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Postage Rates 12 to IS pages. 1 cent; IS to 32 pases, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents CO to GO pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. I cents; 78 to D2 sages, 6- cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree & Conk- 11 n, New York, Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steger building. Hu Vmnctr Office R. J. Bldwell Co. 742 Market street. PORTLAND, SUJfDAY, MAY 24, BECKER Gt'ILTY. The case against Charles Becker, the New York Police Lieutenant ac cused of Instigating the murder of Herman Rosenthal, was materially strengthened in the second trial. One new witness was Mrs. Lillian Rosen berg, widow of "Lefty Louis," one of the four principals recently executed for the murder. Mrs. Rosenberg tes tified that she had heard Jack Rose urge the four gunmen to kill Rosen thal because Becker demanded that he be put out of the way. Later she saw the money payment divided among the four gunmen. Another new witness was C. B, Plltt, Jr., Becker's press agent. Plitt testified that Becker had asked his assistance In establishing an alibi for a certain night and had told him he would know the purpose the next day It was that night that Rosenthal was murdered. The evidence of Jack Rose, Harry Vallon and "Bridgie Webber, accomplices, was unshaken in the second trial. There was weighty circumstantial evidence against the accused Police Lieutenant. Rosenthal was murdered in the early morning hours of Tues day, July 16, 1912. On the preceding Saturday he haC supplied to the New Tork World an affidavit charging that a police Lieutenant was his part ner in a gambling house and received 20 per cent of the profits. He named Becker. This affidavit was published Sunday morning and on Monday Dis trict Attorney Whitman made an ap pointment with Rosenthal to go over the evidence In his office Tuesday morning. The District Attorney had previously announced that he In tended to use Rosenthal In revealing graft conditions in the Police Depart ment. Rosenthal did not keep the appoint ment. A few hours before it was to have been held he was called out of a hotel cafe one hundred feet from the heart of Broadway and shot down by four men who fired from an auto mobile. The police showed a signifi cant Indifference to the capture of the murderers. A passerby who caught the number of the automobile as It sped away went to police head quarters to report it but was locked up and the police blotter was changed in an apparent effort to conceal the information given. Jack Rose, the confessed conspira tor with Becker, claimed to have been a graft collector for the Police Lieu tenant. Investigation by the District Attorney's office disclosed that Becker was possessed of a fortune far greater than that of an ordinary police offi cer. Bank deposits aggregating $50, 000 were' found In addition to a hand some newly-built home, real estate and stocks and bonds. These facts taken in conjunction with the direct testimony of confessed accomplices, men of low morality though they were, established a re markably clear case against the Po lice Lieutenant In the first trial. The added testimony of a better class of witnesses In the second trial ought to be sufficient to sweep aside minor technical blunders In rulings or in structions that may have crept in and which might, if evidence were less con ' elusive, be given consideration by the Court of Appeals. The theory presented by the de fense that Rosenthal was killed as an outcome of a gamblers' war Is not even plausible in the light of events that preceded the murder. But were there a shadow of suspicion that the gamblers had acted without consult ing Becker, it is clear that the murder was committed because of him. Their motive was protection of Becker as well as themselves. There need be no sympathy for a man who, chosen to enforce the law, connives with scoundrels to break It and thereby promotes graver crime. It perhaps cannot be held that full moral responsibility extends In every case to all beneficiaries of crime, but the activities of Becker In the realms of lawlessness with the type of part ners with which he was surrounded lead almost inevitably to murder If the conplrators fall out. Were there doubt as to Becker's legal guilt there would be no doubt as to his moral guilt. SERVILE SCHOOUNO. Some of the advocates of vocational training in Boston carry their doc trine to a regrettable extreme. One of them, in a recent report, advises the school authorities to drop Eng lish, mathematics, science, French and German from the high school of mechanic arts and leave nothing In the curriculum but business practice, shop organization and applied citizen ship, of course with the regular trade subjects. He would organize the school workshops on a strictly com mercial basis and exclude text books almost entirely. No doubt a school of this kind would produce Industrious and capa ble workmen, but it would not pro duce good citizens.' Should our public schools ever gravitate to the condi tion which this report desires they would train VP servile class totally unfit for American institutions. It is a highly valuable thing for a young person to be able to practice a trade skillfully, but it is equally valuable for him to be able to think soundly. Schools with a curriculum such as we have described would not encour age thought. They would extirpate It. Educational propagandists are prone to go to extremes. Very likely other propagandists have the same falling, but the extravagances of those who Influence our schools are excep tionally harmful. Not many years ago their Ideal was "the citizen with an all-round culture." With this beautiful vision in their imaginations they despised everything practical and exalted everythng abstract and "cul tural." They proclaimed shrlllv at ail their professional assemblies that they did not wish to produce "skilled clerks and mechanics" In the public schools. What they wanted above all things was "thoughtful citizens with a keen sense of morality and beauty." They did not get that kind of citizens by the grinding of their mill, at least not always. Now they have changed their minds and gone to the other extreme. Cul ture, the power to think, general in formation are all of no account Manual dexterity is everything. The mind is forgotten and the hand is idol ized. Surely if we persevere we can at last strike the wise middle course between these two ruinous extremes and' educate youths who will be citi zens as well as workmen. CHAMBERLAIN YS. HASLET. The Oregonlan invites careful at tention today to the letter of Colonel C. E. . S. wood, conspicuous Oregon Democrat and one or more times its candidate for the United States Senate, Colonel Wood supports the candidacy or ivuiiam Hanley (.Progressive) on the broad ground that he is a real Democrat, and has been, is, and will oe a supporter of President Wilson; and he opposes the candidacy for re election of Senator Chamberlain be cause the Senator is in no true sense a Democrat, and among other things is not a supporter of President Wilson In the administration policy of Pana ma tolls repeal Let us be fair to Senator Chamber Iain. He would have stayed by . the resident in the free tolls and every other issue if he had not discovered that he could not Justify himself -to his constituents and that he could not be re-elected. Is It' possible that Col onel Wood thinks Mr. Chamberlain ought thus have committed political suicide? Perhaps; but no one else who knows Chamberlain expected it. No sacrifice of political principle is too great for him to make if the re ward is a political Job. Colonel Wood demands responsible party government and unquestioning support of party policies by Demo crats without regard to consequences. But let him cast his eye back over Democratic history in Oregon for the past twenty years. He will find, that Mr. Chamberlain in his various can didacies has deliberately suppressed open advocacy of the principles of his party on the avowed ground that it did not pay. His only platform was. to win; his only principle to get the votes. That Is all. If Senator Chamberlain is unable to convince his constituents of the sin cerity of his recent grandstand play against the Administration policy of free tolls repeal, let him find it in his own political record. . Meanwhile the old game of side tracking every other candidate and subordinating every other effort in the grand scheme of ' electing George Chamberlain to office Is to be played once more in Oregon. Poor C. J. Smith! M'RKYNOTLDS' FOOT IX IT. It is most significant that the most stalwart defender of Attorney-Gen eral McReynoIds in his controversy with Joseph W. Folk is the New York Sun, which has been most bit ter in its opposition to those meas ures of the Administration designed to break up the concentration of financial control whereof J. P. Mor gan in his lifetime was the command- ng figure. That journal perhaps dreaded the effect of the revelations Charles S. Mellen would make re garding the New Haven deals. It ac cuses the Senate of exceeding its con stitutional power in the request to the Interstate Commerce Commission to make the Inquiry. The Senate cer tainly has power to collect informa tion needed to guide it in legislating on current affairs. The Commerce Commission was created for the pur pose of conducting inquiries relating to railroads and has all the necessary machinery. The Senate, therefore. acted- most properly in seeking infor- ation about the New. Haven deals and in asking the commission to ob tain that Information. Its action is particularly timely when it is about to consider legislation dealing with the issue of railroad securities. In objecting to Mr. Mellen's telling the whore story, Mr. McReynoIds has "put his foot In it" once more. Had he shown due diligence in prosecut ing the Mellen indictment the Senate might have held Its hand. As he has not, the public interest will be better served by securing restitution to the plundered New Haven stockholders and by securing legislation to prevent like wrongTdoing than by the punish ment of a confessed tool of a dead financier. FINDING THE SAFE WAT. The era of extravagance and waste fulness in public expenditure in Ore gon began with the adoption of IXRenism. For ten years state, coun ty, city and school district have joined to pile the burdens upon the tax payer, who must support government In all its branches. The citizen pays three times as much in taxes as he did a decade ago. That Is when the electorate began to listen to tTRen. Not all the widened scope of pub lic activities, and not every costly public enterprise 13 due to ITRenism, of course; but URenism has played a great part in the general trend toward the higher cost of public living through all kinds of experimentation and through the assumption by the public of every kind of duty. Possi bly URenLsm was only a symptom of the general distemper, which has not been confined to Oregon but has spread through the Nation. Oregon has had enough, and more, of XT' It en Ism. The latest ITRen manifestation is to abolish the State Senate. He has got the State Grange to his way of thinking on that subject. The Grange thinks that government could be cheaper and better if we had only one legislative body. But the facts do not bear out the argument. No candid Investigation of legislative history in Oregon will fail to disclose that the Senate is the con servative body. In 1909, for example, the State Senate killed Jl. 000. 000 in appropriation bills passed by the House. The way out of the bog of waste and prodigality In the public service is not to be forever abolishing some thing or other, according to the TTRen plan. It Is to put good men on guard. No system Is better than the men be hind it. The tTRen theory is that when one system fails, or is ineffici ent, another system must be substi tuted. Oregon does not so much need new systems as strong and capable men in public place. We are in a fair way to get them. Look at the men nomi nated for the Legislature throughout Oresron.' If Wf Inr hnv crrrr o-nir. eminent through them, we never will have it through tTRen. NO MORE FREE SEEDS. The Senate has plucked up courage to cut the free seed distribution out of the agricultural appropriation bill and unless it relents when the bill is reported or goes to conference we shall have to buy our own lettuce, onion and radish seeds instead of re ceiving them from our Congressman. That is the second streak of. econ omy seen in the proceedings of this Congress. Senator ' Thomas said he had been trying to find the right place to practice economy, but it had been impossible to place it anywhere except the barbershop and the bath rooms. Senator Warren informed him the Senate had already commenced, saying in bitter tones which the Con gressional Record leaves to our imag inations: We no longer are. to have nailbrushes, hairbrushes, or pure water for our com mittee rooms, or sufficient towels and sun dry Items' In the barber shoo, or the little Items of supply such as medicines, reme dies, and appliances for first aid to the sick ana injured as we used to have. Think of the great saving, the great economy, effected In this way. Good old Dr. Galllnger and Farmer Martlne of New Jersey told of the great good done by free seeds, but Senator Kenyan of Iowa could see no merit in what he called "political seeds." He summed up their effects on the recipients in this satirical lan guage: If they get those and do not plant them before the primary or before the election, the man who has sent out the seeds has a great advantage over bis opponent. If they plant them, however, and they grow before election, he Is at no advantage over his opponent. The Government might Just as well appropriate money to send out cheap cigars to the electors of this country; the principle would be Just the same. ' By endorsing such views the Senate Is becoming positively radical. It has set the broom of economy in motion. and has swept out the nailbrushes, hairbrushes and medical remedies for use when Senator Warren stubs his dear old toe. Now away go the free seeds. Which of our idols will be smashed next in this iconoclastic age? DB COOK'S LATEST. In his effort to keep himself before the public. Dr. F. A. Cook, the pre tended discoverer of the North Pole, has Induced Senator Polndexter to of fer a resolution thanking him for the discovery and voting him a medal. In a pamphlet sent out by the Cook exploiters an attempt is made to prove that Admiral Peary has not been recognized as the discoverer of the Pole by any official or scientific body except the National Geographic Society, yet an attempt is also made to prove that Peary's evidence corroborates Cook's claim. If Peary's evidence Is so weak that Congress and various foreign geographical so cieties have evaded recognizing him as the discoverer, of what value is that evidence in support of Cook's pretensions? As usual with a man In Dr. Cook's position, he has become involved in a maze of his own making. Had he been a straightforward man he would have seen the folly of -'discrediting. Peary and of afterwards using Peary as a witness on his behalf. He has per mitted his venom against Peary to blind him to his own interest and to deprive him of the benefit of an in genious device for corroborating his story. Having destroyed" his reputation for veracity by his Mt. McKinley fake. Dr. Cook cannot re-establish It by any quantity of evidence as to his North Pole fake. The most he can accom plish is to raise doubt as to the genu ineness of Peary's discovery and to cause people to place both men in the same category. If they continue their mudsllnglng debate, we shall be tempted to doubt whether there is a North Pole. . FITTCRE OF THE THIRD PARTY. Should Colonel Roosevelt persist in maintaining the Progressive party in the field, he will lead a sadly shrunk en army to the polls next November. The vote it polled for him In 1912 was its- high-water mark. Ever since that year it has shown a vast diminu tion at almost every election, and the exceptions serve only to emphasize the rule. In Massachusetts the Pro gressive candidate for Governor made a slight gain on the Roosevelt vote and the Republicans sustained a loss on the Taft vote, but exceptional cir cumstances rendered that election de ceptive as to the relative strength of the two parties. In Louisville the Progressives held their own at the municipal election, but party lines are slightly regarded In municipal af fairs. In every other election the Progressives have lost strength enor mously and in some cases their forces have almost vanished. The return of the two hundred thousand Pennsylvania Progressives to the Republican party, even to the support of Colonel Roosevelt's pet aversion. Senator Penrose, Is but the last of a long series of events having the same complexion. Maine, Michi gan, Maryland, New Tork, South Da kota, Oregon and several Congres sional bye-elections tell the same sto ry. Registration In other states re veals a wholesale return of Repub licans to their old party. Men who led in the bolt have also abandoned the new party, such as Munsey, Han na, Fllnn, Prendergast, Wellington, Bristow. The Colonel's political staff Is reduced to such stalwarts as Per kins, Beverldge, Pinchot and John son. There are two ways of interpreting this Progressive slump. The most ob vious is that the men who left the Republican party recognize that their chief causes of revolt have been re moved, that the party is now under control of its advanced members, and that the old party offers the best means of- putting their political con victions into effect. Progressive lead ers, however, reply that a slump was to be expected after the excitement of 1912 had died down, that the vote they polled at recent elections is rock bottom and that they will build up on that as a solid foundation. They also say that registration figures are deceptive as to the present Progres sive strength, a poll of enrolled Re publicans in California having shown that more than 50 per cent intend to vote for re-election of Governor John son. There Is another cause outside of either the Republican or Progressive parties which prompts voters to de sert the latter for the former. This is practical experience of Democratic rule as a result of Republican divi sion". A revenue tariff, trade depres sion, sacrifice of the most essential benefits of the Panama Canal, mud dling in Mexico and apology to Co lombia are .bitter pills for patriotic citizens to take as medicine to heal their wounds, but they are- having their curative effect. Progressives are having impressed on their minds how small are their differences with " Re publicans by comparison wlth their differences with the Democratic party. The most conclusive test of the rock-bottom strength of the Progres sive party may come In Pennsylvania. Hosts of men who voted for Colonel Roosevelt in J912 are now for Senator Penrose. The Senator was named by the Colonel as one of -the chief causes of his bolt and the Colonel's out-and-out adherents are likely to vote for his lieutenant, Glfford Pinchot. If Mr. Penrose Is still as obnoxious as he was two years ago. Progressives who are registered as Republicans will again bolt the Republican ticket. They must choose between Mr. Pin chot and Mr. Palmer, the Democrat. They may be joined by some anti-machine men who voted for Mr. Dlm mlck. Colonel Roosevelt will doubt less throw himself into the fight -with his old-time ardor, fired by his grudge against Mr. Penrose, his devotion to Mr. Pinchot and his desire to rally his admirers to the Bull Moose stand ard. The one weak point about the Re publican party is that its advanced wing has developed no one outstandr Ing character as a leader to whom all factions will rally and who can win back the remainder of the Progres sive party. The Progressives have the advantage of Colonel Roosevelt's strong personality and of the disposi tion of many Republicans to forgive. In their search for a leader, the harsh things he has said about their party and to make terms with them. These Republicans are unwilling to abandon their historic party name or to adopt some of his new ideas, but they would probably smooth the way for his re turn without loss of "face." SWEDENBORG FOR THE MASSES. John C. Ager has compiled a book of extracts from Swedenborg's writ ings which gives a connected account of that great man's religious opin ions. The book is called "The Path of Life." Its contents are taken from nineteen different works, including "Heaven and Hell," "The Last Judg ment," "Universal Theology" and "Angelic Wisdom." Swedenborg was perfectly qualified to Impart angelic wisdom to the .rest of mankind be cause from his 65th year to the day of his death, when he was 84, he was in constant communication with the realm of spirits. One of his frequent phrases is, "I have talked with the angels," and learned thus and so from them in the same way as Moses talked with the Lord himself in Bible times. According to Swedenborg's views, every living person is attended by two or more ange's through whom he obtains vitality from on high. Should these spirit mlnistrants desert him he would perish speedily, since the channel through which life flows Into him would be cut off. In Swedenborg there was no con flict whatever between science and religion. He began his marvelous researches in both realms of knowl edge when he was still a boy and kept them up during the whole of his long life. Up to the age of 5 5 he seems to have groped in more or less spiritual darkness. He had published books on mining, chemistry, dock embankments, navigation and other erudite subjects, but he had not mas tered the mysteries of the inner life. He held a royal appointment in the department of mines in Sweden and was in active correspondence with European learned societies.- He was also a great traveler and had seen whatever was worth seeing In many lands. Still he was dissatisfied. From his boyhood he had been peering Into the depths of human nature seeking for the soul. At the age of 65 he found it and from that time he de voted his genius to writing books on religion. His first work was in eight large volumes upon the, "Internal sense of Genesis and Exodus." He was too mucn of a scientific man to take these poetical books of the Bible literally, so he sought for an esoteric meaning and supposed he had found it. The eight volumes of his mam moth commentary were published at his own expense and sent all over the civilized world. His next publication was "Heaven and Heli," probably the most popular of his many writings. It has been translated from the orig inal Latin into scores of languages, including Japanese. Its circulation in English runs up into the hundreds of thousands. The essential point in "Swedenborg's religious faith was his mysticism. He put no confidence whatever in formal professions of belief, but based every thing . on immediate illumination by the inner light and upon deeds as the expression of the soul. "All religion," he wrote, "Is a matter of life, and the life of religion is doing good." Again he tells us that "where there is no goodness of life there Is no religion." This is in direct opposition to the for malists, who make the essence of re ligion consist in the profession of cer tain beliefs and the performance of certain rites. Like most of the mys tics, of whom Swedenborg was by all odds the greatest, he made much of performance and very little of creed. To him the spiritual world was as real as the physical and he perceived oc cult truths with the same immediate certainty as ordinary men perceive bricks and dollars. His theory -of evil is Ingenious but unsatisfactory. It stands on the same shaky basis as every other that at tempts to give God credit for the good in the world and exempt him from responsibility for the bad. He says, for example, that "God did not create evil, but evil was Introduced by man himself." It would be interesting to hear Swedenborg or anybody -else ex plain how man managed to intro duce earthquakes, cold Winters and drouths. . But that is a comparatively trifling point. The gist of the matter lies in the fact that when the Al mighty created man he created all that man is and does. The , possibil ity of It all must necessarily have lain In the original creature. Otherwise there . was a part of him created by some other being than God, which is contrary to our hypothesis. Sweden borg. says that "man- is continually turning into evil the good that flows in from God" and hence he is alone responsible for it. But this is an obvious evasion. We may Justly ask who it was that created in man the disposition and power to turn good into evil. Man cannot rightfully be blamed for acting as he was created to act. Indeed it would be difficult to see how he could act otherwise. There are some observations on this in Fitzgerald's Omar which Sweden borg might have profited by if he had been privileged to read them. But the problem of evil is a rock on which many another ship besides Swedenborg's has gone to wreck. His bad logic in this particular does not affect the validity of his general scheme of religion and the moral gov ernment of the world. He explains the flourishing condition of wicked men convincingly enough. The Lord does not approve of their sins, but his government is one of "uses," and since wicked men are often gifted with shining abilities he is willing to employ them. The truly good love service for its ovn sake, but not so the wicked. They serve for the sake of power, riches, glory. "Thus the Lord governs the impious In heart who are In high places by the glory of their name and incites them to serve their fellow men by the gain they will get from it." This may not be orthodox theology, but it is. excel lent economy. Perhaps some theo logians might improve their views of the Almighty a little if they would attribute more common sense to him after Swedenborg's example. INCITING MEXICAN ENMITY. The worst Incentive to anti-American feeling In Mexico and other Latin American countries Is such predic tions" as that of Representative Wlngo in Congress that "those hearing me now will live to sit in a Congress that will see the Mexican border pushed to the Panama - Canal." Neither Presi dent Wilson nor the great body of the American people have any such de sire, and if the time ever comes when this prediction will be fulfilled, . the American people will act reluctantly, choosing the less of two evils. The severest criticism aimed at Mr. Wil son's Mexican policy is that it -has created a danger that the! United States would be compelled to occupy Mexico for an indefinite time in order to avoid a worse evil. Mr. Wlngo's prediction was unwise, not only -because its fulfillment is im probable and contrary to the National desire, but because It will intensify the enmity of Mexicans and the sus picion of other Latin-Americans toward this country. It is likely to be transmitted to Mexico and to be republished there as a true- indication of our aggressive aims. It is apt to inflame Mexicans to the point where they will murder some hapless Amer ican. It is likely to hamper us in dealing with Latin America in gen eral. Though Mr. Wingo held this opinion, he should not have ex pressed It. The greatest vice of our National legislators is their disposition to let their tongues wag. They seem to imagine that they are elected to talk. They are not; they are elected to make laws. STEW LIGHT OX KEATS. The new poems by Keats and the letters touching upon his later life which Sir Sidney Colvin has pub lished in the London Times add little to our knowledge of the poet and nothing to his fame. One of the poems is a somewhat trifling song in which Apollo invites the Graces to ride with him tacross the gold Au tumn s whole kingdom of corn." Another reproaches a chaste maiden for loving him less warmly than he thinks suitable. Her hand "no soft squeeze for squeeze returneth," which neglect throws the poet into agonies. The newly published verses seem all to belong to Keats' earlier period when his poetry gave little promise of greatness. His first volume, which appeared when he was 22 years old. contained very poor stuff upon the whole and deserved all the severe things that were said about it. His second volume contained "Endymion." This appeared one year after the first. It was upon "Endymion" that Black woods Magazine made those scandal ous strictures which were said by some sentimental people to have has tened the poet's death. Keats was more or less annoyed by the black guardly review, but it did not affect his-health. At that time he had fallen in love with the charming Mary Brawne and his passion for her drove every other consideration into the background of his mind. Keats' disposition was rather heavy. His intellectual ma chinery moved with a good deal of friction and his feelings did not read ily kindle Into flame, but once set blazing they made a lively conflagra tion. His letters to Mary Brawne are as ardent as the most romantic reader could wish for. Up to the day of his untimely death Keats never outgrew a certain boyishness which caused him to magnify his troubles. His inclination to whine is unpleas antly marked In circumstances where a more robust person would have sworn. But mere personal singular ities of this sort do not affect the quality of his poetry. "Endymion" is a work not without great merits, but upon the whole, as Shelley said of It, the poem is unreadable. Or at any rate the task of reading it through has seldom been accomplished. It is overweighted with all sorts of vagrant mythological fancies which obstruct the narrative, and when the ancient story has been finally puzzled out there is very little of new worth in it. Keats lived more In Greece than In modern Europe. His best poetry transforms ancient mythology into something eternally vital, but his -worst is terribly dull. Pretty nearly everything .that Keats produced of lasting value was pub lished In his third volume, which ap peared in 1820, the year before he died. In this collection were the Im perishable odes, besides "Hyperion," "Lamia," some dramatic pieces and "The Eve of St. Agnes." Keats pos sessed a certain dramatic gift which would have given him respectable rank among the minor playwrights' had he cultivated it assiduously. The specimens he has left are said by the critics to be fully as good as Byron's closest dramas and not worse than some of Shelley's efforts. This Is faint praise, but probably as warm as the circumstances warrant, "Lamia," which is a narrative poem full of classical reminiscences, contains bril liant wit, lines of surpassing poetical beauty, and is, upon the whole, "one of the most glorious Jewels' in the crown of English poetry," to quote a generous critic. "Love in a huf with water and a crust," the poet reflects In "Lamia," "Is, love forgive us, cin ders, ashes, dust," which Is a tran scription of the old proverb that when poverty comes in at the door love flies out at the window. The poem glitters from beginning to end with faultless gems of thought and fancy. "Hyperion" is another classical construction, but more In the Mil tonic vein than "Lamia." The lan guage soars ambitiously and ' the thought is consistently sublime, but before it was finished Keats felt his genius unequal to the task he had attempted and dropped the work in the middle. Milton did the same thing with his fragmentary "Ode on the Nativity," confessing that the sub ject was too ambitious for his years when he began upon it. Had Keats lived out the full measure of his days he would have .climbed to Milton's level and perhaps even higher. He developed rapidly after his boyish failures and no critic likes to set a limit to N the powers which death un happily blighted before their prime. Keats' odes are the finest in the language, perhaps the finest in any language if we -consider only pure beauty. Swinburne says of the odes "To Autumn" and "On a Grecian Urn" that "they reach the triumphant achievement of the very utmost beau ty possible to human words," while the ode "To a Nightingale" is almost supernaturally "radiant, fervent and musical." Phrases of this sort are mere extravagance of language to readers who do not love poetry. For such persons Keats' finest produc tions are almost meaningless. Just as some eyes see nothing worth while in Raphael's pictures. It pro&ably re quires a keener artistic sense to ap preciate the poetry of Shelley or iveats than to see the greatness of most other works of literary genius. They give us the spirit of poetry with few traces of a body Such flesh-and-blood as Keats vouchsafes to his readers is dug from Grecian graves and it is not always complete ly vitalized. His "Ode on a Grecian Urn" contains the famous lines: Beauty ts truth, truth beauty, that Is all Ye know on earth and all ye need to know. a sentiment which appeals more strongly to one whose bread and but ter are securethan to the common mass of toilers. Keats' most popular poem is "The Eve of St. Agnes," which is a study in colors painted on a block of ice. Nothing can surpass the loveliness of the poem and noth ing can equal Its chill.- The Springfield Republican, an in dependent newspaper, thus disposes of an unpleasant canard sent out from Brazil about Colonel Roosevelt: The canard that Colonel Roosevelt on his visit to Rio de Janeiro last Autumn de manded and received large payment for de livering an address before the Brazilian Geographical and Historical Institute Is finally and categorically denied by the in stitute itself, and it is to be hoped that this will be the end of It. Those who aim to Judge the Colonel fairly and to criticise him only when the facts warrant are under continual handicap from those whose In temperate hatred ieads them to give credit to and circulate indeed, to manufacture all sorts of tales reflecting upon him. The truth about Colonel Roosevelt ought to be enough for both his enemies and his friends. The Oklahoma minister who wishes to sell the church building where he has been preaching for the last year seems to be well within his rights. His congregation has paid him only J 16 since last November. . What worthy use that kind of people ex pect to make of a church is a mys tery. Evidently they nev.er pray or they would not be so stingy, and preaching does them no good. It would be a great improvement over Itheir mock worship to use the build ing for a barn or a saloon. Nordica evidently had little faith in banks and investments of the or dinary kind.- She preferred to invest her savings In jewels. There is an old saw which says they are about the safest of all property. Their great value in small bulk is an advantage to a woman like Nordica who trav eled constantly. Their price does not vary much from year to year and there is always a market for them. Probably her heirs are better off than if she had bought bonds instead of gems. Now, now is the time of the yelp ing cur. He sleeps all day and rests his voice. At sunset he eats a hearty meal and just about the hour when weary humans Want to go to sleep he tunes up. Now he emits a continuous torrent of piercing yelps. Now he pauses, in order to strike more fierce ly on his victim's nerves. Meanwhile his loving mistress sits on the front stoop and encourages him. As she sees it, the world was made for her dog. Those Americans who remained in Mexico City in spite of the situation are at present able to. laugh at their more timid countrymen who rushed out leaving everything behind. Mellen Bays he shielded Morgan. However, is is quite likely that Morgan Is now reaping the fujll reward , for any delinquencies he may have in dulged in. According to Mr. Marshall, Mexico's crying need is a Vice-President. Huerta is one, however, if you put the proper construction on the "vice." Girls are smarter than "boys, says a noted educator. Everyone who has ever attended a co-educational insti tute has long known it. Bulgarian milk fcacilli are said to promote amiability. We know a number of. Individuals who ought to take large doses. Villa is growing a bit more popular in the United States. Recent reports indicate that he has hired an Amer ican press agent. A new Venus has been unearthed. Inasmuch as her head is missing, as well as her arms, De Mllo has nothing to worry about. But if Congress adjourns in July the members "will be kept too busy mending their political fences to get a rest. i It is well that the weather should get all the moisture out lof its system before the Festival. Good coffee is reported very rare. Restaurant patrons have long sus pected as much. Why doesn't Doc Cook lay claim to original discovery of that river in Brazil ? Teddy makes it clear that he in tends to mill around and get nowhere. Our Vice-Consul at Saltlllo is safe. Thanks to British efforts. Nature is rapidly setting the stage for the Rose Festival, 1 We haven't had a Mexican crisis now for over a week. .. Becker convicted again. Tammany has lost his grip. About time for another White House wedding. Watchful waiting Is again firmly en trenched. Just rain enough for the rose hav-vest. If you love your dog muzzle him. COL. WOOD OX TRCE DEMOCRACY Wfcjr He Supports Mr. Hauler and Op pose. Mr. Chamberlain. PORTLAND, May 23. (To the Edi tor.) I am "dee-lighted" to receive free advertising as a "millionaire," an "anarchist" and Bill Hanley's "cow partner" and In order to keep the ball rolling will you permit me to say I think The Oregonlan Is making a great mistake In not educating the people on -the Importance of Democrats support ing President Wilson In the repeal of free tolls, the Mexican peace policy and all other administration policies. Some day, if ever the G. O. P. returns to power. The Oregonlan. If still glad dening the morn in that remote pe riod, will want to Invoke this princi ple of Responsible Government which Wilson Is now seeking to make a part of our unwritten constitution. What would England, regardless of party, think of a member of the House of Commons attached to the "govern ment" party, who refused to support the Prime Minister and Cabtnet on a bill put forward by the government? W hat would become of responsible gov ernment? The only way we will ever gret re sponsible government In this country Is by recognizing the President and his Cabinet as the responsible party leaders and of popular opinion compelling the legislators to support them. Of course under our system It Is dif ficult to compel a local man (and our Senators are local) to support the re sponsible government head If the local man thinks It will defeat his re-election; and I have no doubt Senator Chamberlain has sized up Oregon Just as The Oregonlan has and believes the repeal of the free tolls will be unpopu lar In this state. But if Hanley thinks free tolls wrong in principle and be lieves the President ought to be sup ported, ho ought not to suppress his beliefs to get votes. Waving the point that the clear terms of the treaty and our National honor require no discrimination, waving the point that the free tolls are but a sub sidy added to an already existing mo nopoly, the vital thing to Democrats, and as I think to all citizens who look further than playing short-lived party politics, is to establish the principle in this country that the President as leader of the party In power must be supported in the carefully considered policies of the Government, Everybody knows I Intend to support William Hanley. Not because he is my life-long- friend, but because in Its larg est sense he Is the best and biggest Democrat I know. He Is for the plain people always. He refused to be an elector on the standpat Taft ticket and openly came out for Wilson. He now publicly and In print says he is proud -of it and If elected or not elected will support Wilson in his broad enlight ened policies. He believes now that the way to give shippers lower rates is not to add a subsidy to the American coastwise monopoly (New York and Boston to Honolulu and Manila being "coastwise"), but to repeal the mo nopoly and give Portland and Seattle the same chance as Victoria and Van couver, B. C, at the open competition of the ships of the world. If this Is to defeat him. I know he will meet it with the Hanley smile. He 'will re spect himself that he has been honest and candid and has not pussyfooted : for votes. I think William Hanley the most picturesque and commanding fig ure in the state. He knows Its general needs better than any man I know, and will command attention wherever he may be placed. C. E. S. WOOD. UTIGAXT STANDS FOR HIS RIGHTS Reluctant Man WliihnB to Support Wife If Proceedings Are Regular. ChicaKo Inter-Ocean. "I stand on my constitutional rights." said James Phillips, charged with fail ing to support his wife, Mrs. Mabel E. Phillips, and their children, to Munici pal Judge Uhlir in the court of do mestic relations. "I stand on my constitutional rights and I refuse to answer any questions because I have no lawyer." Judge Uhlir appointed Charles S. Wharton, former Congressman from the Fourth Congressional District, as Phillips counsel. "I admit my client's guilt," said Mr. Wharton Immediately. "Sure!" his client echoed. "I ought to have ?5 a week," ven tured Mrs. Phillips. . "My man can afford to pay J10 a week," Mr. Wharton declared. "You bet," his man affirmed happily. The order was entered. THE TALE OF THE MOTH. 0 the glimmering lights of city nights! How the little devils call! From the light that lies in woman's eyes. Home love, home comforts and all. 1 am led by their blinking and wanton winking To answer the call of the street. And I follow the crowd with laughter loud . To a place where good fellows meet. Then It's give me the lass that likes her glass And give me the ragtime song. For the gentle jag and the merry rag They help a fellow along. So give me the cup to keep me up. And give me my friends to treat. For the company gay on the Great White Way I tell you are hard to beat. But when a fellow is old and mellow And his eyes are dim and his hair is gray. Where- will the friends be he toasted so merrily. Those friends of a gayer day? They'll be where the light is. enjoying their gin fizz, At the same old make-believe game; And if one came to say that a friend died that day. They'd but flutter more close to the flame. And when the long night without any light Had closed in over his clay, They'd drink highballs In gilded halls. And this is what they'd say: "Oh, It's many a dinner I've had with that sinner And many a bottle, too. And now he's dead just pass me the red, I declare, I'm feeling blue. "But don't you think, really, he spent too freely? He died all alone, so they say. The friends all deserted with whom he had flirted. And stole back to the Great White Way." MART H. FORCE. Portland. May 14, 1914. God's Gallery. Though I am poor, and cannot buy The rare, time-mellowed things of art, God keeps an open gallery Of glories for the poor In heart. Whose walls are hung with grander show Of color than old Titian knew. With outines Mlchaelangelo Wronged in the best cartoons he drew! All "this Is mine to have and hold; Nor fire may burn, nor years may soil, With ruthless trace of gathering mould. These wonders of the Master's toll; Nor can some ruthless child of fate. Some darkly gifted Corsican, By red successes decorate His Louvre from my Vatican. Maurice Thompson. XT