6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. MAT 15. 1910. iwtmtnn PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Fostofflce as Second-Class Matter. Subscription Rates Invariably -ia Advance. (BT MAIL). rally, Sunday included, on year. . . .. .$8-00 iJally, Sunday Included, six months.... 4-25 Ially, Sunday Included, three months. . 2.25 Xaily, Sunday Included, one month..... .75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 600 Ially, without Sunday, six months.... 3-25 lally, without Sunday, three months.. 1.75 XJaJly, without Sunday, one month..... -SO Weekly, one year 1-50 Sunday, one year....... ....... 2.50 Sunday and weekly, on year......... 8.&0 (By Carrier). rally. Sunday Included, one year 00 Ially. Sunday Included, one month 75 Mow to Remit Send Postoffice money order, express order or personal check on vour local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoffice ad dress In full, including? county and state. Postage Kates 10 to Is pages, 1 cent: 1 to 28 pages. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages, 3 cents; 40 to 60 pages, 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Office The 8. C Beck with Special Agency New York, rooms 48 t0 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 010 512 Tribune building. PORTLAND. SUNDAY. MAI 15. 1910. XOX-PAKTISAS irfMBCG. The Multnomah Bar Association has made the ludicrous announcement that lawyers should choose the people's Judges and that none of the people's political parties should name candi dates for the judiciary. This doctrine the lawyers of the Bar Association proclaim as "non-partisanship." It is amusing- to hear the Bar Association thus declaring . independence of all party organizations and. then to see it trying to create a party of its own. on a no-party basis. But men chosen for judges will be either Democrats or Republicans; their principles or purposes will be those of one of the parties or the other; and it would be a sorry time if they should, ever be guided -by the principles or purposes of lawyers in meting out justice to the people. The Republican will not cease to be a Republican, however, nor the Demo crat a Democrat, because either may have been elected Judge. In discharge of their judicial functions judges do not act as Republicans or Democrats; never did. No complaint of that kind has ever been made in Oregon. But no man is converted Into a no-party man, with no political principles, by being elected to a judgeship. The non partisan notion, therefore, is cant and humbug. Judges heretofore have been elected as Republicans or as Democrats. After their election they have not, in any cases we remember, been active parti sans. . But they have not been expect ed to abjure all political principles, become political eunuchs, or epicenes. Nor will they, if elected by the pre tense of non-partisanship. Such In fluence as each one may have (will still be exerted quietly but effectively as possible., for success of the party of which he is a member. Judges elected on party tickets have done no more. Judges elected as no-party men will do no less. If the man is worth any consideration his political purposes or desires are not changed, nor annihi lated, by making him the judge of a court. On the other hand there is no claim or pretense tha judges elected on party tickets have been guided by partisan motives on the bench, or have swerved from the rules of justice to assist members of the party that elect ed them. Suppose the test should be made that no man should 'be elected io a judgeship wt o has any ascertainable political principles, or ever has been a party man. This would 'be the logi cal conclusion of the so-called non partisan cry, for the election of non partisan judges. We have, and ever have had, good and sound judged elected as nominees of parties better men than any who may be ready to profess that they have no political principles or party pur pose, but merely wi;h to be elected. The Bar Association, which calls for t lie election of "non-partisan judges," Is just like any other association in this respect, to wit: A few members post- as "leaders" of the others and promulgate an idea or policy in its name: the great body of the members arc careless or silent; then when the election comes on all scatter and vote as they please including the active members who made the "programme," yet will never unanimously support the nominees, since they are sure to dislike some or all of them. IMPROVING OREGON'S "SYSTEM." That "speech" of Senator Bourne's told wonders of the Oregon "system," that mado its auditors marvel yet again. It displayed the fine fruits rf the system two Senators, one a Popultst-Democrat-Republican, the other a Roosevelt-Democrat, engrafted upon a State that is overwhelmingly Republican. The Oregon Senators are not too modest to boast of the great triumph that has been won under a system which disrupts party organtza iion, foments petty factionalism and defeats majority will of party and electorate; which thrusts alternative minority candidates for office upon the electorate, neither of whom the voters desire: which makes money more of a power than ever in exploit ing seekers of votes; which ignores the representative principle by which alone citizens lift themselves from the ways of mob to those of deliberative concert; and which injects into pol itics bitterness and perjury, dem agogy and vainglori-us self-seeking. The Orccon system, which was the text of Senator Bourne's speech, is a trrand success in these respects. Yet Oregon's voice is never heard In that body . thrilling men's souls with electrical truths of states manship or guiding the Nation's .areer with elear-vlsione J policies for today's and posterity's thinking or showing that Oregon is contributing one whit to the Nation's destiny. In stead, Oregon's effort is centered on postofhees and pensions. This State has done wonders, but the wonders are those of petty pol itics and petty statesmanship. It has permitted the subversion of time tested methods of determining the ill of the majority and has lifted to !ho high ofTi ces of its pride and power men w" o boast of the achievement and point to themselves as its best ex ample of merit. There are men in this common wealth, sincere, patriotic, and hard thinking large numbers of them who revere old landmarks and are not in tune with this system of dem agogy and selfishness. They are not to be diverted from the effort of elect ing high-minded men to high offices. Their immediate goal ts restoration of the political assembly, as a means of curing defects of the direct primary. The results bf this old-approved sys I tem -will go before the people, and the people will Judge them in the primar ies, accept them If they are good and reject them if they are" otherwise. This will improve the system where by, two men. now. in the Senate, ap propriated their offices in this state, and make it possible for the ruling sentiment of Oregon, to choose fit men for Its high honors. IT BI-IC DOCKS AND PRIVATE IMtREaT Agitation for a policy that would commit the city hastily and unad visedly to the sale of a parcel of bonds for public docks Is due more than anything else to the efforts of a small steamboat company which wishes to compel the city to furnish a dock for its use, at the public expense; where as, from the beginning of the City of Portland till now other steamboat men have built and maintained their own docks; and others not running steam boats have supplied dock and' wharf facilities both to river and ocean vessels at reasonable charges, and are doing so yet. Not much significance Is to be at tached to the popular Vote in favor of the sale of bonds to the amount of $500,000 for this purpose. The sub ject was a new one; it was not fully considered or digested hy the electors; besides at first motion great numbers will vote bonds for anything, thought less about the burden and little dis posed to think of the pay day. If the city should enter this busi ness it will soon he "in" to the tune of many millions. The one-half mil lion now proposed will accomplish nothing; and since there is no plan. If the bonds should be sold, the money would lie Idly -by, while the interest charge would steadily accumulate. Nothing could be done with $500,000; and there would, be a continuous de mand for more and more and more. The worst kind of business would be to cell bonds beforehand and then try to buy a site. The true policy, if the policy of creating public docks is re ally' to be pursued, is to get proposals and offers of sites and allow the public to judge of them. Then everything would be in the open. Public docks will always be a bur den, and It will become a heavy and growing one, to the taxpayers of Port land. Their operation, as in all other matters of the kind,, conducted under officialdom, will be a great center of factional effort, at the expense of the public. Wouldn't it 'be as well, if the little steamboat company which Is raising great part of this clamor, in the hope of getting a dock fo'r its own use at the public expense, would buy a site and put up a wharf of its own, for its own use, as others have been doing, time out of mind ? RECURRING TROUBLKS IN CUBA. Matters in Cuba are falling into such bad mess again that it is becom ing plain the United States made a second mistake when it withdrew its authority from the. Island the second time: . The Cubans have had less than & year and a half of self-government this trial, and already the publis debt has increased enormously, taxes are excessive, swarms of office-holding parasites infest its government and negroes have been attempting a revo ltuion in order to gain larger share of the spoils, for themselves. The United States withdrew from Cuba in 1902 and returned in 1906, when Mr. Taft went thither on his celehrated mission of bringing order out of chaos. In January, 1909, the island was handed over to the Cubans again, against protest of responsible property-owners who feared recur rence of trouble under Cuban inde pendence. Distribution of spoils has been going on more than a year and corruption is reliably reported to be permeating all official circles. Taxa tion is extremely burdensome and the public debt has reached $65,000,000. A negro party under General Estenoz has been organizing for the avowed purpose of gaining more recognition in distribution of offices, and Its lead ers have been clapped into prison by the government of President Gomez, which alleges that Estenoz and his followers have been striving to work up a negro insurrection and have been making military preparations for an uprising against the whites. It Is merely a question of time until Cuban self-government shall reach" an end. That will be after large debt and injustice have accumulated. But for a namby-pamby sentimentalism and false political doctrines of "gov ernment by consent" and "liberty" In this country there would not be this unnecessary renewal of trouble. I1IIX THE TRA in C-M A KKR. The earnings of the Harriman prop erties in the State of Oregon have al ways ranked high among the best dividend-paying roads of the country. The enormous grain crops formerly moved to tidewater from the "vTillam ette Valley formed the original traffic for the valley lines, and when hop growing, fruit, dairying and other forms of diversified farming supplant ed graingrowing, the freight traffic became greater than ever. The timber resources of the state hardly have been touched, but the output of the mills at Portland and other districts in the state has supplied an enormous traffic for the railroads as well as the water carriers. East of the Cascade Moun tains, even with the comparatively scanty development that has taken place, there has poured out an im mense volume of wheat, wool and live stock, which is now being supplement ed by the much more valuable busi ness that is following the change to di versified farming and modern home building made possible by completion of numerous irrigation projects. Not even the most pessimistic in dividual who is at all familiar with the natural conditions in this, great state believes that the territory which has produced such great earnings for the Harriman lines is developed up to one-half or even one-third of its traffic-producing capacity. It thus fol lows naturally that there is in Oregon a field for exploitation by the Hill lines which, properly handled, will yield tq the newcomers fully as large revenues as have been collected by the Harriman lines without in any manner affecting the revenues of the older system. This much for the ter ritory in which the railroads have al ready made a beginning and in a por tion of which Mr. Hill will operate electric roads. In the Central Oregon country lies a virgin territory larger In area and nearly as great in natural resources as that which has already been invaded by the railroads. Into this new land both railroad systems are hurrying with feverish haste, and their advent has been the immediate signal for the greatest rush- of homebuilders and landhiinters that this region has" ever known. It is the presence of this great empire entirely undeveloped in some portions . and only partly de veloped in its oldest and most thickly settled regions, that has attracted the attention of Mr. Hill, one of the most prominent industrial figures of the century. It is from these rich regions that Mr. Hill expects to draw traffic which will be hauled out of the coun try over his $50,000,000 trunk line, the North Bank road. Following his lifelong policy as a railroad man, he expects to create new traffic instead of wresting from his competitors business which is already being de veloped. "What the coming of this "empire builder" means to Oregon can be un derstood by what he has done else where, for to a greater extent than any other man he has caused two blades of grass to grow where but one had grown before. Mr. Hill's North Bank road added more millions to the value of Portland property than any enterprise that was ever undertaken in the Northwest. In his present cam paign of development the benefits ac cruing to Portland will be greater than those which have already been sr muen in evidence. NOR.1IAL SCHOOL TBOCBLES REVIVING Neither will electors of Oregon gain satisfactory solution of the normal school trouble through direct legisla tion. Bills are being initiated for re establishment of the institutions at Weston, Monmouth and Ashland. Voters have no choice of alternative location. They must take back the old schools or none. Of course, they are at liberty to select one of the three or two of them, but that would ' not remedy geographical misfits which have been so long disturbing forces in the politics and the legislation of this state. The Oregonlan realizes full well that this criticism will incite resent ment in certain localities. But in com mon with most of the citizens of this state. The Oregonlan would like to see normal school education established on an enduring and efficient, basis. It would like to see one, or at most, two schools properly supplied with funds and equipped with facilities and lo cated near geographical centers. This seems a reasonable view of the mat ter. The question ultimately ij to be decided, after all, not by local pref erence, but by state-wide choice. Yet no measure Is to b initiated, evidently, that will accord with the general interest of the state. Instead, the electors are to hash over again the old-time normal school mess. The Legislature last session was dead locked between House and Senate on the normal school question and ad journed . without appropriating funds for either of the three schools. This was an unfortunate outcome. The state has lost two years for training of teachers and for establishment of a new normal system. Now comes the Initiative, threatening to make mat ters worse. For if by criss-cross vot ing all three schools or one of them should win a plurality vote, then the cry of the "will of the people" would be heard forevermore, although it Is manifestly the will of the people that old normal abuses should be forever abolished. What is needed Is legislation framed in the interest of the state instead of In the interest of localities. A GREAT DISCOVERT. The marvellous scientific discovery which Mr. Philip W. T. R. Thompson has exhibited to an assembly of edu cational men at Los Angeles seems to rank in Importance not very far be low the great Sympsychograph which Dr. David Starr Jordan invented some years since. Readers will recall the wonderful advances In knowledge which the world owes to the sympsy chograph. It enabled a person to see his own soul in a sort of looking-glass and even to procure a photograph of it. Since that time, there has been no such thing in the world as a soul secret and spirit affinities have not had half the difficulty in recognizing each, other that they had before. The atmosphere, of Los Angeels, for some reason not thus far explained by savants, seems to be remarkably well adapted to the promotion of a certain sort of science. We recall that it was in this famous center of illumination that spiritual ear trum pets first became popular as a means of investigating the other world. To all appearances the trumpet used in this miraculous process Is like the small tin ones which bad little boys and hoydenish girls love to toot upon in Rose Festival time, but in reality it is very different. The genuine Los Angeles spiritual, or ghost, trumpet must be subjected to a preparatory incantation before the souls" of the departed can speak through it. A distinguished clergy man of this city who has ertioyed con verse with the inhabitants of Para dise through one of these marvellous instruments . says that . the trumpets are prepared by soaking them seven days in spiritus frumenti, or perhaps it is the person using them who is soaked. The exact fact escapes us, but it makes no difference.- The prin ciple is the same. After it is prop erly prepared, any person can set up a communication with the souls of the dead by simply putting the magic instrument to his ear and listening. The soul of George Washington, Soc rates or some other equally reliable person will at once begin to talk into the trumpet, and will reveal the fact that the moon is made of green cheese or something Just as important and not less true. Up to the date of Mr. Thompson's great scientific revelation the ghostly trumpet was the predomi nant marvel among the leaders of thought in Los Angeles. No parlor gathering of the learned was com plete without two or three of the in struments, and it is said that the reve lations obtained through them will .soon be published in a book. It is expected that this work will rank as high in the scientific world as Laura Jean Libbers novels do in belles lettres. The fact that the ghost trumpet or the person using it must be soaked seven days in spiritus frumenti Is in teresting Mn this connection because of the Intimate relation between the magic number seven and Air. Thomp son's great illumination. What this famous genius" has done, it appears, is to discover four "forms" from which he can reproduce the entire universe. Democritus and Lucretius before him had a vague notion that the world could be built up of atoms patterned after a few fundamental shapes, but they did not say how many shapes would be required. Mr. Thompson puts them to shame by giv ing the correct answer, which is four. This is also a magic number. Thus there are four gods of the wind, four sides to the celestial city, three times four tribes of Israel and exactly as many disciples, as well as four sea sons of the year, four weeks in the month and four quarts in a gallon. We must not forget either that the Greek philosophers discovered the fundamental scientific truth that the universe Is composed of four elements, earth, air, fire and water. No doubt Mr. Thompson's four forms when he publishes his full explanation of them will be found to correspond to these four elements and likewise to the four archangels, Michael, Gabriel, Raphael and Uriel. But it was of the number seven that we began to speak more particularly . in connection with Mr. Thompson's new revelation. We are told in the account of the marvel that "seven is a magic num ber in working out geometric forms." and it appears that our Los Angelean philosopher has made full use of it. It will be news to geometricians that seven has any particular connection with their science. The heptagon never has been an especially fascinat ing figure to them heretofore. Pascal and Brianchon delighted rather in the hexagon,' while the projective geome ters love to dally with the' complete quadrilateral and Archimedes devoted himself to the polygon of an infinite number of sides. . But no doubt Mr. Thompson has a reason for what he says. It will be remembered that the spiritual trum pet was reviled at first as being a novelty. His magic forms, we are told, divide the octave of, music into seven notes. Musicians have up to this time parted the octave first into two tetrads and these again into twelve intervals which they name semi-tones, but following Mr. Thomp son's discovery they will probably abandon their antiquated views. The physicists must, do likewise. Since Helmholtz they have believed that light was composed of three primary colors. Mr. Thompson declares that there are seven and that each of these seven subdivides into seven others. The opinion commonly held that light is a continuous series of-wave lengths running without a hreark from the red to the ultra-violet, of the spectrum must of course now be regarded as overthrown. . Later developments of Mr. Thompson's discovery will doubt less show that while he gives great prominence to the number seven in his scheme of the universe and still greater to the number four, he has not forgotten the supreme Importance of number one. SOMETHING NEW IN DWTXIJNGS. The thought of living in a house a hundred miles long startles one at first, but within a few years it is likely to take place among other common place wonders of the times. The change from the isolated dwelling of today to the "road town," which is described in a recent number of The Independent, would not be much greater than that from the dirt floors and dark rooms of five centuries ago to tha rugs and plate glass of the modern mansion. The house of that period was a filthy, unventilated, in convenient place, without stoves, gas, electricity or any of the other com monplace comforts of our day. Most of the conveniences which we cannot do without .have been contrived within the last hundred years, and there is no reason why inventive genius should pause in its work now. The impor tant changes hitherto have, been made within the house. They pertain to the furniture, the appliances for daily life, for business and sociability. Along this line there Is perhaps little more to bo done. But the outward type of the human dwelling has re mained essentially unchanged for many thousands of years. Of course styles of architecture have varied, but that is not the point. The house has remained an isolated struc ture with all the apparatus of life re peated over and over again for each separate family. Dreamers have often lamented the expensiveness of this ar rangement. It is absurd, when you come to think of it, that each family in a neighborhood should buy a kitchen range large enough to cook for a dozen, while each has also its wasteful machinery for washing clothes,, serving . food and cleaning house, to say nothing of heating and often lighting as well. Plans to rem edy the waste of wealth which re sults from the. isolated dwelling have not been lacking and some of them have been fairly successful. The modern apartment-house saves a great deal of money and worry for those who inhabit it, but there are also sac rifices to be considered. Life in an apartment is deprived of the pleas ures of the green grass, trees and flowers. The flat-dweller has no land to call his own. He is a prisoner in brick walls, a humble slave to land lord. Janitor and delivery man, while, worst of all, his neighbors are so near and not always so dear that life loses Its best savor. His dog is an abomi nation, his children are nuisances and his piano is an instrument of torture. All this trouble arises from the fact that heretofore inventive faculty working at the problem of the co operative dwelling has looked persist ently upward. It has built toward the stars, forgetting the possible ad vantages of stringing the multiple house along the ground rather than making it tower skyward. At last, however, a tremendous genius has struck a new note in architecture. The "road town," which we mentioned a moment ago, is not to be more. than two or three stories high, but its length is to be prodigious. It will meander across the country through green fields and flowery vales, climb ing hills and sinking gently down de clivities, wandering pensively by the side of babbling brooks and seeking philosophic repose in the gloomy depths of broad forests, from which it will emerge and come to an end only after a course of some scores of miles. It Is to be as long as rapid transit will permit. Of course the dweller in the last apartment it con tains must be able to reach his busi ness in the city after an hour's ride or so on the electric car, .but that is the only limitation upon the length of the road town. It Is to be a sort of hollow Chinese wall divided up into separate houses, with solid concrete walls between them, and provided one after the other with the loveliest gar dens you can imagine. There will be plenty of room for children and es pecially for dogs. The latter feature is expected to make the invention sin gularly attractive to childless women. Country roads will pass through the structure under arches, but transporta tion to the city and back will be in a continuous tunnel beneath the whole length of the building. Here also will run'the water mains and conduits for "electric" wires." Reckoning each dwell ing fifty feet long, a road town of a hundred miles length would house 10,560 families, and if In each family there were five members, the entire population of the structure would be 52,800 persons. This is ample to sup ply traffic for a well-equipped electric line to carry freight and passengers. The roof of the road town would nat urally be devoted to the lighter joys. Here of .an evening pate- famillas will sit surrounded by his brood and smoke his pensive pipe while the little ones disport themselves. The fond mother will mingle admiration of the setting sun with worship of her lord. Here tea will be served as day declines and on moonlight nights dinner will for sake the gloomy interior and be philo sophically fletcherized beneath the be nignant stars. On paper the project is practicable as well as alluring. What difficulties may develop when the inventor tries to carry out his Idea time will tell. No doubt the structure is feasible enough mechanically. No doubt, too, people would enjoy living with the advantages we have described, but it occurs to one that there may be trou ble in getting title to a strip of land of the right shape for the road town. Would the farmers be willing to sell a meandering ribbon through the heart of the country for any practica ble price? A road town one hundred miles long, with its gardens, would require some 2500 acres of ground, which might possibly cost half a mil lion dollars or even more. This looks like a large sum, but it is after all a mere trifle compared with the cost of land enough within a city to build dwellings on for 52,800 people. REDMOND'S JTST PROTEST. A strong protest has been made by John Redmond, the Irish Nationalist leader, to Premier Asquith against the form of oath to be taken by the new King before Parliament. The word ing of this oath is held to be need lessly offensive to Catholic subjects of the realm. By it with all due solem nity the ICing is made to disavow any belief in transsubstantiation and to affirm that "the invocation or adora tion of the Virgin Mary or any other saint and the sacrifice of the mass, as they are now used in the .Church of Rome are superstitious and idola trous." Since there are between 6,000, 000 "and 7,000,000 loyal Catholic sub jects in the United Kingdom, the oath is held to be grotesquely out of place. It is cited further that the absurdity of the oath is the more noticeable be cause one of the high personages in attendance on the King when the oath is administered is the Duke of Nor folk, Earl Marshal of England, and a Catholic. It is recalled that King Edward disapproved the wording of the oath in this particular and w as anxious that it be changed before he took it. A dispute, hot as religious disputes usually are, arose over the wording of the altered oath and no change was J made. The incident passed and the acrimony engendered was forgotten in the conciliatory and tactful reign of King Edward, only to be revived when his heir came to the throne. Since the oath sprang from a time and con ditions far distant and at variance with the present in the mater of re ligious dogmas, and the sentiment ex pressed therein is utterly immaterial at this time, it would be. a gracious thing if the w-ording so .offensive to a-large-body of the loyal subjects of the King could be changed. BK NOT TOO BOLD. It is not wise to believe too confi dently that the comet as it draws near the earth will exercise no influ ence upon our affairs. The latest opinion is that it Is a huge hall of gas shaped like a globe. It will therefore act like an . enormous lens and will condense the light and heat of the sun to a focus somewhere in space. At that exact point the heat must be something frightful to contemplate. No doubt it is sufficient to vaporize iron. AVere this focal point to sweep across the earth there would be few left in its path to tell us of their ex perience, but fortunately it will not reach our planet. Still, the condens ing effect of the cometary lens will be perceptible here on the 18th of May, and we may expect that day to be unusually warm and the sunlight to be brighter than ordinary. Even if the comet passes us in the night, there will be a good deal of illumination. It will seem like bright moonlight. Moreover, the condensing effect of the comet will appear in other ways. It will direct down upon the earth a powerful stream of radiations similar to the X-rays. Many of these are as yet unknown to science, and it is im possible to predict their exact influ ence. It is certain, however, that they are forms of energy and can therefore produce all sorts of mechanical dis turbances, such as high tides, earth quakes and storms. Many scientists hold that the unusual weather we have had this Spring In some parts of the country must be attributed t the stream of condensed radiations which the comet has been sending, not di rectly toward us, but into our general neighborhood. When the downpour becomes direct, of course, the effect will be greater. As to the visi: le tail of the comet, it has lost the last of its terrors. Sci entists now know that it is nothing more than a beam of sunlight precise ly like the rays which a searchlight sends out into a fog. It is odd that this complete explanation of the phenomenon should not have been thought of long ago, but it is a trait of the human intelligence to hit upon the simple only after It has baffled itself for centuries with the complex and difficult. PAX VOBISCUM. -Although Mr. Roosevelt's Nobel prize oration at Christiania contained nothing new, still it restated in an en tertaining way what can be said upon the subject of universal peace. Some thing, though not very much, has been done of a practical nature to prevent international hostilities. The Hague tribunal, as Mr. Roosevelt in timated, must remain somewhat In effective as long as there is no way of enforcing its decrees. Obedience to them is purely voluntary and must continue to be so until some sort of an international police force has boen or ganized. At present we may think it out of the question that powerful na tions will ever agree to be controlled by a world police, but five Qr six cen turies ago the same might have been said of the powerful nobles waging war from th-'r feudal castles. The prediction that the mightiest of them would one day bow humbly before the policeman with Lis prosaic club would have seemed ludit -ous. if anybody had been hardy" enough to make it. But ludicrous r not, It has come true. Mr. Roosevelt is not unaware of the parallel between t"-e present condi tion of the separate nations and that of pioneer roughs living without much law on the frontier. Every man un der those conditions is his own de fender and the weakest goes to the wall. This Is not lte the state of things among the nations today, be cause there is at least a beginning of international morality and something like a world conscience: but as a rule might makes right between govern ments, and it always will until public opinion has been radically changed. Perhaps the most potent factor in putting an end to war, if that ever happens, will be the economic diffi culty of maintaining armaments. The expense of the fleets and armies which are now kept up is likely to bankrupt the principal governments of the world within a quarter of a century. Prudence urges them very str-ngly to discover some method of reducing the cost, and this may perhaps lend irresistible attractiveness to the ar bitration treaties for which Mr. Roosevelt pleads. There is plenty of material for a fine line of sensational tales of mur-der-and mystery In the Gohl case at Grays Harbor. Human life was of small value when It interfered with the plans of the man who was looking after the affairs of the sailors' union. There seems to have been no lack of victims to satisfy the murder lust of the fiend who killed men with no greater compunction than would ordi narily be felt over the slaughter of a dog. Interest was added to the hor ror by the subordinate actors in the tragedy. Klingenberg, the frightened or hypnotized tool of the master mur derer, seems to have played a part as weirdly wicked as anything that fiction has presented. The extent to which "Jensen the Weasel" figured in . the case has not been fully revealed as yet, 'but If he played any such part as "Cooney the Fox" played in the cele brated Cronin murder in Chicago about twenty years ago, he' has added another element of mystery to a wholesale murder plot that stands without an equal in criminal annals of the North Pacific Coast. Ordinarily the public does not take kindly to an exhibition of the family skeleton when it is handed Into pub lic gaze for the purpose of gaining a point for the exhibitor. Criticism over such an expose of family troubles will, however, not lie in the case of the late John A. Benson, the California land thief. By the long list of crimes com mitted while he was building up the fortune that is now the bone of- con tention, Mr. Benson brought so much sorrow and suffering upon, the respect able members of his family, that it now can add but few heart-aches to prove the post-mortem charge of bigamy. The charge is made by his own son for the purpose of preventing a large share of the Bcnscn i. .tune from falling into the hands of an ex dancehall artist for whom Benson cast aside the lawful wife and mother of his children. Viewed from almost any standard, the late Mr. Benson seems to have been an exceptionally versa tile and disreputable old scoundrel. It is announced that the Pennsyl vania Railroad will soon put into oper ation an all-steel train made up .of non-collapsible cars. Other railway conipanies are preparing to . follow suit. In planning for this train the Pennsylvania has endeavored to build a coach which will provide the great est possible strength, a steel framing which cannot be affiected by fire, an inside lining which will be non-combustible, and at the same time will not conduct heat or sound. More safety in travel is the universal de mand. Let us hopj it will be univer salis' met. The statute forbi..uing the cx:.i bition of "freaks" was evoked against two disgusting hills of human flesh, a woman and a man, whose mammoth proportions have been exhibited for some days in Portland for gain. This is as it should be. A huma. creature, so lost to all sense of decency as to be induced to parade a physical misfor tune before gaping crowds for pay causes even pity to turn away from the spectacle with contempt. Evangelists John Wesley Hill and John Callahan, of New York, are going to San Francisco to set up a counter attraction in the way of rival services at the time of the Jeffries-Johnson prize fight. The .nagnitude of the undertaking is only equalled by the zeal of those who have engaged In it. The object is an intere . .ing on , what ever the outcome. Students of the University of Oregon threaten removal of the Institution to Portland unless Eruene shall provide better water. However, the City of Eugene may think these recipients of free education rather ungracious. There are colleges in Portland already. Mayor Busse, of Ch' ago, has issued an order prohibiting wrestling bouts on Memorial day. This is well as. far as it goes. But is there any good and valid reason why r thing that is ob jectionable on one da should be con sidered perfectly legitimate on other days? Mr. Bryan, it is saii, will not be a candidate. So that while from one point of view the Democratic outlook is unfavorable, frpm another it is quite encouraging. Perhaps the Walla Walla Valley, in order to save the strawberrjf crop, will have to turn the schools loose in the patches. Pupils will probably wel come the change. The ideal baseball team is one that wins all the games at home and also all the games away from home. That is all the "fans" ask of Manager Mc Credie. The Colonel praises the Kaiser and the Kaiser Is quite sure the Colonel is the biggest man America has pro duced. However, the Republican assembly will not be so ungracious as to de nounce the State Grange assembly. The c-s in the comet's tail is said to have gone to its head. The disrep utable old skylark! The new King of Britain seems not dismayed to wear the "hoodoo" name George, MR. MILL AND TEXTBAt OREGON', Why He Will Develop the . Great Inland 11m p 1 re. Here is , an article on a subject of some eurrentinterest from the Med ford Mail-Tribune, entitled "The Bible of the Mossbacks" (meaning The Ore ognlan) : Jaraea J. Hill when at Salem recently, stated that he had turned hia attention to Washington Instead of Oregon, because of the attitude of the Ladd. Oorbetta and other Portland capitalists, who did not want rail roads; did not want progress and develop ment. The attitude of the old set of Portland capitalists was typical of the old Oregon. The ultra conservatism or mossbackism which disgusted Mr. Hill, long ruled the state and kept it In the rear of sister com monwealths. It was the spirit of the Portland hog and the Salem pig. which the new Portland has outgrown, but which fctill rules Salem. This old narrow, provincial, carping spirit finds an echo in The Oregonlan. the Bible of the mossbacks. an anachronism in up-to-date Oregon, which with its eyes glued on the Isolated past, still exerts its influence to oppose progress, block good roads, slaugh ter normal schools fight taxation for im provement, check legislation that opens up and develops the state and restores cor ruption and machine rule In politics. T.Ike a crab. It moves backwards, or sideways anything but forward. It is the spirit of The Oregonlan that kept Hill out of Oregon for 25 yeara and still endeavored to keep him out even after he had begun his recent invasion of the Deschutes. But Oregon has outgrown her mossbacks and their Bible. Progress and de velopment are the order of the day, and those who oppose. Ahougrh. backed by the prestige of the past, must shed their pro vincial shells and learn to move, forward with the procession. This singular outpouring from the Memord paper is worth little atten tion, perhaps; but It would appear to make appropriate republication of the following paragraph from an accouut of a public banquet at Prinevllle Sat urday, May 7: In speaking at the banquet. Mr. Hill said that James J. Hill had been induced" to enter the Central Oregon field largely through the representations of what the country contained made to him from time to time by "William Hanley. of Hums; Harvey W. Scott and The Portland Orego nian. The Mr. Hill herein referred to is J.ouls W. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railroad. It is fair to as-. sume that he is a qualified witness. MERELY A "SCRAPPING MATCH.' It does not escape observation that the Senators of either party who are baiting Aldrich all declare themselves protectionists, but dispute with Aid rich and with each other on the appli cation of the "principle." And the principle, as each one interprets it, is dictated or guided by specicl conditions in his own state. That is, the tariff is "a local, question." Even the South ern States have now reached this "principle" of interpretation. Here is part of the record: "Thirty-eignt Dem ocrats in the House voted against free lumber; 29 against free hides; 102 of the 171 Democrats are recorded against reductions of schedules. And W"hcn it came to a vote on free iron ore In the Senate a vote for or against a future monopoly by the steol trust out of 2t who voted for free iron ore, 14 Senators were Republicans more Republicans than Democrats were found fighting protection on an important raw ma terial Ten Democrats were the oniy ones among the entire party represen tation in the Senate who voted for free iron ore 10 Democrats out of 3i." ljurin-- Mr. Cleveland's second term the first and only time the Demo cratic party has had entire control of the legislative and executive branches of the Government during more . than fifty years this same difficulty or em barrassment in dealing with the tariff beset and confounded it. It couldn't possibly marshal its forces for the "re form" it had been preaching so long, but made a tariff more lopsided in fa vor of protection than the one it had undertaken to repeal or correct. All the uproar about protection and against special privileges it confers whetbsr by Republican "'insurgents" or by Democratic "reformers" is shallow humbug, and so it will ever be "so long as the men of either party, or both parties, who contend against the high priests of protection. Insist that they are still protectionists themselves and fight for the protection of the special interests of their own states or dis tricts. There is but one principle on which the abuses of protection may be over come, and that principle is tariff for revenue. Till this principle can be adopted, the tariff debates in Congress and before the country will be merely a contest among "interests" for special advantages for themselves. This is il lustrated perhaps better than ever be fore by . the present "scrapping match" in Congress. From The Oregonlan, June 14, 1909. Nearly one year ago The Oregon lan published the article here repro duced. It iits present conditions ex actly. Men of either party, every where, are juggling with the tariff for party ends, but each and all fight fiercely for the special inerests of their own localities. The Vanishing Legion. New York Mail. With the approach of Memorial day there is a renewal of the suggestion that the veterans who turn out be spared the long, fatiguing inarches which they are accustomed to undertake on that solemn anniversary. The Civil War veterans are all old and most of them are feeble. Their lines grow thinner and thinner very year. They are the vanishing legion whose annual turnout is viewed with mingled emotions pride in their heroic deeds and tender regret for their dimin ishing numbers. Would you hazard a guess as to how rapidly those honored veterans are pass ing away? Senator Scott, of West Vir ginia, estimates that they are dying at the rate of one every 12 minutes, or say 43.V0O a year. Tlio world never has wit nessed the spectacle of so vast an army of veterans of a single war marching into the silence. Spokane's) fiack-Dons. Yakima Republic. The Spokane City Council, in defer ence to the wishes of the people, has reversed itself on the question of giv ing the North Coast '& Milwaukee the right to come into the town. The Council refused franchises to these roads, except on condition that fhey grant the city terminal rates. Con sideration has convinced the Spokane people that the demand was unrea sonable. , Caoae for Jealousy. Kansas City Star. Formal proclamation of George V as King was made in London today by "the York herald." This will be sure to make Mr. Pulitzer and Mr. Hearst sore. . Room for More. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Hell may be full of politicians, as Dr. Farkhurst says, but doubtless there is room for one or two more.