6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 29, 1912. PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland, Oregon. Postoffice as Second-Class Matter. Subscription Raf! Invariably in Advance. (BY MAIL.) Sally. Sunday Included, one year f-J9 jaiiy. cunaar innuueu, bis . . . Daily, Sunday Included, three montha.. Daily. Sunday included, one month.... Daily, without Sunday, one year Dally, without Sunday, ail month!.... Daily, without Sunday, three montha... Dally, without Sunday, one month "Weekly, one year Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, one year (BY CARRIER) Dally. Sunday Included, one year Daily, Sunday included, one month - How to Remit Send Postotflce money or der, express order or personal check on your loral bank. Stamna. coin or currency are at the sender's rlak. Give postoffice addreaa In . lull, including county and state. Postage Rates 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 1 to 2H Daaes. 2 cents: 30 to 40 paxes. 2 cents 40 to cm) pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage. double rate. Eastern Business Offices Veere & Conk' lin New York, Brunswick building. Chi cago. Steger building. Man Francisco Office R. J. Bidwell Co. 742 Market street. European Office No. 3 Regent street, S. v.. Lonoon. 4.25 2.2 .7 6.00 3.2. 1.74 .00 J. 50 2.50 3.50 8.00 PORTLAND, SUNDAY. SEPT. z, , THE NEW . COMMISSION CHARTER. The citizens of Portland are to have an opportunity Jn November to choose between the present cumbersome and complicated system of city govern' eminent and the simple system em bodied In the proposed commission charter. The unsatisfactory, unwork able character of the present charter has been so clearly demonstrated by painful experience that there should be no doubt of a majority in favor of the commission system. There Is, however, danger that It may fall of adoption through division of the com mission forces between two or more alternative schemes, while those who oppose the change will at least be united; The charter proposed by the com' mittee of nine includes all the essen tial features of the commission plan together with all those provisions for direct popular rule which have come to be known as the Oregon system. It has also borrowed from the expe rience of our neighbors some additions to and Improvements on the Oregon system. It Is a distinctly progressive chatter, without attempting to try any experimental fads on this city The most distinctive feature of the commission plan is adopted In the pro visions for a Mayor and four other Commissioners, all sitting together as a Council, In whom Is to be concen trated all the legislative and executive power now scattered among the Coun cil, the Executive Board and various ether boards. These Commissioners are all to be elected by the city at large, not by wards, and will there fore represent the whole city, not a number of fractions. Each one of them is to devote his entire time to the city's business. Is forbidden to have any Interest In any concern which has dealings with the city, and is to have entire charge of one of five departments into which the city's af fairs are divided. It is made worth the while of able men to seek, these offices under these conditions, for the salary of the Mayor la raised to $6000 and that of each Commissioner Is made. J 5000 a year, and after the new plan is in full oper ation the term of office will be four years. . The Auditor Is the. .only other elective officer, the charter makers deciding that, as he is to keep check on the Council's acts, he should be independent of that body and should receive his mandate direct from the people. "At the first election under the new charter the Mayor, four other Com missioners and Auditor are to be elected, but the Mayor and two Com missioners receiving the highest vote are to serve for four years and the Auditor and the other two Commis sioners for two years. Thereafter all terms will be four years, so that there will be only three officers to elect at large biennially, instead of the swarm of officers and Cduncilmen we now elect. Thus we secure the short bal lot. by which public attention is con centrated at election on a few men instead of being lost among many. Who can recall the names of the fifteen Councilmen, let alone the ten members of the Executive Board, let alone the various other boards? With only three men to elect, it will be easy for the voters to fasten their attention on the retiring officers and , to weigh their merits against those of their would-be successors. No "light weights" or grafters can sneak into office under such a system, or, if by any mischance they should, well de fined responsibility and full authority will prevent their shirking blame for their misdeeds. The voters can recall them or at the worst retire them at the next election. That Is the great merit of the com rrflsslon plan. It abolishes the system of checks and balances, which a cen tury of experience has proved only to . check initiative and achievement and to balance the obstruction of one offi cial against the willingness of another, but has not checked waste and in competence. The commission will have no more power than the present city government, except the power to ap point all subordinates subject to civil service rules and to remove them sub ject to appeal to the Civil Service Commission. But the power now ex istent will be concentrated, whereas now it Is diffused. The people will thus be in a better position to ob serve, reward and punish their public servants. The new charter does away with party divisions in municipal affairs. Candidates for office will be nomi nated by 100 individual petitions and their names will go on the ballot without party designation. Should there be more than two candidates for each office, the voters will express their second choice; if more than three candidates, their third choice, and in the latter cases a majority determined by adding second and third choice votes will elect. The voters will be called on to choose men because they are the best men to transact the city's business, not be cause they are Republicans, Demo crats or members of any other party. The Commissioners are given power to appoint the city treasurer, engi neer, attorney and municipal Judge. The Council Is given power to remove these higher officers named, stating the cause in writing, and the officer removed may make a counter-statement. Subordinate officers are to be appointed and removed by the Com missioner at the head of each depart ment, but subject to civil service rules. In case of removal the reason must be stated in writing, the employe may appeal direct to the Civil Service Commission, which shall investigate if he reastfi appears to be political, re ligious or not in good faith for the purpose of improving the service. If employe is to be reinstated. - This provision appears to meet all legiti mate criticism on the present civil service rules from the appointing of ficers and to protect appointees front wrongful removal. There is ample provision to protect the people in their relation to public utilities. The -Commissioners are given power to regulate rates, and to exact reductions in lieu of added taxes; to value corporate property; to compel full reports and to buy in public utili ties at a fair valuation. Exclusive franchises are forbidden and common user clauses are made obligatory. Full publicity of proposed franchises is re quired and 2000 voters may call for a referendum on them. Should Portland adopt the commis sion charter, this will be the largest city In the United States having that form of government. It has worked beneficially in smaller cities and Port land should have the courage to give it a fair trial. j MAKING SPORT OF THE INITIATIVE. An impressive example of the Inex cusable abuse of the Initiative in the' proposal of complicated and obscure measures of miscellaneous legislation is to be found in the proposed act (No, 358,339) said to be offered by the Medford Traffic Bureau. The cap tion of the bill, as it will appear in the ballot, is: A bill for an act fixing the percentage that freight rates on less than carload lots shall bear to carloada and to eatabllsh minimum weights and maximum freights and providing penalties for violations of tne act. It is clear enough to the voter that the measure has something to do with railroad freights and weights in Ore gon. If he seeks information he will encounter a stone wall in the text of the act Section one, for example, I reads as follows: Section 3. The classification ratings of freight shall bear a uniform relationship of one class to another class, and the per centage of the first class shall be loo. and tne other classes snail be the following per centages of the first class: Classes 1 2 3 4 5ABCDE Per Cent'gs. .100 84 70 59 00 42 35 29 .24 20 The people of Oregon are herein asked to resolve themselves into a body of experts and determine classi fications of freights and their intri cate relationships. It is an Impos sible proposal, on its face presumptu ous and preposterous. Are the proponents of this measure seeking to make the Oregon system and the Oregon electorate ridiculous before the world? added 21,000? Or Wilson the extra 40,000? The Oregonian is quite unable to answer the questions it asks. But the men who know all about it will find the answers easy. THE SAME OLD GAME. The Northwestern Electric Company has been granted a power and light franchise by the City Council, and the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company sets afoot the circulation of petitions to invoke the referendum. The interest of the established light and power concern is obvious. It would defeat the franchise if it could; but in any event it would hold up the grant until the election next June. Here now we find one corporation employing the machinery of popular government to fight another corpora tion. The public be damned. The motives of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company are selfish and revengeful, and Its tactics 'are arbitrary and high-handed. It can have no hope that the referendum will be eventually successful. It cannot hold the field alone and it must soon or late give way to the public demand for competition. But meanwhile the monopoly will not be disturbed for the larger part of a year. Here again is the logical operation f the free-and-easy referendum. Some voices that are now raised in igorous protest against the insolence of the light and power monopoly are the identical influences that have re sisted and denounced all proposals for safeguarding the initiative and refer endum. Petition-hawking and name' buying Is a game anybody can play at. even a corporation. TAFT, WILSON OR ROOSEVELT ? The outright statement of the La Grande Observer, edited by the ex chairman of the Oregon Republican State Central Committee, that the state will go for Roosevelt In Novem ber If the Taft people vote for Taft ought of course to be considered in conjunction with the fact that the Observer is now a bellowing Bull Mooser. We assume that the Observer has been making a profound study of the returns in the recent Presidential primary in Oregon, and Is greatlv encouraged to find that Mr. Roosevelt had then a considerable plurality of Republican votes (or rather of citi zens who voted in the Republican primary). Mr. Taft was third. The actual returns were as follows: Roosevelt, 28,905; La Follette, 22,491; Taft, 20,517; total, 71,913. Th Democratic vote was: Wilson, 9558: Clark, 7857; total, 17,445. We shall not enter Into a fruitless discussion of questions that can be. settled only by the official verdict in November; but we refer these inter esting figures to the political prophets and expert mathematicians, with a suggestion that they consider the fol lowing queries: Why was the total Republican vote in the April primary nearly 10,000 more than the total Republican vote for Taft In 1908 a phenomenon present in no other state? Why was the Democratic vote in April over 20,000 less than the vote for Bryan In 1908? Did 20,000 Democrats vote in the Republican primary? If so, how many voted for Taft? Or did these 20.000 Democrats remain at home? If they remained at home, where did the surplus Republicans come from? Will Roosevelt get in November all his 28,905? Will he get part, or most, or all, the La Follette vote? If not, where will the La Follette vote go? If the Roosevelt vote stands pat, will Taft have enough, even with all the La Follette vote added? Assuming that the total vote in November will be 125.000, how many must the winner have to carry the state over his four opponents (all be ing Taft, Roosevelt. Wilson, Debs, Chafin)? Will 50,000 be enough? (Taft had 62.530; Bryan had 38,049.) Will Wilson carry,all the Bryan votes of 1908? Wrill he have enough Re publican accessions to make up the losses. If there are losses? Is Wilson with his 9o88 in the April primary farther- from the necessary 50.000 (approximately) in November than Roosevelt, with his zs.sos, or Taft with his 20.517? Will "Wilson get all Clark's 7857? If 20,000 Democrats voted in the April Republican primary, did they vote for Taft or Roosevelt or La Fol lette? Are they going to Wilson now, or to Roosevelt or Taft? Does any Taft man know a Demo crat who entered the April primary to vote for Taft? Who does not know that many Democrats then voted for La Follette or Roosevelt? FACE TO FACE WITH A CRISIS. The election of a Presidenital candi date for a third term involves a de parture from the historic policy of the Government, held inviolable from the beginning and preserved for more tnan a hundred years as a sound principle of our unwritten law. If we elect Mr. Roosevelt, we declare to the world that' the apprehensions of our fathers were groundless and the repeated ad monitions of our statesmen foolish. Mr. Roosevelt is himself a recent convert to the new theory that any man provided- his name is Theodore Roosevelt who may have been twice President of the republic is Justified In seeking a third term. On the night of November 8, 1904, when he had Just been triumphantly re-elected to the Presidency, Mr. Roosevelt voluntarily gave out his fa mous pledge to the people that "under no circumstances" would he be a can didate for a third term, for the "sound custom which limited a President to two terms should be rigidly supported. ' President Roosevelt stoutly adhered to his contract with the people during his term of office, resisting successful ly the blandishments of the second elective term boomers and the appeals of political mercenaries. Repeatedly after he left office he declared he was not a candidate, and could not be. He wrote to a Pittsburg newspaper editor that his nomination would be a "genuine calamity." So it is. Later be said he would accept the nomination, if tendered, but would not seek the office, and invented the shal low subterfuge of the "consecutive terms." His method of proving that he was merely a receptive candidate was to run all over the country after the nomination. Defeated at the Republican conven tion for the nomination, Mr. Roosevelt became the candidate of his own spe cially organized party at a specially conducted convention. If Mr. Roosevelt shall be elected to a third term, he may fairly claim a fourth term, for the country will have demonstrated to his satisfaction that the need of his services entirely over balances all considerations of prece dent, caution and experience. He will be warranted In accepting his election as a mark of the supreme National confidence in him. and in him alone; and in assuming that It was intended to place in his hands alone the Na tion's authority and the Nation's welfare. Is it safe or wise to elect Mr. Roose velt President in these circumstances? Would it be safe or wise to elect any human being? that imperial genius at anything like absorption of the Tennessee Coal & his true value. Like so many others Iron Compa'hy; his failure to prosecute of that crudely provincial period he the sugar trust, though the evidence saw Poe's addiction to liquor highly offered him by George H. Earle has magnified and overlooked the essen- since been made the basis of prosecu- tial elements of his character. He told tion by Taft and has been the means his son an anecdote of the poet which of enforcing restitution of nearly discloses more of the narrator's liml- $2,000,000; and his refusal to prose- tations than it does of Poe's real na- cute the harvester trust. ture. He came ' hurriedly into Put- When a man describes his opponents nam's office one day, half tipsy, "a indiscriminately as crooks and corrupt condition in which much of his work men, he invites unusually searching was done," said the publisher con-1 scrutiny of his own acts. Judged by temptuously, and announced "in a I his acts and his failure to act, Roose- fine frenzy" that he had made a dis- velt is not in a position to stand such covery which would revolutionize the scrutiny. thought of the whole world. He sat aown at tne aesK ana oegan to write EDUCATIONAL ADVANCES. runousiy vvnen rulDam If one paIr of shoea costs ,6, hcm tor itie id, ,.c M many pairs can you get did not stop until the Janitor turned There are tW(j of dot; mm out. me next uay ne icpeateu the performance. The outcome of it was his "Eureka," which in fact con tains the Nebular Hypothesis. Of course Poe was not the first inventor of this theory of the universe. Kant had worked it out long before and Laplace after him, but Poe knew for $132 ways of doing this sum in simple division. One has been used by all sensible people for a million years and will be used till the day of Judgment. The other was invented by a visionary in one of his foggiest day dreams and willed to the Portland public school children for their sins. To do the sum, any person not utterly nothing of their writings on-the sub- ou(. Qf hlg wUs w of courge Ject and his essay is therefore as llgix goes Jnto 132 twent tw0 Umes. purely original as if nobody had eve Hence can twenty-two pairs of anticipated him. There is no doubt that Poe possessed a wonderful Intel- shoes," and there the matter ends. There Is no more to say about It. The lect and if he had lived in naPP'ei: subject has been aettiea and disposed circumstances he would have rivaled the splendor of Leonardo's achiej ments as far as variety and perfec tion are concerned. The country Is of. But the faddists who lay down the law for school children thought other wise. They devised' the following puz- only beginning to understand what , a ' lm, much occupied with his grog that it nits lorgoi.ei. nuuut uio B'""- lee nr twontv-twn " Now no r-hild un UlieieaiJiis . .. . . matters wonderfully: "You can get as many pairs of shoes as $132 are times Another of Putnam's descriptions refers to Daniel Webster's oratory as compared with Henry Clay's. He was charmed with Clay's beautiful enunciations. His whispers could be heard farther than other men's shouts, but when it was a ques tion of explaining a difficult point, give him Webster. The godlike Dan iel could unravel the most compli cated difficulties without apparent effort and make a child see through der the skies can understand this lingo, and for a very good reason. It doesn't mean anything. What sense is there in the phrase "$132 are times $6? It is a crazy man's jargon. Dollars are not times. The pedagogical machine runs In curably to fads. Not many years ago it was overwhelmed by the marvelous discovery that "you cannot multiply by a fraction." Some unparalleled Where Is Taft to get the extra 30,000 the- r founu to be the reasons, the! votes he needs? Or Roosevelt the AN INTERESTING BIOG3APHY. The biography of his father which George Haven Putnam has written Is an extremely entertaining book. The elder Putnam, roundel of the publish ing house of which his son Is the head, was a man of letters, a soldier, a pub lisher and a persevering traveler. In the course of his Journeys through Europe he met many interesting authors and statesmen who figure in the biography, among them Thack eray, Charles Read and John Bright. He had a house in London for a time where he received some of the revo lutionary agitators of that day. Th time was about 1848, which is known as "the revolutionary year" in Europe The famous Italian patriot Mazzini used to visit his house and Napoleon III, who was then an exile, also came but not with Mazzini. In the Spring of 1848, when the Chartist agitation was exciting all England and the Londoners were afraid of rapine and slaughter, the young Napoleon served as a special policeman and mounted guard on London bridge, where Put nam saw him patrolling his section One of the curious pages in the book gives an account of Putnam's call on John Bright, who was then in the Cabinet as president of the Board of Trade. Bright lived in the most modest was-, occupying longings oi wnicn a statesman would certainly be ashamed our time. He received his young visitor without ceremony and made him feel so much at home that he almost forgot how great the man was with whom he was talking. No doubt a certain pomp is usually essential if magnates wish to receive the homage which is their due. Few statesmen can stand the test of familiarity. In judging of heroes we are all valets if they let us approach too near, but Bright seemed to be exempt from the common lot George Haven Putnam does not believe that his father felt any sympathy with the revolutionaries who used to meet at his London house, but one never can tell. Men who de velop in later years into the most hardened conservatives have often been hot radicals in their youth. We should not be surprised if the elder Putnam were discovered to have cher ished the wildest dreams of Utopia in those days and only renounced them when his business affairs made it necessary for him to adopt respectable opinions. The economic motive de termlnes the revised and ripened views of many a wise man upon both politics and religion. In those days Washington Irving was to be seen in London occasion ally. He was Minister to Spain and his principal occupation was the col lection of material for his "Life of Columbus' and other works on Span ish subjects, but he ran over to Lon don now and then and was made much of by the lights of the city. Putnam was at a dinner with him where Prince Albert presided and made three felicitous speeches as toastmaster. All his life Albert rather shone in diplomacy and im pressed the world more by his stodgy German solidity than by his wit, but in his younger days he was gay and not seldom a little giddy. At this dinner Irving was referred to most flatteringly by the Prince Consort and naturally had to make a speech in reply. What he said was, "I beg to return you my most sincere thanks." It was not much of a speech, but per haps It served the purpose as well as some more extended efforts. Irving was even less of an orator than Haw thorne, who was dumb whenever he could be. Precious few of Irving"s countrymen have inherited this charming incapacity. If there is a man, woman or child in the United States today who is not able to make an hour's oration at a moment's no tice on any subject under the sun we have Vet to hear of him. Irving was always popular in England and found life there more " congenial than at home. Putnam naturally became acquaint ed with the American statesmen and authors of his time. He seems to have known Poe pretty well, though not well enough to have appreciated ihlkest miirstoner The "biography 'V1;? Z. is an unusually interesting work. It . ," ,. " h , - lights up a period of our history with tlt : mult plication by a frac- whlch most Americans are only dis- invo'vdv dl, vlslon y tJ,he, J??1: tantly acquainted. nator and 1Uce f1" ?0 that found a began , to "chortle.". Within a few THE MAVERICK. months every teachers' Institute in The following fine poem has already the country was chanting the chorus been printed in The Oregonian, but not that "you can't multiply by a frac in a very conspicuous place. It is so tion." Evervbodv who knew a little good that it deserves to be reprinted geometry understood perfectly well here, where more readers are likely to that you can multiply by a fraction see and appreciate it. and must do It in order to compute Jack Murphy, the author, is a Mon- areas, but the paean was sung Just tana cowboy, but life on the range the same until it died of its own folly, has not put him out of favor with the Now it has been succeeded by a Muses. The sentiment of the verses Is stm wilder streak of mental perver- true and tender and some of the lines sion. The schools have gone mad are pure poetry. No lyric in the lan- over "division of reparation and divis guage can beat the last verse for mu- ion Qf measuring." The sapient guides sic and manly loyalty. And think of who instruct our youth imagine that being roped and tied with roses. Lay on the iron! the tie holds fast And my wild record closes; This maverick Is down at last. Just roped and tied with roses; And one small girl's to blame for It And yet I feel no shame for It; Lay on the iron! I'm tame for it; Just roped and tied with roses. I loped among the wildest bands Of saddle-hating winners. Gay colts that never felt a brand. And scared old outlaw alnnera. The world was pasture wide to us. The wind was rein and girth for us, And our wild name was pride for us High-headed, bronco sinners! So loose and light we raced and" fought there .is some marvelous difference between taking one-fourth of a num ber and dividing it by four. The fact that in order to take one-fourth you must divide by four escapes them completely. What a pity it is that those who undertake to impart knowl edge to the young have not first ac quired a little for themselves, that It has become easy to follow the Savior. But it Is not so. It Is just as difficult as it ever was. The trials have changed their form, but they are as real and as hard to bear as they were at the beginning. Any man who finds the Christian life easy Is prob ably not a Christian. "If any man will come after me," said Jesus, "let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whosoever will save his life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall save It." That is, "who soever is willing to lose his life shall save it." In truth that is the only way to save it. The coward dies a hundred deaths In anticipation. The brave man dies but once and the Christian never dies, for In his faith he crosses the river without sinking under the waters. "For," Jesus went on saying, "whac is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul, or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" Will iam Borden has pondered upon these questions to good purpose. He has seen into the depths of things and weighed the values of what life has to offer and he has made up his mind that the one-thing worth all the rest is service. The servant of all Is the greatest of all, as Jesus told the disciples. He is greatest not only in power over cir cumstances, but in happiness and hope. There is no real joy In selfish pleasure. Gratification which does not flow outward to others is sterile and disappointing. It is to the man who gives that life brings the deep satisfactions- One who is always making demands never gets what he wants. In the economy of- God no body ever reaps unless he has sown with his own hand. The harvests we gather from others' toil are illusory. They count for nothing in eternity and for next to nothing in time. Mr. Borden's resolve is one among many signs that the gross falsehoods of materialism which have been leading the world astray for years are at last losing their spice. Men begin to see again that sensual indulgence is not the true object of existence. Money and pride and power are not the only j things worth living for. The world of service has better rewards to offer and he who enters it and abides there finds a treasure of happiness and peace as imperishable as the laws of God. The Ballad of Freshmen By Dean Collins. Attend ye well, my gentle friends And lo. I will warble thee How gates of Learning were opened up For venturous Freshmen three. The lamp of Learning can ne'er be lit Unto the proper blazing Within the soul of the Freshman green Save through the art of hazing; So. altruistic, the Sophomores Gathered the Freshmen three: "Come, gentle youths, and we will ope The gates of learning to thee." And one they playfully bound and gagged And laid on the railroad track And stole away but the train went by Before they came ambling black. "'TIs sad," they sighed, as the few remains On the lid of a box they raised "But he never could be a college man Until he was properly hazed. And one they placed In a barrel and rolled From the brink of a hill with glee. "If thou survlvest, thou hast the stuff For a collage man in thee." They sent him home in a lacquered caso And a note to his parents ran: "He scarcely showeth the staying power That maketh a college nun." And one, through a mill of divem stunts With wonderful nerve came out. And soon, by means of an Invalid chair. Was able to be about; And when he recovered reason and speech With humbleness he began To thank the Sophs, who had proven him Fit stun for a college man. For the lamp of Learning can never flame With a blaze of the proper hue Except one proveth himself of worth. At the cost of a bone or two. Portland. September 28. TOPICAL VERSE LULLABY. Ah, little one, you're tired of play. Sleep's fingers rest upon your brow. You've been a woman all the day, You'd be a baby now; Oh, baby, my baby! You'd be my baby now. Perhaps you had forgotten me. Because the daisies were so wnue. But now you come to mother's knee My little babe tonight; Oh, baby, my baby! My baby every night. Tomorrow, when the sun's awake. You'll seek your flowery fields again. A AIIT.I.IrtXAIRE MISSIONARY, I? would be absurd to pooh pooh William W. Borden's resolution to be come a missionary or assume that And every range w tasiea. utm f h will ronpnt In corralled and caugnu w .-.... ..... - a year or two. No doubt ne win see And now since I'm I know those days were wasted, From now the all-day gait for me! ThrtraTthatharYbtraigTt'for me! moments of discouragement, as every man must wno unaenaites a. uinitun task lasting for years, but there Is no reason to believe that his courage will fail. He has a sister who has long been a missionary in India and during his college days he found social wor particularly to his taste. He estab lished the' Hope mission in New Haven. The property for it was bought with his money and he direct ed its work as long as he was a stu dent. This Hope Mission ministers to he needs of the lowest human wrecks. Every Winter night it shelters more Far down that trail who'll wait for me? Aye! those old days were wasieu: But though I'm broke. I'll never be A saddle-marked old groaner. For never worthless bronc like me Got such a gentle owner. There could be colts day glad as mine, One outlaw's days as bad as mine. Or rope flung false as bad as mine But never such an owner. Lav on the iron! and lay it red, I'll take It kind and clever: Who wouldn't hold a prouder head To wear that mark forever! . I'll never break and stray from her, I'd starve and die away from her; Lay on the iron! It's play for her. And brands me hers torever. It is pretty well established that than a hundred miserable creatures poetic talent is inborn. When it crops who pay nothing for the rooms they out In unlooked for places we are occupy. It is a charity pure and likely to search the ancestral line for simple. The circumstance which a gift that has been handed down makes Mr. Borden's resolve appear silently through the predecessors of strange to many is his great weaitn. him in whom the muse speaks. It Is said that his fortune amounts to Whence comes it if not from such more than five million dollars. He source? It is acquired rarely and has a palatial residence in Chicago, then but indifferently. another on Lake Geneva, the wiscon But how about Jack Murphy? The sin resort most favored by million name is not a guide. His lineage can- aires, and others elsewhere. His wife not be traced to some romantic versl- Is a society woman. His friends are fier of the Emerald Isle. Jack Murphy, wealthy. Mr. Borden Is going to for- we are told, is a full-blood Flathead sake all these earthly delights and Indian. He was born on a Montana bury himself in a remote province of reservation. His schooling has been China for the good of its inhabitants. limited to that offered by the mission The people to whom he is going are schools. The only poetry of which his among the most wretched in the forebears knew was the solemn mono- world. Their religion is Mohammed tone of the tribal council or the death anism, which does not encourage chant of the stricken brave. Rhythm progress. Famine has been ravaging was there, perhaps, but not rhyme, the population of late and disease has Crude lyrics they were, sung to the followed in its tracks. Of course the beat of the tom-tom. not to the meas- noor creatures are fanatics of the ure of the tuneful viol or lute of our I most hopeless sort. There are no such own medieval ancestors. furious bigots in the world as Moham- The Maverick" is not one of these, medans who live cut off from the It Is too far removed even to be world in the interior parts of Asia, termed a refined outgrowth. Truly, If Mr. Borden undertakes to preach genius is yet to be pinned down and Christianity to them he will probably dissected by philosophy or science. incur serious danger. He may lose his life. His existence will be solitary in the extreme. Of course his wife will go with him and the change will WHERE THE FUNDS CAME FROM. Roosevelt was asked ten questions .-n rAatr for her than for him by the New York World on October They may neaT from heir friends once 1, 1904, as to how much money had fw.nft . vear DerhaDS. The only been contributed to nis campaign acces3 to Kansu, where they are go fund by the beef trust, the paper trust, ingf ls on foot an(j tne journey takes the coal trust, the sugar trust, the oil six -weeks, so that mails cannot be trust, the tobacco trust, the steel trust, very frequent. Now and then life will the Insurance trust, the National h(, pnnvened for the exiled couple by banks and the six great railroad the visit of some brother missionary trusts. Judge Parker followed this and at jong intervals an adventurous up on October z Dy cnarging tnat tne traveler may cross their threshold, trusts were supporting Roosevelt and hut no other human beings will they on October zs ne saia tney were rur- see except the miserable natives, nishing campaign funds to his oppo- Mr Borden seems to have no illu nent. Roosevelt did not reply till K-oriB about the work he has under- three days before the election. Then taken. He has counted the cost and he denounced Parker as a liar. made up his mind that the enterprise It has since become known that win av. It will not pay in money, Perkins contributed $48,702.50 of life but In other values. For the next Insurance money to the campaign and year 0r two he ls going to study the that two other insurance companies Arabic language at Cairo. Then he gave $50,000 each. That answers one will take a medical course in London of the Worlds questions and proves and finally,. after he reaches China, Parker to have told .the truth in one ne will learn the language of the particular. country. After such preparation he It has also become known that Har- ought to be equal to any task which riman raised $260,000, of which he nresehts itself if he carries the right. himself contributed $50,000. That an- spirit with him and it seems pretty swers another, question and further certain that he does. As far as one corroborates Parker. can judge from what the papers say We know from Perkins and from about him Mr. Borden is a Christian the steel trust's counsel, Mr. Linda- of the kind that Jesus had in mind bury, that that trust contributed both In 1904 and 1906. That answers a third question and still further cor roborates Parker. Ground Is there fore furnished for believing the state ments of Penrose and Archbold that the oil trust gave $125,000 and was asked for but refused to give a further $150,000, though Roosevelt denies these, statements, as he denied Par ker's charge. As confirming the suspicion that these contributions had their influence on Roosevelt's official acts, the World cites bu assent to Uie steel trust's when he set up an ideal for the dis ciples. He had been telling them that he must go to Jerusalem and be "put to death after suffering , many things from the priestly politicians who misgoverned the Jews. Peter was horrified at the description and cried out in his impulsive way, "Lord, this shall not happen to thee," but Jesus told him it certainly would hap pen and not to him only but to every one who should try to follow him in all the ages. Wre often hear nowadays that the old persecutions are past and gone and The Portland Spectator, a poor lickspittle weekly, prints an extract from the Ad Club speech of Ex President Roosevelt, made in Oregon on September 11, lauding Senator Bourne for his labors in behalf of the Oregon system. The Spectator adds this comment: give publicity to that part of the Colonel's But night shall fall, and for my sake speech. You 11 be a DaDy men; The Spectator relies upon Its Oh, baby, my baby! obscurity and littleness to escape the My little baby, tnen. b . l. . i v. . j ,. -j i r l.. i.u..cui.ra ot me I1CUUU...U. . . .. hoods It nrints about The Oresonlan. " ... . l .Happen you ll leave me ior your niwit But since a friend of Senator Bourne And nrgnt tlraea when the shadows fali nas Drougni tne statement to iub i ju Kreet as mother can; uregonian, witn request ior an expia- i oh, baby, my baby! nation, we shall furnish It. The expla- I As only mothers can. nation is. of. course, that the SDec- I loin. Ho Tk. nfsr.n-. In Sonatnr But now. ItlV little heart Of May, Tlni.rno will ho found In full on naee L'e closely, sleep ls on your brow. a , r.o c.- i Tou've been a woman all the day. Moreover, the extract printed by the Spectator was in all likelihood taken from The Oregonlan's report of the Roosevelt speech. You'd be my baby now; Oh, baby, my baby! My little baby now. -Richard Mlddleton in rne nnsiisa Review. Immune. Th A ovnlr? who Bald "Chrlstia nitv was not a failure because it had never He laughed with glee and said, said he. 1 care not; no. not . The price of beef brings me no grief; Let it go to the sky; been tried," overlooked such preachers as Dr. Aked. He has "tried Christian ity," the real thing as the Savior And buuer may go all the way taugnt it, ana ne nas persuaoea otners To sixty cents a pound, to try It. His preaching ls one of the While folks may beg to get an egg, great factors for righteousness In the Serene I shall be round -mo Ufa la full nf TT barrio for all that ls w nere lOlK 1IK6 me you a qu.cmy . courage. r- .1 J . o fall Christlike in thought and effort. To Fr"u38" d, with goods unsold, the gray-headed warriors who may Would soon begin to crawl, sometimes think that victory is long They'd make a flop and rates would delayed. Dr. Aked's glorious faith drop brines renewed hoDe. To the vouns Be cheap as cheap could be; he is an inspiration. To all of us he The way to bust each wicked trust radiates the Influence of a strong, val iant, good man - and consecrated preacher. Is to become like me. I do not care for food that's rare, Care not for food that's plain; Why, its mere sight upsets me quite. To taste it gives me pain. Trailing Roosevelt is good sport f ir the political spellbinder and it is good What do I eat? I simply heat Dolitical stratesrv.' The philippics de- Some water in a pan llvered by the Colonel while he was And melt In it a gluten grit; President went unanswered largely rve ot dySpepS .nYor York Press. The World and the Egotist. and he has become so accustomed to having his own way that he has be- .ftmo naraleca TTia 1raenihilltv van- I ders himself 'vulnerable to criticism S0!"?"?" ' '"LT' and a team of trailers can have good Wn.n Mriv e'vervhodv knows sport and produce good results by tne Fate never meant to be his own. encouragement to "heckling" which And yet the world, with face quite they offer the Colonel s audiences. straight. The Colonel shines when there is no Insists on letting him orate. rpnlv trt him hut tint In a Inint rlehate. j . . o,i He never lets a chance go by KZ 'Zr .vl i To offer all his wisdom free; an opponent are requisites to success Ha.a .enerallv savins- "Me." in debate which he conspicuously And yet the world says. "Bring him lacks. The Medford Sun waxes indignant over the widespread canard that Roosevelt was drunk while in Port land, and sarcastically remarks: Washington was an embezzler, Grant was a drunkard. Webster was a arunKard, L)n coin was obscene. Cleveland was a wife out; lit cheers me up to hear him shout. 'For Jokes are scarce and laughs art-few. Of all the Jests upon the list. The best arise, twixt me and you. From the unconscious humorist. Thanks to this man I oft relieve ht.r it eem' to be the Decuiiar fate Dull care by laughing in my sleeve." of great Americans to be maligned and I , Washington Star, vilified as long as tney remain in" public lira So it Is. So it is. Some people ,.. o r.l,lt In . r.n. far as to declare that And said it was nectarine. even go so Roosevelt is a common liar. He grew exceedingly elate There Is this difference between the When a producer set a date. T" , Knit onH tViA Wilonn hr.lt- -ij The leading lady was a peach stand on the platform, Roosevelt be- u" "c " cause he could not get the nomination. But gl-omy thoughts succeeded soon. The leading man was such a prune. President Taft has settled finally th fuss made bv Commissioner Val- He felt forebodings or despair, entine over the garb worn by the So ill-assorted was the pair. teacners in reaervanuu su-ioois. ill .,,.... t-,ii, hi -(- siiuuiu u.ivi .--.. 0.0.--CV1. I Particularly yells or "Quince." Perhaps It would be better to let the Producer swore he'd bought a lemon. mother, rather than the teacher, tell And changed from "angel into demon. ha hntr (ho mratorv rt f hlr-th huf t r.n I many mothers leave their boy's to find The critics gave the Play a.T ,o And said it wasn t worth a fig. 11 VUb UJ.avvu aAjwidbtai Succeeding houses followed suit The Democratic National Commit- I And killed the show with chicken fruit tee needs three-quarters of a million to :run the campaign. Also It needs votes more than money. Here ls op portunity for patriotic endeavor. New York Sun. A Good Memory. I remember, I remember The flat where I was born; Where bill collectors came around From the first peep of morn. The youngest Vanderbilt has a $50,- 000,000 handicap up to which he must The landlord was a funny man; live H will not have a fraction of I Ha used to want his Day, the joy of life experienced by the And so when I was three months old washerwoman's baby. e nau to . xne Macvicnoias Droiners aemon- u,i. Maml. strated the old truth that a sucker is v,iiB, nn Summer nieht. born every minute. liverj-Doay dui Turned down the only parlor light the sucker seems to know It. The Judge, beside her, whispered things Lothario Dickes has a better wife Of wedding bells and diamond rings. than he deserves. But your midnight rounder usually has. He spoke his love In burning phrase. And acted foolisn lorty ways. Is Kellaher a standpatter? been nearly a week since h bolted It's I When he had gone Maud gave a laugh last I And then turned off the dictagraph. Milwaukee Sentinel,