffers from too much advance advertising. . It is impossible to avoid the conclu sion, then, that Mr. Taft today has the nomination for President in his own hands. That he will, in all probability, be nominated on the first ballot is ob vious to all careful and impartial ob servers. Whatever action the state and Congressional conventions take next Thursday, should, therefore, be taken advisedly. OLD AGE. It does not follow necessarily that Jacques was any better off for the ser mons he found in stones. Perhaps, like many sermons found in pulpits, they were too long to be truly edifying. The honey which the industrious bee gathers ' from innumerable calyxes during a long Rummer day fills but a little pouch when she returns to the hive at nightfall. Likewise, it may be surmised that the piety and wisdom which most preachers distil from their researches during a whole week can usually be condensed into the space of twenty minutes or half an hour on Sunday, with plenty of rooru left va cant. One of the most valuable amendments to the Constitution which we can recommend to' the initiative and referendum toilers 'is an article forbidding "any minister to preach more than thirty minutes upon the stretch.'' Think with what enthusiasm the suffering multitudes would vote for this blessed amendment, and how much the joy of the world would be enhanced, by it, .with no. loss to any body. Incidentally, a clause might be annexed making it a capital crime for any orator, of whatever stripe or hue, to speak more than forty minutes con secutively. The poets allege that garrulity is the besetting sin of old age, but we have not found it so. ; In our experience Dogberry's gibble-gabble is a trait which belongs to youth rather than senectitude. Young politicians are es pecially fond of imprisoning a helpless-audience in a torture chamber and wringing their souls with oratory. Who has not been through one or more awful scenes of. this kind. Who does not retain in his memory, among the pictures he would fain forget but can not, a vision- of some youthful monster on a platform shaking his hyacinthine locks and rattling his tireless tongue while he smiled at the agonies of his victims? Torquemada in the chamber of' the Inquisition was an angel of mercy compared to a boy politician with an audience in his toils. There has been much vain discussion among theologians about the unpardonable sin which the Lord had in mind when he said that everything should be for given unto men with one exception. What was this exception? Nobody hitherto has been able to specify it with certainty, but in our opinion he meant garrulity. Certainly boys are more garrulous than old merr, more given to boasting and all sorts of gibberish. The gift of beauty may be a fatal one to wo men, but to a young man the gift of gab is much more deadly. Beauty may have slain its thousands, but gab has slain its tens of thousands. Which sex is the more subject to this lethal disorder it would be difficult to decide. There is a common report that wo men's tongues are more agile than men's and their brains less active, but brought face to face with cold facts, this report loses a good deal of its credibility. It is extremely doubtful whether a sewing bee or a mission meeting runs to gossip more than a beer party in a corner saloon does. In both sexes and at all times of life, when people have nothing else to do, they will talk. Wordsworth's boy whistled as he went for want . of thought, and among Goldsmith's party under the hawthorn the loud laugh bespoke the vaoant mind, but as a rule it is the active tongue that bespeaks the vacant mind. When a man finds himself indisposed to think, he gets on his feet and makes a speech. We remember an erudite and up right judge, now in Paradise, who was much invited to dinners, funerals and other diverting scenes, but before promising to go he would always ask warily, "Are there to be any speeches?" If there were he would resolutely decline. Long subjection to the society of lawyers had filled him with a preternatural horror of speeches. This judge passed away in the prime of life. Perhaps if he had lived to old age he might in his de cline have fallen into the vice of gar rulity. He might possibly have ac quired the habit of oratory, just as some aged men lapse into other un speakable practices, but we think not. As he advanced in years his mind seemed to grow more powerful and his intelligence more alert. The com mon belief that the approach of old age impairs one's useful faculties was not true in his case, nor do we believe that it is true in general. Nature has so constructed us that we may en joy life to the end, unless In youth we have squandered our inheritance of vitality. It seems to be the plan of Providence that a human being should grow more valuable as he grows old, although we often thwart the Almighty by our follies. In his remarkable novel, "Old Wives for New," David Graham Phil lips preaches a little sermon upon the sinfulness of meeting old age more than half way. In his opinion it is our duty to resist the invader at every point and only yield at the last mo ment when all the walls have been battered down and the last bullet fired. His doctrine' is sound. Instead of ar raying themselves in sad garments af ter 50 or 60 and leaving the gay hues to youth, why should not aged people put on apparel more and more gaudy as they approach the grave? Why not keep up. a brave heart and fortify our courage with gorgeous attire? If our women of 90 were truly philo sophic it would be they who would wear the merry widow hats, while solemn bonnets of sable hue would be left to schoolgirls. ' The ancient world valued old men more highly than we do. Our times incline to thrust the aged into corners out of the way and give everything over to the young. Much boasting is heard that "this is an age of young men." There is an accepted belief that everybody does his best work be fore he is 35, but it is wholly fabulous. Except in the realm of experimental science nobody knows enough to be very useful before he Is 40. Man's muscular power declines after that epoch, but his mental vigor increases. It is then that he begins to reap the harvest of his early sowing and it would be sad, indeed, if he were to be deprived of his reward by decrepitude. The best work of the world in every department requiring greatintelligence has been done by men between 40 and 70. After 70 one may Justly claim the right to rest, but If weakness compels him to rest sooner it is because he has discounted the best period of his life by folly in his youth. We fail pre maturely because we do ndt . learn soon enough how to live. DR. . VOORSANGER. Dr. Jacob Voorsanger, of San Fran cisco, who died a few days ago, was one of the most eminent members of the Jewish race, and one of the most distinguished philanthropists and scholars of the Pacific Coast. He was born in Holland in 1852 and lived there until he was twenty-one years old, receiving his early education in the schools of Amsterdam, his native city. It was in Cincinnati, however, that he prepared himself to exercise the office of Rabbi. , He presided over several congregations, always with great success, that of Houston, Tex., being the last which enjoyed his serv ices before he went to Emanu El syn agogue, in San Francisco. He was the Rabbi of - this congregation, which is the largest west of the Mississippi, for almost twenty-five years. Dr. Voorsanger was . a conspicuous example of that passion for broad use fulness and devotion to high Ideals which inspires so many of the min isters of the Jewish Congregations. Largely free from sectarian bias, mas ters of an ancient and profound re ligious philosophy, excited to emula tion by the deeds of noble ancestors and the mighty history of their race, and endowed with an intellectual acu men which no other class of men ex cels and which fev can equal, they have been pioneers of religious and political liberty. Among these leaders of men Dr. Voorsanger was conspicu ous for his ability, energy and courage. He was an educator, an editor, an author and a philanthropist, as well as a minister. The- chair of Semitic languages and literature in the Uni versity of California was founded by Dr. Voorsanger, and by him it was filled for many years. At the same time he delivered lectures at Stanford, edited the denominational paper called Emanu El, and wrote books of merit. At the time of the earthquake in San Francisco no man was more prom inent in active service and wise coun sel than this energetic Rabbi. He was famed for his courageous thought and his unswerving devotion to the truth. He was loved for his devotion to hu manity. He was revered for his conse crated piety. The Jewish race has produced many more than its propor tionate share of scholars, teachers and leaders of thought in this country, and among them Dr. Voorsanger was one of the most admirable. "ON THE "WITNESS STAND." Under this title Hugo Muensterberg a name suggestive of scholarly re search and radical opinion has pub lished a volume of essays, eight in all, which is entitled to more than pass ing notice. It deals with matters that confront the world today and fascinate while they appal the philosophers, so called of advanced thought, the stu dents of cause and effect in the realm of occultism. The topics treated are, "Illusions," "The Memory of the Witness," "The Detection of Crime," "The Traces of Emotion," "Untrue Professions," "Suggestions in Court," "Hypnotism and Crime," and "The Prevention of Crime." The present ment of these subjects is preceded by an introduction In which the author remarks that there are in the United States alone about fifty psychological laboratories "a fact which the aver age man of education has not noticed. or, if he chances to hear of them, fan cies that they serve for mental healing or telepathic mysteries or spiritualistic performances." Continues Professor Muensterberg: What else can a laboratory have to do with the mind? Has not the soul been for 20CO years the domain of the philosopher? What has psychology to do with electric bat teries and Intricate machines? Too often have I read euch questions In the faces- of visiting friends who came to the Harvard Psychological Laboratory in Emerson Hall and found 27 rooms venspun with electric wires and filled with chronoacopes and kymo graphs and ergographs and a mechanic at work. Considering that, perception and memory, feeling and emotion, attention and volition, and so on, are the chief factors of daily life, entering Into every one of our enjoyments and duties, experience and professions. It seems astonishing that no path led from the psychological workshop to the market place of the world. The conclusion reached by the au thor is that the time for applied psy chology is near, and that the fields of practical life that come first irr order for study and development are "edu cation, medicine, art, economics and law." The latter he considers the field where greatest resistance will be encountered. The lawyer is more ob durate, more closely wedded to prece dent, more dependent upon the power to make the worse appear the better reason In plying his vocation than are workersalong other lines enumerated. It is with the hope, not altogether forlorn, to exert some pressure upon the jurist through public opinion that will compel him to make some conces sion to the spirit 'of modern psychol ogy that " these sketches have been written. That they will repay perusal is conceded. That they will change the tactics, indurated in custom, that have made the "witness stand" what it is a dreaded, uncertain and unsatis factory element in our jurisprudence is at least doubtful. A TEMPEST STIIXED. A short time ago there occurred a genuine tempest in a milliner shop in Wabash, Ind. The press of Spring or ders was great it was, in fact, just before Easter and the distracted forelady we use the term "forelady" advisedly the forelady was driven by dire extremity to trim a hat. It being contrary to the rules and regulations of the milliners' union for a forelady to demean herself or infringe upon the rights of her subordinates by work, the union promptly levied a tax of J I upon the offender. Urging the stress of the situation in defense of her ac tion, the forelady refused to pay the fine and was expelled from the union. Here the proprietor's trouble began in earnest. A committee of the union waited upon him without delay and demanded the discharge of the non union forelady. This demand was. In common justice, refused, the other employes, by order of the union, de clined to work with a non-union woman, and a strike was on. In the emergency Samuel Gompers. president of the American Federation of Labor, was called upon, and, after gravely considering the matter, he or dered the union to rescind its action, saying: A forelady has an unquestioned right to assist in the performance of any work, and in any establishment foremen and foreladles are required not only to superintend work but to do work themselves. ' This is easily the most important de cision that Mr. Gompers has rendered in his official capacity for months. It may be doubted whether any that he has rendered during his official career as leader of organized labor surpasses it in interest; certainly none outranks it in plain, ordinary common sense. If there is any reason why a foreman or forelady"' in any establishment should not be allowed to use his or her own judgment in the interest of the employer, such reason is not apparent to the unprejudiced observer. Why, indeed, should not an employe in such capacity do what he or she is hired to do, look after the interests of the em ployer? Why, indeed, should he or she not be permitted to use his or her own judgment in the discharge of the duties of such vocation? THE GENERAL. CONFERENCE. The governmental machinery of the Methodist Episcopal Church has been admired by almost everybody who has taken pains to study it. Not by any means a pure democracy, it makes abundant use of the representative de vice, and even retains vestiges of au tocracy. Still the voice of the lay membership Is potent in its affairs and ultimately predominates. This voice is heard four times every year In the quarterly .conferences which assemble under the leadership of the "presiding elders." Here primary tendencies be come manifest, new Ideas begin to fer ment and changes of policy are de bated. From these original assem blies what is left after the preliminary sifting goes up to the annual confer ences, each of which is presided over by a bishop, while the ripened judg ment of the denomination embodies Itself in fundamental law at the great general conference, "which assembles once in four years. This is the su preme legislative body and the court of last resort for all Methodists. It is a coincidence not without sig nificance that the. quadrennial confer ence comes in the same year with the Presidential election, for the Methodist Church has never withheld its hand from secular affairs. From the stormy days of the slavery agitation down through the troublous temperance re form the voices of the local and gen eral conferences have invariably been heard on the side of righteousness. When some genius is born who shall adequately write the social history of the United States, he will assign no mean place among the factors which have molded our life upon the Ideals of genuine Integrity to the persistent striving of the Methodist Church. Sol diers of the cross and followers of the Lamb were the old circuit riders; mili tant protagonists for the God of Jus tice are the delegates who are now a.s sembled in Baltimore. Marvelous in Its origin,- wonderful in its achieve ments, the church of Wesley has steadfastly cleaved to its high ideals and relentlessly fought the world, the flesh and the devil. Nor does it think the victory won now, or show any dis position to lay down its armor. The Baltimore conference confronts- the questions of the day like a young man stripped for the race. The bishops havespoken their mind to the dele gates upon temperance, upon labor and capital, upon worldly amusements, upon divorce, and we search in vain for any abatement of the ancient cour age, the unflinching integrity, the in exorable hostility to sin, which have characterized this noble church from its humble beginning until now. Not without a sympathetic beating of the heart can one read the account of the enthusiasm which swept over the conference when the bishops called upon the delegates to "pledge eternal hostility to this foe of man and God," the liquor traffic. It recalls old his toric scenes when men forgot their souls and bodies for the moment and merged themselves in the eternal. Every delegate sprang to his feet and everj- voice rose triumphant in the mighty hymns of the church. So Han nibal, one man against the military oligarchy which threatened to sub merge the world, knelt at the- altar of his God and vowed eternal warfare, upon Rome; so the Hungarian noble when the Empress Maria .Theresa, queenly in imperial majesty and thrice queenly in the beauty of motherhood, held up her baby for their fealty, drew their swords and swore that they would die for their King; so the gath ered multitudes of Europe caught fire at the exhortations of the Hermit Peter anl took up their march to re deem the tomb of Christ. It will be a sad day for the world when the breath of heaven hath blown out these enthusiasms and strewn the cold ashes of prudence upon the deliberations of conferences and legislatures. It is a good thing for great assemblages to burn with high ideals. - And the ideals of the Methodist Church are high. We bow to their splendid consecration. We do homagi to their unflinching steadfastness, even if our own thought cannot quite accept them all. As to wqrldly amuse ments,, the bishops wish to drop from the discipline certain condemned pas times, like cardplaying and dancing, and return to Wesley's simple rule. This was that a Christian should go nowhere and do nothing which would involve "the denial of the Lord Jesus." The probability is that Wesley was wiser than those who altered his orig inal regulation. The advice of the bishops tends toward individual free dom and true piety. Consciences are not all alike. An act which is sinful under some conditions is innocent else where. Religion is a state of mind, not a system of rigid formulas. One source of the power of the Methodist Church has been its uncompromising hostility to frivolous living, but there is a frivolity of asceticism as well as of indulgence. When the bishops come to speak of divorce, however, they lose something of their persuasiveness. They refer to the present facility in dissolving the marriage contract as encouraging "consecutive polygamy." Are they quite sure that additional restrictions would not encourage simultaneous po lygamy? Their contention is that di vorces break up homes, but the fact seems to be that the home is broken up before the divorce is sought. De nial of. the divorce would not restore the home. It would simply drive the parties to unlawful cohabitation. More than that, it would subject women In particular to intolerable hardships. It is not divorces which threaten the home, but those social conditions which make people seek divorces. In this field it is an inveterate habit of 1 clergymen to deal with symptoms and Ignore the causes which underlie them. It would probably be a mistake for the Methodist Church or any other church to try to restrict the freedom of di vorce, but the bishops are eminently wise in advocating uniform laws upon this subject thoughout the country. In this effort they will enlist the co operation of everybody who cares for the public welfare. "Logic and Its Uses" is the subject of an extended dissertation written by George H. Smith, formerly Supreme Court Commissioner in California, for a well-known magazine devoted to the legal profession. . He urges that law yers and Judges should be well ground ed in the principles of logic as In vented by Aristotle and modified by the school men of the Middle Ages. And there are many who will agree with him.- especially since reading some of the recent decisions of courts In the jurisdiction in which Mr. Smith resides. The trouble is that the logic used by the lawyers and Judges today is not that founded by Aristotle and modified by the school men of the Middle Ages, but is a variety devel oped by the legal fraternity in modern times. As Mr. Smith aptly quotes: What thief e'er felt the halter draw. With good opinion of the law? There all the trouble lies. The thief. whether a pickpocket or a political boss and bribe-giver in San Francisco, must devise a system of logic by which Judges may divide a hair 'twlxt south and southwest side, thereby allowing the guilty to escape. In the immedi ate past there has been a departure from that fundamental principle that "law is the perfection of reason, it al ways intends to conform thereto, and thatt which is not reason is not law." Mr. Smith has undertaken a huge task when he endeavors to interest lawyers in the uses of logic of the old school. But his efforts may be spe cially commended to the attention of the fraternity in his own state. One of the. strongest arguments against an increase of pay of members of the Legislature from $3 a day to $10 a day is that it would breed a spirit of extravagance. There would be a tendency to raise the compensa tion of all officers and employes of the Legislature, including the clerks and stenographers, in a corresponding de gree. There would be a greater read iness to increase salaries of county and state officers and to enlarge the force of officials and assistants beyond the needs of the public service. We shall get just as good men in the Legisla ture with compensation at $3 a day as we would if the pay were J10 a day, and the service rendered would not be Improved by an increase in per diem. A recent article in the Michigan Law Review says that "the? profession of the law exists in all civilized coun tries save China, and it is hard to see how society gets on without it there." If the author of the article, who is a lawyer, were a resident of the Pacific Coast he would know that the Chinese have the reputation of being the more truthful in their speaking and more honorable in their dealing than any other class of people with whom we have business relations. He would then admit, perhaps, that the Chinese have no need of lawyers, for, having had none, they have never learned those nice technicalities by which men convince themselves that wrong is right. A news dispatch from Albany says that "it is no uncommon sight to see youths of immature years intoxicated on the streets of Albany." If this is' true, it conclusively proves one thing that a new set of prosecuting officers is needed pretty badly up there. What ever one may think of the saloon question and of the effectiveness of prohibition in general, there can be no room for doubt that when it is a com mon sight to see immature youths In toxicated upon the street of a "dry" town there is gross dereliction of duty somewhere. Judge Cameron's principal objection to John Manning as District Attorney Is that Manning has found it expedient in important cases to employ special counsel. Cameron as District Attor ney would not hire special counsel. Here Is another first-class reason for the re-election of Manning. It will be well for all women travel ing alone to equip themselves with identification cards or photographs, showing that they are not Mrs. Belle Guinness, of La Porte, Ind. Other wise they are likely to fall into the hands of some able detectives. It would appear to have been quite unnecessary for the President to in form those Senators that he Is the commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy. . He always knew It himself, and he has proved it to the Army and Navy a great many times. Admiral Evans has been in the American Navy for forty-eight years. He ought to know something about eggshell 'armor belts; but he never saw them, apparently, except in the muckraking magazines. It is unkind to throw it up to Judge George that he happens to have the same name as the great advocate of the single tax. The Judge is doing his best to live down the family reputa tion. Suspect Martin is the latest to com plain of the fare served him at the City Jail- Everybody knows the way to ' get along without Jail food, and that is to stay out of jail. Mr. John C. Young describes him self and Senator Bourne as "Statement No. 1 Republicans." The Republican with a prefix has a long history in Oregon. Harmon is the "choice of the con servatives," we are told. Well, that's all he's the choice of. The man who snatched away Judge Marquam's property Is no better off for having done it. There is .yet no 'skyscraper office building m England. But Liverpool is about to erect one. Just how many states will Hon. Jud son Harmon carry that Mr. Bryan couldn't ! Oregon will be for Taft, not for second elective term. VERSE , BY HARRY MURPHY.-. Why God selects a aaturnine, Intol'rant sword in hand -To represent his love divine, . I'd like to understand. . Deliverance from every vice yet known Is possible, save avarice alone. ... ; The day of love of country's by; The day of love of mankind's nigh. " No sham so shallow that it ever ned Seek followers; but who the truth will heed? . We call our court at Washington su preme And, put just slightly slangy, that's no dream. .... Perhaps the reason why so few of us Are good, we fear to be ridiculous. ' March of Mind. The baron, bandit, buccaneer. Are but a memoried name; When came their modern trust compeer. They forthwith died of shame. 1 Your Turpin. Rob Roy, Kidd and Hood Were but a simple lot; 'Tis well they've gone from wave and weed Such bunglers be forgot! Perhaps their blunderbuss and lance Were fit for untaught tlms; Be we've progressed to high finance To rob's no longer crime. For paltry purse we never knock Our victim down or shoot; O gentler far's statute and stock; And nations are the loot! Epigrams From the Latin of Martial TO POMPONIL'S. Your guests applaud, but .if you only knew It is your feast that's eloquent, not you. TO VACERRA. Alone to poets dead your praise you give; The price I thinks too high and so I'll live. TO A BAD DOCTOR. A doctor, you're a soldier made; the name Is dlff'rent, the employment is the same. TO THEODORUS. Tou've vainly begged my verses? ' Well, you see, I feared lest you present your own to me. ON THEODORUS. A BAD POET. By flames the house of Theodore the bard Has perished; that it's owner's spared is hard. TOMATHO. You speak too finely, Matho; if you would Speak well, speak sometimes neither ill nor good. TO REGULUS. No money, Regulus, at home have I; Only your gifts. Are you inclined to buy? ON BASSUS. Bassos' new robe's a bargain? Why, Ten thousand seems to me quite high. High, yes; but cheap you will admit. For Bassus. who'll ne'er pay for it. "The poor always ye have with you." -Quite so! likewise the priv'ledsed few, ... Most folk are right some time; not through Intent, Of course. Ah, no; it's merely accident. ... Our locks and laws and jails are just A trifling mark of mutual trust. ... Our "sense of humor's" all a'mytb, else we Die with laughter being called "the free." . . The "good of greatest number" is to say In specious phrase, that strong on weak shall prey. e Females most laud the beauties of the mind Who lack those beauties of another kind. To teach divine good will Your heart with hatred fill. ... Behave as though you think a man a thief He'll likely give you grounds for your belief. .... The most surprising thing that we Meet with 's an act of honesty. ... Men with brutes themselves compare. In the brute's case this Usually 'a an instance where Ignorance is bliss. ..... Nothing is wonderful whose place Is not far off in time or space. . . . -Who cares his own infirmities to mend When he can rectify those of his friend? ... Our kind of government is all Right for the few who take the toll. , . . . Laurel for conquest o'er A fool, who ever wore! ... When someone else is be ing damned we all agree. e Call no people free Wanting honesty. e Optimism somehow fails To account for laws and jails. ... In selfishness and jealousy. Men differ, only in degree. ... . The barbarous of human kind Have less of vice than the refined. ... Great wealth and poverty's the ground Where worst iniquities are found. ... Of folk to pass the hat there's no Lack filling it is diff'rent, though. . We doubt one who would render us A benefit gratuitous. . . We exclude our own Infirmities and their Virtues when with others we ourselves compare. "Widow" Hat Too Bis; for Phosc Booth. Baltimore (News. Miss Marguerite Shonts, of New York, daughter of Theodore P. Shonts, and a sister of the Duchess de Chaulnes, is wearing one of those large sailor hats black, trimmed with a single wreath of four magnolias. The revenge of a long-suffering public who have been dodging these millinery cartwheels for the last month seemed to have vented Itself, all unconsciously, at Sherry's the other day. Miss Shonts was about to telephone. She went rather hurredly to the booth designated by Central, reaching the door when she suddenly tossed her head over as does a long-horn in close quarters. It was unquestionably a dilemma. She looked hastily about, then out came the long hat pins and oft came the offending hat, and Miss Shonts. with the hat held sideways, entered the narrow but now no longer impossible portal. . Bad Attack of Xewapnperltla. Chicago Record-Herald. Colbourn Huey. of Springfield. 111., aged 13. frequently runs away trtra home, in order, he says, to get his name in the nevrspnpers. He gets his ideas of making escapes from novels. J