THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 31, 1912. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflea a, Secocd-Clasa Matter. EuDacrlbtton Rates Invariably Advance. BT MAILO Dally. Sunday Included, on year r?S pillr, Sunday Included, eix montha e paliy. 6unflay included, three montha... j tally. Sunday Included, one month Eaily. without Sunday, one year J-"? Da:,y. without Sunday, eix montha..... Daily, without Sunday, three montha... Dally, without Sunday, one month Tl Weekly, one year i ? J Sunday, one year ? Eunday and Weekly, one year BT CARBIER- Dally. Sunday Included, one year.. Pally. Sunday Included, ono month . Hoot to Kemit Send Poatofflce money or er. express order or peraonal check on TOM looa: bank. biainsa. coin or currency are at the sender's ma. Give postotfice address in full, including county and state. 'Postage Kateo 10 to 14 pages. I nt. 10 to is es. I centa; So to 4u pagee. eenle. 0 to ou pace. centa. Foreign postage, double rate. r..v. . ka.leru ttnainen Offlet Verre ConK ltn New Tork. Brunswick buUding. earo. sterer building. - - 8aa Francisco OfIce R. X Bldwell Co tJ2 Market street. . . European office No. 3 Regent atreet. -W.. London. fORTUXD, RIXDAT, JCLY. 1. . A STORY OF A LAWYER. Once upon a time, many, many years ago,' there dwelt a lawyer Cormorant In the City of Utopia and the State of Atlantis. There are no lawyers like him now, but we fear there may be some in the future and therefore we are going to relate a few tales from his biography for the warn ing and admonition of the young. In those days there were a great many lawyers like Cormorant, but since his time the character of the profession has been exalted and if his i deeds should now be imitated by any mem ber of the bar he would be cast out in disgrace and sent to prison. It is to warn the young from a possible fate of this sort that we undertake the dis agreeable task of narrating some se lections from the voluminous record of Cormorant's misdeeds. Once he was employed by a man named Gam mon to collect a claim of $850 for him from a certain Mr. Roe. Cormorant collected the claim without much dif ficultv. but, instead of turning the 1850 over to his client, he followed the good, old rule of keeping whatever you get and pocketed It. This was all the more astute on Cormorant's part, because he had already been paid his full fee for the service. Before Gam mon got his money he had to hire an other lawyer to sue Cormorant, which made business lively in the -profession, though it was hard on the poor client. Still, since the public then existed for the benefit of the lawyers, it was com monly agreed that Cormorant's con duct had been for the general wel fare. ' On another occasion Cormorant was ' employed by a man called Simpleton to defend him in court. At the trial Simpleton was set free for want of any evidence against him. but he had put up J500 bail, and this, by some process which the reader may think out for himself, fell into Cormorant's hands. Did he pay it over to poor Simpleton? Not he. He kept it, Just as he did Gammon's claim, and again it was necessary for his client to hire another lawyer before he could fret his dues. This little piece of sharp practice on Cormorant's part was much admired by his fellow law yers in those benighted days. Xow they would all be horrified if such a ttilng were to happen. ' But the climax of Cormorant's sable-hued career came in his deal ings with Jennie Sago. Jennie was a mature woman who had worked all her life and managed to lay up a lit tle money, about 1813. Cormorant, smelling out this fact by a marvelous instinct which was common in those days among lawyers, inveigled Jennie to w-ork for him as a maid servant. In this capacity he won her confidence ind got the JS13 into his hands. Part of it he lent on a mortgage. The rest lie kept. When Jennie asked him for the note and mortgage he refused to pfive them up to her. He collected the Interest on the loan and assimilat ed that also. Jennie finally left his service and found another place. Her new employer, taking pity on the woman for her evil fortune, tried to wrest some of her money from Cor morant's possession. The lawyer at first pretended that he never had heard of such a woman as Jennie Spro. When that pose became impos sfble he cooked up a story that she owed him lawyer's fees enough to eat tip all her money. Meanwhile the for lorn woman began to have fits of de spondency. The money which Cor morant had swindled her out of repre sented the savings of her life and she declared that if she must lose it she wanted to die. A short time afterward she committed suicide. Did Cormor r.ht care? No. indeed. It was all in the way of his business. Everything he had done was quite professional in those days. So regular and strictly professional was it all that when a vacancy oc curred in the municipal Judgeship of Utopia, the Mayor, a most learned and pious man, appointed Cormorant to fill the position. The Mayor knew all -about Cormorant when he gave him the appointment, so It stands to reason that he approved of his con duct. As a Judge. Cormorant pursued the same oourse of conduct which had won him so much credit when he was practicing at the bar. For example, a certain lewd woman was Jailed one day and about to be tried In Cormor ant's court. A day or two before the trial the Judge visited her in her dun geon and ordered her to employ one Goldsmith, a dear friend of Cormor ant's, to defend her. If she employed Goldsmith she would be acquitted. Cormorant told her. If she did not, she would be convicted. That was the way Justice was dispensed in those days in the Municipal Court of Utopia. The lewd woman was ordered to pay Goldsmith for his services $150, which was to be divided into three parts, one going to Cormorant, the Judge; one to Goldsmith, and the third who was to f;et the third nobody knows. Let us all be thankful that In these happy times there are no lawyers like Cormorant, and that, if there were, none of them could ever hope to be appointed a Judge. Such is the purity of the legal profession now that no member of it would dare to appropri ate money belonging to his clients or cjteat his maid servant out of her property. If he did such deeds he would not only be punished by legal process and expelled from the bar. but not a lawyer in all the land 'would be seen speaking to him for fear of shar ing his disgrace. Municipal Judges do not abuse their power in our blessed times to wring money from prostitutes nor do Mayors select swindlers and blacklegs for positions on the bench. The events which we have narrated happened Ion and long r.go, when our civilization was primitive and the Ideals of the bench and bar were very" low. Cormorant is dead and gore to his account, and the Mayor who iiffye him a Judge has had to answer for It before a tribunal which Is not subject to political influence. Still, the cir cumstances seem to convey a lesson even for our own day, though wo are not quite certain what It can be. If such things were to arise now, the State Bar Association, through Its grievance committee, would pursue the infamous Cormorant by day and by night until he was expelled from the ranks and landed In prison, and the imputation that might rest on- the legal profession through Its tolerance of criminal practices by any lawyer would be removed. MICHIGAN AND CAI.IFORNIA. If we have been inclined heretofore to find fault with the third party for constituting Itself an Itinerant body, so that it might move on,' or move back to the Republican party, as occasion suited, we are to an extent reassured by the latest Oyster Bay ultimatum via the state of Michigan. The still faithful Dixon has been in Michigan with full authority from the Colonel to say what's what. This time the sovereign command is that the way to organize a new party is to have a new party. The National Pro gressives of Michigan are therefore di rected to place In the field "a full ticket, embracing Presidential elec tors, and state, congressional and leg islative candidates." Do the ' National Progressives of Oregon get that? Apparently Fred Mulkey is the only real live progres sive who has been willing to wet his feet by crossing the Rubicon, for he is safely on the other side, in the pro gressive camp, though all alone, all alone. All the rest have stayed and raised the rebel flag over the camp, armament, muniments, and impedi menta of the Old Guard. But some day they will have to cross over, too, and the guerilla warfare will be over and an open and honorable conflict will be on. Colonel Roosevelt ought to send Mr. Dixon out to California to give the bushwhacker Johnson some notion of real warfare. The Johnson purpose is to confiscate the whole party ma chinery, usurp the party function, anil destroy the Taft minority In the state by outlaw methods. It is proposed that the coming Fall the state Re publican convention, being in the Johnson control, shall nominate Presi. dentlal electors pledged to Roosevelt, and that tha complicated machinery of the election laws shall be employed to deprive Mr. Taft of any candidates for elector. The voter who wants to vote. for a Republican elector, or for Taft, has only, the alternative of Roosevelt, Wilson, Socialist or Prohi bitionist. Thus a hundred thousand and more sovereign" voters are to be disfranchised through trickery and dishonorable manipulation of the steam roller by the impeccable Call fornlans who made so uproarious a protest at Chicago about the tactics of the remorseless majority. Thou shalt not steal. The Bible says "thou," It will be noticed. The discovery that it says "thou" and not ''i" or "we," was evidently made in California. STAYING ON THE BENCH FOR LIFE. Senator Cummins the other day called attention to the fact that Fed eral Judges are appointed to hold of fice "during good behavior" and not for life, as most people and all Judges assume. But there is no method pro vided In the Constitution by which a judge may be dismissed from office except under impeachment for "trea son, bribery and other high crimes and miso'emeanors." Drunkenness Is hardly a high crime, except in a social sense; and engaging in a private transaction to buy a culm bank at a low figure from a corporation that may happen to be a frequent litigant Is not treason; but clearly It is not good behavior. The clumsy and solemn process of impeachment presents such formid able obstacles to the enforced retire ment of any Federal judge that it has been seldom followed. The constitu tional lawyer has not yet arisen to say that the President has the arbitrary power to strip of his ermine any err ing Judge who is guilty of bad be havior; yet it would seem that the authority which appoints ought also to have the right to discharge under the "good behavior" rule. Our Federal Judges as a class are men of conscience, courage, intelli gence and Industry. The history of the Federal judiciary reflects credit upon Its incumbents and honor upon the country. But occasionally the bench Is dis honored by a judge who is either par tial or lazy or dissipated, or perhaps venal. It Is only occasionally; yet the misconduct of such a Judge does much to bring all judges in public disfavor, and is largely responsible for the clamor that has gone up throughout the country for reform of the judici ary. A summary method ought to be de vised for removal, or at least sus pension, of any Judge on the suffi cient ground of unfitness. In a state it should be lodged with the Gov ernor, or with the Supreme Court; In the Nation with the President A good judge ought to welcome scrutiny of his acts; a bad judge is made worse by knowledge that he is safe for life. The Judicial recall Is a bogey that has alarmed the country. It has ex isted In Oregon for years, and has never been invoked, or seriously threatened, but once. Yet every Judge in the state is, and has been, under the menace of a recall in his re-election and every Judge Is made aware, in one way or another, that the pub lic favor is his most important politi cal asset. The recall worries no Ore gon Judge; the popular method of election concerns them all. OLYMPIC GAMES AND TJB METRIC SYSTEM. From one point of view the most interesting feature of the Olympic games has been the use of the metric system. The race courses, the ham mer throws, the high Jumps and so on are measured in meters and cen timeters. When the young men from the various countries of the world re turn home their haunts will resound with talk In which the decimal scale will form an important part. Feet and inches are things of the past as far as international athletics are con cerned. Miles will no more be heard of. In place of them we shall speak of kilometers. Perhaps the Introduction of the scientific French system into athletics will facilitate its use in other depart ments of life and this generation may live to see the last of our awkward and dificult method of computing weights and measures. According to our table, twelve Inches make a foot, three feet a yard, five and a half yards a rod and 320 rods a mile. It is as irregular and meaningless as a table could possibly be. Contrast it with the French table, where ten mil limeters make a centimeter, ten centi meters a decimeter and ten decime ters a meter. This Is as simple as dollars and cents. The entire metric, system runs in tens. It has been extended to dis tances, land measures, estimating wood, weights and everything else for which exact computation is required. It imposes but little strain on. the memory and Is much easier to apply In practice than our cumbersome ta bles. Yet the metric weights and measures have never made much headway In the English-speaking countries. Our children are obliged to master the old. Irrational scales In school and this indisposes them to seek for anything better. We cling to the inconvenient by force of bad habit. The fresh Interest In the metric system which the Olympic games must awaken will no doubt help to break the spell of our Inertia. When boys have learned the facility and. economy of a scientific system of measure ments for their sports its application to business ought not to be long de layed. Old-fashioned pedagogues af fect to despise the metric system as thor 'iln ao-rtciiltiire and domestic economy, but, be it thankfully said, their day Is about over. OPPORTUNITY IXES WESTWARD, nn west, vouns- man." Nearly or quite half a century has passed since Horace Greeley utterea mis Base vice. Millions of young men have irnfit4 hv It The West has grown and blossomed and prospered. Today the same advice Is repeated Dy iivb great financiers of the East. The West still possesses boundless oppor tunities. They are here to be grasped by young men of energy and attain ments. nn .Tiiiw 1 tho New York World published a full page symposium of opinions it had received irom, men ui prominence In the fields of politics, hmlnrss and finance. These opinions were given in response to the query "What should the young college sia.u uate do?" Most specific of any as to loojitiner for life's endeavor Is the an swer given by Thomas W. Lawson, the Boston financier, "were i graauai ing today from college east, west or south," he says, "I would head for the great undeveloped Northwest. I would buy my ticket ror -oruana, Oregon." A. B. Hepburn, chairman of the board of directors 'of the Chase Na tional Bank of New York, mentions Oregon, with Washington, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia. "I should say," he continues, "that for a young man Just leaving college the most nrnmkini fipM is the Northwest, and that in regard to "a calling or profes sion to follow he may just as wen follow his own Inclination, for provid ing Via la no-pr trt work he will find abundant opportunity In a hundred directions." "P self-reliant, keeo minute ac counts and go west of Chicago," In brief is the advice given by William Sherer. manager or tne rew mia Clearing House Association. Tt F Rush, nresldent of the Mis souri Pacific Railroad, declares that the best chances for success lie west of the Mississippi River. From F. L. Wilk. banker and rail road man of Chicago, comes the opin ion that for a young man tnrown upon his own resources the West and Northwest offer the best opportuni ties. Of seven men quoted, only one, James G. Cannon, president of the Rrtnrtn National Rank. New York City, specifically advises the young man to remain in tne .tiast. oiay Hc-ht at hnm and be a farmer In New York State," he says in effect. Governor Thomas K. Marsnau oi Indiana urges young men to take up scientific farming. Indeed, this open ing is pointed out by nearly all the writers as one of the most- promising or the day. There is more than one significance In the suggestions. These men are successful in life, observant oi conditions, in touch with the indus trial, commercial and financial phases of every large locality. Doubtless their recommendations will promote settle ment of lands where it is most needed. Moreover, there is an Imrilied indorse ment therein of Western development enterprises. These financiers have cnnlrun thiir rnnfidpnM in the North west. Their opinions ought to make easier tne ODtaining oi capital ior worthy, legitimate enterprises. rio Wost vonnp man" has been sound advice for 50 years. It will re main sound until a century or more has sustained the prophetic vision of the man who first gave it to the world. BOLTERS WHO DO NOT BOLT. At Dairy, Oregon, we are informed by a subscriber, there is much discus sion over two questions. They are these: Con a defeated party candidate for a nom ination In the April primaries re-enter the mi-, for flip same office aa an independent at the following- November election? Can a successful party nominee at me Aoril primary withdraw from the November election ? Doubtless the same questions have been propounded and are being dis cussed in many other communities. One. the second query, goes into a very material Issue in view of the suspected or announced attitude of some of the Presidential electors and the. openly declared stand of one Re publican candidate for Representative in Congress. We know of no provision in the law which prohibits a defeated aspirant for nomination in the party primaries from seeking office as an independent candidate in the subsequent general election. There is, however, a provi sion In the primary law. which deals with withdrawals In such a way as seemingly to preclude the retirement by any nominee who may become dis satisfied with party procedure or party platforms. The nominating election laws that existed prior to enactment of the direct primary law contained two sec tions relative to withdrawals.. They are now sections 3343 and 3344 of Lord's Oregon. Laws. Section 3343 originally permitted any person whi had been nominated and who had accepted such nomination to file a withdrawal in writing prior to the general election. Section 3344 pre scribed the method of filling vacan cies on the ticket caused by death or withdrawal. The direct primary law adopted in 1905 modified these provisions. Sec tion 19 of that law (Section 3367 L. O. L.) reads as follows: The provisions of sections 3343 and 3344 (withdrawals) shall apply to nominations or petitlona for nominations made under the provisions of this law, in case of the death of the candidate or his removal from the state or his county or electoral district before the date of the ensuing- election, bnt in no other case. In case of any such vacancy by death or removal from the state or from the county or electoral district, such vacancy may be filled by the committee which has been given power by the political party or th!a law to fill such vacancies substantially In tha manner provided by sections 3345 and 3346. The law as it has been amended by the Presidential primary act makes a peculiar situation in Oregon. Party choice of candidates is made before the National convention acts. Candidates for office on the Repub lican ticket thus named who cannot subscribe to the principles enunciated in the National platform .and those candidates - for Presidential Elector who will not support the party can didate for President are. not Repub licans. They are prospective mem bers of a new party, yet they will go before the people soliciting the votes of their political enemies and repu diating the implied pledge to which they subscribed when they sought the Republican nomination. Not one has yet indicated a desire to withdraw his name from the Republican ticket Each seems to glory in the anomaly and unmorality of his position. Doubt less it would make no difference if the law concerning withdrawals of candidates read otherwise. They are so enamoured of office that most, perhaps all, of them would take it no matter how they got it. With them "Thou shalt not steal" bears a literal construction. The highly moral motto applies to "thou," not "us." As a result of the situation brought about by the Chicago bolt there is cause for amendment of the Oregon direct primary law. To alter the sec tion quoted in full herein would not reach the issue. Voluntary- withdraw als by men in whom party confidence has been misplaced are not to be ex pected even when permitted by stat ute. We might extend the recall to party candidates, but there is a sim pler and cheaper method. Candidates should not be named until party issues are made up. THE CASE FOB GREEK. The debate upon the value of Greek as a college study still rages intermit tently among the learned. No com mon person cares enough about the language of Plato even to quarrel over it, but university professors find it useful as a subject for more or less animated discussion when other topics are worn out and conversation threat ens to languish over the wine or academic periodicals lack a page or two of respectable filling. When every other theme has been exhausted it is always possible to say something in favor of making boys and girls learn Greek which shall sound ortho dox and conservative. The fact that no student ever does learn it, even where it is taught longest and most laboriously makes no difference to these portly champions. They are so used to dealing with unrealities that they can easily imagine a whole world of people mad with enthusiasm over Aristophanes and Menander and they proceed to talk and write as if their airy phantom were substantial. There are still a few colleges in America where Greek Is compulsory for the degree of bachelor of arts. This re qtllrement usually goes with obliga tory attendance at morning chapel and a portentous reverence for secret societies. These three fetishes have about the same value. The student who at tends morning chapel because he does not dare to stay away can scarce ly be expected to be very ardent In his devotions. The secret society which makes the greatest parade of mystery Is the emptiest of the whole empty family. And the language which is studied only because it has long been the fashion to study it leads to noth ing but vanity. It is doubtful if there is a solitary college graduate in the United States who is able to sit down and read a page of Aristophanes, even with the aid of a dictionary. Some few remember a half dozen sentences of Plato for a year or two after they graduate. Then that fades too and for all the time and pains they spent over their "classical studies" they have nothing whatever to show except a vacancy in the head. To be sure they have the consolatory distinction of saying to one another that they have studied Greek, Just as fellow members of the awful society of the hip bone and cervical vertebra can discurs the fateful Initiation cere monies, but what of It? Who cares? If all the secret societies in all the colleges in the country were to col lapse today and be heard of no more forever it would not make an atom of difference to the progress of the world; and If no class in Greek were to be taught next year or in any sub sequent year things would go on pre cisely the same. Nobody would be any the worse except a few super fluous professors who would proba bly lose their chairs and nobody would be any the better. The students who now waste their time over Greek would probably waste It over some thing still more senseless. So we might as well let the Greek classes proceed. The study of that lovely tongue is an elegant and innocent way of dawdling through the four college years. The fancy that they are learn ing something as they putter away idly at their dictionaries and Greek texts agreeably divert young men and maidens who have nothing better to do, while it provides an income for a number of irreproachable pro fessors most of whom have families to support. Students who really want to learn something useful and prepare them selves for an active part in the world's work do not go to colleges where Greek and other futile branches are required. The choice of institutions is wide enough to suit every demand. Those who want an old-fashioned orthodox "education" without any admixture of common sense can easi ly find colleges which will gratify their desire. Those who want to soil their hands with machinery and chemical experiments and study the organization of the social world can find colleges just as easily which will provide what they seek. The educa tional world is very agreeably organ ized. It has room for all sorts of dis positions and tries commendably hard to please all tastes. Those who want to be indolent can find plenty of highly respectable colleges to educate them for that vocation. Those who want to be useful need not go begging for instruction. If it were worth while to institute a comparison among the more or less vapid college studies no doubt Greek would win the palm for utter vanity. But it is not worth while. The arguments for contin uing this bootless branch of instruc tion are sufficiently strong to con vince those who make their bread by teaching it and what more can you ask? After all, the principal pur pose of a college is to provide a com fortable living for the professors. The foremost of these arguments is that the modern world owes an im mense debt to Greece. From that un deniable fact the conclusion is drawn that every college boy ought to study the Greek language. It is Just about as logical as it would be to conclude that because the human race owes an Immense debt to the horse therefore every man ought to eat oats. We can show a befitting gratitude to ancient Greece without' compelling our youthV to waste four of their best years pot tering over a language which they cannot learn and which would be useless to them if they could. Greek history .is related in English works a great deal more accurately than it is in Thucydldes and Xenophon. Grote has resolved problems of Hellenic life which Thucydldes never understood. The poetry of Homer and Sophocles has been translated over and over again so well that even a professor of Greek cannot miss its beauties. Plato can. be studied in Jowett's translation to better purpose than in the original. Why under the shining stars, then, should we force youths to waste their time pretending to learn the Greek language? Every body knows why. It is for mental discipline. Aimless doddering for four years over a subject which begins in nothing and leads nowhere is sup posed to have immeasurable disciplin ary value. Such is the degree of com mon sense which we find among some of our college professors. PRACTICABLE REFORMS. A rrtrrpRnnn dent whose letter to The Oregonian is printed today in another column, does us the honor to quote the following from a recent editorial article in this paper: "We do not admit that $600 a year is enough money to spend on a growing American family in a big city and we want conditions improved in some way, so that the man who needs J900 can obtain it honestly and without toiling unreasonably hard for it." Our correspondent then proceeds to ask If we "have no way to suggest?" plainly Implying that we have none, while he, speaking for the socialists, has any number. He does not tell us what they are. Hence we are not in a situation to pass judgment upon them, but we are not quite so desti tute of remedies on our own part as he seems to suppose. The Oregonian has been advocating for a long time several perfectly definite and practicable measures which would help relieve the work ing man of some of his burdens. They would not cure all the evils af society in an instant, but would appreciably improve conditions and make the next step forward easier to take. In our opinion the world must be cured of its troubles gradually. We believe in evolution and have but small faith in the revolution which our corre spondent predicts. If such an event were to occur the worklngman would lose much by It and gain nothing. To speak in detail and not in those "generalities" which our correspond ent rebukes we may mention that The Oregonian favors a parcels post. This wholly desirable measure would at once lower the cost of living to city dwellers and increase the farmers' in come. It. would eliminate a host of parasitic middlemen who at present perform no useful function and fatten at the expense of both producer and consumer; Besides that, the parcels post would aici powerfully to spread intelligence in the rural districts, would promote agriculture, encourage roadmaking and help build up churches and schools. There is no other single measure which would be gin to do so much for the improve ment of both urban and rural condi tions as the parcels post. While it might not directly operate to raise wages, It would make current incomes go so much farther that the effect would be the same as if it did. Again, The Oregonian has spoken in season and out of season for co operation among producers and con sumers. We feel positively assured that by the Judicious combination of purchasers the cost of living could be materially reduced to every family in the country. On the other hand, were producers to unite their interests they would receive more for their goods without raising the price to buyers. So we might go on rehearsing the ameliorative measures which The Oregonian has advocated for years, but no doubt .enough has been said to show how far from the facts our cor respondent has permitted himself to stray. If he and others who wish well to the world would unite in promoting practicable reforms, instead of clam oring for a foolish and impossible rev olution, we should all move much faster toward the perfect state. WOMEN AND HEATHEN RELIGION. Many persons concerned with the welfare of foreign missions are greatly exercised over the spread of some of the so-called .heathen religions in the United States. The situation seems to be much the same as it was with Car thage when the Romans sent an army to invade Africa while Hannibal's troops were in Italy. There is more than one flourishing Mohammedan mosque in the United States. At Green Acre, New Hampshire, there is a sort of Chautauqua, amply endowed by the late Miss Farmer, where the mysteries of the Vedantlc philosophy and Hindu mysticism are taught every Summer to rapt throngs of converts. All over the country there are classes in "Yoga" which set the Hindu scriptures above the Bible. Almost everywhere among a certain class of Intellectual people one meets with the notion that the sacred books of India contain a treasure of religious wisdom not to be found anywhere else. The ancient faith of Zoroaster is professed by sev eral congregations in Chicago and other cities. The great god Ahura Mazda has two temples in Illinois, with a third in course of construction at Montreal. Thus it is evident that while our foreign missionaries are diligent and often successful in their propaganda of Christianity, the heathen faiths have begun to retaliate by invading the home of Christianity. Perhaps the time will come when, as in the early centuries of our era, a struggle for existence will arise between the religion of Jesus and that of Zoroaster or Buddha. It was a form of Maglan ism which overran a great part of the Roman empire at about the time of St. Augustine and narrowly missed extin guishing Christianity. Augustine him self was a Maniachaean, as the devo tees of the sect were called, in his youth, but by the labors of St. Am brose he became a convert to the true faith. Which of the many heathen cults that are spreading in the United States Is likely to become predomi nant nobody is in a position to say. Very likely none.of them will become really dangerous except to individuals, but, on the other hand, it is impossi ble to assert positively that some old heathen belief may not take root and spread all over the land. The prog ress of a false religion is like that of a cancer occasionally. It lies dormant for a long time and is scarcely percep tible. Then all of a sudden, it begins to subdue everything in its way, dev astating the entire body. It would bo unwise to despise American Moham medanism or Mazda worship because up to the present their congregations are small and scattering. The devotees of tliese foreign faiths are of all ages and both sexes. A few scholarly men have been attracted to them. Of course children are to be found in all the congregations. But by far the larger number of the converts to Vedantlsm, theosophy, Zoroastrianism and the other outlandsh cults are women. The fair sex has taken to experimenting in strange religions today, just as it did in Rome at about the period of Au gustus, and, no doubt, for the same reason. In those daj-s an industrial rerolution had taken place in Rome which left the women with little or nothing to do at home. The old do mestic vocations had passed into the hands of slaves. In the early days of the republic the wife and mother spun, wove, sewed and cooked for her fam ily, but in the Augustan age she no longer did anything of the sort. Slaves had usurped all of her domes tic tasks. Left, with vast unoccupied stretches of time on their hands, the Roman women naturally sought for something to interest them, and noth ing offered except religion. So they brought in new faiths from every part of the world and there was a veritable orgy of strange worship. We have the privilege of witnessing a similar phenomenon in the United States in our own time. An. industrial revolution almost exactly parallel to that in ancient Rome has deprived women of their domestic occupations. The work has passed, not Into the hands of slaves, to be sure, but to ma chines, ad It comes to the same thing. Multitudes of intelligent and active women are left with nothing to do. Nature forces them to seek an outlet for their energies to stave off insanity and vice, and, for want of something better, a certain class turn to the hea then religions. Their choice is unfor tunate, but we should pity them for making it, not blame them. If they had been taught to appreciate their social duties and recognize the great tasks which the world demands of un occupied women, they never would have fallen into this sad error. But they were taught in childhood that the first duty of a-woman was to be fool ish and useless, and in choosing to worship Zoroaster and adore Buddha they are simply obeying the precepts they learned in their youth. In deed the same precepts are still taught to girls everywhere, and as long as they form the staple of female educa tion we may. expect all sorts of follies to flow from them in later years. The way to overcome the drift to heathenism is to teach women that they are responsible members of soci ety with social duties corresponding to those of men. As long as they are taught that it is unwomanly to b! sen sible and useful they will continue to be foolish and useless. If women had the right to vote and take an equal hand with men in public affairs, they would show as little disposition as men do to stray after heathen gods. An id'.e brain Is the devil's workshop. The Michigan progressives T. R.'s progressives have had the courage to declare for the Initiative, referendum and the recall. That sounds like busi ness. Probably the T. R. National platform will do the same thing. The Republicans forgot all about the ini tiative, referendum and recall, and the Democratic platform wholly ig nores the Oregon system. Whereat various little papers and little poli ticians in Oregon are in something of a sweat. But here comes the Roose velt platform with good strong stuff in it, and the only true friends of the Oregon system and enemies of all who are not friends of the Oregon system will sit up and take notice. Their home is with Roosevelt and there of course they will go. What else is there for the fellows who bellowed and roared for weeks because Taft never indorsed the Oregon system? The conversion of Hetty Green is a spiritual victory in which the Rev. Augustine Elmendorff may feel par donable pride. Only rarely do women, or men either, forsake their sins at the age of 78 years. Conversion takes place in childhood or not at all, as a rule. The scoffer might hint that Hetty has entered her second child hood and thus account for the event, but he would only be laughed at. There will never be any second child hood for that Indurated Wall-street Amazon. We doubt if there was ever a first. The statement that Professor Cus ter, of California, "was still alive but beyond resuscitation" involves a con tradiction. Resuscitation is always possible as long as there is a spark of life. Some claim that even the dead by drowning can be revived. Profes sor Custer had been in the water a long time when he was found, but the chances are that he need not have perished. It is one of the sad defects of education that the simple methods of saving life are so little understood. Typhoid fever has been uncommon ly fatal this season. As Fall ap proaches and the rains wash refuse into wells and streams, its victims will be more numerous still. The typhoid fly breeds rapidly as rubbish accumu lates toward September. This disgust ing insect spreads the disease far and wide. There is no more excuse for tolerating flies than bedbugs In houses. Both are engendered in filth. There is one point that the voters can't get around. That is, if this proposed taxa tion (single tax is so very bad that it will ruin the country and take the stars off the flag why the antls don't urge a trial of it in the tbree counties that its results may be an object lesson to this great country? That's a hard one to get by on, isn't It? Oregon City Courier. Great scheme! We never thought of it, before. Let's be a horrible ex ample. Let's try it on the dog and be the dog. Mr. Thompson appears to have pur sued his courtship of the fair Mrs. Goodeve mainly at Portland's most popular roadhouses and wayside inns. There is where the course of true love flourishes best for awhile. The Elks go, but their works sur vive them. For the bank clearances serve as a testimonial of the activity of the Elks in spending their money. Good money, too, and not tainted. Mr. Wilson has politely determined not to mention his opponents during the campaign; but the Mentioner in the Outlook office will have its usual megaphonic attachments. Steffens is worse than an Anarchist, he says, for he believes in Christian ity, and practices it. Colonel Wood will have to go some to beat it. If Senator Root tells what hap pened at Chicago, and all that hap pened, the Ananias club will have its most important accession. The only First Party organize a third party? Never. Scraps and Jingles By Leone Cass Baer. "I'll be O. K. again, I'll be bound." said the dilapidated magazine to Itself. e Quaker woman weighs 300 announce! a headline. Sort of earth quakers. as it were. e Speaking of Quakers wouldn't one be a bad second in a duel? No Esther, the Charge of the Light Brigade was not written about the gal company. see Nowadays its handsome is as hand some has. e e A kiss in time leads to nine. eve Time, tide and suffragettes wait for no man. e e Music hath charms to wake the si lent guest and set all the visitors gab bling their best. e e A sound critic is a musical critic. Wit is a boomerang that quick re turns to hand. But sarcasms, venomed shafts stick tight where 'er they land. wee If there's a skeleton in every House, where is the one in the Senate? e e i Among the "horrors of the Titanic" is a new popular song about it. e ' e e M'iss Calamity Step-and-fetch-it, the charming and cultured lady poet of Kansas, has written a pretty ballad on "A Troublesome Pair." At first I thought it belonged in the fruit de partment and was going to- can it. Then I read the pome and saw I was plum wrong. Says Calamity: Why, O why, must you go 4000 miles? It throws our correspondence out of gear. I can't afford to cable you, dear He Besides, to the sailors it might look queer. You wrote of your rheumatlz I sym pathized. You got my answer ten days after date When you was up and around again. Which you in your next letter did re late. In the meantime I had wrote you one In which the terrible heat made me sigh Now today when its so derned cold I sneeze I get your sympathizing reply. And so Its bothering me considerable. Our missives miss are cold or fond; There's just one cure dear He, come home. And then we'll meet and cease to cor respond. Perverse Mankind By Dean Collins. The writing is upon the wall, From California's Summer peaches. Threatening boycott stern upon Hotels that perch on manless beaches. "Give to us men, or else we go And leave you to your desolation." This have they said to those who hold The haunts of fashionable vacation. Brave men they seek, who'll dare the chill Of ocean surf that cramp creator Wise men who understand the ways Of cranky auto's carburetor. Strong men, the type that undismayed A lengthy dancing programme faces; Deft men, who well can fetch and bear Teacups and fans and scarfs and laces. And the innkeepers, seeing how They stand to lose full many a dollar, Forth to the cities send amain A raucous Macedonian holler. Seductive rates do they declare. Their hoped-for customers assuring Of every kind of courtesy Truly a prospect most alluring. Sooth, It Is sad, when ladles call And vexed and worried bonifaces Make the way clear; that men should bt So loth to seek the summering places. Perverse mankind! They hearken not; They shun the swallowtail for khaki, And, like lone Injuns, roam the woods With gun and rod and pounds of "baccy." Alone they whrp the purlingbrooks And waste their days with merely fishing. While on the long and manless beach A thousand maids are vainly wishing. For, sooth to say, the brutes perverse, If they be anywhere near normal. Revert to the primeval woods And duck the Summer beaches formal. SOLUTION OF LIVING PROBLEM Socialist Asks for DUcuasion of Reme dies Not Condition. PORTLAND, July 16. (To the Edi tor )m an editorial July 9 replying to Mr. Uthoff's letter of same date you express a willingness that condi tions as they are. be made known to the people. You say "we do not admit that J600 is enough money to spend on a growing American family in a big city and we want conditions improved In some way so that the man who needs 900 can obtain it honestly and without toiling unreasonably hard lor You "want conditions improved in some way." Have you no "way" to suersest? You acknowledge that the present method of distribution of wealth Is wrong. We knew that long ago. What we want is a change of method that will correct the evils of the present system. The Oregonian is a big paper with a powerful Influence. In Its columns you discuss, editorially, financial and poli tical questions specifically and in de tail, but you touch upon this vital economic question only In generalities. Will you not specify what you propose to do to relieve the millions who are suffering as a result of present unjust Many people realize that a revolution is at hand, that a change must take place. A few are aware the change has been In progress many ye- that the revolution they are Jok'"K forward to is all but achieved. The hulk of the production of wealth has Passed from the hands of individuals Into the hands of communities Note the change in the textile industry. At one time8 the Individual prepared the raw material, spun and wove it and turned out the finished fabric. Now a "hole community of workers is re oulred to produce the finished cloth and a hundred workers accomplish now what would have required several Thousand by the old methods. It is tne same with all the principal In dustries. An individual can no longer turn out a finished product. In other words the production of wealth has been socialized. ..' We socialists propose that the peo ple take enough intelligent Interest In their own welfare to socialize the dis tribution of wealth as well as Its pro duction. We have very definite plans for the accomplishment of this object. If the people of this country are half as Industrious in studying this question that so vitally affects their well being as the politicians are in studying ways and means of fooling "em a solution of the problem will be quickly reached. R- B- Opinion On a Hobble Skirt. Boston Transcript. He So that's your first hobble skirt Well, how do you feel in It? She About the same as a mermaid looks