s THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 14, 1908. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year. .... .$8 00 Dally. Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 Dally. Sunday Included, three montha. Dally, Sunday included, one month...- .76 Dally, -without Sunday, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, six montha 8.2S Dally, without Sunday, three montha.. l.5 Dally, without Sunday, one month w Sunday, one year 2..rf) Sunday and weekly, one year a. 00 BY CARRIER. Dally. Sunday Included, one year 8 0? Daily. Sunday included, one month to HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give poatoffice ad dress In full. Including county and state. POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Poatoffice as Fecond-ClaBS Matter. 30 to 14 Pages J " 16 to 28 Pages cents 80 to 44 Pages ! 48 to BO Pages cents Foreign postage double rates. 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Wheatley; Fairmount Hotel News Stand: Amos News Co.; United News Agency, 14 'i Eddy street; B. E. Amos, man ager three wagons; World's N. S.. 2625 A. Sutter street. Oaklaud. Cal. W. H. Johnson. Fourteenth and Franklin streets: N. Wheatley; Oakland wagons; Wellingham, E. Q. . .old field. Nev. lxule Follln. Eureka. Cul. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND, era'DAT, JUNE 14, 1908. IT IS CONTEMPTIBLE SNIVEL. Everybody knows that Secretary Taft, in his remark about General Grant's early habits, told the simple truth. It Is the hypocrisy of the de nial from some quarters that dis gusts. The truth was told for a good purpose, too, and the effect cannot be other than good. Grant, after a hard struggle, such as few men can make, completely redeemed himself. The fact conduces immensely to his hon or, and all succeeding generations of his young countrymeii should know It. All biographies of Grant mention, of course, his resignation from the Army in 1854, and several give it as a reason that his habit of drink had made It necessary. He himself says in his memoirs, that he resigned be cause he could not .support his fam ily, from whom he was separated by duty at distant posts, on the pay of a captain. He could not be expected to speak in his memoirs about the unfortunate habit of his early life. In his great historical work James Ford Rhodes says that after the Mex ican War "Grant passed ' four years at Detroit and Sackett's Harbor, when his regiment was ordered to the Pacific Coast. This occasioned a separation from his family, and a cloud came over his life. He fell In to habits of Intemperance. In 1854 he resigned from the Army and re joined his family." All who remember the current news, written at the time of the Civil War, will easily recall the statements which' then frequently appeared, that Grant sometimes took liquor, observ ing which General John A. Rawlins, his chief of staff, told him that total abstinence in his case ' was an Im perious necessity, and that he (Raw lins) would quit him if he did not make it an Inflexible rule. That Grant ever was intoxicated after he came to high command there Is n& certain proof available though his torians do not shrink for considera tion of the stories told about the time of the Vicksourg campaign, and later. Colonel George E. Church, who had the most friendly personal relations with Grant, and wrote a biography of him, says in his book that "Grant had one physical weakness, and that was an incapacity to take the small est drink of spirituous liquor without being overcome by it, and at rare in tervals, when a young officer, he would be betrayed into what was for him an overindulgence. This," con tinues Colonel Church, "led to a dif ficulty with his post commander (at Fort Humboldt), Major Robert C. Buchanan; . . . and he conclud ed to resign, though it was not in the power of his superior to compel him to do so. against his will." This statement seems to support that of others, that Grant was threatened with court-martial for Intemperance. These things belong to history; and Grant's place In our history is so great that they cannot be ignored, but even are. necessary to full knowl edge of his life and character. A most hypocritical uproar has fol lowed Taft's allusion to them, as If he had uttered a slander, as mall clous as false. The truth about our eminent men is due to history. Wash ington, at times, fell, or rose, to stormy passion, and uttered vehement "cuss words." Hamilton had well known foibles that brought him Into difficulties and subjected him to bit ter, yet not unjust censure; Webster, down to his last years, was addicted to over-indulgence in brandy. But what? These men did things, and knowledge of the weaknesses as well as of the virtues of our great his torical personages is necessary to right estimate of their character ana achievements. To say that greatest men have had faults is only to say that they were men. . The man -wholly made up of Ideal virtues would most likely be a milksop. Should Taft be nominated for the Presidency, the snivel about his "at tack on Grant" will probably con tinue. Should he fail to get the nom ination, no more will be said about "the Infamous slander." IS IT A MTSTERY? An esteemed contemporary offers the remark that "The Oregonian comes nearer making its circulation pay than any other paper in the Northwest." That is because every body in the Northwest who has any thought or concern about anything in human life or affairs must read The Oregonian. And they who read it willingly pay for it. Herein is the reason why The Oregonian has a uni versal circulation. Every person in terested in affairs, every thinker on any subject, must have it. There is no mystery about its circulation, or about the eagerness with which all ? persons to whom nothing of human interest is alien, read it and pay for it. If, as asserted, "The Oregonlan's subscription business is the envy of every other paper in the Northwest," it may be supposed there Is good rea son for it. For we are told that multitudes who buy and read The Oregonian -with deepest interest "cuss" it. That is because it offers something Unusual to their thought, and forces them to challenge the correctness of their own opinions.! It makes them "scratch." King James, after he had come from Scotland to the English throne, said nobody but a King should be permitted to have the itch, because it was such a lux ury to scratch. It may be that the luxury of scratching is what makes all those who are said to "cuss" The Oregonian read it. But the mass, who haven't any "itch of poor opinion," the phrase Is Shakespeare's but want the news and straight common sense, have still better reason for reading it. On the whole, however, a newspaper's ene mies are even surer readers of it than its friends. Even their enmity to it is a tribute to Its activity and force, and to its power to stir them. On the stage of human history there never yet was a man of force or a thing of force that didn't stir opposi tion and enmity. Persons of active minds don't want altogether . the ideas they agree with, but are inter ested in ideas and purposes opposite to their own, especially when pre sented with an incisiveness and force that compel attention. This sceptre has been snatched with a vigorous hand, and it must be as vigorously maintained as gained. This phrase also is Shake speare's; without whom every per son who speaks English would be tongue-tied. But though The Ore gonlan's circulation may be the envy of others, tjjere is nothing miraculous about it. The Oregonian, this many a year, has simply striven to be a pub lic Journal that people would feel they must read. . A SANT5 FOURTH. , As the glorious Fourth makes its dire approach, that fraction of the press which aims at edification rather than diversion begins to exhort for a reasonable celebration. "Alas," walls the Outlook, of New Tork, "what a vast deal of useless noise we make upon the natal morn, to say nothing of the night before and the day after. What a wretched host of us get drunk and act like maniacs in our cups. How many people we kill; how many other's we maim and blind. Behold that devilish Instrument of death, the toy pistol, and consider the hideous use the abandoned urchin makes of it. Reflect upon the firecracker teem ng with the bacilli of lockjaw. Medi tate upon the bursting cannon, the accident-breeding gun, the rocket spreading conflagration far and' wide, and admire if you can the wisdom of a great Nation which can devise no better way to commemorate the day of its nativity." , The Outlook contsives an excruciat ingly bitter fling at the noise-makers by reminding them that they imitate the Chinese. That people, whom we despise, always celebrate great occa sions with an infernal uproar, and from them we have caught the same bad habit. Thus do evil communica tions corrupt good manners. For there was a time, ere America's griefs began, when we used to cele brate the Fourth with less tumult and more sense. In those good old days, forever gone perhaps, the preliminary bills set forth with pomp and parade the name of the orator as the princi pal attraction; now it Is the name of the baseball club and the hall where the. dance will be held. And great has been the change in the day's pro gramme. Formerly the eager crowd gathered early in the morning at the door of the principal hotel waiting to see the procession set forth in solemn array. After a, delay befitting the greatness of the individuals who were to participate, it finally started. First came a glittering vehicle wherein rode the president of the day, and at his side that still more exalted personage, the orator. Immediately behind them the brass band rode in an omnibus decorated with flags. Then followed all the dignitaries of the town in seemly array, with plain citizens and little boys bringing up the rear. The procession was a noble specta cle, well devised to fire the heart of youth with patriotic emotion. "Will the time ever come," the bare foot boy asked himself, "when I shall ride exalted in a carriage at the orator's side on the glori ous morn. Nay, why should not I bay the orator himself, In some far and fortunate future?" And when they had all sat down in the grove and the orator stood up and let the grand sentences roll from his lips, sentences which burned with the un quenched fires of the Revolution, great watchwords of liberty, mighty calls to high ambition, did not the boy's heart kindle and his soul ride heavenward like a young Elijah in a chariot of flame? Perhaps much of what the orator said was mere noise, after all. but it was better than the noise of firecrackers and toy pistols, and it had the exceeding merit of being harmless. Nowadays the procession is some what different. At the head rides in glory a steam calliope, whose squawks drown the noise of the various Chinese deviltries which we have adopted with which to celebrate the Day of Inde pendence. The baseball club follows with the band. Next comes the man who is to go up In the balloon with the hired vaudeville troupe, while the orator of the day rides humbly in the rear or inconspicuously walks. And woe unto him when he gets up to deliver his speech. Behind him the calliope continues to play for the re volving hobby-horses; on his right a fiddler allures the crowd with fiendish melody to the dance pavilion; on his left the barker for the fat woman lifts up his profane voice in ceaseleses exhortation, while all around, fire crackers explode continuously. Un happy .orator. A few old men who are partially deaf seat themselves on the edge of the platform In a vain effort to hear what he says. Every body else is busy making as much noise as possible. Why such a change? Why has the celebration of the Fourth' of July so degenerated? The cynic will reply that it is part of the .general slump in our National morals and manners which has taken place since the Civil War, one more proof that as a people we have for saken intellectual and spiritual things In a mad pursuit of material enjoy ment. But the cynic will be wrong, as he usually is. There has been no such slump, for one thing. The American people have tolerated a mad race for material enjoyments and possessions on the part of a few, but as a-whole they have not taken part in it and now they are ceasing even to tolerate it. The orators are not listened to because as a rule they have nothing to say worth hearing. Let them discuss sanely and 'bravely the questions which we are all thinking about and we will gladly lay aside our firecrack ers and hang upon their lips even as our fathers did of yore. The usual Fourth! of July oration In these baser times contains scarcely more thought than a Roman candle. Like the ordi nary sermon, it deals with the dry bones of dead Issues and tries to make up for its lack of sense by empty and mendacious boasting. The people can find better mental food In the newspa pers and magazines, and very wisely they choose it. They drown the ora tor's eloquence with firecrackers be cause the firecrackers are more intel lectual than he Is, and usually more sincere. Make the celebration of the Fourth significant of living issues in stead of dead . humbugs and it will become sane and safe without further trouble. VICE OF IRRESPONSIBLE PARENTAGE. The story that comes from New Tork through the Washington, D. C, Herald, of many children of the East Side -tenement districts crying with hunger as they start to school in the mornings, there being absolutely not even bread in the house and no way by which the parents can procure It, Is one of the sharpest arraignments of parental responsibility or irre sponsibility that has ever been brought before the open court of pub lic opinion in this country. Talk of, and seek to discourage, race suicide, so-called! What Is this too selfish ir responsible race propagation? If it is not criminal to encourage the class of people who cannot, or will not, or do not take care of children Jn their helpless childhood (the only class by the way, and alas, a large one, that is encouraged by any exhortation from any source upon this subject) to bring large families Into the world, such encouragement is certainly irrational. Far better were It for humanity, bet ter, Indeed, for a man's own good, to use such stringent measures as alone are adequate to prevent race propa gation In the wretched abiding places of squalor, unthrift and dissipation, than to commend and encourage it. "I must shake hands with that patriot," President Roosevelt was re ported to have said, when told in Butte, Montana, several years ago that there was a man in his audience who was the father of eleven chil dren, the oldest of whom was but thirteen. Pushing his way through the crowd with eager self-conceit, so the story ran, came a short, low browed, malodorous fellow with a cob pipe between his teeth and proudly proclaimed himself the "patriot" sought. And when later his toothless, slatternly wife and their dirty, un kempt, unmannerly brood was lined up for inspection the President's good sense and sense of parental respons ibility must have Been shocked. Inquiry afterwards disclosed the fact that the home of this "patriotic" pair and their numerous progeny was little larger than a pig sty and much reminded one in other respects; that the man's wages were mainly squan dered in drink; that the children from the time they were able to find their way about the streets sold papers and picked up their living, such as it was, in any little odd jobs that presented, including emptying cuspidors In saloons; that they early became known .as pilferers, and that the mother, taking with her the baby and the other baby, went out to wash. Patriot, forsooth! Breeder of suffer ing and destitution and crime rather! Promoters of vice and anarchy, such parents especially such fathers as this are the shame of civilization, as later their misbegotten offspring. In the role of bomb-throwers, hired as sassins, train wreckers, and in their turn irresponsible and prollflo par ents, are its bane. Pity Is due to little children, de prived of all the Joys of childhood, poorly nourished, miserably clad, starting in the race of life with their double handicap of untoward heredity and wretched environment; but for the fathers there Is nothing but cen sure. THE ERA OF THE CHAFING DISH. "From cooking by the open fire place, with its crane and trammels and pots and skillets, to cooking on the chafing dish, is a far cry," said a white-haired woman after reading in a popular magazine an article by Christine Terhune Herrick, a woman beloved of women, on "The Era of the Chafing Dish." "Between these two extremes," she continued, "lies the era of true domestic comfort in modern civilization." A little reflection will establish the truth of the estimate. "Only the rich can afford to lead the simple life," says the author quoted. When she adds, "People possessed of less than wealth must rack their brains to devise means for keeping any sort of homes, if fate 'casts their lines in big cities," she makes a statement that can readily be verified by the ex perience of thousands of energetic, re sourceful women in large cities to whom home without home-cooked food is but an empty name. To meet this condition the chafing dish has come Into use, and its era is a busy one. The art of cookery before wide-mouthed fireplaces, with their rude but substantial and sufficient utensils taxed the strength, the in genuity and the endurance of Ameri can women of a century ago; the art of cookery on the chafing dish taxes the strength of women less, but their patience and ingenuity .more. The "kitchenette," a name applied to the little box in a modest suite of "light housekeeping" rooms, bears no resemblance to the kitchen in the homes of old New England, or of those in the cabins of the early settlers of the Middle West; yet, thanks to the chafing dish and the determination, as strong now as then, of womanly women to make the best of the condi tions that surround them, odors arise from the former, as savory as have floated down on the breath of tradition and folk-lore from the latter.- Between these extremes, however, the true comfort of the American home is secured. The well in the door yard of the old home, with its old oaken bucket "dripping with coolness," holds its place In song and ctory, but no one would wish to see It supplant the running water In the kitchen; the potatoes roasted In the ashes were sweet and fluffy and toothsome; the bread and pies baked In the old "Dutch oven" were perfection, in their kind; but the more modern housewife has demonstrated the possibility of the duplication of these wholesome viands upon the cook stove. And now, Mrs. Herrick tells us, the miracle of good cooking- can be performed by means of a chafing dish, a pan or two, a coffee pot and a pint of denatured al cohol. Since the kitchen, with all its convenience and comfort that the name implies, is an impossible achieve ment in the home of the person of moderate means in the great city, let us be thankful for the "kitchenette," the chafing dish, denatured alcohol and such other shifts and makeshifts as have been evolved from the love of home and the ingenuity and patience of women as make a home possible under difficulties. EDWARD AND NICHOLAS. Germany has naturally viewed the meeting between King Edward and the Czar with disquiet. The real pur pose of such a conference is never disclosed. The nations left out are obliged to guess at what is going on and the self-protective instinct leads them to' surmise the worst. Thus they are pretty sure to be agreeably disappointed when the genuine facts come out because of the visit of one monarch to another, though it often cements friendship, seldom Implies much hostility to anybody else. Kings are not unlike schoolboys in their mu tual suspicions and jealousies. Anyone who happens to be left out of a par ticular arrangement thinks the rest of them are conspiring against him, when as a matter of fact they are only plan ning for a little lark together. How ever, it Is altogether likely that Ed ward and Nicholas are planning some thing more serious than a lark, and William does wondrous wisely to be on the lookout. His empire Is squeezed In uncomfortably between France and Russia, which have been close friends for a long time, while the for mer only bides an opportunity to have Germany on the hip and get even for the wrongs of forty years ago. If England Is now to be added to this alliance, William may well look upon it as a Kriegesdreibund, which being interpreted means a conspiracy of three nations to fight the father land. Edward and Nicholas deny that they wish to change the present rela tions of the powers, but monarchs take such a pragmatical view of truth that we are not always compelled to believe what they say. When Edward VII came to the throne England was diplomatically isolated. She 'had not an ally and scarcely a friend on the Continent of Europe, nor was it sup posed that the new King would help matters much. But in this respect he proved a wonderful surprise to the civilized world. He turned out to be the most adept diplomatist among modern monarchs. As international statesmen, perhaps such men as Bis marck and Cavour were greater than he in their day, but not much greater. While Russia was at war with Japan Edward contrived to keep up intimate relations with France, though she was Russia's main dependence for sympa thy and money, and at the same time with Japan. More amazing still, al though hostilities with Russia were on the verge of breaking out two or three times, he avoided them and almost as soon as the war was over not only strengthened his alliance with Japan, but also concluded a friendly agree ment with Russia which made the In dian frontier secure. Thus very soon after the peace of Portsmouth Eng land found herself in close diplomatic relations with Russia, Japan and France, while it was Germany's turn to be Isolated. The reality of this con dition was beautifully illustrated when the trouble In Morocco arose, for Will iam then stood alone in his hostility to French intervention, while all the rest of the world favored It. There Is, and has been for years, a rooted dislike between the English and German peoples. It arises, of course, from commercial rivalry. While the Germans have little genius for plant ing colonies, they are, nevertheless, en terprising traders, and their mastery of scientific technique has gone far toward giving them the supremacy In world markets which England once enjoyed. William has advanced Ger man manufactures and commerce In every way he could think of, by plant ing colonies, by building a great navy, by Imposing a protective tariff, by im proving internal waterways, by taking possession of the railroads and by fos tering technical education. Meanwhile England has done little except to grumble over her losses and nurse a grudge against her competitor. Of late years the Kaiser has main tained a close alliance with Turkey, exacting in exchange concessions In Western Asia which are disagreeable both to England and Russia. On the one hand he has made steady progress toward Persia and the Russian fron tier in Asia; on the other he has moved toward the Persian Gulf and the Indian possessions of England. It seems likely enough that he will soon have a railroad with its remote termi nus at the head of the gulf. He is thus In a position to threaten Russia and England at pleasure, while his own territory is guarded by the troops of the Sultan, whose army is officered by Germans. William has pushed himself like a wedge into Western Asia, where he holds a position incalculably harassing to Russia and England. The delicacy of the situation Is increased by two facts which probably have much to do With the present visit of Edward to Nicholas. Though the truth about It Is concealed as carefully as may be, nevertheless students of current his tory know that India is on the ragged edge of revolution. The power of England is threatened there as it has not been for the last fifty years. Again, Russia Is irritated on one. side by Tur key and on the other by japan. Tur key Is not a power to be despised and never has been. Japan will not yield an inch that she has gained without a terrible struggle, and she is waiting an opportunity to gain more. Ger many lies securely fortified in Western Asia, waiting like a tiger to spring upon either England or Russia, as oc casion may direct, hating both of them, fearing neither one alone, but almost certain to be overpowered if they form an alliance with France to help. Almost certain, but not quite, for Germany has fought Russia, France and Austria all together and come out safely. Thus the key to the present European situation must prob ably be sought in Asia. If there is anything in the rumor that the English-Japanese alliance Is weakening, we may before long see the Mikado and the Kaiser pressing toward Cen tral Asia from the east and the west, respectively. In a common cause, with Russian and English troops fighting them, while France seizes the oppor tunity to strike Germany along the Rhine and India nses in revolution against her hated white-faced rulers. Who shall say that the peace of the world is secure with all these possibil ities impending? LINE OF LEAST RESISTANCE. The Tacoma.Newa continues to take a very gloomy view of Portland's fu ture. Using for a text a slight refer ence made by The Oregonian regard ing the necessity of getting commerce out of the grasp of" the pilotage mo nopoly at the mouth of the Columbia River, the News proceeds to sermonize on the impossibility of this city mak ing any gains in the shipping business. "There are no such handicaps clinging to shipping from Tacoma," asserts our Tacoma friend and well-wisher. Not exactly, but the handicaps which will never again permit Tacoma to reach the prominence as a wheat port that It has enjoyed in the past are different from the pilotage handicap which Is temporarily costing- Portland some money. When Portland business men wake up to the fact that compulsory pilotage is out of date, and too expen sive for modern times, they will simply ask the Legislature to pass a law mak ing It optional and providing rates no higher than those In force at ports with which this port competes. This, at the worst, is an artificial handicap, and in the long run all arti ficial devices, whether they retard or facilitate commerce, will be supplant ed by natural methods. Commerce the world over follows the lines of least resistance. Poor judgment and unnatural haste may result in a rail road for heavy traffic being built over a lofty mountain, but as the newness of the country wears off and the Im possibility of such a road successfully competing with a water-level route is realized, the error is corrected. The over-the-mountaln railroad to Tacoma is the handicap which caused the building of the North Bank Railroad and the construction at Portland of the largest wheat warehouse in the world. During the season Just closing Port land handled more wheat than ever before in a single season, and without being crowded for dock or warehouse facilities. If, as asserted by the News, "Portland's case is as hopeless as ever, in spite of the North Bank road," Mr. Hill has made a serious mistake in providing facilities for han dling any more wheat than was han dled last season. And yet there are people all over the country who firmly believe that the North Bank magnate will make more money by pulling trains of seventy-five loaded cars down the Columbia to Portland with one en gine than he could make by "bucking" trains of ten or twelve cars over the Cascade Mountains with two engines. The News is of the opinion that the completion of the Milwaukee Railroad will make tributary to the Puget Sound city some new territory and "will have the effect of giving better rates." Portland sincerely hopes that the News will not be disappointed, es pecially regarding the rate matter. If there is any one influence that can hasten the day when all of the wheat that is to be shipped from that vast territory east of the Cascade Moun tains wil'l come out over the line of least resistance, it Is a readjustment of rates. There will always be a train service over the lofty Cascade Mountains to Tacoma. The scenic beauties of Snp qualmie and Stampede make the ride through the mountains a delight for tourists, and the road is a necessity for passenger travel between Eastern Washington and the state capital, but the completion of the North Bank Railroad marks the beginning of the end of that costly railroad operation which commenced when the North west country was a virgin field for exploitation. All that is needed to complete the economic change that is now taking place Is a readjustment of freight rates on the basis of cost of service. When that readjustment takes place there will be a sudden doubling of the volume of traffic which now follows Nature's highway down the Columbia and through the Cascade Gorge to Portland. DEFECTS IN CRIMINAL LAW. Two years ago Attorney-General Crawford requested all District Attor neys to report to him all defects they have found in the criminal statutes of the state and to recommend such changes in the laws as they deemed necessary in crder to prevent guilty men from escaping punishment upon technical defenses. A number of sug gestions were made and were acted upon by the Legislature, with the assistance of the Attorney-General. This was a good move, and while per haps not productive of as much good as might be desired, if followed up every two years, it will - eventually bring our criminal laws to a high standard of efficiency. . The District Attorneys, more than any other offi cials, are in a position to observe de fects in criminal laws. Quite likely many of them forget the particular flaws by means of which guilty men have escaped during their administra tion, but it they would check over their cases lost upon technicalities in the past four years they could make a fairly complete list of statutes that need improvement. It is to be hoped that Attorney- General Crawford will renew his effort in this direction and that the several District Attorneys will aid him in every way. Other officials or private Individuals who know of loop-holes which afford a means of escape for the guilty could render a public serv ice by calling the Attorney-General's attention to the circumstances within their knowledge. By placing before the proper committees of the Legis lature the Information he can gather upon this subject the Attorney-General will not only lessen the work of that branch of the state- government but will greatly increase the value of the work it may do with regard to crim inal statutes. The recent trial and second convic tion of Ab Hembree suggests one need ed change in the parole law. It will be remembered that Hembree was con victed of murdering his wife and was given an Indeterminate sentence. At the end of one year he was let out of the penitentiary on parole, the Gov ernor taking the view that the law left him no alternative, provided the prisoner's conduct had been good while In the penitentiary. There are a great many who believe that the executive, under the law as it now stands, has the right to exercise discretion In granting paroles. But since the Gov ernor's opinion prevails, it is desira ble that the law be amended so that there can be no question and so that responsibility for the parole shall rest upon the man who grants it. Hem bree's second conviction, this time, upon the charge of killing his daugh ter, leaves little room for doubt that there was adequate proof of his guilt. This being true, there should be no shifting of responsibility if he escapes punishment. The Newport Mail upbraids the people of Taquina Bay for sending orders to Portland for goods. It is a pretty old story, not confined to Taquina Bay. But we can't all "keep our money at home." Many of our people go over to Taquina Bay every Summer and spend much money there. It may be suspected the New port Mail would not have them "keep it at home." There is. much humbug in this phrase. People spend their money on their own Judgment and for their own gratification; not as others may wish or advise. And, by the way, it Is the production of a country or a community that adds to Its wealth; not the money it "keeps at home," except in very small de gree. A screechy paper at Salem ex claims: "After the people reaffirm Statement No. 1 by 45,000 majority, and carry every county in the state for It, then they are to be defeated in their choice of a Senator by the machine managers." No; they are not to be defeated by any managers. They have simply made a contrivance for election of Democratic Senators and conversion of Oregon Into a set tled and permanent Democratic state. Let it go so; but don't be fooled by It. It is charged that a boodle fund of $50,000 has been raised in Louisiana for the purpose of preventing the en actment of legislation adverse to race track gambling. That isn't enough to be worth mentioning, compared with the amount spent in the effort to save the Louisiana state lottery some twenty years ago. Evidently the anti gambling movement in that state Is still making progress, though against strong influences. The London Iron and Steel Trades Journal reports the formation of a British steel trust with a capitaliza tion of $375,000,000. Of course this is a kind of pigmy alongside of our own and only rblllion-dollar steel trust, but there are great possibilities ahead of it. The introduction of a few Installments of water would dou ble and treble the dimensions and in cidentally increase the profits of the promoters. Notwithstanding Chamberlain's en thusiastic Indorsement of Roosevelt's policies it is significant that it was Bryan and not Roosevelt who has tened to congratulate Oregon's Gov ernor on his having secured the high est vote for United States Senator. Bryan considers it a great Democratic victory. We shall hear him say so before the Presidential campaign has progressed very far. Mr. Taft, of course, Is merely listen ing for the call of the people and Is not concerning himself about the Na tional convention; but he has a wicked partner named Hitchcock who appears to be attending to a few details that might otherwise be overlooked. See report of proceedings of National committee. The Portland Journal's "contempt for the intelligence of the common people who gave Ellis that stupen dous majority," Is an object of re mark. Tou see, the cqmmon people are very intelligent when, they vote your way; awfully stupid when they do not. Marion County gave a large major ity against the constitutional amend ment increasing the pay of legislators from $3 to $10 a day. Did the people up there forget that legislators spend all they can afford on rooms and board and other things while at the capital? This and that Republican Legislat or will not be rewarded with Federal office, after electing Chamberlain, but this and that Democratic Legis lator will be "cared for," sure enough. That may be an improvement, but we shall all find out. A correspondent at Toncalla asks The Oregonian whether it knows when work on the railroad from Drain to Coos Bay will be resumed. The Oregonian does not know that it ever will be resumed. Oregon Democrats, In their state platform, failed to condemn erring brethren who register as Republicans. But perhaps that was an intended omission. California liquor men may boycott Oregon products but will probably not put the ban on Oregon money. "Oregon," says the Clatskanle Chief, "is neither a Republican nor a Demo cratic state. What is it?" Both. The world will be much improved by the graduating essays and ora tions, or ought to be. TOM JOHNSON'S GREAT FAILURE Ron- Ilia Three-Cent Fare Scheme Is Working at Cleveland. New Tork Commercial and Financial Chronicle. The difference between promise and performance In the political world Is well shown by what Is transpiring -at the present time in the City of Cleve land. For years Mayor Tom Johnson of that city had been a great power In political affairs. He was elected over and over again, and seemed to be daily Increasing in popularity. His sole cap ital was his antagonism to local trac tion interests. He was working to get for the local residents lower fares and kept Incessantly telling them how much better oft they would be if only the municipality could take over these trolley lines and operate them in the interests of the whole community, In stead of their being operated for the benefit of the stockholders, as repre sented by private capital. He made strenuous efforts to get possession of these local lines with that end in view. The owners fought determinedly against having their property virtually confiscated, but finally, when Mr. John son last Autumn again triumphed at the polls, and it seemed as If he might remain enthroned indefinitely in the Mayor's chair, they In effect threw up the sponge. After much further par leying with the owners, Mr. Johnson at length accomplished his purpose and acquired the linos on terms deemed ex ceedingly favorable to the city, and the reverse to the owners. Mr. Johnson had attained his goal. The lines were now "the people's." and 3-cent fares were established. If. at this Juncture, a merciful Provi dence had removed Mr. Johnsoh from the scene, he might have remained a popular hero. But no such good luck was In store for him. With the city In possession of the trolley properties, Mr. Johnson was called upon "to make good." Troubles for him began almost the moment the city took possession. The public had been educated to expect much. They were getting little. In stead of the service being Improved, It became worse. The traveling public began to grumble, and intimations came that they would prefer to pay the old rate of fare and get decent service. They were told to be patient; that the people themselves now owned the trol ley lines, and soon the benefits would be apparent to everyone. Confronted with the necessity of making both ends meet, the new management also found itself obliged to discontinue operating non-paying lines. That made more trouble. Then came difficulties with the employes, who wanted more money, and who went on a strike when the re quest for Increased pay was refused, thus paralyzing street-railway opera tion. The Cleveland Finance says that Mr. Johnson has not lived up to his promises in any respect. Instead of giving 3-cent fares, lie is giving 3, 6. 8 and 11-cent fares. Instead of universal transfers, he has eliminated over 25 transfer points. Instead of more fre quent service, the interval between the cars has been lengthened, and Instead of carrying out the contract made by the Clev.eland Electric Street Railway with its employes, he is discharging the three-year men and hiring men at much lower wages. Moreover, Finance says that were he now a candidate for Mayor, he would be defeated by 20,000 votes which seems quite likely. There is a useful lesson in all this. For years blatant demagogues all over the United States have been criticising street-railway management, and have been telling the public how much bet ter things would be when the public came "into possession of its own." In Cleveland, the experiment has been made, and we see the result. It is one thing to criticise the acts of others, and quite another to be called upon to do the same work better ourselves. The experience of our Public Service Com mission has been much the same. Great, things had been expected of this new body. Tney devoted themselves first of all to the Brooklyn bridge "crush," but the crush still remains unrelieved, ex cept so far as the opening of the tunnel to Brooklyn, as the outgrowth of pri vate endeavor has reduced the pres sure. Then they devoted themselves to the trolley lines,' with the result that practically all the surface lines in Manhattan Borough and the Bronx are In receivers' hands, and that a large portion of the free trans fer privileges previously enjoyed by travelers has been cut off by order of the courts the receivers hav. lug notified the court that they could not pay wages and buy supplies with transfer checks. If these experiences shall lead to the development of a more tolerant spirit toward public-service corporations managed by private enter, prises, the harm and suffering entailed through the assaults of recent years Will not have been without compensat. lng advantage. No Fault With Taft'a Grant Speech. New York World. In Secretary Taft's Memorial day ad dress on General Grant, regarded as a whole and with an eye to its Intent, there Is little ground for the criticism voiced by some of its veteran hearers. The speaker referred plainly to certain weaknesses of Grant in his early man hood, to his drinking, to his resignation from the Army under a cloud in 1854, and to his subsequent ill-success at farming and in business. No honest es timate of Grant's career can be made without taking these things into con sideration. In Secretary Taft's speech they were used simply to emphasize an eloquent tribute to Grant of later years, to accent the wonders of self -rehabilitation displayed when emergency and duty had called the great soldier to the front and had brought out his hitherto latent powers. Next Great Reform. Irrigon Irrigator. The East Oregonian, published by a Democratic non-partisan Socialist, registered as a Republican, says "the next great reform, after nation-wide prohibition, will be the removal of the tax exemption from church property." Why, certainly. Give us that "re form" by all means. And the school houses and other school property should be taxed. And why exempt the graveyards and tombstones? Sure, they should be taxed. And our parks should bear their share of the burden. And the hospitals; they must not be exempt under this "reform" wave. As Samantha says, "when you're glttln', git all you kin." So while the "reform" spell Is on the Oregon voter should go the whole hog. The Coming- Topic St. Louis Port-Dispatch. We might as well begin right now And memorize again The Hat of presidential votes In Arkansas and Maine, And learn to trip them glibly ta Our everyday debates. For that's the coming toplo In our United States. W might as well get at it. As we've often done before. And learn If Indiana has Eighteen or twenty-four. For that's the great essential That Immediately awaits The art of conversation -In our United States. If Bryan lost New England, Now York, and Idaho. "Wnat others would ho have to get? Is what we've got to know, For that's the sort of thing to which, All talking gravitates "With proper provocation In our own United States. The fellowe who are posted Are the men that win cigars And drink their booze for nothing At the few remaining bars. For they've memorized the figures. And they're loaded for debate In a Persidentlal season In oar own United State,