v - Editoiual OF.. 1 HE JOURNAL ' -x. .. ; ; - ' & . . i " 1 ' :- li '-,r ' t f .. t . I :v?' v.;r. PAGE-. 1 ; h THE JOURNAL , AN HiDSfgaDSHT BgWBrArnn. . & JiCUON. rHM rr win tewet J" Y UTS aaa. Be- rassattMioa threes the Mlk es eQeed-sUa tM- . - .. - ' y ' ' . -. r . TttXrBONEa, ' Veltertat Bona...., .......... !?! SJ IvlHH Offloa... .-W "00 POBElaV ADVKBTtSlBw IIPHTTItI finlndall Special svsrMetg law IIimi lrt, Jw Turk XriDoae V lag, Clueaea, . . . . ........ - 'Saerlrtloa Tmi well V T rtta" B) the l sitae IUM, Cesses m Bwawvt . -. . BAILT. , 0w rear.. :......& I on weeth,. J ...... ...Sx.00 I Oh nott DAILY AND SUN DAT. , (T.oM 0 mmtk....... - Better to be despised for. .too anxious apprehensions than ruined by a too conii- i dent security Burke, - . THE COMING DES MOINES . CONFERENCE. .'J'; "KJEXT MONTH the conference I VI called by Governor Cnmmino ' ; f to 'discuss the election of . United States senator by direct vote of the people will meet ' in Dee Moines, and it it expected that dele gate from nearly if not quite all the states will be in attendance. As every . one understands, the several legists- tares will, have to go through the formality of electing senators, or rati- - - fying the choice made by. the people in primary elections, but this will be come, it is believed, only a clerical :' formality, the legislatures exercising no real choice or power of selection, V ... after the people by 'a plurality have expressed their preference. . . . -"The conference at Des Moines will ' in all probability indorse fbi's primary ,;- method of choosing senators, already . in vogue in several southern states, in Oregon and in Illinois; but it is expected it will also take steps to a bring; about an amendment . to the - federal constitution by the action of three fourths of the states, as that 'I instrument provides may be done. 1 1t requires only a majority of the states to petition congress for ' a "constitu- tional amendment, when that body is I Hound-ti'.4WU.the- .amendment to i -tne several states, ana u ratiuea py three fourths of them -it becomes a I part oi the eonstirarfoif without'iir . ther. action on the part o( congress. There is little doubt that if the op portunity were . presentedTaV" least three Jouiths of the .states would adopt ' such an amendment, but the thing necessary to be done first is for a sufficient number of legislatures to preVnt the necessary memorial to ' congress, and it is partly to work up V a concert of actioix in this particular avTL"1 - - . . . In one way c the other the old -method of electing United States sen ators is doomed to, 'pass away,' as it involves too many scandals and inter feres too much with proper state legislation. A BOSS-RIDDEN STATE. CALIFORNIA Republican poli ticians are now engaged in loading dice for' use in the state convention of that party. ' The governorship is . at stake, and the smoothest manipulator will name the ; winner. There is no hitch over, re form plans and methods, such as have disturbed Republican conventions in ' the "east." " No candidate depends pn any particular issue. The primaries . have been held, and the main thing now is to get the support of those delegates whose first allegiance is not! to their constituents, or even to the Republican party, but to William F. Herrin, political distator of the South ern Pacific railway. The nomination y will not be made for several ballots. . Railroad delegates will be permitted to square themselves with the "home folks"; then Herrin will say the word . and a stampede will follow. - i It is a peculiar state of affairs. Four candidates are looked upon as ',, . possibilities, but politicians admit that none of the four ia strong enough to win without the aid of Herrin. A ".. few years ago such a condition would have attracted little attention, but in ' these days of political house-cleaning ", one expects something different; either a well-defined reform or a re volt California Republicans seem to be reconciled to their fate. If there is to be any breaking away at elec tion time it has not as yet csst any shadow before. , v rt,'. California is st the mercy of two bosses, William F. Herrin and Abe Ruef. One would prefer to name ' Warren Porter of Santa Cms for gov , trnor; the ther,favors J. O. Hayes, San Joee millionaire and brother of ' Congressman E. A. Hayes. This might look like t quarrel between the bosses,; but it is not. Neither one wants Governor Pardee to succeed himself, and st the' psychological mo-J ment they will doubtless corns to-1 gather and unite on some candidate satisfactory to .both.': , It U .thla4hat throws a rainbow across the path o: Congressman J. N. Gillett. The man from ' Humboldt has never offended either of the bosses, and this doubtful virtue may snake him governor of California.'-' : ; . .. At a glance it would seem that Governor Pardee is the people' can dldate, Not o. Four yearf of office has given him an opportunity to build up a machine. This machine has won for bun tittle' more than a third of the total number' of delegates.- To gain what he .lacks, he would jump at the-chance to com promise witK Herrm, but . the. rail road boss is looking the other way. Only in. the. event of a break with Ruef and the insistence of the latter that Hayes be nominated would Her rin turn to Pardee! . ' On jthe other side of the political fence lies' a demoralised Democracy. The state gave Roosevelt about 11,000 majority in 1904, and this has put fear into the hearts of the hither to unterrified. ' After the Republican convention has taken its orders from Herrtn, there may be a public awak ening, but it is not likely. No ordi nary Democrat could beat even the weS,of railroad Republicans. At that-this isn't a good year to fight the railroad in California. The an swering cry that E. H. Harriman came to the rescue of San Francisco at the time. of the , earthquake and fire would blind the public, to. the main tissue. : The Golden state is doomed to four years of. railroad domination. By that time it may pro duce a Winston Churchill to quicken the civic conscience and lead the peo ple in a fight for political inde pendence. ""-,'" ;- . EARTHQUAKES. HERE have always been earth r quakes in various parts of the . world, and many destructive ones, but this seems a time of un usual seismic activity, . possibly por tending even greater disasters, if pes sible and it would be possible, say in New York or London than those that have recently . occurred in San Francisco , and Valparaiso and other Chilean towns. We naturally look for; earthquakes in a mountainous and volcanic region, and near a coast, and they generally occur there, yet hot always, as the Charleston earthquake proved. London has suffered earth quakes,, and temblors have been, felt in the prairie regions of this country, A small Missouri town was .once destroyed. Valparaiso- has. been subject to many earthquakes, in fact they have been so numerous there that people thought little or ; nothing of them, but these were generally only slight i vis ui wsiitw vi s ai v vst sn t "us nesp-iv- frighting the people more than mo mentarily;' but in such a region a violent and destructive disturbance is liable to occur at any time is pretty sure to occur at some time, though perhaps not for centuries. This year was the time, in San Frncicoand in Valparaiso,' though in both cases the principal cause of destruction wss not the earthquake, but subsequent fire. A person living in a city so situated always runs a risk of earth quake and fire, of just the calamity that has befallen these Pacific coast cities, but for .that matter there is an uncertain degree of risk anywhere, in any city, t particularly on a coast It) may be spared for many genera tions, for many ages, even for aye; yet it may be destroyed,-as these were, any year, any day. - A severe earthquake, with its almost certainly consequent fires, is something whose occurrence no scientist or ssvant can predict ' It comes, like sudden death, "like a "thief in the night" OBSERVANCE OF LAW. S' OME IF NOT all the large shippers and' railroads have been so accustomed to violate the interstate commerce law for years that they have considered its viola tion to be a matter of course, some thing scarcely to be denied or dis guised. They seem to have supposed that the law was a mere "pretense, a dead letter, something passed in ac cession to a popular demand, but not to be taken at all aeriously by the peraons whom it was designed prin cipally to affect and whose transac tions it was intended to regulate. But latterly ; time has been 1 a change, an effort not altogether un successful, to enforce the law, and even those who have most insolently defied it and held it for naught have been obliged to admit that it means something, and has force and vitality to punish its defiers and violators. ' Some of the big railroad and other business men seem to be willing to give up their illegal practices and obey the law, 'though we imagine there are not a few among them who will bear watching yet ' But the con viction and lining of one after an- other of these concerns on account A Little Out THINCJ P-WNTID TO READ WHILE YOU WAIT, . ... Tha LitUa Blind Btggar At 'the aats of the world where . the travel flow. And the folk stream by rull-tloe. ' A' little bltn4 bsaar alt in the sua : And eheots afar sn4 awtde. He fits the arrow ana twangs the bow. And low In his throat laualta he. ' Fee wU he fcnpwa he wlU hit hla mam Though vr a rao he , i. And never his stock ef arrows fall For the aln of the wound la swoet, And the etrtckm folk bring the arrows back :.-.'- To pile at the boggaVe foot . 1 So he fits the arrows and twangs the bow. , And laughs till his fingers shake. For welt he knows ho ean never mlsa, But eemewner. a heart must aebo. Now they who are struck, they keep still tongue, But they carry the arrows back, : And" thay who are spared they sound abroad. ... The songs ef the pais they task. . . But still or singing, and grave or gay. Through the - gate or the . world thy sro. AM the little blind beggar sits tn the eua . - . .',-.... And iaugha as he lays them low.. Joeephlae Dodge Daskam. . Reflactiona. A The woman whe la ambitious to run things gonerally practices on her own heabandw- Now Tork Times. The surest wey to keep money la cir culation le to have a family. New Tork Fres. An optimist Is a man pho polishes up the dark aide of tife. New Tork Tlmaa. The borrower always saems to be able to wear better clothee than the lender. New Terk Frees. . The young -lawyer's first plea Is a trial performance. Chicago Newe. - v It Is easy to expect others to set good examples. Sometimes money talks, but more of tan It stops talk. Any man whe aays T eon ears" la slther a liar or a fool. At least the toa of the man whs welte are sure to turn up. One aeeret of aueces Is the ability to keep your own eeereta. i Ufa 1a a riddle: we ean gueea It therefore we must all give It up. Chinese Fight With Fingers. From the Bangkok Tlmaa On Sunday afternoon a Chinaman Is reported to. have baen killed la a house at Talat Piu, Bangkok, as the result of duel with ' another Chinaman. They fought with the two forefingers ef eaoh hand, stabbing each other with these In the region of the spleen and at the same level on v the other side of the body. A strongly built coolie, using the eight of his body, could certainly give a nasty blow in that part of tha body, even with two fingers, and repeated blowe Of the kind are eatd usually to prove ratal. i ne men wno go in ror this kind of contest practice every massw( of ' rebstes . and other violations of law las been a most excellent thing for -the country, and a very useful lesson to many men and corporations that heretofore have had no respect for this law which they in particular were called upland bound to obey. And the country generally has on ac count of these prosecutions and pun ishments, though perhaps inadequate, a greater regard for laws generally, A Ml ' 4. - 1 ,! M . - 1 . I and will be inclined to heed them better, ' ' - This is what the country has long needed and stilt needs, not more laws, but better observance of laws. Of couTse-the tourts wiirheVe "to decide whether the holders of fran chises grsnted before the adoption of the present charter are obliged to make reports of their. receipts snd expenditures. ; In equity they ought to do so, ss well as ths owners of later franchises. At any rate, the matter ought to .be tested, and all possible effort made to tax all public service corporations impartially. .While the excuse necessarily car ries with it a confession of its in adequacy we will have 'to remain content with . President Roosevelt s intimation that the appointment of T. Cader Powell to . a position in Alaska without hope o( defalcation is the only fit punishment that could be visited on a politician who Vsien ly nurses his crimes in the aegis of the statute of limitations. The Journal is hot jeopardizing its hitherto untarnished reputation as a political . prophet when it predicts that "Uncle Joe" Cannon wlU not be elected to the presidency. This splen did nation is moving ahead too fast to permit itself to be hobbled for years with the policy of "stand patism." . ' r- ' -'"j1 11 '. " One of Sesttls's prominent women hss just presented her delighted hus band with twins, and the citiiens of the sprightly little suburb are talking of celebrating the event by taking a new. census. Seattle is in a fever of progress, all right ..''. ... ... Senator Cullom speaks of the ter rible times under free trade 10 years ago. We had no "free trade" then, and the terrible time began under the McKinley tariff. .. . ' ., - g - We sincerely trust that the knowl edge that Mr. Harriman hai made 120,000,000 out of a skillful ' manipu lation of the stocks of railroads that are supposed to serve Oregon will of the Common' tng stabbing bags of rice or peddy with these fingers till they can use them like a piece of 1 re, .. .... ! Defiant English. When struggling with a foreign tas guaaV, ' aaeieat or modem, one seidoai stops to think how ludlerpua our an' deavora to translate the meaning Into eur ewa tongue would seem te eae bora to apeak that language as hla ewa. Ts appreciate this, one .has only to see the tablea turned when traveling in foreign parte. Underneath the eleetrle light button in the bedroom in a popular ho tel la The Hague are these words: "The eleetrto light dares net te be touched." I High Ufa In Africa, ; ; A Gold Coast 'Journal desoiibeS wedding and a feast following It in meaner befitting a eustodlen ef morals and manners: "It la reported .-that most of tha gentlemen who attended refreshed themselves avariciously, and the manner tn which they aoted does not epeak well of their gentlemanly principle These gentlemen may Please beware te avoid a repetition en future oeeaeioas." . . ' -Remarkable Metaphor. The English -woman suffragtsta have contributed besides other things to the gayety of nations a remarkable mixed mixed metaphor. One ef these atrenuoue ladles, speaking ef the lack of interest of women In their rights, soldi Ae Jet it Is but a flea bite ea the eeean, at let us arise in all our strength and nip it. in the bua. we have seen too much not to' know where the --' 'boot plnchee.", . ' V Winfleaa Angel From the Tonkere Statesman. "The theatrical angel has no wings,' remarked the observer ef events and things: "when hie money le gone he has to walk just like the reet of the bunch." - , Out of th Mouths of Babes, From the Chisago News. ' - - Mamma Tou have been very naughty today. Tommy.' ., Tommy Shucks! I eould have been twice as naughty If 1 had wanted to. ' One day small Elmer was gtvea a por tion or tripe ror innon, preparea eordlng te the bpanleh method. - - -Ughf he exclaimed after teetlng it "Ain't we got nothla' to eat but this eld sour bath towel, mammar 7 Little JUsle Mamma, - how mueh do people pay a pouno tor Dam ear Mamma Bablea are not sold by the pound, my dear. Little Elsie Then why do they al ways weigh'' them es soon as they are bora?. Teacher- (Junior grammar class) Johnny, what gender is "phonograph' Johnny Feminine gender. ..Teacher No. no: 1 it's neuter. eSfohnny Well, it ought to be fejni- ne. 'cause it - repeats everytnmg - it tseaiBV reconcile our business interests to the trifling loss occasioned by ; the car shortage. , : '. :' Owing to the customary demand for space by people who pay for their advertising, we find ourselves unabls to publish all the letters of those who foretold the disaster of Chile and neg lected - to t make their predictions public. TWheat has Tdeclinedta-price'10 cents a bushel and cotton and corn are getting cheaper, and yet the Re publicans declare that the tariff pro tects the fanner. A thief who stesls a few dollars is a very insignificant criminal beside Stensland, who injured thousands and ruined hundreds.' Th,e Tacoma Ledger concedes that protection did not cause the big crops. The Sslem Statesman may consider this heretical ' Coeds Won't Marry. From the New Tork Sua Statistics just Issued by Secretary Ar thur E. Beeter of the Alumni associa tion of the University of Chicago ehow that of the 1.SS0 woman graduates of the university since ite reestablish' ment In lift only 1T1. or about if per cent, have married, i - It Is conceded that the 114 girls graduated In the elassee of the last two years should have more time, but the eeme consideration cannot be given to those who were graduated before, and the officials have no satisfactory ex planatkm to give for their lack of In' tereat In matrimony. This failure of the coeds te wed Is not confined to eny one class. In fact of the nine women who - graduated in IStl, the year - following the world's fair, not one has married. . ' - The officers of the university deny that there le anything tn the sugges tion that the restrictions at the uni versity against college courting and en gagements between students has any thing to do with this Showing, nor do they believe that the average age of the women graduates nas naa any erreot, although the statistics show that the av erage age of the women who have grad uated has been very close to IS, while the men have been younger. The students figure out that the fac ulty regulations have done more than anything else to turn the girls' heads to other matters than matrimony. They are almost unanimous in declaring that the university authorities have pieced such restrictions on college courting that younger girl students go elsewhere to college. They cite the large number of engage ments at Northwestern university as proof of this claim. . ,. . c .. Cognac for Automobiles. ' ' v From the Paris Eclair. Shortly before the Shah of Persia was 111 there arrived from Parle an automo bile. Almost before It was unpacked his majesty wished to see It worked. "Sire," eald the grand vlsler. "there le no spirit available for the motor." "No apirltl" exclaimed the Shah. ' "And my old cog nac of ill It Oet some flasks of It." And -the Persian monareh'e automobile Was heated with oogaas at 110 ths flask, A Little N onaense v j.". ) The Power of Talis. V Mayer Casey, the 'courageous forme of Lowell, said the other day ex a certain corruct aorDeratlaai , Talk is cheap, and till we atart to put inese men in Jan they win continue to sin. For, no matter how often we expose them they need only turn on a flood ef loud, ehean talk of outraged ana virtuous aenui ana the force er our exposure le wined out . - Te matter what men ere convicted of, Juet give them liberty to talk, and somehow or other with their noisy, red-faeed.jUeeuenoe. they will telk themselves : baek ; Into reepeeubillty again. , - "Here is an lastaaee of what talk aoee. .- t ' Freneh paper one day printed a paragraph to this effect 1 At tne table d'hote a dish or new peas la served. A German sweeps all the peas into hla plate and begine te eat Took here.1 says a neighbor, the reet of ua .like aeaa. too.' - " 'Ah. but not as much as' I do,' says the German. "This parasTanh ' reached Germany htuly. The . German editors 1 read It Then they printed - the next day paragraph like this: "At the table de'hete a dish of new peas la served. A Frenchman sweeps all the peas Into his plate and begins to eat, .'. Xeek Here,' says a neighbor, ; the reet 01 ua like peaa. too,- "But not as much as I do. save tne rrenenman. , . Tht Bad Dollar. raee that bad dollar r said the smart conductor. . ..)- "Well, a fellow passed It on me when wasn't looking, and Ss I oan't afford Che loss, 1 must pass It along. Bee that falow with a grip running to catch this earf Ten to' one he wants to eatoa a train. He gets the bum doner. - The men with the grip clambered aboard. Near the depot the conductor ruanea up to-ini. 1 "Fare, please!" 1 The man with the grin handed out a MIL grabbed the change and dashed from the car Just In time, carrying away unnotieea tne worthless coin. "What did I tell your' said the emart conductor. "That fellow's el wey a in a hurry and always changes a bill!" Then he looked at the bUL and swore eortiy. -... -.i "He caught me at last." he said, this te a woree counterfeit then the dollar Strange. ' ' .- Hillary K. Adair, a western detective, said In Chicago, apropos of certain cir cumstances that had enabled him to de- teat a bank robber: "I deserve but UtUe credit The cir cumstances pointed to only : one' 111 omened conclusion. They were unmis takable. They were like an Incident that happened the other day to a dear friend. , . - ,-. : My friend, aa he eat at breakfast looked up to see his wife- smiling at him tenderly and playfully. . - i ' 1 mended the hole m your 'vest pocket last night while you- were asleep.' ebe eald. . 'Am I not darling. a oareful housewife r " "Perhaps,' said my friend - darkly, But hew did you know there was a hole in my veet pocket TV" . -. A Child's Odd Mind.";; V The late - Henry N. Ptllsbury. . the famous cheae player, was fond of chil dren and delighted In Incidents that illustrated the originality of the chllj mind. . At the Meroantile library they teach me new waye of looking at thlnge. They give me new points or view. . "I showed a little girl -an aquarium of Japanese gold fish the other day. 'How would you like to be a little flat. mmlA -1 "Not much. eald the tittfe girf "Why notr I asked. - -Because,' sns s-Jd, if you were a little fish your mamma wouldn't have any lap.'"- Didn't Mind Being Sued. Denial Webster was once eued by hie butcher and the man did not call upon him afterward to ask htm to trade with him. Webster met him In the, course of a few days and asked him why he dldnt call. "Because," eald the man, "I supposed that you would be offended and wouldn t trade with me any more." To which Webster replied: "Oh. sue me as many times es you like, but for heaven's sake don't starve me to death." Cardinal MartinelU'b Birthday. , Cardinal MartlnellL who became well known to Americana In his several years' residence In Washington as the apostolic delegate to America, wee born August 10, 1S4S, in the pariah of 8anta Anna, Lucca, Tuscany. He became a churchman at li and spent the yeara of hie novitiate in teaching. At the gen eral chapter of the Auguetlnlan order In 1SSS he was elected prior general of the order. He wee appointed papal delegate to America in and served In that office until he was succeeded by the present delegate, Monslgnor Fa loon to. Archbishop Martlnellt was elevated to the college of cardinals in 1S0I. Cardinal Martlnellt won the esteem of all Americana during hla residence in Washington. He speaks English with e end fluenoy. To the quick, viva cious ardor of his countrymen he unites the keen Insight snd delicate sympathy of the high-bred churchman. ' , Inducted by His Sons. . Frank Stewart of Cedar Falls.4 Iowa. has been made a Knight of Pythias un der remarkable circumstances. The three ranks wsre conferred upon him by Ms 11 sons, the event 'taking place at the castle hall of Red Cedar lodge No. (I. . Some of the grand lodge officers of the state attended and a number of Knights of Pythias from outside lodges were present Among the eone of Mr. tewart who took part In the conferring of the degrees were W. B. Stewart and. R. . Stewert of Spartaeue lodge, Chi cago. The work was the termination of a family reunion that has lasted for week, and the boys took this occasion of making their father a member ef the organisation. " Algerian Strikers. t They have en original way ef making strike effective in Algiers. The shoemakers ere striking. They are Jews, Mosisme and Spenlerde, and lack cohesion of race and language, eo that their leaders felt something wee needed to keep them In hand. It was therefore decided by general - vote that no man should be allowed to leave the central of ftoee which are, . fortunately, roomy In CM Algiers even for food or sleep, so long as the strike lasts. If a man gets away by any chance there le a ue ana cry until be is reoaptured and led book. , . ..... Letters From the People on Topics - -.of Current Interest A Word to - Portland. Aug. H.Te the Editor of The Journal In your, valuable Issue of the 4fth was an artiole from the pen Of a eouaetlman recommending aa ether pipe line abJ the purchase ef the ton ef Mount Tabor fee a park. , The perke owned by the elty are only partly improved. We have more perke than can be property attended to. Thou eande of dollars for this purpose eould be expended If the city eould afford to f 0 so. As to the water . suppty. we already have an abuadaaee of water ' for the needs ef the present population, and even tnougn the population waa 100, soa there woiaid be ample water Jor all Of course, we have net water sufficient to supply all of Multnomah county. When the waterworks were built they were intended only to supply this elty. A number, ef eur emsens think that In. order for Portland te be a great roe tropolia all the edjeeent farming coun try must be annexed, such as Mount Tabor, Montavllla and other suburban towns. Where the benefit is to be de rived frem having these plsees - an nexed ts doubtful. All the benefit theee places could hope te have from annexa tion would be aa Increase of taxation and a supply of Bull Run water; the expense te the elty is so great, end the compensation, so small, that It la Inade quate to the amount of money to be expended. If eur elty severed but one half of the territory It does now U would be better, aa the elty le alto gather tea large for the population. As far aa parka are concerned, we might eay all the suburba are parka, aa one oan get but to almost any of them in is or le minues ana get all the fresh air and country sights and scenes h deslrea . . . When we get supply pipes laid te Mount Tabor and Montavllla we WlU have aa abundance of Water. . The Inoome reoeivbd by the elty for water Is something enormous. It seems Indescribable to any eae who thinks ef the matter that the water department ebeuld have trouble la making the water department perfect. Net. only that, but there should . be large auma of money, and would be. If handled Ju diciously, which would go toward pay ing the great debt orented te bring the water from Bull Run. Instead, I am reliably Informed nothing has been con tributed to the sinking fund, and this great Income has been spent la the put tiirg in or new pipes, etc it would that the equipment of the water depertmeet would be aa perfect - as moaey eould make It when vast sums of money spent for that purpose are taken Into consideration, Oregon need never fear a water fam ine, ae the supply ts almost Inexhaust ible and, best of all, the water pours into the elty by gravitation. All the expenee the water department Is pat te le In looking after the pipe line from here to Bull Run, and the water does the reet ..i-... .-' . Ae far- ss the water department ie concerned, when the time eomeo In the distant future that It will be necessary to instair another pipe line.- It will not be necessary to sell bonds, as the great. Income from the tax collectors ror wa ter will be amply adequate to furnish ths money for a new pipe line If needed. Consequently it will not be aeceeasry to sell bonds for that purpose. , - THOMAS QUINEAN. Xarmoales ef aTaeure.', Clackamas. Aug. IT. To the Editor of .The Journal In a recent issue of your paper was a suggestion that "without a belief tn God there eould be aomorallty In the human soul." I was enrloua at the time ef reading, and am till so, to know what the-speaker meant by the word "Ood." Did be mean one of the Greek god, ef whom there were f Or wee It the Qod Jehovah of the Hebrews in general, and of Moses, Plain Statement or FROM AN OUTSIDE PAPER. Commenting en a recent editorial In the Oregonlan concerning the Marquam ease. The Dalles Optimist says: Ordinarily we have followed Mr. Boott In his views along the "plutocratlo" campaign, but In thla case we think bis Judgment Is warped. , - As we understand It the Marquam case was something like thla: P. A. Marquam, one of the ploneere or port land, found himself In 1SSS, or there abouts. In pee sea tion of- eome very val uable real eetate in tnat city, sna ne wee considered m weauuy man, kujiv ln to the Portland standard of -those days, snd wished te Improve some ef bis property to bisks it proauee en income He was urged to build a theatre, on the now famous Marquam Grand sits, and finally undertook to do so. As the structure n eared eompletlon he found. la the first place, that It would cost vastly more, something " like 1 100,009, thsn hs had expected, and to eomplete it hr was forcsd te make a large loan. The edifice , was - completed, com pleted af tea a fashion, snd ths doors were opened.' But the thee t re proper did not pey, end the rooms did not rent at anything like the retes he had rig ured on.' It will be remembered that a large crack appeared on the Morrison street front and tenants were wary of going Into the upper storlea - Ana tne property wee oaaiy nanaiea. He bed no uniform prieee for rooms. One tenant would pay f 10 for a room and the one adjoining Identically the eeme would be rented for tlf. ' The ele vator service waa execrable, the halls were lighted by-candle. It at alt and all In all the management was very bad. About the time when thlnge were at sixes and sevens, a prominent lady was killed by ths gross carelessness of an elevator boy. This cost . him several thousand dollars, and was the beginning of the en . The hard tlmee. cams en and the In terest eould not be paid and current expenses could not be met ' Then, through Mr. Ross, or ths Ladds. If you will, a loan waa made to pay off the debts and the property turned over to me mort sag-ore. i nan n was roun'i that Mr. Marquam, In hie simplicity, had greatly underestimated the debte and greatly overestimated the rentals. As time passed, and the money strin gency - became more accentuated, and the mortgage again became due, like wise a large sum for running expenses, the property waa placed under the ham mer. " Now, as a strict matter of feet the Marquam block waa not at that time worth the amount due on It ; The Ore gonlan knows that; every buetnese man In Portland at that time knew It and It took a good Job of flnaneeerlng for Mr. Ross to find a purehaser. Finally he suoceeded, and the prop erty wae closed out for good and ail, and nothing snore waa thought oi IV Joshua and David In particular? 1 as te near an answer saying: "Neither ef theee gode te worthy our attention tf, day, but the designer and creator ef na ture la alone worthy eur adoration." '' Wee nature ever designed? - Waa ne- ' turs ever created . If go, where did th4 designer corns frorat And where did he reside while the work of qreatlon was going on? '."",' Let ua gome down to the solid facta in ' the case and say aiturs never waa de . signed,, nature never was oreated, but atanda aa an eternal unit af life, self existing, self-governing, . knows no be ginning, end will have no ending, afoun tela of unfolding goodness, of love and) of beauty, Aa the rose unfolds frem the j germ, so, alao, does eoul righteousness, morality, if you please, unfold from tn nate qualities ef the humsn germ, and not ae a gift or pressure from without, Heaoe the justice ef preaching spirit eve olutiea as well es preaching material eve) ut ten. One law, the law of unfoleV ment governs all things. I have seen many people eeeatlagly.es just es morel, es beautiful la love aa were their professing neighbors, who be' lleved net in a Qod nor la gode, nor yet In a first cause, but cultivated the good ness wlthla) themselves for the effects that goodness would bring, stood before the world on their own righteousness, aer tried te borrow from another, - Eternal life, te Insured- by the eenatt . tutlon of nature, and self-untoldment evolution of our Innate powers, will ' bring ua to the ha roe salsa mt nature. which ts a joy forever. ; WU4AM FHUXIPS. ; The rneee ta the Oroeham, OttTAug. 11. To the Edits ef The Juumal In the Morning Orege Blaa of August It appeared an article by! special reporter with theee heedllneeii saloon Man Holds Fort.' u. Wsinhard. of Greeham Deflea the City Marshal t Arrest Him." If yoa will kindly seoord me the space. which- the Oregoolea refused. I shall state the facts la the ease. I. Welahard waa granted alloenae last Jsnuary te eall liquor near the, south east corner ex Main and rowen streets in a building known as the Leader salooa. A few months later ha waa ordered out ef tha building by the proprietor. Ia view of this feot he purchased property across the street (having been encour aged by eome of the eouneUmea that tney were willing tnat ae should trans fsr hla buslnsss) and moved In. At a apeelal meeting of the - council, the mayor refused Wetoharg pet mission to ' do business, as a remonstrenoe had been preeented. Ae yet the eouneil baa net revoked Weinherd'e license, aa the city's attorneys have advised them te do be fore nisttsrs ean proceed. V .' Welnhard has newer dared an yens ta arrest him. and Is aa anxious for the mat . ter to be settled aa anyone -, , GEORGE W. METZGBR, -- . Town Marshal.. - Wo Water Faxaine ta IVaats. ' Portland, Aug. IS. Ta the Editor ef Ths Journal The artiole tn Saturday's Journal relative ta tha water famine oa tha Mount Scott line was unjuat te" a portion of It at least and should not have been made se sweeping-. Lents (which the Mount Scott News calls the metropolis of the Mount Scott section) has not had a water- famine. On the contrary, the surety of good water and plenty , of It Is one of the strongest factors In. making Lenta the finest suburb of Portland. - . One only has to go some 41 or SS feet to get en inexhaustible supply of the purest ef water. The water supply from the Coff man water works has not felled; we have water frem this source tn both bouse and etable and no lack ef water '. has ever been experienced. If anyone near Lents lacks water they have failed; to connect themselves with the .surest ' supply; and better water would be herd to find. Certainly la juetioe to Lenta " this should be stated. A RESIDENT OF LINTS AKP-A PA- TRON OF WATER ST8TEM.T V"" the Marquam Case JL and the buyers were supposed to have a sold brick. In the course of time, however, values Increased, and then very auddenly tha Marquam s undertook to show that Mr. Ross had aeted as agent for the pur ' chase of the property from himself aa trustee, contrary to law, and the suits ' began. ' Well, the supreme court has . twice decided that Mr. Ross -aoted with , ih his legal rights, and the eaee to set tled. - . , ... .... Now eomee the Oregonlan and others, ' and placee a greatly exaggerated value' on the property. We have been told, and we think truthfully, that the Mar quam block would not today sell for enough to pay the original loans, opsr atlng expeneee and 6 per cent Interest And we all know the estate has bsen carefully and economically eared'- for. The courts went Into that matter .and found that to be true. The whole proposition Is otitis: Mar quam undertook to handle a deal which . he could . not master. He went broke, He was sold out The Incident was " close. Just ae the Perkins and others of those days. Thsn the block wes put In good order, waa properly handled, values went up and the old ownere un dertook to get it back on a technicality, and they have failed. "3 We do not bow the knee te Mr. Rose! . or -the Ladds. or any of the "pluto ' crate. " But we do not think the Ore gonlan Is "toting fair" In this matter, ' and we give the facts, nsvsr having see a them fairly stated before save in the cojert proceedings. - . The Road to "Success." By Wsx Jones, 1 ' ' Let everything go In the hustle tor dough, . . i . - And never let up For a bUlloa or ecu - ' To Umbo with youth .' ' '.' And friendship and truth; Get your mitts on the coin ' ' ' . Without scruple or ruth. ' Expand your first mtlllon : Till It swells to a billion: Then moll dsy and night - -e maker it a trillion. . . . ' - . ' . And then when your store -" , Is a trillion or o'er .... . ., Why, keep oa a-huatHog And rustling for more, ,- ; - ... Keep'on, never stop; ) -1' Ksep on till you d?op. . . Every dollar you miss ' ' s ' , Some other will cop, . ' , .-' . . . Keep on till you die And then from the day ' ' . ... ' Tou may watch your gap ksaas 7 : Make year ellas-Vj 1 - f V . '! A -