.?( 2 IHE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, OREGON. SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1907. Jit: H I Current Opinions n Lie Topics Wanted New Financiers. (Chicago Tribune.) With some people It may bo n lack of confidence. With others It may bo a belief that they can use their money to better purpose. For some reason the public obstinately keeps out of the stock market. It will not help tho speculators to play their game. It will not absorb the new securities which are being put out, and they remalu In good part in the hands of the disappointed under writers. It would bo interesting to know tho extent to which the unyielding attitude of the public Is due to the deliberate policy of tho great rail road operators and high financiers, if there be a lack of confidence In railroad securities. When It became apparent that Congress would enact the rate law, the mighty ones of Wall Street began warning the public of tho dangerous consequence of such legislation. Mr. Hill, Mr. Rogers, Mr. Harriman, sang tho same pre concerted song. They, renewed their "warning when the state legislature liegan enacting laws giving tho peo ple fairer passenger rates. These prophets of impending dis aster knew that their predictions would have a bad effect on the stock market, the quotations of securities they held would go down, and that It would be difilcult, If not impossi ble, for them to float new ones and gather In millions from confiding In vestors. They seemed to have rea soned that the effect of the slump in stocks would be to alarm the com munity, to persuade It of the unwis dom of the legislation which tho Wall Street men dreaded so much, and thus throttle that legislation. The game was one where the play ers were ready to submit to a certain immediate loss In the hope of a greater future advantage. If the players had won they would have made good all they had lost. But they did not win. The public refused to be scared. It Insisted on railroad legislation while stocks and bonds were going down from an artificial lead to something approaching their value. In spite of the lower level, inves tors show no eagerness to touch these securities. They have just con fidence In American railroads, but they have little or no confidence in the financial acrobats who are now controlling many of them. James Speyer, the New York banker, said the other day: "I believe that all this legislation will result in legis lation, probably Federal, which will prevent many abuses and make rail road investments in tho United States, safer than ever." When the hands of the railroad financiers are tied, so that their old predatory games cannot be repeated, there will be no lack of confidence In railroad 1 securities. The public has come to be pro foundly distrustful of Mr. Harriman and men of his type. It would be well for the railroads and tho country if they would drop out and make room for men who are imbued with different business ethics, who do not think all methods of money-making aro legitimate, and who will strive to earn and keep the confidence of tho community. The stocks and bonds of the roads such men control never will lack buyers. Psychical Research. (Oregonlan.) What has psychical research dis covered? Not very much. It has perhaps shown that thought is some times transmitted through space like magnetic waves. The evidence for this consists of a multitude of facts, most of them trlval, but pretty con vincing all together. One of the most common is tho persistent thought of an absent friend which often pro cedes tho receipt of a letter from him. (Almost everybody has ex perienced this mode of telepathy and mildly wondered at it. Tho Society for Psychical Research has collected facts of this order, classified them and verified them. They aro numer ous and extremely diverse. The society has also collected cer tain evidence which tends to show that man possesses something like a soul, or an astral body If you pleaso, which can leave tho physical body .without perishing. This soul, or whatever It Is, has been known to ap pear to a distant person at the instant of tho owner's death. To some peo ple such a phenomenon seoms to de monstrate that wo have an immater ial part which survives tho dissolu tion of tho flesh; but it mny bo mere ly another case of thought transfer ence. Touching tho solution of tho prob lem of tho futuro llfo which Interests mankind more than any other, psychical research has accomplished nothing. Wo know today neither more nor less about It than Plato did; and whon it comes to envelop ing our ignorance In wordy cloud mantles, wo fall far below the melli fluous Greek. Should anybody ask what facts aro known, which go to prove tho immortality of tho soul, tho candid roply must bo that there aro no such facts. There are guesses, illusions, solf-decoptions, but no fncts, not a single ono, in all tho realms of knowledge The only baslp for tho bollof in tho lmmdrtallty of tho soul Is tho hope that God is jubt. Multitudes die with wrongs unrlghted, sorrow unrecom ponsed and souls undeveloped. Tho world reeks with cruelty and groans with Injustice. Even If wo could sot things right for coming generations, that would not help tho dead. If thoro Is a God, and if ho is just, ho hns glvon to "thoso gone boforo" a happier lot In another world. Tho argument for Immortality is entirely ethical. It doponds absolutely for Us cogency upon our faith In a righteous ruler of tho univorso. If thoro Is Bueh a ruler wo know that wo shall live again, for tho balanco must swing oven. No bonoflt to tho hu man race or to coming generations can squaro one's Individual account, A Just God must sottlo with John MlMIOBinnjiitjpMUBBW A- himself, and not with James; and since the settlement Is not made In this world, It must be made else where. This is Kant's fnmous argu ment for immortality and, thus far, psychical research has not Improved upon It. Still, "has not" signifies something very different from "can not." Tomorrow some fact may bo dfiscovered which will prove Immort ality as clearly as the motions of the planets prove the law of gravitation. A USEFUL RICH MAN. (Oregon Journal.-) Reasonable criticism is not direct ed against riches, but against riches obtained by wrong methods, by illegal or unjust practices, by tho tyrannical power of combines. There must be rich men In so great a coun try, and it would be a country of poor opportunities If there were not a good many rich men In It. Tho rich man, whether he gained his wealth by legitimate, profitable business en terprise or by Inheritance or luck, who uses and adds to It in such a way as to benefit others as well as him self, who tries to do good with It though not strictly along philan thropical lines, Is a man to be com mended, esteemed and appreciated, not hated or abused because of his wealth. Whether much wealth Is a discredit to a man depends entirely on how he acquired and uses It. The Journal told Thursday of an admirable worthy rich man, tho youngest son of John Wanamaker, the great merchant of Philadelphia. Rodman Wanamaker became a part ner of his father and brothers, and na Hiir-ii wnnt tn Paris to take charge of the great Wanamaker department store in that capital, in wnicn ne made an innovation that compelled Imitation But this young man saw how he could not only benefit his firm's business but the people gener ally of both countries, In spite of our fool tnriff laws. The story says that "he brought about a practical re ciprocity, which never existed be fore, and which has worked to the advantage of both nations. By mak ing a personal study of the situa tion in France he found a way to supply the deficiencies of the Aineri rtin mnrltfit. liv drawlntr upon the skill of the French workman. He showed the Frenchmen how to mane goods that America needed, and that could not be bought at home. At the same time he Introduced Into France goods In which America ex cels." But this was not all. Like many rich men of a high type, this man interested himself In and became a very liberal patron of art. For sev eral years ho has been president of the American Art association in Paris. But he did not learn to de spise America. He has bought and shipped to this country many hun dreds of fine paintings. From the Paris salon of ono year alone he shipped 400 paintings to America for free exhibition, a stimulus to Am erican art students and a source of Inspiration to all beholders with an artistic taste. Many of these paint ings teach and propound lessons more powerful than could be taught in tho greatest sermons. This action is in agreeable contrast to that of Mr. J. P. Morgan, who for years has kept hundreds of tho world's art master pieces in Europe rather than pay the dutv on them though tho duty on art "is another fool Item of the tariff law. We like to read and hear of a rich man like this, and have no objection to his becoming reasonably richer in carrying on his immense business. Ho is not a "wretch, concentered all in self," but tries to and does aid and benefit humanity by right uses of his wealth. S'lJOI'Ll) NOT DELAY ; ACTION TO SECURE ELECTRIC ROAD SYSTEM (Eugeno Guard.) If Eugeno people will get a move on, they may be able to make ar rangements to have work begin at once on this end of the electric sys tem that Is destined to traverse the Willamette valley from Portland south. Tho complications arising over tho uncalled for delay in ac cepting Mr. Cnrvor's Sluslaw propo sition should bo sufficient Incentive to cause a hurry-up call to action to be sounded In this Instance. In some matters tho "better late than never" nxiom does not prove a good rule for guidance, and Eugeno should by this time bo convinced that prompt ac tion is necessary to success. Tho building of electric roads In tho valley marks the beginning of a new era of development, and this city should endeavor to become the cen tre of a system radiating In all direc tions, llko the points of a compass. There aro thousands of acres of as lino land as can be found anywhore on tho globo nlong these proposed lines, much of It not probably culti vated because tho owners have not found It necessary to glvo It proper cultivation nor to make any effort to got out of It all that should bo got ten from It, In order to make good money. Tho lnnd has been so easily productive that It has been a tempta tion for years to tho owners to make a living from It as eaMly as possible. Tho operation of these electric lines will menu thnt this land Is too valuable to longer llo In practical Idleness. Tho great farms will bo di vided Into smnller sections which will bo occupied by families who will cul tivate tho soil In tho best possible way, ami, thoso now families will bring new business and every point along tho line will benefit from tho now business. Each of tho towns will have Its customers along ilio lino of tho roads and as tho new people come In to In crease tho business each will receive its share. Eugeno morchants can profit by drawing tho trado from other townB only aB they pay bettor prices for farm products or as they carry better coods or soil them cheaper than com peting morchants at other points, but tho business lnteresta will prosper in jftf!fm-- f 4ly( " IjM (f SH BBBBBHk . Bi ahJEBEOBBBBMBBBfc. .HbTbbVbBBBBBBBBBBBBBBH various ways. In tho winter and spring, for example, when the roads are muddy, farmers refuse to take their teams and vehicles out into the mud unless compelled by absolute ne cessity for the want of provisions. Tho merchant Is deprived of his cus tom and tho residents of the city aro deprived of the produce they have to sell. When the farmer can make use of the electric lines he will take his produce to tho car and to market, ex changing It for the provisions he may require, and the conditions of the roads and the weather will make but little difference. The expenses of the own transportation and that of his farm produce to market would be but little if any more than tho cost of his feed bill If brought In by his team. When electric roads from Spokane were built connecting that city with small towns in Northern Idaho, it was freely predicted that the Idaho towns would suffer. The contary has been the result. The little town of Coeur d'Alene, the terminus of one of the roads, has grown In tho last two or three years from 1,500 or 2,000 population to S.000, and every acre of ground along the electric line Is now under cultivation. In other words, both Spokane and Northern Idaho towns have been greatly bene fited. The same result will undoubt edly follow relative to Eugene and surroilndlng points. Science Gets a Jolt. (Cleveland Plalndealer.) Criminology and palmistry have contrived to get themselves into a rather embarrassing fix. Tho result is a tendency to laugh at the ponder ous efforts of character students who organize their observations and de ductions into "exact sciences." Hu man character Is elusive, and so are physical characteristics, and tho dictum of the natural scientist that "everything explains everything else" seems to need qualifying. A blunder made by the foremost criminologist of tho world in sizing up a supposed criminal goes far to weaken faith in physical characteristics. Prof. Cesare Lombroso has, written instructive works on "How to Tell a Thug on Sight," and numerous other phases of present day criminology. Palmistry is one of his specialties. The other day somebody sent him photographs presumably of the hands of Soleillant, the child murderer of Paris, with a request for a scientinc analysis. Tho analysis came in due time, reeking with profuse, minute and positive deductions, and was pub lished with eclat. Lombroso found that the crimes of Soleillant were fully explained by the lines of his hands, which "Indicated by their chromatic symmetry the born mate factor and opileptlr." One of the hands he discovered to be distinctly characteristic of the lower apes. But that is not all. It developed after the publication of Lombroso s luminous treatise, that he had based his judgment on photographs, not or the murderer's hands, but the right and left hands of a meek stableman an innocent dresser of sheep skins respectively. Somebody had sent him the wrong pictures. It was not quite fair to the scientist, but on the other hand it may be that the scientist s dogmatic criminology has not been quite fair to tho public. Our Infant Marvels. (Astorlan.) The projected establishment of a commercial wireless telegraph station on the heights at Astoria, suggests the idea that marvelous as con sider these extraordinary agencies, they are but In the very Infancy of development; that in a few .years they will have been so Improved up on as to make tho apparatus and ser vice of today wholly distinct and use less in comparison. There is no limit o the inventive capacity of men and he Is never quite satisfied with tlio good things ho devises for h mself and his fellows. He is eternally after the simpler and cheaper method, al ways looking for a y to minimlzo time, effort and adaptability. When ono reviews tho work of scientific de velopment of tho past quarter cen tury aid notes the ratio of progress as acalnst the century preceding It, he "take" the limit off his ex peti tions and ceases to estimate any thing and merely waits its coming. Tho certainty iut " r,i qulslte expansion along unexpected lines will come has robbed all achievement of the old-time marvel ing nnd excited surprise that one time g"!eted these wonderful evolutions and tho mind, of man is, dulled against novelty forever. The man of today has seen so much he looks al most unconcernedly for everything, nor will ho bo disappointed. Tradi tion Itself has gone down before the proven law of science and superb and gracious fact alono remains. And this is onougn ior uiubl iui .--ho sees his condition Improving with each day he Is permitted to live. DECLINE IN STOCK VALUES. (Walla Walla Bulletin.) Tho declino in stock values which has followed the Imposition of that $29,240,000 fine upon the Standard Oil company, and tho threat of an overwhelming judgmont against tlio Alton railroad, Is of interest to tho stock gamblers only. It will not af- n. ....inn rt nnv Rtncik as an in- vestment, or tho slzo of the dividends thereon. Tho country win ku ... ,!,!.. linoinpss for tho railroads just the sanio, and tho railroads will bo worth intrinsically jusi us uiuuii, no matter how ninny millions the ,..,,.. tn Wnll Street mav claim to havo been wiped off tho valuo of stocks. MORE THAN SPEED LIMIT NEEDED ( Spokesman Review.) It Is proposed In North Ynklma to . .A am.1 Inn nn-. nno.Qil f.. ilia oltV IlllYU till U1IIIMIIUI-U JIUOOUU Mi V..U -.- council making It a misdemeanor for autos to use tho wrong side of tho street. "Keop to tho right," the law of tho rond In this country, Is to bo mndo strictly applicable to auto mobiles. Tho rule Is a good ono and its Judicious enforcement would go a long way toward preventing acci dents nnd personal Injuries. It must bo apparent to any one that there is more danger in the care less, indifferent and reckless disre gard by many automobillsts of the legal rights of others on tho streets than in the actual speeding of their machines, though the latter should, of course, be restricted under certain circumstances. It Is right that prop er speed laws should bo enforced on streets that aro In common use, but it Is even more essential that drivers, whether they aro wlthlrt vhe speed limit or not, should handle their ma chines In all respects with a duo re gard to public safety. Particularly when turning corners should the "keep to the right" law be observed and speed reduced, lucre should also be strict enforce ment of the law requiring notice of approach to be given by blowing the horn nnd this warning should not bo postponed until within two or threo feet of a pedestrian crossing the street. The speed-limit is good so far as It goes, but North Yakima recognizes that something more is necessary. PICKING UP BARGAINS. (Boise Statesman.) It is said that Hetty Green, tho famous woman millionaire, is pick ing up a long line of stocks at pres ent prices. She says they are bar gains and so long as she has avail able money she will take In all she can get. Hetty is probably right. Stocks were very high a few months ago, but they have receded heavily and were probably down below values before the recent slump started. The origi nal break came about through the bursting of a boom bubble inflated by some of the younger men of means who had conceived tho Idea that prices were destined to go on ad vancing indefinitely Though quota tion of all stocks had advanced to fig ures that few, If any, had eer ex pected to see, the young follows took fire in tho brain and concluded that prices were to be doubled again, and body pricked the baloon, it collapsed, market topheavy, and, when some body picked the baloon, It collapsed. The resulting smash of prices carried quotations down below the valuo of tho stocks in many in;fnnces. Now It Is stated the Standard Oil Interests have withdrawn (heir sup port. Whether it is those or other interests that are manipulating the market, It Is apparent that some body is driving it down for a purpose not made public, and thus stocks are selling at bargain counter figures. There Is a strong suspicion that the market Is being sold down with the view of creating conditions of dis trust, but, If that is true, those part ing with the stocks will be tho suf ferers. There are others as shrewd as Hetty Green. These will quietly take In the bargains, and when those making the sales wish to ,get the stocks back they will find It necessary to pay much higher figures. CITY WILL BORE FOR LARGER WATER SUPPLY Well Drillers Will Go Another Fifty Feet and May Then Use Dynamite. Aurora, Ore., Aug. 23. At tho last meeting of the city council it was decided to have the well drillers go down to a depth of 450 feet at the well the city i3 having drilled to secure a sulllcient flow of water for the proposed city water works sys tem. The prospect now, as the well is already down 400 feet, of striking water at the present location is ac knowledged by both the council and the well drillers to bo extremely doubtful. The council wants to glvo the project a fair test, and for that reason has decided to go to 450 foot, and if no water is struck at that depth the project of trying to securo water there will be abandoned. Some of the council aro in favor of shoot ing the well with dynamite if the drillers fail to strike water. They realize that this plan Is uncertain as to tho desired results, but the council wants to use all possible means to get results from their cost ly experiment. For over 200 feet below the 168 foot depth, where a small vein of water was struck several months ago, and which was pumped out In less than an hour by tho big pump that has been installed for the plant, the drillers went through solid blue clay, and had to reduce from an eight-Inch to a four-Inch casing, and had ex treme difficulty In driving even that small-sized pipe through tho hard clay. Tho well drillers say that the proportion of successful wells are about six out of ten that are drilled through ground similar to what they are working in here, and It begins to look as If tho Aurora well was one of the four that don't materialize. Dnneo at Sumner, Aug. 31. Launches Tioga and Sumner leave Marshflold at 7:00 sharp. Pull tlio BELL yCORD Wet Your WhLWe Thjrfi Blow J. R. HERRBWj'Prop. Front Street, t : Marsblleld, Oreaon W. A. WARING Dealer in vifSffSam Milk nnd Butternulk. Free de livery to all parte of flie city. North Bend, Oeegon &t0&&wtat&ttfm0istw jfLJ w There is no power so clean, safe, flexible in ap plication and, ready for in stant use As an electric motor. 8c is more econom ical thasteamboth in in stallingWirflope ra tin g. I 1 Your expense your machine stops. I IE Co( ectrlc fiTELS, uses, Camps o Resl CO. ARE NOW CARRY ING IN STOCK THE FOLLOWING LINES Unl.l n LlL. nuiei luinges uoin single anu uuuuic oven, Heavy Steel Cooking Utensils, White Metal Table Wares, White and White German Enamelware, and all lines to furnish the above trades complete. Catalogues and discount on application. stops the sec- BO. y y VEY l I J..L,lrtl