TTTP? STTXDAT OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 14, 1913. - . ... I , iv. i..n.tn Tmnlra I crt T n q T n.T npnin inere -WiUS iiu viuicui i i Portland, oregox. Entarad at Portland. Oregon. poatofflce aJ aaeond-cl&ss matter. Subaciiption Kate, Invariably In Advsnca IBT MAIL) rm annriav tnrlud-d. or.e vaar' S 00 -4 Ijaily. Sunday included. ,ia muntha . IaU. Sunaajr Included, threa montna Ijail, Sunday Included, ona moutn Pally, without Sunday, ona yar . ... latly. without bunday. aix montba .. pally, without Sunday, threa montha 2-ii J ... ... a. ... 1- KM ltl.y, witnoul btiDaij, sot numu ..... Waaltly. ona year - J eunaay. one var afiu Sunday and weekly, ona year IB7 CAKKIER) DaJly. Sunday Included, one year . T..I1 Sunrlav Included, ona month .I9.00 . i. .- j . i monaT dar. axpreaa order or peraonal check on your local nana, tiuum i" .;j aendera riak. Give poetofflce addraaa full. Includlne tounty and aiate. PoatM Itatra iz to la pa. V.ii. to ii paa. 2 cant; 34 to 4 H la ao to aw pagra. a c. -rent. T to 2 pacta. centa. Foreln poat ac. double ratea : . . . . -., a naaaa. EaMarn Baainoa omwi varraa lln. New York. Hruuawlck bunding. Chi- ctfo, fct-rar buuoini i titim n J. indwell C&. KanrpeiaB Office No. 2 Resent etreat YV Lomltia. FORT LAN D. RUN DAT. SEPT. 14. 1913. GOING TO COLLEGE. For birds and college students Fall la the season for migration. The swallows are making them ready to fir. wheeling out on the -windy sky. and the young men and women are flitting away to their various colleges. Some go east, some go west and per haps here and there one flies over the cuckoo's nest, if we may use this poetical expression to signify that aim less lack of purpose with which some of our youth frequent the halls of learning. Happily these mavericks, as we may perhaps designate them out of courtesy to the Round-L'p, are few. The greater number by far of the young people who go to college have In mind some ample ambition. They wish to acquire that vague treas ure which Is called "general educa tion." or they seek "mental culture" for the sake of the Intellectual power which it Is supposed to Impart. Many, long before they enter college, have their professions unalterably chosen and whatever they do in the four years of their course bears as aptly as they can make It upon this purpose. Academic rules and the Idiosyncrasies of professors often interfere with the line of studies a student would prefer if left to himself, but upon the whole In a good modern institution his free dom is wide. If he is obliged now and then to pursue some branch which he detests this Is compensated by his undoubted liberty to include everything he likes. Although it is fashionable now-a-days to scold the seats of the higher learning, we shall venture on this oc casion to say a word in their praise. "We admire them for some of the enemies they have made, among whom the aggressive Mr. Edward Bok is included. If this gentleman could have his way, Judging from his OuX look article, he would consecrate the entire teaching force of the colleges to preparing young people for busi ness, that Is for making money or helping somebody else make it. "We gather from his incisive remarks that his ideal college would be a place where spelling and punctuation were assiduously inculcatec" with some type writing and shorthand as time could be spared for them from the two fun damentally Important branches. He treats the old traditional subjects, such as Greek and the higher mathematics, with a certain scorn because they merely nourish "Ideals." Tht despite ful way in which Mr. Bok and some of his school speak of Ideals is most edi fying. In their estimation one little round dollar rates all the Ideals that have been won and lost since time began. But not in ours. We value the colleges most highly for exactly that which lowers them in the eyes of some of their critics. It is because they have not yielded to the fascina tions of the dollar but have, with some waverli'gs and dippings down ward, upheld the ideal for the wor ship of youth that we love them. It may In future years be taken for the crowning merit of the colleges that they are not practical. Where, if not within their walls, are our young people to learn the thoughts that have founded civiliza tion? Who, if not their professors, hall teach them to love the beauty that does more than burn the topless towers of Ilium, the beauty that molds millennial evolution and fixes the goal for human effort? If their professors are to deal with nothing but the practical where In all the world shall we find room for the ideal? When are young men and women to read the poets if not In college? What leisure will the press ing affairs of active life leave them to dip Into Gibbon; to make acquaint ance with the organ music of Paradise Lost: to know how Homer told his stories and Herodotus narrated the drama of the Persian wars? It is for such things as these that we have colleges. If there were nothing in the world but dollars the best education for a gifted youth would be to apprentice him to some merchant or manufactur er as soon as he could walk and keep his nose steadily to the grindstone. But, heaven be praised, there are oth er things than dollars. There are things in life that money cannot buy and that no merchant ever can sell and it Is for the sake of these imma terial treasures that young men and women forego the pursuit of tangible profit for a little part of their lives and dwell with the wise and great of all the ages. Of course It is very sad and shocking when persons graduate from college without being able to spell all the words In the dictionary, but If they have acquired the Ideals that Milton lived for and Socrates died for we think they have gained com pensations. Every concession that the colleges make to the practical is to be regard ed with misgivings. At most they ask only four years of the youth's life for the spiritual, a small proportion In deed, and they ought to guard with miserly Jealousy every moment of It. Four years are all too brief a time to learn the problems that lie at the basis of thought and the solutions that great speculative geniuses have imag ined for them: to read through the Immortal books which have nourished the souls of the heroes of the race; to ponder the theories of the universe which make and mar our existence. The higher the college faculty fly above the solid ground the better. If they can sail In the empyrean for four full years and keep their students up there with them among the clouds, they are to be admired and envied. Grand visions, airy speculations, am bitions too lofty for earth, dreams that never can come true, are the rightful food of the youthful mind. From such Insubstantial diet they digest the thoughts that perfect civilization and make religion grow more divine aa the ages pass It is time to praise the colleges for their fidelity to the standard of the Ideal when pretty nearly ail the rest of the world had forsaken It. They battled loyally for the true, the beau tiful and the good when everybody else was scrambling for dollars. They toiled upward for the value pure and undefiled that fadeth not away when the path was hard and lonely and the multitude mining for dross regarded them with contempt. It is meet now that they should begin to reap their reward in the love of those who can think. ' BKAINS AT A DISCOUNT. John Bassett Moore, one of the world's greatest authorities on Inter national law. is not comfortable In his position of counsellor of the State De partment. He has twice before served that department under men of experi ence and ability. Then his advice was sought on affairs of the greatest mo ment. His superiors and associates from Secretary Bryan down are Inex perienced and stand In much more need of his advice, but either It is not sought or it Is ignored, and a quantity of routine work which Mr. Bryan's green hands are Incompetent to han dle is thrust upon him. Mr. Moore took the office with great reluctance at the urgent per sonal solicitation of President Wilson, who expressed a desire for the benefit of his great ability and experience in diplomacy. It was expected that his advice on foreign policy would be sought, but it was not asked on Mexi can affairs until after John Lind had been appointed confidential agent, and he was not Informed of that appoint ment until he read of it in the news papers. He has taken a month's va cation and there would be little sur prise if he should resign. The one department of the Govern ment which requires the highest abil ity and experience is put in tha hands of men who have had no previous con. nection with foreign affairs, headed by a man v.-hose time is divided between chasing the rainbows of peace and chasing the dollars of the Chautauqua circuit. The men who have done long, faithful and distinguished serv ice as diplomats are displaced to make room for men whose sole rec ommendation Is that they are Demo crats. And this is called progress! GOVERNORS CONFERENCES FRUITLESS. Great hopes were entertained that the states would agree on concerted action in regard to some important questions in. which all are concerned when the first conference of Gover nors met at the White House several years ago. Similar conferences have been held in every subsequent year, but each one has attracted less at tention than the one preceding until now they have degenerated into Junk ets and opportunities for self-exploitation. The reason is that the conferences have accomplished nothing and the people have ceased to hope that they will ever accomplish anything. Much more has been done by the National committee on uniform laws, but much more needs to be done. The Gover nors conferences have not even be gun to do anything, and the phrase "House of Governors," once applied to them, excites only derision. If the states really wish to bring about uniformity as to those laws which should be alike in every state, they might take a leaf out of the book of Congress and of their own Legisla tures. When the Senate and House disagree on a bill they appoint a con ference committee to reconcile their differences and the agreements of these committees are almost invari ably ratified. Were the Legislature of each state to appoint one or two men to meet like delegates from the other states in conference, who would draft uniform bills for submission to each Legislature, their recommenda tions would have better chance of adoption, rne Dins inus arawn wouiu have behind them the weight of the authority of the body which must pass upon them. The Governors could continue to meet and talk and junket, but the legislative conferences would do the actual work. THE EXCUSE OF IGNORANCE. Because The Oregonian the ' other day recalled the failure of the Oregon Senators to obstruct or even attempt to obstruct a 19.000,000 raid on Ore gon reclamation funds It is "stabbing," "poisoning," "undermining," "pulling down." according to a Portland Dem ocratic newspaper which has frequent explosions In its store of expletives. Why does The Oregonian not criticise Mr. Ellis, who knew of the Joker in the bill, for not notifying the Senators? Why does It not criticise Mr. Hawley for not protesting In the House? Why does it not condemn Senator Lodge for announcing in the Senate that the bill made no changes in the reclamation laws? Why does it not denounce the President for pushing the bill? All these are questions asked by our ful minating contemporary to excuse the unfortunate lack of resistance in the Senate. Let us apply a little of this Demo cratic newspaper's own logic to the others it orings into the case. Per haps the President believed the bill satisfactory because nobody told him about the addition of the clause re pealing section . 9, and because he heard no word of protest from "the floor of either House; perhaps Senator Lodge had no watchful guardian in the other House to tell him all the things he ought to learn for himself about the bill: perhaps Mr. Hawley was Inactive because of lack of in formation from Mr. Ellis; we already have the word of the Senator's de fender that the Senators were ex cusable for not knowing what a cursory perusal of the bill would dis close, because Mr. Hawley and Mr. Ellis had not Instructed them in the matter. If trie Senators are to "pass the buck" why not let the buck be passed clear down the line? The result will be about as this pop ular pastime usually ends. The one least to blame will bear the entire burden of the fault. Mr. Ellis is the only one whom the flimsy plea of excusable ignorance would not clear. If that plea clears Senator Chamber- tain.. Mr. Ellis did protest in com mittee. The cold, simple fact is that there was gross neglect of duty by the Ore gon Senators. That some one else was also derelict does not excuse them In any particular. "Mr. Chamberlain has done many excellent things for Oregon," we are told, but "nobody ever saw one of these acts commended In The Ore gonian." But suppose all these good things were measured against Ore gon's loss of reclamation funds. against Oregon's prospective loss through admitting wool to the free list; -against Oregon's contribution to the useless and repressive duty on grain bags! How would the totals compare? And were any of the ac complishments for Oregon by Our George of striking originality or other than the common things that every other Senator gets for his state as a sort of routine duty? Senator Chamberlain, like ex-Senator Bourne, has performed some im portant services from a National standpoint and in them Oregon has Its share of interest. The Oregonian has but lately commended his Alaska railway bill and but recently endorsed with warmth his efforts in behalf of birds of plumage. But The Orego nian's conception of a useful United States Senator is one who, while fix ing his gaze on affairs of the whole country and perhaps the circumam bient atmosphere, is not blind to the vital and peculiarly individual needs of his own state and has the courage to protect and aid them. Its ideal of a Representative In Congress Is much the same, but It sees no occasion for adding as qualifica tions the capacity and willingness to act as majordomo or wet nurse to his Senate colleagues. ACTIOX ON THE SEAMEN'S BILL. If those Senators and Representa tives who are most directly interested in the merchant marine will exert themselves, they may be able to secure the passage at this session of the sea men's bill, which was vetoed by Pres ident Taft in the last days of last ses sion. The bill, with slight modifica tions, has been reintroduced and is now before the committee of the Sen ate. It has been indorsed by the Sec retaries of Commerce and of Labor and meets with the approval of Presi dent Wilson. This bill relieves seamen from the peonage in which the law now holds them, provides for greater safety of life at sea, and will aid revival of the merchant marine by helping to equal ize the cost of operating American and foreign ships. While it makes im portant changes In the conditions now prevailing in the shipping industry, it makes them gradually and will not come into full effect until four or five years after its passage. As a member of the Senate commit tee on commerce. Senator Chamber lain Is in a position to forward the passage of this bill and Senator Lane could not do better than second his ef forts. The Senate has no business of Importance to consider before the con ference committee on the tariff reports or the banking and currency bill comes up from the House. This In terval could well be used in procuring a favorable report from the committee and the passage of the bill. It would then be ready for action by the House, as soon as the remaining committees have been appointed. OREGON POLITICS. Walter C. Woodward's "Political Parties In Oregon" is one of the most entertaining books we have read for a long time. It Is full of research and scholarship and nobody can go through it without learning a thou sand things, but its best quality Is recreative. To an Oregonian who knows something of the dark ways and vain tricks by which politics is trundled through Its defiles Professor Woodward Is like an unabashed ur chin revealing family secrets at the dinner table. His history, which ought by good rights to be as dry as an Egyptian mummy, is almost dra matic in its charm. It even has a pretty definite plot with a dark, de signing villain if not a hero. To be quite candid, there are a score or two of politically sinister characters, but the most important is Asahel Bush, who founded the Oregon Statesman In 1850 and soon made it the dominant political force in the territory. At first the Statesman was published in Oregon City, but by 1853 Mr. Bush found it expedient to remove his plant to Salem. There was a hot fight be tween the two towns for the state cap ital. He favored Salem in that vitri olic manner which was characteristic of his Journalism, and such patronage as he had secured in Oregon City nat urally waned away before a great while. Professor Woodward's admiration for Bush's political deftness is unlim ited, but it can scarcely be said that he feels much affection for his hero. Speaking of the founding of the Statesman, he says: "Through its edi tor, Asahel Bush, cold, calculating, re lentless, it was to dominate Oregon nnmifa for a. decade, making and breaking politicians at wllL" On an other page he empnasizes mis juag ment: "The real dictator of the Ore rnn Democracy was the man behind the Statesman, wary. Inflexible, ruth less." Seeking to account for the ab solute dominance of the Oregon Democratic party in territorial oays, our author sums up that "one is forced to return to the conclusion that the xnnrrnllinr force in the situation was found in the coercive influence of the Oregon Statesman and in the person ality of its editor, Asahel Bush." His most powerful opponent was The Ore gonian, which published its first issue in December, 1850. Four years later or t. Adams established the Argus at Oregon City. The Oregonian and the Argus spoke in those years for a more or less modified Whlgism. Adams ad vocated a territorial government, ine Oregonian, under Dryer's editorship, was opposed to the change on the ct emprise. The Democrats desired territorial organization pro vided that they could control tne ol flces. ThU end thev achieved very happily by forming at Salem a close little band which was known as the "Clique. in the words of Professor Woodward, "With Bush and the Statesman as a nucleus, Salem at once became the recognized headquarters and rendez nf n. little coterie of Democratic politicians which held Oregon in the palm of Its hand." The Clique made Mr,A marred men at its pleasure. When Joe Lane began his career in Oregon he was on friendly terms witn it- iis personal charm and political facility ,.iniihi asset as lone as he was sufficiently docile, but when the break finally came these quamies maae mm a formidable foe. Lane really wanted to use Oregon as a stepping-stone to higher things. From the days of his residence in Indiana he aspired to run for President of the United States, and Professor Woodward assures us that h wnq not without support irom ex alted quarters. The prestige which he gained in Oregon pontics aiueu mm m his larger ambitions. The lute was rtoA hv the contentions over slavery. Tono waa vlolentlv pro-slavery. In Congress he obediently voted with the Southern nre-eatera ana received as his reward the nomination for the Vice-Presidency on the Breckenrldge ticket. Bush and the Clique held to the squatter sovereignty doctrine with Douglas. On this Issue tne Oregon Democrats split into two bitterly hos tile factions whose mutual wranglings opened an opportunity for the feeble birth of the Republican party. The pro-slavery Democrats were ex tremely aggressive in Oregon, as they were everywhere. It was said truth fully by the men of those days that one of the rabid pro-slavery brand was equal to ten of his Douglas opponents because of the uncompromising vigor of his attacks. Professor Woodward brings out with startling clarity the real danger there was that Oregon might Join fortunes with the slave oli garchy of the South. He quotes and indorses T. W. Davenport's remark in the Quarterly of the Historical Society that in 1857 "the people of Oregon were In far more danger of the intro duction of slavery among .them than the people of Kansas were at any time." The Democrats had control and "the masses of their voters were In blind subservience to their leaders." Lane was notoriously pro-slavery and a Southern sympathizer, "and his in fluence upon the rank and file was sinister." The Federal office-holders In the territory were chosen for their pro-slavery loyalty by Buchanan, while the Dred Scott decision, by mak ing slavery National under the Con stitution, had in a measure tied the hands of the free soilers. Dryer, edi tor of The Oregonian, who was in the Legislature of 1856-7, declared from what he saw there that "the leaders, office-holders and office-hunters had been busy all Winter preparing with ever-increasing boldness to force slav ery into Oregon; and that several of the prominent leaders had openly de clared that the Democratic party was in favor of the introduction of slav ery." Judge Deady, "one of the most prominent, gifted and popular Demo crats in Oregon, advocated the intro duction of slavery." according to Dryer, as our author quotes him. portentous of all, "five of the eight newspapers in the territory directly or indirectly advocated slavery." How this peril was averted and turned into a victory for freedom Professor Wood ward tells with a master's skill in his history. SMASHING MACHINES. Amid all the outcry for rescue of New York City from machine rule, what has become of the direct pri mary, which the Progressive party once worshipped so devoutly? That party has Joined in the nomination of a ticket by a committee which lacked even the representative character of the now contemned delegate conven tion. It has forgotten all about the rule of the people and has sadly re lapsed into machine methods. Had our largest, wickedest and worst-governed city taken a leaf out of Portland's book and ignored par ties in municipal affairs it would have had a better chance of destroying the Tammany machine. But it would at the same time have smashed the ma chines of all the other parties, to which the leaders are devotedly at tached. What they want Is to smash the other parties' machines and keep their own Intact. If New York City should not escape the benign rule of Tammany and re cover control of its own government, the reason will be the same as that for which the United States retains control of the Philippine government the great city Is not fit for self-government. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. What Waterloo was to the first Na poleon, Sedan, fought on September 1, 1870, was to the third. After that battle, hope of French victory was gone. The best France could do was to delay the inevitable. From that day It became certain that Germany would dictate terms of peace. Had Germany been magnanimous, she could have taken away the sting of defeat by demanding no spoils of victory in the shape of cession of terri tory. But she insisted on annexing Al sace and Lorraine in adltion to the payment of a huge Indemnity and the occupation of French territory until it was paid. Whatever may have been the racial stock of those provinces, they were French in language and spirit, and could be held only by force. They thus became a burden rather than a source, of strength. Their loss was a dally reminder of humiliation to the French, and kept alive a desire for revenge which prompted military arm ament In preparation for another war. It caused France to look on all sides for allies and led to the alliance with Russia and later to the understanding with England. It surrounded Ger many with enemies, actual or poten tial, and forced her to keep in a state of continual preparedness for war. She dared not sheath the sword lest France and ftussia fall upon her and England destroy her growing navy. It forced her to find allies In Austria ana Italy and to Induce those countries to assume military burdens second only to her own. Had Germany not taken Alsace and Lorraine, had she generously left the French frontier Intact, the feeling of resentment might -fell have given place in time to that of gratitude for a magnanimous act. The thirst for revenge would not have been kept alive. The foundation might have been laid for a Franco-German alli ance which would have been a guar-, anty of peace to Western Europe. Mu tual respect for each other's valor and common Interests have been known to change foes into allies. Such an alli ance would have made armies of only half the present size sufficient to ward off attack from any quarter on either of the allies. What Germany actually gained by her victory over France she would have gained without the annexation of Alsace and Lorraine and her greatest gain has been the firing of the spirit of a common nationality which welded the German states together in the empire. That cleared away the ob stacles to the marvelous industrial, commercial and maritime development of Germany which has come in the last forty-three years. This develop ment would have been the greater for avoidance of the waste due to keep ing hundreds of thousands of men un der arms during the best years of their youth, when they .should have been at work on the upbuilding of German industry. German commerce could have expanded and a navy could have been built up to guard it without arousing the suspicion and enmity which prompted England to engage Germany In extravagant com petition in constructing warships and to thwart her colonial ambition. The real peril against which Ger many needs to guard lies to the east and south, not to the west. It Is the rising tide of Pan-Slavism, which is fostered by Russia, which has received a great Impetus from the triumph of the Balkan states over Turkey and which threatens to spilt off the south- i era provinces of the Austrian Empire at no distant day. Even at this late day it would be to the advantage of Germany were she voluntarily to restore the annexed provinces to France. Such an act would end French hostility and begin an era of friendship in which all West ern Europe might be united in a league of peace. Armies and navies adequate to withstand Slavonic aggression could still be maintained, but five nations could be relieved of the intolerable burden under which they now groan. The annexation of Alsace and Lor raine was the Initial cause of modern European militarism. REMEDY FOB CAR SHORTAGE. Shortage of cars during the crop moving season is inevitable unless the number of cars and train crews is enormously increased. As these would casTiVes would be" necessary to ,k urnarts for th add- ed expense. But railroads should be able to increase the efficiency of their Pre o,a.: gree as would greatly reduce the shortage. The average movement of a freight car is only 24 miles a day. This is absurdly slow. Of course a car moves a greater distance when actually trav eling. The average is pulled down by the number of days It stands Idle in a blockaded yard or on a sidetrack waiting to be loaded or unloaded. For the latter cause of delay the shipper is largely, if not mainly, responsible, and the railroads continually appeal to the shippers to hasten movement of cars. But delays In the yards are the fault of the railroads. Either their yards are too small er the railroads try to handle too much traffic. If they would co-operate in the move ment for waterway Improvement and would relax their grip on water ter minals, bulky, cheap freight would go by water and thus relieved the railroads could get many more miles of traffic out of each car. The only alternative Is periodical enlargement of terminals, which will become more costly as cities grow and value of land rises. The terminals are now so far behind present needs that by the time the railroads had caught up, another enlargement would have be come necessary. The excuse that shippers get more rapid transit by rail than by water will not hold good; almost any old steamboat or tugboat can travel more than 24 miles a day, even including the time occupied in loading and dis charge. SWEDENBORG. The greatness of Emanuel Sweden borg is not commonly appreciated. Since his death in 1772 interest in his character and work has been gradu ally increasing and the number of congregations who profess his theolog ical tenets has slowly enlarged, but to this day these churches are scattering and their membership comparatively restricted. The first Swedenborgian church was founded in London in 1783, eleven years after the death of the prophet. Four years later it as sumed the name "New Church," by which the Swedenborglans have since designated themselves. Soon after ward his doctrines began tor spread in the United States and on the continent of Europe, but not very rapidly. In 1886 the state of the societies in Great Britain and the United States was moderately encouraging. In the for mer country there were 65 churches with 5700 members. In the United States the churches numbered 116, while missions had been established in Italy, Sweden and Germany. Since that date the church has certainly been erowin. but the rate is not rapid. Swedenborg's doctrines are esoteric. His genius was mystical and his modes of thought so unusual that It will require centuries to popularize his profound and difficult conceptions of religion. It may seem strange that the New Church should have gained its first foothold in England Instead of Swe den, the land of its founder's birth. But in 1668, the year when he was born, Sweden was in a backward con dition intellectually. The great man was compelled to publish his books in other countries, mainly in England, while at home few understood him or cared for the questions which he dis cussed. Sweden was at that time more concerned with military glory than with the affairs of the soul. The King, Charles XII, was exhausting the resources of his people In a fruitless struggle with Russia and their interest naturally clung to the fortunes of that extraordinary monarch, whose adven tures Voltaire has recounted in one of his most entertaining works. Charles was the friend of Swedenborg and one of his few admirers in Sweden. To show his good will he appointed the philosopher to an important position in the Swedish College of Mines and thus secured him a comfortable in come. This was in 1716, long before Swedenborg had developed his pro found speculations upon religion. Educated at. the University of Up sala, which was then a moderately ad. vaneed seat of learning, he showed at first an unusual aptitude for exact sci ence and mathematics. His work on algebra .was the first ever published in the Swe'dlsh language. When his col lected scientific works appeared in 1734 they excited wide attention throughout Europe and gained for the author high standing among savants. A year later he published the treatise on "The Infinite and Final Cause of Creation," which marks the turning point in his career. From that date he no longer devoted himself to mathematics and physical science, but gave all his energies to speculations upon the unseen world. His many books, as they 'originally appeared, were .published at his own expense and such slender returns as they brought in he allowed the booksellers to retain. The great Roche edition of his works. whose publication by Houghton, Miff lin & Co. has Just been completed, makes accessible to readers for the first time in compact form the mar velous thoughts' of this incomparable religious genius. We are not told that Swedenborg experienced any "new birth" or sud den conversion, like Paul and John Bur.yan. The transition of his mind f rt m earthly to heavenly interests was gradual. At a certain point in his life he ceased to write upon sicence and mathematics, and began to deliver his views upon the soul and the world of spirits. That Is about all we can say on the subject of his conversion. More than any other of the great prophets Swedenborg professed to have first hand knowledge of the invisible world. He actually, in his own belief, dwelt among the angels, listened to their conversation and knew all about their habits. Heaven and hell were here on earth. Every person built up his fu ture state as he passed through life, so that at death there was no violent transition, but a mere disencumber ment of the body. The free spirit did not fly away to any remote sphere, but took up its dwelling among the other angels invisible to its living friends, but near them. Naturally Swedenborg possessed incredible mediumistic pow ers, and there is no question whatever that his "phenomena" were genuine. The philosopher Kant, who investi gated some of them, was convinced of their reality. For example, Sweden borg was besought by a widow to tell where her deceased husband had laid a missing receipt. It was for the price of some silverware and the merchant was seeking to collect the debt a sec ond time. Swedenborg described to her a secret drawer where the paper had been concealed. She looked there and found it. He professed to have obtained his information from the husband's spirit, and Kant believed him. What reason is there to douDt the story? Jhe , best evidence , here U for Swedenborg's mediumistic powers is his own character. He never vaunt ed them, seldom gave seances and re- Uused to base the truth hisdoctHnes upon any miraculous performances. It was his own deep conviction mat ne knew the angels exactly as he did his living friends and conversed with them in the same way. Swedenborg interpreted the Bible symbolically. The day of creation in Genesis stood, as he conceived' it, for the progress of the soul from sin to righteousness. Adam stood for the most ancient church, the flood for its dissolution, and so on. In this way the Bible may be made to mean any thing whatever, but under Sweden borg's manipulation it at least escaped the inane significance which some weaker theologians have given it. He believed in the 'deity," not the divin ity, of Jesus. The trinity was ex plained as three modes of the same person, a tenet which made him a heretic, or a Unitarian, which comes to the same thing. The final Judgment took place In the year 1757. At that date a New Dispensation began and a New Church was established by the Almighty, with Swedenborg's writings for its foundation. This church is symbolized by the New Jerusalem of the Apocalypse. The Incomprehensi bly mystical visions of John the Apos tle seem to have been Swedenborg's favorite part of the Bible. Miss Eleanor Wilson, daughter of the President, rode from New York to Cornish, N. H., in an upper berth because no man would surrender a lower berth to her. They all said the President's daughter could sleep in an upper berth as well as anybody else. Of course she can do so as well as any other woman. Some man should have given her his lower berth, not because' she Is the President's daugh ter, but because she is a woman. But courtesy to woman is dying out In the Atlantic states, though still prac ticed In the "raw and untutored" West. Representative Hobson proposes that the Government publish a week ly newspaper, to be called the Official Journal. He would create a circula tion by giving each Senator 25,000 and each Representative 15,000 copies for distribution, which would make a total of 8,895,000 copies. We pre sume that all the departments would be required to publish all official announcements and pronouncements in the Journal. In that case it would trench on the field of Secretary Bryan's Commoner. At a loss for an occupation since his retirement from the Navy, Rear Admlral Osterhaus will raise canaries and doves. "I feel lost without some thing to do," he says. "I was never in better physical condition." There is something wrong with a system which automatically retires a vigorous man of 62 and dooms him 'to such trivial occupations. History is full of the names of men who performed their best work after they passed that age. The Japanese have been famed for their courtesy, but they seem to be much like other nations. When they become excited about politics, they forget their manners. When informed that the foreign minister would re ceive a delegation, the mob which clamored for war on China howled in derision. An evening paper says "the alight ing passenger is entitled to cross the street without risking his life by the speeding of a car on the other track." Granted. But the alighting passenger seldom cares to be killed and is bound to recognize possible danger on the opposite track. State Superintendent Churchill has the thanks of Oregon parents for his vigilance in detecting a holdup of 50 per cent in the price of one textbook. Individually the loss would have been slight, to be sure; collectively the "profit" would be in five figures. Another woman writer of fiction Is seeking a divorce. Somehow, the talent la not conducive to domesticity. In this later case the husband the second, by the way Is alleged to have assaulted her with a chair. He might have made it worse with the ax. The Duchess of Roxburghe (May Goelet) attributes the fact that her baby is a boy to her abstinence from food containing sugar, according to Instructions of a Vienna specialist. What a deadly blow that doctor dealt at the candy industry. Mrs. Lillian Bell Bogue accuses her husband, who is a promoter, of fail ing to account for $70,000 which she had earned as a writer. What does she expect of a promoter? Is not Mr. Lillian Bell Bogue entitled to his commission ? The fire that destroyed $40,000 worth of business property at Bend yesterday caused serious loss to a thriving town, but the losers show the Bend spirit by announcing they will rebuild of brick at once. To the ordinary individual a Fed eral Judge seems to have an easy Job; but Just think of the Judge who has to listen to the appeal of the dyna miters in a brief of 725 pages; There will be a little oMX county fair at Gresham this week that will remind people along in years of the cattle shows and "punkln" shows of their youth. Be careful in arranging the bill of fare tomorrow. It Is "Made in Ore gon" day. This is the last day to hatch plots against the peace of mind of "dere techer." Scraps and Jingles By Leone Lata uaer. Appendicitis covers a multitude of sins. a a a Many a girl weds a man, not because she thinks he will make a success in business, but because his father did. a My idea of a primitive hypocrite Is the child who goes smilingly to school, a a a See where Governor West Is going to have a choir sing to the prisoners. Well, they can't object on the ground that It wasn't included in their sen tences. a a The only time a woman keeps her mouth closed for any length of time is when she is getting it accustomed to her store teeth. . Shrieks Mrs. Pankhurst, "We want women to sweep the country." Yes, but some of them would shine better sweeping the kitchen. e Advertisement for local store was to read, come and look at our 10 beautiful windows, and the compositor got it out 10 beautiful widows. Another difference is that you can see through a window. Help! Thaw is out again! a a a That was paneful, wasn't it? t Speaking of mis-prints, I saw one that should have read "Ask any patron you meet about the wearing qualities of our B. V. D.'s." And the printed word read matrons. a a a Dr. Friedman says that he believes liquor rightly applied is a benefit to humanity, and clinches the assertion by saying, "I've proved it for whisky saved my life once." Well, how does that 'prove it has benefited anybody? a Answer to T. P.: A table d'hote meal is the only sort a man eats with his reg'lar wife. a a a Uncle Sam Is going to be forced into acquiring more territory. There's not half enough states now to write slush Bongs about. a a . a For a change and novelty and down right uniqueness, why not dash off a ballad about Mount Hood, or Portland's roses for a popular song? ' a a Newspaper article says, "Jessie Wil son the President's daughter, is taller than the average woman." Well, Isn't she going to marry and settle down? a a a See where a fireman is being sued for breach of promise by one of his old flames. a a a Women dress "at" each other, a a Note where a seaside belle has be come Mrs. Lott Somebody. Reckon all "his folks" will call her "Lotfs wife." a a a Royalty in great gobs, and grand and noble presents at ex-King Manny's wedding. I'll bet he'd rather had the money. a . a a One thing enfranchisement has done for us. Where men used to blame us for nearly ' everything we now get blamed for It all. a a a Huerta claims to have a bit of Irlsli blood. Well, the percentage Is too small to do him any good. a I don't believe that old proverb that "those who live by the sword die by the sword." Just read where a break fast food manufacturer died In a motor wreck. N. Nitts on Symptoms By Dean Collins. Nescius Nitts, sage of runklndorf Sta tion, Saw a bumblebee, humming with grea.t animation; One nictotine Jet stopped the bee's aviation, Then Nescius gave out a lengthy ora tion On health and on schools and their Inter-relation. My young grandson, Nescius, takes As fine a young lad as I ever yet see; Jest pluniD tun ox neaiin unu iB. and vim. All through the vacation you couldn t stop him From runnin' and playin' and frolic and shout Then all on a sudden he sorter give out. He moped round the house sorted Jest a-com plain in' How peaked he felt and how bad he was palnin'. Until all us folks was almost plumb distracted With worryin' over the way that he We dosed him with syrups and calomel pills. But couldn't Jest get the real seat of his Ills. My daughter she sends fer a doctor at last. And tells him: "Come quick, for the last hope is past!" He comes and he looks at young Nescius' tongue. And tests out his pulse and the force of his lung. "The symptoms," he says, "ain't no reason fer sorrow; They're annual things the school opens tomorrow." What Did He Mean to Snyt Current Opllnon. A certain Dr. Spooner, of Oxford, has become famous for his blundersome way of mixing up words. Here are some of his weird expressions. Can you untangle them? Turning to a young lady sitting neii to him at a dinner table. Dr. Spooner asked: "Will you pass the pig's fleas?" A little later, pointing to some cran berry Jelly, he asked the same young lady to pass "that stink puff." Being late for dinner one evening, he excused himself, saying he had been "hatching a pasty snipe." To a railroad porter who asked about his baggage the doctor said that he had "two rags and a bug." Entering the kitchen when fish were on the fire, he sniffed and exclaimed, "What a h 1 of smerrings! n iv,o worst case of all occurred when he was in the pulpit. He an nounced as his text: mw k but chew are fosen. Be ye therefore of the fosen chew." Writing a Love Letter. Puck. Miss Summit I must answer his let ter, and I want to write something that doesn't mean anything. Miss Palisade Why don't you tell him you love him? i Rainfall on Mars. Milwaukee News. "Mars must be a poor market for silk hose." "Why do you think so?" "Pro fessor Lowell says it never rains on Mars."