TOE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX rORTI.AXD, MAT. 28, 1911. rOBTUiXD. OBKGOX. IntrH t Portland. Orosoa. Postofrle aa patit4- IM Mactor. kiitaciipiM ItiiM Inv-axlsMr la AAvaace. BT MAII. X" of ?t. fimrtsv tn r M 1 one y . . . T .IT. M .4 . Inrlmlhl ai. MMfhl I 1 ;t.' SanAr ln,-lol-4. throe monlbo. . . J- Jolly. Sotwlor loHudo4. on bmaiIl - 3-lr. wlfltoot Sus-lor. ono -oor....... Xi r. -M'ootit S-iodor. aoatha.... J.:lr. wl'hout Suartar. tbree motiis.. ton "W o&o 1 w .......-- 1- -isdar, ono y mt - a - - . . ioti4 n A weoaly. ao year..-. V-1Tt. fUIT hx-hwleo:. ono yr Boi.r. ounoor uun-a. W Kw to Willi !-nd prwT-rrve snoBo teeaor. nprna onlr or personal oboe !y-f looaJ oojtk. Stamps, cola o eMT r at trim oadr- r-.. tirro oootorflc sdjroea lm fall. lnrlo4l.DC count r u otolo. rma. Wot l- to p- eet-. 1 , . - - . . . u la a . . . . I rnti : oo la o poo. 'costs. reform " ouxiblo rate. rn naataooo OftVoa Torro Cm f -Xt Tors. I.ruoowlca. kuUdlss. CM ofttfft. ns i owil4ia. ortnvnjLxn, cxiAr. mat t. im. THK rtnTKE. SOT TMI 1AST. Mr. Rushlight breaks a Judicious ;ienc to mak an attack on Mayor filmoa a a "tfomm" of former clays: but Mr. Rushlight may t advised that tit public Is not so mix h concerned about the political past of Mr. Iroon as It la about the political future of Mr. Kushllsht. The cr-rr of Mr. Simon, personal, professional and political, Il a part of the familiar bl-torr of city and state. The career of Mr. Rush light, so far aa It la known, has been on of constant demagogic appeal to the restless, discontented and Irre sponsible elements of the community, of subservience to the corporations and the sewer trust, and of traffic with the suloons and the North End. It gives no promise of firm control and rtirtd supervision of the Immoral element, or of discipline of the cor porations, or of rebuke to the dom inant political ring In the City Coun cil, or of effective opposition to the Urge scheme of the thrifty and ener getic band of contractors or ho Infest the City Hall. Mr. Simon has lived In Oregon practically all his life. He early man ifested a real gentus for politics and for adroit and successful political manipulation. He became a bona of tbe old atyle. operating In the old way. He 'was a State Senator, and several times president of the State Senate. He opposed and crushed the long dominant and arrogant Mitchell ring. He set up a machine of bis own, which in time was destroyed, after he had been elected United States Sen ator. Then came the new era In our political affairs and the entrance upon the political singe of the self tceklng. stealthy-moving, people-fooling, primary-working, weatber-vane-vaichlng operator and statesman of the Rourne-Kellaher-Kushllght type: and the last estate of the common people, so far as political leadership Is concerned, is as bad as the first, and probably worse. Throughout his long and active hls-tm-y In Oregon. Mr. Simon's personal Integrity has not been Impeached. He hits been above, graft or the suspicion of graft. He ha been Identified In a ronsplcloua way witn largw ' affairs, and has manifested administrative and executive abitltte of a high order. T.1 . 1 .1 i n a- tratto flf Air. SlmOnS IlinW UMluma " " character were so well known, and the public knowledge of his great capacity and confidence In hi personal Integ rity were so general, that two years ago the was called out of his law office to become Mayor of Portland. He con sented rehH-tantly. and was elected by a large vote. Now It Is again demand ed that he become a candidate for Mayor, and he has yielded. The kind bf administration we have had for two fr-ars satisfied the public, though It Is freely acknowledged that mistakes riave been made. Hut by and large It has been a highly efficient adminis tration. With two years experience In handling problems that were, some of them, new to him. and moat of thrro difficult and momentous. Mr. Flmon Is equipped to do even better Ip ghe ensuing two sears. It Is futile for Kushtlghl. who has verythlng to conceal about his pres ent dealing and future policies, to trail at Simon, who has nothing to con. cU about past, present, or future. ,No even Knshllght will venture to de clare that any act of Mayor Simon has bewn tainted by an Improper purpose or Inspired by personal or political ambition. He ha been th Mayor. le has not sought to make the May oralty an Instrumentality . of other end cr the convenience of any group ,.f politicians. He will not In the fu ture. Put Rushlight? What will Rush l ichtdo? Who will be his appointees? Who will constitute his cabinet? What will be his aim and pollcle? Those are question of present mo ment. No buncombe protestation of virtue or threadbare recital of long f.rgten eeents will obscure the live l-aee.of the day and the hour. H IMXfAITIMt Ot TKAHK. Senator Jones, of Washington, has Introduced bill In the Senate pro viding regulations for the Panama Ca rat and containing a provision that American vessels engaged tn coastwise trade hall have the free use of the canal. Regardless of the fact that ex istent treaties which we ate making no attempt to abrogate explicitly pro vide that no favoritism In rates shall be shown any vessels making use of the canal, the Seattle Poat-Intelll-gencer commends this feature of the Jones 4ill. and makes the unwarranted statement that "either the American ships must have special privileges In the canal or the benefit of the canal will go to the foreigners at the ex pense of the people of this country." The Seattle paper reaches thl con clusion In thl way: "When the canal Is open the British Columbia lumber manufacturers can ship their products through to the Atlantic States precisely a easily as can the Washington lum bermen. But the Washington lumber men will have to ship exclusively In American-vessels. while the British Columbia mlllmen can use vessels of any country In the world." The Pan ama Canal Is not being constructed as a money-making enterprise, but It la toped that a sufficient amount of hipping will make use of It to enable Uhe earning of operating expenses and tat least a small Interest on the Invest ment. Any -special privileges." such .a exempting American ships from t.-nnage dues, must necessarily be paid lf r by the American people, who must f.t the bills. I-et u see w h- secure the financial .altantare of this propose! special 'ts-eivilcge. Surely not th consumer. for he pays the freight and no reduc tion in rates Is promised even If the American vessels are exempt from dues. Neither can the producer obtain any more for the commodities . he ships, for th special privilege, which costs all of the people something, all goe In the nature of a contribution made for the purpose of making prof itable an unprofitable business. There are a thousand consumers and produc ers for every shipowner, and any fa voritism shown the latter must neces sarily be at the expense of the former. What the Pacific Coast producers and their customers In th East need more than free canal due Is the right to use cheap ship. The canal I not being constructed for the purpose of enhanc ing the profit of a few wealthy ship owners. It Is being built to facilitate th commerce of the United biaies ana to cheapen transportation. To reap the fullest benefit from the canal it U necessary that we erase this fine line of distinction which at pres ent prevent us from awlBff any kjnd of an ocean carrier that la available. A free-ship bill which would permit Americans to buy tonnage tn the open market and operate tt on any route they saw fit would reduce freights be tween the Atlantic and ( Pacific sea boards nearly owe-half. That reduc tion would be followed by unexampled prosperity throughout the country. WHKX DID tLACt Bt lCIDB BEGEXf Between the Springfield Republican and Professor W. F. WUlcox, of Cor nell University, a pretty little differ ence of opinion ha arisen over the precise time when the lamented de cline in our National birthrate began. Professor Willcox sets the date as early as ltlS. but the Republican In clines to believe that the decline could not have begun much before 1850. Each of the two contestants has a good deal to say about the predictions of Elkanah Walker. This gentleman, who flourished early In the last cen tury, prophesied that the population of the United State would continue permanently to Increase as fast a It had np to the year ISIS, that Is. about one-third every ten years. His con clusion was reached by study of the birth rate which then prevailed. It Is a remarkable fact that the actual rat of Increase remained at about the figure he forecasted until the year I860 and then It began to fall off. Th Republican plausibly argue that. Inasmuch a he drew from hi premises a conclusion which was veri fied by the facta for many successive years, the premise themselves must have been accurate. rtf eourse Rlkanah Walker's most Important premise was the assump tion that the birtn rate wouia not decline during the nineteenth cen tury. The Republican contends that It could not have declined up to 18S0 or his predictions as to the Increase rut th nomil&tlon would not have come true. Professor Willcox declares that U did decline, but that tne popu lation continued to Increase a he had prophesied It would because of the falling death rate. On the other hand It Is contended that the death rate in .v.. TTnitoH KfafM did not chanse ner- ceptlbly during the interval between 181S and 18&0. Professor wiucox argue that It must have fallen, since j..ih, w e-sree In nronoftion to population In every otter country in the world, ror wmcn, coru during that time. - Unhappily there are no accurate statistics to confirm or contradict the conclusions of either side In this In ...otinv Hehste Professor WUlcox derive some figures from the various census reports of the early decades of. tho . lut eenturr.- but evidently they are of no-great service to him, while as for statistics or Dirtns ana aeauia they simply do not exist. Our evi d.nr. nnon'the subject of the contro versy Is almost purely Inferential. The subject la or practical as ncu o theneetv-aJ ImDortance. for If our birth rate realty began to decline a eaxly a 181 we cannot attribute the calamity to recent cause. It is Idle for us to say that It come from the high cost of living, the protective tar iff or anything 01 tne son. n mui have been due to something In the natural conditions of the climate or the soil It Is well known that, al the Indians had dwelt In thl ..Mre rnr nur generations, they did not Increase In numbers. No doubt th land was aa tnimy populat ed when the Pilgrims landed a It was a thousand years earlier. Why did not the natives multiply? War reaped Its harvest, of course, but not Mn Mftn it did among the popula tion of Europe from the fall of Rome to th eighteenth century, ana yet during that whole Interval the num belncs living In Europe steadily Increased, while the number of th Indian never Increased so far as anybody can learn. It may even have diminished from the date of their primitive migration to this country. It could not have -been war which kept th Indians from multiplying. No more could It have been dktease. In their original condition they do not seem to have suffered much from deadly maladies. They caught sev eral from the Huropesns. but that Is a different matter altogether. It seems tenable to argue, therefor, that the clhnatlc conditions of the North' American continent are not favorable to the multiplication of human be ings. Thl inference la reinforced by the fact that even th most fecund of our foreign Immigrant tend to be come sterile within a few years of their landing.' The solitary exception of the French Canadians would not of itself Invalidate this general con clusion. It Is therefore a matter of great Interest to prove. If possible, that our National birth rate did not begin to decline until the pressure of popula tion supplied an obvious reason for it. This would relieve us of the disagree able thought that our continent may not be adapted for the permanent sur vival of mankind. As a matter of fact, there is hardly more than fanci ful ground for concluding that the birth rate began to decline early In the last century and still less for Imagining that this hypothetical de cline was counterbalanced by a fall ing death fate. The decrease of the death rate In the modern world is due almost entirely to scientific dis coveries which, as the Republican notices, are very recent. Almost all of .them depend upon the germ theory of disease which has made Its strik ing advance In the last twenty or thirty years. Before it was established that the most dangerous epidemics were caused by microscopic forms of life medical authorities worked blindly in their efforts to protect the public health. Very few of the measures by which human life I now protected and prolonged were thought of be fore 1850 either In city or country. Condition remained about as they were at the beginning of the century while the density of the population had Increased. Bence If there had been any change in the death rate it probably rose instead of fell. The conclusion i follows at once that the birth rate could not have declined. All this omits any reference to the influence of Immigration, but that factor did not become of pronounced Importance until the latter half of the nineteenth century. THK FCBFCCT 8U8E. A timely article In conjunction with Portland's annual Rose Festival, now but a week off. appears In the current number of Everybody' Magazine, un der the head. The Quest of the Per fect Rose." Daintily Illustrated" and written by an enthusiast In rose cul ture, this article Is a seasonable embel lishment of the pages which It covers as well aa a timely presentment of the queen of flowers, so soon to hold sway over Portland streets. The "perfect rose." exclaims one of our local devotees at the shrine of the queen of this coming carnival. "We already have It. Look at Caroline Teatout!" "Nay, exclaims another, "look at Viscountess Folkstone," and yet an other and another claims perfection for La France, and Rlclimond; for Lady Battersea and Duchess De Bra bant: for Marie Von Houtt and Cath erine Mermet; for Maman Cochet and Madame Alfred Carrtere. And so on and on through a list of floral queens arrayed In shell or silver pink; In gorgeous crimson. In tints of sun set and gold, or In purest white, each and all of whom will hold court In the hearts of clrixen of Portland during the week beginning June 6. To be sure, we need a few day of sunshine; warm and bright, to bring our roses to perfection, but we need no new types of roses; no new variety or "sport" of any type in order to be able to show perfect roses by the thousands and ten of thousands In early June days. We are told that the "blue rose" Is the dream of rosebreeders and hybrid ists. Here the question, "Why should anybody want a "blue rose'?" Is per tinent. "Of course." comes the an ir, "there la nothing beautiful about a blue rose. The effort to produce it Is simply one of those strivings for the arways desired for the Impossible." With this explanation m can afford to drop the "quest of the perfect rose." feeling sure that It Is pursued, not be cause we have not already perfect roses In abundance, perfect in form, fragrance, tints, habits of growth, vivid coloring and profusion of bloom, but because of the unappeasable de sire to produce something new or quaint or striking, that will serve to show man's power in the domain of Nature. WORl J8 OKKATIMT COBOXATION. "The boast, of heraldry, the pomp of power." have been very much In evidence whenever Great Britain or any other monarchy crowned a new ruler. The coronation ceremonies In all times and among all peoples have been Impressive. Interesting and ex pensive. The affair now under re hearsal In London, will be more Im pressive, more Interesting and more expensive than any that the world ever saw. This Is made possible only because th world Is richer and the genius of man has provided facilities for spending money that were never dreamed of when William the Con queror. Richard I. or any of the long departed rulers of England were crowned. There Is nothing In the an nals of the old days that reveals any lack of desire for the spectacular or for the pomp and glory that are pre dominant features of twentieth cen tury coronations. In their respective day and age these old-time coronations were perhaps in degree the equal of that for which the world Is now wait ing. In view of the fact that London has to such a large extent commercialised the greatest of all attractions which she has ever been able to offer the tourist It Is not at all surprising to note that even the church Is making some concessions. Despite the pro tests of Lord Halifax and other high church dignitaries the nonconformists will be permitted to participate In the minor features of the gu-at event. The average EnVlishman dearly loves a lord" and Is always In readiness to grovel at the feet of royalty-. Precedent and tradition coming down through centuries In which murderers and reDrobates graced and disgraced the throne on which King George is about to be crowned have not taken the keen edge from the British desire to pay homage to royalty. But the Engusnman aiso nas a strong religious vein. From the days of the 'Roman Invasion he has fought for his religion with the same ardor displayed In fighting for his king. the two objects not Infrequently ad mitting of concurrent fighting. Hence it is that the crowning of a king In all ages has been regarded as a most sacred religious rite In which the church appears as a witness or agent to a solemn contract entered Into be tween the people and their ruler. In the days soon after the Romans had departed from England the opportu nities for elaborating this religious ceremony were not always of the best. The English at times changed mon arch so often and in such haste that the coronation exercises may be said to have taken place "on the run." Even when William the Conqueror was having the crown fitted to his head in Westminster Abbey In 1066 his Nor man .guards outside the Abbey mistook the hearty responses made in the Eng lish tongue for a signal for trouble and began burning the town, thus at tracting so much attention that Will iam and the priests were obliged has tily to finish the coronation exercises alone. The'rellglous ceremonies at the cor onation of Richard the Lion-Heart ed were also disarranged by a massacre or the Jews, which began almost sim ultaneously with the appearance at Westminster of the new King. But there will be no massacres and no dis cordant notes at the coming corona tion that is now drawing spectators from every country on the globe. The coronation proper will cost Great Britain 125.000.000. and this Is only a small portion of the grand total that will be spent by the people. According to Athenaeus, the coro nation of Ptolemy Phlladelphus in 285 B. C from the standpoint of cost, would have given that of King George a close race, but the world in Ptol emy's time was a small affair com pared with that which is to pay hom age to King George. Pomp and power In an ax tra ordinary degree were also In evidence at the coronation of Charlemagne at Rome In 800, and nothing more romantic is recorded in history than the crowning of Charles VII at Rheims, the culmination of that wonderful movement that cost the im mortal Joan of Arc her life. Napo leon, wielding a power greater than attained by any other man and always fond of the spectacular, violated all precedent 4y summoning the supreme head of the Catholic Church to crown him at Paris instead of at Rheims, the ecclesiastical home of the nation. But for all this, the military and theatrical features of his coronation far outshone those of the church. - George V may lack the blood and Iron qualities of some of the central figures In the gorgeons coronation spectacle of past ages, but no mon arch who In earlier years followed the path of glory to the grave was ever called on to assume the mighty re sponsibility symbolized by the crown w hich will be placed on his head next month. The far-flung possessions of the British Empire embrace nearly 12.000.000 square miles, and nearly 400.000.000 subjects will hail him as King. Sub-rulers of these subjects are already pouring Into London from all parts of the world, and the crowd is being increased by thousands of Americans, who are attracted by the prospect of the greatest, spectacle of Its kind that the world has ever seen. Added Interest is caused from the possibility of this being the climax of England's greatness. iCertaln It is that the limit of her territorial ex pansion has been reached. With the mutterlngs of her starring millions at home, rebellious millions In India and other outlying colonies, and with her people staggering beneath the weight of army, navy and royal family bur dens, a change, economic and political, may not be far in the future. Histor ians of the future may. have occasion to write that the British Empire reached the xenith of its greatness with the crowning of George V. MATERIALISM. Mr. Roosevelt's opinion that this country stands in great danger frord the spread of materialism and pagan Ism merits serious attention. The warning was delivered to a congrega tion of ministers, members of the fed eration of churches, who had assem bled In New York and must therefore be received as one of the Colonel's profoundly meditated utterances and not a mere fugitive breeze of senti ment. It Is to be regretted that he did not define paganism as he did mate rialism. Had he done so the weight of his prophecy might have been bet ter appreciated. As the subject now stands we know we are threatened with one peril, materialism, which has been clearly described for us and another, paganism, which we are Heft to make out for ourselves as best we can. We venture the modest guess that by "paganism" Mr. Roosevelt meant to signify that form of faith which is sometimes called "natural religion." It was the theory of divinity and life which was accepted in the ancient world up to the time when Christian ity triumphed. Just how widely it appeals to the populace In our day saems rather a difficult question to answer. Mr. Roosevelt declares that it is undermining orthodoxy every where and he has traveled so widely and observed so much that he ought to know. But It does not follow that pagan ism, even if It has been adopted by large numbers of people, is a real dan ger to the country. Its ultimate ef fect may be to waken the ministers of Christianity to more fervent zeal and thus bring about the restoration of those happy conditions which ex isted when every man was a church member and orthodox. This, however. Is nothing better than speculation. We are more concerned with what Mr. Roosevelt had to say about material ism. Of this evil he offered a clear and brief definition. He said it meant "concrete forms of wealth and power," which reads a little oddly seeing that power Is always Immaterial and wealth often so. It did not escape Blackstone's no tice that many forms of wealth are pure abstractions. The property right represented by a bank note or a share ol stock partakes very slightly of the material. It resembles much more closely those "generalized Ideas" which Plato followed Into the empy rean. Most great' modern fortunes have passed Into this etherealized state. They are not composed of goldiand sil ver, nor of land or any other tangible substance. What they really are is a mere right, sustained by the law, to lay hold of a certain proportion of the products oflndustry from day to day. When too much of this right or power is accumulated in the hands of one man we agree with Mr. Roosevelt that It becomes a menace but we can not concede that "materialism" Is the name by which menace ought to be designated. On the contrary It Is a subtle ' form of Idealism. Wealth in its modern and dangerous shape is not a thing but an idea Just as the pagan gods were. Whether it is real or not makes no difference so far as its power over the minds of men Is con cerned. There was a time when the Egyptian Isis exercised tremendous authority over human beings. She did not exist but her ministers did and that was sufficient to obtain the ef fect. Since, then, we must class wealth among' Immaterial things, mere ab stractions, we cannot concede that the craving for It ought to be called "ma terialism." The pursuit of wealth is the quest of an Ideal in more than one sense. By far the greater number of those who seek it do not thirst much for the wine it will buy nor do they long especially for automobiles and fine linen In themselves. These things are valued merely as symbols. Like a bishop's crozler they stand for spir itual authority. The persons who pos sess them are eminent in the modern hierarchy which conducts the ritual of Mammon. They value the station, the power that goes with it and the ador ation of their fellow men which fol lows upon the splendid show of virtual omnipotence. No doubt a hungry car penter gets more enjoyment out of his badly cooked beefsteak than the dys peptic millionaire does from his cham pagne and exquisite French dishes, so far as mere eating goes, but he does not get the awe-stricken worship from the humble which irradiates the mil lionaire's meal and makes it like a religious function where he enjoys the dignity of the god. A heathen god, to be sure, but that does not mar the feast. It Is Just as satisfactory to be a heathen god as any other so long as you are believed in. We are afraid Mr. Roosevelt will find himself compelled to revise his I definition of materialism. Perhaps all of us will. Matter grows a little vague and elusive in the light of modern science. It becomes harder every day to tell precisely how It differs from mind. President McCosh used to be gin his lectures on metaphysics with the oracular sentences. "What Is mat ter? Never mind. What Is mind? No matter." His puna have lost some thing of their pungency to the twen tieth century student who Inclines to believe that If mind is no matter still matter is mind. The two entities seem to differ most radically in the way they are measured. Mind cannot be weighed or counted. Neither can thought or memory or purpose. But there are things which can be esti mated in terms of quantity and in no other way. These are material things. Ideal entities can only be estimated in teems of quality. They answer the question "What kind?" while of mat ter we can only ask, "How much?" This enables us to define a material ist pretty satisfactorily. He Is a man who tries to state everything In num bers, in quantity, ignoring quality al together. The person who declares that "all Is matter" may be an Ideal ist without knowing It, but he who thinks of the universe In tons and mil lions of dollars alone is a materialist. Whether he calls himself a Christian or a pagan makes no difference. WOMAN IN A NEW ROLE. The announcement of the appoint ment of Miss Mabel Albright as Dep uty Prosecuting Attorney of Douglas County is surprising chiefly because the appointee is not an elector of the county or state and therefore Is sup posed to be without political pull or recognition in the graver affairs of the commonwealth. The fitness of the appointment is, however, recog nized in the assignment of the young woman to the prosecution of Juvenile offenders. The harsher Judgment of men arways excepting Judge Ben Lindsey, Ihe originator of the Juvenile court in American cities is of ten. ill suited to the case of the Juvenile of fender, while the intuitive instinct of woman specially qualifies her to deal with offenders of this class. At least this Is the ground taken by many criminologists, who insist that not only should Justice be tempered with mercy in the casa of the child who has gone wrong, whether from crimi nal instinct or from lack of experi ence and proper direction, but that mercy should, and In a vast majorlty of such cases might with ultimate benefit to the individual and the state, set Justice aside, or at least hold It in check. From his large experience in deal ing with Juvenile offenders Judge Lindsey designates children as "neither moral nor immoral, but simply un moral," and holds that they should be restrained and directed, rather than punished. This view is shared by most women who have given thought to the subject. And while the entrance of duly qualified women Into the de partment of law that deals with youthful offenders Is an Innovation in our Jurisprudence it can hardly be de cried as Inapt or unwomanly, since surely anything that she can do toward the uplift of the child Is strict ly within "woman's sphere." Miss Albright, of Douglas County, is the only woman holding the office of Deputy Prosecuting Attorney in this state. It may be hoped that she will discharge the duties ond obligations of her important office wisely, realiz ing that she cannot afford to . make mistakes in her new and highly re sponsible position. It is tolerably cer tain, indeed, that any faults or flaws In the pursuit of her official duties will be those that lean to virtue's side. A WOEFCI. TTPJ3. The Oregonlan has received an ap peal which ought to touch the-hardest heart. A young woman, a pupil in the eighth grade of the public school in an Oregon town, terrified toy the ap proaching peril of the June examina tions, writes for Information on two subjects. It occurs to us that In some occult way she has made up her mind that these matters will -be referred to In the examination questions, and, with true feminine shrewdness, she wishes to take time by the forelock. She would set her intellectual house in order to prepare for the day of doom. Her letter Is printed In another col umn of today's paper and we shall speak of its contents by and by, but first we wish to give utterance to an irrepressible astonishment that the ex aminations in the public schools should be so much of a horror to the pupils. What can the reason Tt to .ertalnlv not because the questions are difficult. Those which we have seen ougnt to oe auswereu. i -- v.. oni- Intuftlcont nprsnn. easu vj 0 . . w"hether he. ever went to school or not. They touch upon subjects or ordinary Interest, concerning which persons who read the newspapers and share in the usual routine of life can hardly escape being Informed. And yet the ...minitiniu friehten the pupils Into nervous prostration and more than half of them tail to answer ine idea tions correctly. . Many, of the "failures" are, of course, to be attributed directly to this .oininv MrhL , Nobodv can use his mind to advantage' when he Is badly scared. Other tauures resun from diversity of instruction. The hM not rhA same meaning in different textbooks. Definitions are given In varyins" language ana oiten in irreconcilable substance, and so on. But the latter cause ought not to count for much In Oregon, since here we have the same textbooks in all the schools. Children lately arrived from other states might experience some difficulty from it, but not those who have attended Oregon schools all tbeir lives. There may be many causes for the AroaA iwlth which most school children see examination day ap proaching, but we are convincea tnai one of them Is far more Important than any of the others. This is the deep consciousness of Ignorance. A child receiving instruction in school Is like a traveler conveyed by an angel from one mountain peak to another in a country by night and kept blind n)A.A oil diiv He is Dermitted to ex amine the surface of the peak at his feet by the light 01 a taiiow canaie, he eaze upon the wide expanse, of the intervening landscape, nor does he learn tne roaas irom ono mountain to another. Naturally, the ,r-A if surface at the summit of one mountain looks very much like the similar area on anotner. wnen ih. on col l at last ready to bestow his parting blessing the traveler finds it difficult to discriminate oexween peaks. If he Is asked to describe and name them, be is only too likely to fall Into confusion. Memory alone can come to his rescue, and unfortunately j memory has little to cling to. The school child feels instinctively that his mind is filled with a sort of intellectual rubbish, unrelated frag ments of knowledge which resemble real education no more than a pile of bricks resembles a house. On exam ination day he is imperatively ordered to search through this rubbish heap and draw forth treasure after treasure at a moment's notice. The command would be inhuman If he had weeks' notice 6t every question, for a needle in a haystack is proverbially hard to find. No wonder the poor child. In his wild panic, fits any answer that comes first to hand to any question whatever. The only surprising thing about it is that he ever gives a correct answer. The fact that this occasion ally happens goes far to convince us that the day of miracles has not yet passed. The paths which lead from fact to fact are far more important than the facts themselves. The level country between the mountains is of infinitely more consequence than the snowcapped peaks. On the other hand, the peaks can be numbered and classified, while it Is difficult to the last degree to tabu late for recitation purposes the teem ing cities and flowery fields that lie between them. The latter stand for life, with its myriad intricacies. The former for the school, with its arid caricature of life. We said a moment ago that the child's . terror of exam ination day arises from his -deep sense of ignorance. The contents of his mind have no handles by which he can seize them, they have "no living features by which he can recognize them, and he knows it. Hence he is appalled by the command to catch and exhibit them In orderly array. Chil dren are not frightened by an exam ination in what they truly know. On the contrary, it delights them to show off their knowledge. It will not do to offer the excuse that the schools have so much to teach that they can teach nothing well. As a matter of fact, the entire contents of any ordinary series of textbooks do not amount to a great deal, and nobody thinks of trying" to teach them all. What is the remedy? It seems to us that it can be formulated very sim ply. Stop teaching for culture, which inevitably degenerates into bald tricks of memory, and teach for faculty, or the power to do things. Examinations in manual dexterity do not frighten pupils. They can do the work and they know they can do It. What a contrast they present with the panic stricken child vainly rambling through the barren desert of his mind In pur suit of fugitive facts. The girl whose letter furnished us with a text asks for the causes of the troubles in Mexico,' whether the treaty of peace has been signed, and so forth. In reply we wish to ask another ques tion: What is the reason that this pupil has not been taught to read the newspapers and thus keep herself In formed upon facts of current interest? She also inquires what per cent 10 is of . What human being outside of an asylum for the insane ever really wanted to know that 10 is 2000 per cent of something or other? This poor girl is a type, and a woeful one. Fancy the howl of indignation that will go up from the crowd waiting on every street corner when one car after another, to the full capacity of the street railway company's rolling stock, whizzes by because there are no more empty seats! Is it not clear that this attempt to make a street-railway com pany do an impracticable thing will prove a boomerang to the crowd of workingmen and women of the sub urbs who are anxious to get home for dinner and rest after their day's la bor? It goes without saying that every honest son and daughter of toil is entitled to all that he or she can get in the way of convenient, rapid and comfortable transit to and from work; to a seat if one can be had to a strap, if there-Is no seat, to standing room on the platform if that is all that is available. They are Justified In demanding all that the transit com pany can, in reason, be required to give. When they go beyond this it will simply be up to them to get back and forth between their suburban homes and their work the best way they can. There is such a thing as converting a siege into a blockade. That weird, uncatalogued and un accountable equine ailment known as the "walking disease," is so prevalent in Walla Walla as to cause the great est anxiety among horsemen. A horse afflicted with this disease Is a piti able and gruesome sight and danger ous withal, as he plunges about re gardless of owner or caretaker like the mad creature that he is. Since neither cause nor cure for the disease is known, the merciful farmer shoots his horse when the first symptoms appear, v. v. tn nrrod infection and end , the sufferings of the animal. It is not con ceivable that a disease at once so pro nounced and infectious will much longer evade the researches of science In the Interest of cause and cure. Two new transcontinental trains go into operation tomorrow to aid the two dozen that are carrying people each way between East and West. Nothing can better show the growth o'f the country, for the man is yet far from old who remembers when two trains a day carried all the people who could afford the trip Nos. 8 and 4 for first-class and Pullmans, and Nos. 6 and 6 for emigrants, all. on the TJDJon Pacific and Central Pacific. Possibly Mr. Rushlight may have forgotetn that Mr. Simon was among the active Torces that helped save Oregon for sound money In 1896. Or, has he not foTgotten? Hence, the ac tive hostility of forces that were against Simon and for free silver then are against Simon and for a free North End now. , A great city the greatest in all the land is appalled at the prospect of being left without something to laugh at during the coming Summer. "Dreamland," the great pleasure point of 'gay Coney Island has been de stroyed by fire. The difference between Capitalist Ryan and Job Is a simple matter of arithmetic. Ryan had a boil on a leg and Job had barely room for one more. . The Joke In the "no-seat, no-ride" law will be on the man In a hurry to get to work. An employer with the welfare of the city at heart will grant at least a half-holiday ejection day. Ross to Morris: Cooper.'' "After you. Scraps and Jingles Lnm I'm mm Bar. What I want to know is where do women carry their powder rags and money when they wear harem skirts. One of the really satisfying signs of the times is the spread of technical education. I note that an anarchist's association has Just been discovered in Chicago, a feature of which is the course of instruction for members in the use of chemicals for the manufac ture of explosives. Woman novel reader writes to this department as follows, "I am reading Lena Lee, or the Lure of a Handsome Travelling Salesman,' and In one line occurs the sentence. 'Lura bit her lips till the blood came again.' Can you tell me to what story this is a sequel, as this is the first and only biting ref erence in this book?" A tramp hauled Into the local police station was, upon Investigation, found to be wearing a horse blanket about his shoillliArs. threo contn fnup nnlr of trousers, two Bhlrts, five vests and six pairs of hose. It really seems sad and. strange that this man should not have realized that he could market this ability In vaudeville. Wife says, "Why do you sit on th piano stool Ichabod, you know you can't play a note?" And Ichabod says. "Neither can any one else while I'm here." It is thought unlikely that all th public officials will be installed rn the new City Hall before next year. The difficulty of getting- public officials to move is notorious. o - A mere man writes to complain that the fearful and wonderful edifices of hair now worn in theaters are as, great a nuisance as that other evil huge hats. It is difficult to know how to remedy the evil. I doubt, even if women were permitted to leave thetr curls and puffs and coronet braids with the matron during the performance, even If It were perfectly free of charge, whether many of them would avail themselves of the privilege. Tou called. But no reply I made To your gently breathed command, . Tour eyes gleamed at me unafraid, Tou held toward me your hand. 'Twas not that I played false with, you. Or that I wished to stall, I didn't hold a single trump. So I couldn't heed your call. . As a companion volume to that new book, "The Complete Motorist," I sug gest that some one get busy and write about "The Complete Pedestrian." And do It at once or it will soon be diffi cult to locate an entire specimen. o Statistics show that in France 6000 wives are deserted annually. Which only goes to prove what, we have al ways been told that Frenchmen are the most considerate and thoughtful of husbands. o Miss Calamity Step-and-Fetch-it, the cultured and charming, et(j. lady-poet of Kalama, is writing a soulful epic called "The Castlron Pirate," a sequel to that other pretty fancy, "The Apple Pie-rate." i : o o w'..-" ... ' Extract from an exchange reads, "Mr. Roosevelt showed' his knowledge of. history while admiring a table said to have belonged to. Catharine II of Rus sia by pointing out the extreme im probability of the story that the -Peace of Tilset was signed upon it as late as 1907." Now that's what I call a sweetly subtle Incident. And It would never have appeared In print If It had n't been connected with T. R. o testimonial clipped from a Jeweller's ad In a country paper, "I am quite sat isfied with the wedding ring I Jur chased of you and will in future deal always with you firm." According to a recent scientific dis covery an egg doesn't turn really bad until it is at least seven years old. We are naturally, then, led to Infer that most of them like people are born full of original sin. o o That figure of speech "launched on the sea of matrimonial bliss." doesn't convey much to those who get seasick easily. o o Man claims to have Invented a device by which "Summer flower may be grown in Winter or vice versa." For the vice versa pant anyway no device is needed in Oregon. It was a mean man, who, in response to the photographer's request to "look nl.aRnnt. lnOlf fLS If TOO WOrS abOUt tO be married," replied grouchlly, "I am." Half a Century Ago From The Oresonian, May 27. 1861. There were several severe hail squalls in this section of the country yesterday. We have not heard that fruit has been injured or grain cut down by them. A reconnoissance was made last week of the proposed route of a canal round the falls at Oregon City, and a calculation of its cost of construction. It was estimated that a canal might be constructed with suitable locks for 1175.000. An enthusiastic union meeting was held at Dalles on the night of Satur day, the 25th inst. The bogus confederacy has declared war against the United States. Where Elevator Boys - Are Otrls. St Louis Times. Milwaukee boasts of something new girl elevator operators, duly licensed by the municipal Inspector and certi fied to be competent not only to run lifts, but to make ordinary repairs on them. There are two of them, and they have solved a problem for the Toung Women's Christian Association manag ers, who stacked up against a com bination of a building with elevators and a rule against men employes. As "the head of man" was not allowed to "set foot" in the Toung Women's Christian Association, the officials had the two young women take a course In elevator running- and repairing, and , now everything is lovely. School Girl' (tnerle. TURNER. Or., May 24. (To the Edi tor ) I am going to take the eighth I . I n Tun. T vniiM 11k Ifraue Art.ui i ij ...'. ... - for you to answer the following ques tions: What are the chief causes of the war in Mexico? Describe the war. Has the treaty of peace yei Deen ngneai What per cent of 4 is I'7 SCHOOL-GIRL, ,