THE 3IORXIXG OREGON! AX, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 4, 1909. 8 Gfyt Bw$vnxnn PORTLAND. OBECOX. Entered mt Portland.- Oregon. PoitoSlc a Eecond-Claaa Mattsr- SnbKrlptlon Kate Id variably In Advance. (Br Mall.) Patlv. Sunday lneladed, one year. .. $ Dally. Sunday included. six wnthi.... s---j Pally, Sunday Included, three monthl..." 2-3 Dallv. Sunday Included, one month Dally, without Sunday, ona year " Ialiy. without Sunday, at month!. 3-5 Dally, without Sunday three montha l.jj rnflr wlthmit StindaT. A31 month...... -W Weekly, one year... Sunday, one year Sunday and waeklv. one year........... 1.50 2. so S.50 By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday Included, ona year s 2? Dally. Sunday Included, one month '5 How to Remit Send postofZice money order, express order or personal check on vour local bank. Stfimpa. coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give poitofTlce sd dreea In full, including- county and state. Poatace Rate 10 to 14 pare. 1 cent; 1 to 2S cam. 1 cental 30 to 40 pas's. S centa: e to eo pases. centa. Foreign, postage double rate. Eastern Business Ofrlee The 8. C. Beefc wlrh Special Agency New York, nwrai 4 H F0 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-an Tnbur.e building. . , POKTtA-I. THlHSnAT. NOV. . ! THE LIQUOR WAR IX INDLANA. Tfce State of Indiana presents a cu rious and Instructive illustration of the effect of the agitation and effort to force prohibition anions people who. while alive to the abuses that attend an unregulated liquor traffic, yet have jio (fitention of suppressing it entirely. Last year Governor Hanly, a short time before the general election, called together a Legislature elected nearly two years before, for the single pur pose of passing a stringent and prac tically prohibitive liquor law. The Re publican party was In control of the Legislature, and in the circumstances was forced to assume the, responsibil ity of the. act and its consequences: yet many Republican members of the Legislature protested and declined to vote according to the dictation of the Governor and the Prohibitionists. But their places were supplied by Demo cratic members, who helped to put the measures through. These, how ever, voted that way simply "to put the Republicans in a hole." There after they immediately acted with their party. In the effort to defeat opT ponents who were to be held responsi ble for the legislation. This proceeding completely shifted the center of political gravity in In diana last year. ' It caused the election of a Democratic Legislature, the loss to the Republicans of a United States Senator, the election of Democratic Representatives to Congress in eleven districts out of thirteen, and the elec tion of other leading Democratic offi cials. Perhaps the reversal of the polit ical attitude of Indiana on National questions is of little' consequence. But the liquor question in Indiana remains as unsettled as before; and Indiana will, worry with it yet hese many years, till finally reasonable regula tion and restriction, such as have been established In other great states, will prevail Jn Indiana. The varied experience of other states in this business ought to be of tise to Oregon. It ought to afford les ions to our people, but probably it will not. Each state will have to thresh out the contention for Itself, as some have done already. Massachu setts and Iowa and Connecticut are conspicuous examples. Regulation, and local restriction. Is the method; not general prohibition, which always Is futile. SBCnONAX, WASHINGTON. Any plan that might be proposed for divorcing from the State of Wash lngton a narrow strip of territory ly ing along the Columbia River in the counties of Benton, Klickitat. Skama nla. Clark, Cowlitz, Wahkiakum and Pacific, would meet with the most vigorous opposition from the Puget Pound counties. Yet, from far back In territorial days, the Columbia River and adjacent counties in the State of Washington have been continually an tagonlzed and opposed by the Puget Sound interests. These river counties are rich in natural resources, and have added much to the fame and prestige of Washington. The Repub llcan majorities they have returned have more than once saved the day In fierce contests which were all but lost by factional fighting elsewhere in the state. The latest and perhaps most strlk ing example of Puget Sound Jealousy of the Columbia River Is shown in the election returns for the Western Wash ington Congressional fight. The best efforts of the astute political leaders of Pierce County, aided by the votes of hundreds of others who believe In fair play and party principle, were Insufficient to prevent Judge McCredie from being defeated In a county where his majority should have run into the thousands. Nor did the anti-Colum bia River sentiment spend Its force in Pierce County. The same impulse that led to the merciless knifing of McCredie in Pierce County was felt In greater or less degree through all the Puget Sound counties Interested In the contest. Clallam. Kitsap, Jef ferson and Mason, all safely Republi can on most questions, cast large votes for the Democratic candidate. This wave of sectional feeling which reached Its height In Pierce County moderated as it moved south, and throughout the Grays Harbor and Wil lapa Harbor country a normal Repub lican majority was given the Clark County candidate. The river counties responded nobly. It was in the Co lumbia, Grays Harbor and Wlllapa Harbor districts alone that McCredie was saved from defeat. The Intensity of this factional feeling Is best shown In the vote of Tuesday, compared with that of a year ago. In November. 1908. the late Francis W. Cushman, of Pierce County, received a majority of more than 1500 in Clark County, the home of Judge McCredie, this, in pro portion to the voting strength, being the largest majority given Cushman anywhere outside of Pierce County. This year Pierce County reciprocated for the great majority given its candi date a year ago by defeating McCredie by about 600 votes. Last year the Puget Sound district, with the loyal support of the Colum bia River and other southwest coun ties, elected the Pierce County candi date by a majority of nearly 18.000 votes. This year the Puget Sound counties fought the southwest candi date so strenuously that his majority will fall from 10,000 to 11,000 votes below that given his predecessor, al though the increased population, with proper recognition of party principles, should have given McCredie as large a vote as that given the lamented Cush man. It Is obvious that this affront offered the southwest will not go unheeded. The river counties, p.nd especially Clark County, the home of Representative elect McCredie, are increasing " in wealth and population more rapidly than any other portion of the state. Gray's Harbor and Willapa Bay, which vovo i,,uiiv heen turned down by Pu get Sound political influence, and have always had fair treatment irom mo Columbia River counties, have always worked In harmony with these coun ties, and can be depended on to do so In the future. The members of the old "southwest .nmhin." which was a power in Washington politics twenty years ago, are still ore the best ot terms, aajiu voting strength of the new combine, thus forced by Pierce County, is many thousands greater than that ot the old one. Pierce County leading, and Clal lam anil some of the smaller counties following, have marked out a sectional line. The southwest may hew to mat n in th. pnmlnr. Senatorial fight in State, and if It should do so, the knifing McCredie received in Pierce County will rise to plague me men responsible for it. BATS AND RAT-TRAPS. A m'ner at PendletOH it Is Dot necessary to name It, since It bears a false name says: , . This much la certain, the Supreme V.ourt will not autrer through the attacks ot The Oregonian. That paper's record la too well known. . . . The attempt or i no i.i.!.rnra to break the gonian 1 ' solemn pledges made their .constituents re garding tne tsenatoranip is - T . . v. . . -. Hellheratelv advised Dcrr-'i. a i' ...... -- .uiiilie men to hreak their oatha Is well qualified. Indeed, to pose aa a cenaor for the Supreme Court of this state. ti,... o rQ mere lies. If the source ... imnnrtnnt The Oregonian would Vail them lies open, palpable. gross as a mountain. Jiever nas xo Oregonian advised men to Drra. their oaths." nor even to break fool ish promises, that they had no right to make. As to promises aDoui tne Senatorshlp, foolish men permitted themselves to be caught In a trap. Didn't you hear them squeal when the realized the position they were In, like rats In a corner? Th. nroffnnian has made no attack on the Supreme Court. It will make none. It realizes fully tne emoarraEs- ment of the position In which tne court has been placed by Governor-cnntn,- fhamherlalii. and bv the) Leg islature that had been hoodooed to elect him. The Supreme Court Is not ..ennnclh. for the rjresence of the two interlopers who have been forced Into it, by methods which were a part of the work of "a great political re form," forced over the emphatic vote. repeatedly delivered, Dy tne people oi the state. A3 TO CERTAIN ANIMALS, tt .om Incredible that two fami lies In a civilized city like Portland could have a series of lawsuits and fisticuffs over a rooster, but the court records declare that the thing has h.nrwnoH and we must believe mem. The Hatter-Bowman lawsuits began with a difficulty over one lone, solitary Plymouth Rock rooster. wnai iney will end with remains to be seen. Murder has been done for less. Whenever an incident of tnis Kina it renews the insistent .ques tion of how much animal life and what kinds ought to be tolerated in a . : ... Un-oAo nf emirsp. cannot be eliminated Just yet. The automobile is neither cheap enougn nor sunu-ieni-ii manarribln to replace them en tirely, but every Improvement in that admirable Invention Drings tne uwm r.t fh. hnrw . little nearer. Within a few years the dirt he makes and his crazy freaks will become unendurablo to urban nerves, and he win disappear from the streets. His exit from the farm will follow. Dogs present a more difficult prob lem. They are useless nuisances, and many of those kept in town suffer from disease. They also communi cate disease to their human idolators. But they are invested with all the sanctity of fetiches, and. in spite of the noise they make and their filthy hab its, it will probably take a long time to get rid of them. Portland not only harbors numberless dogs of all de grees, and cats -like the sands of the sea for multitude, but it also derives a bucolic etiarm from its cows. hens, ducks and geese. The man who can afford to keep a cow in his backyard is probably prudent to do so, all things considered, even if his neighbors suf fer for it. Nor, in a young city like ours, do the meek eyes of a gentle bossy appear much amiss. But even In Portland, youthful and Vural as we are, it looks odd to see a flock of ducks waddling and quacking through the streets, while the nocturnal songs of geese are anything but soothing to the slumberer's dreams. MORE SHIPPING FACILITIES. Establishment of direct steamship communication between this port and Antwerp Is of exceptional importance to Portland and the territory 'served from here. Frequent additions to the tariff burdens which the consumers of the country are carrying and the per fection of the trust system have re sulted in such high prices for many commodities that there is a sausiac torv margin of profit in importing them from Europe. With a frequent steamship service from Antwerp and other Old World ports, business of this character could be worked up to large proportions. There is nothing experi mental about the project, for Portland is already receiving large quantities of merchandise from Antwerp by way of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. By this route the freight is carried from Eu rope to the Atlantic terminus of the Tehuantepec Railroad, thence by rail across the Isthmus to Salinas Cruz, on the Pacific, where It is loaded on steamers for North Pacific ports. Even by this unsatisfactory system, a great saving is effected In the cost of many ff the commodities imported. Not all of the advantages of the new line are confined to the business In European ports, for the steamer enter ing with merchandise needed by the Pacific Coast consumers becomes available for a return cargo of Pacific Coast products. Since the start of the grain, salmon and lumber industry on the Pacific Coast, this region has had to bear the burden of bringing here in ballast the greater portion- of the ton nage required for carrying our prod ucls to market. The shipowner, re ceiving nothing for the inward voyage of the vessel, was obliged to make the outward cargo bear the burden of the round trip. All this will be changed, with regular liners carrying cargo both ways, and the producer and consumer, who in this territory are to a large ex tent the same, will profit by the change. Regular line steamers loading full cargoes at Antwerp and discharging at Portland, and vice versa, can handle freight much more economically than it is now handled by the Tehuantepec route, which has proved such a vast improvement over the old round-the-WrtfT, cniitnir vessel route. The Te- hiiantener Tlllte. however. IS WOrKin xroii nr. to Its eaDacitv with freight be tween the Atlantic and Pacific ports .f th i-nitprt States, and. as coast merchants and shippers are using this route to a steadily increasing extent;, there Is plenty' of business for the American-Hawaiian liners, aside from the foreign business, which would properly belong to regular lines run- nino- direct from the European ports. The Pacific Coast will not participate to the fullest extent m tne aavaniagea ui steam communication with Old World pqrts until completion of the Panama Canal, but the advance from sail to steam in the round-the-Horn trade is of great significance, and every shipper in this territory should make a special effort to patronize tne line. , BUT HE WILL "STAT." . nr a ,-a hofnrfl -the election in A Jt n v. i. - . . . . v-, -v..v OanHiHate Gavnor. plead ing for the election of the entire Tam many ticket, said In a speech at Sta ten Island: 'just think Of electing me, if ju will, and then surrounding mo with a hostile Board of Estimate. Why. you would fret me to death. I could bt stay there, and 1 would not stay-there. This surely would seem to have been premature. Gaynor is elected, and Tammany's Board of Estimate has been defeated throughout; also Tam many's District Attorney and Sheriff. Tn Va nroWTlCA Of this "hostile" Board of Estimate, will Gaynor "stay there"? You may be sure ne win. The Board of Estimate has control of the Immense disbursements of the city. But the Mayor, as executive of ficer, has control of the police, and the i- .mn-iiHnv tvtnt their "Der- jjeupic M.. .. .. . eonal liberty" should be interfered with. In New York. San Francisco and Buffalo this Idea was specially mani fest and uppermost. The people want to do as they please, and" not be wor ried and harried by law. In matters that relate tothelr personal and pri vate conduct. A SYSTEMATIZED PARK PTAJt. The project of adopting a systematic plan to be followed In laying out parks and boulevards - for Portland com mends itself to the common sense of the public. No European city would dream of spending money for im provements without first adopting 'a prearranged scheme which could be followed year after year, so that every piece of work completed would fall harmoniously into its appointed place. Unless parks and other public works are laid out according to an artistic concept, they are apt to be neither beautiful nor useful. The money spent upon them is simnly wasted. It has taken some Ame.-ican cities a long time to liarn this lesson, but apparent ly It has begun to sink in at last. After squandering $100,000,000 ' on erratic efforts to create a park system without a. nlan. Chicago finally saw her mistake. Competent artists iwere .mniAvnil to annlv their Intelligence to the problem, and the result was a series of parks connected oy Douie vards which everybody admires. Bet . otnl thw are accessible to the people of the city. The first aim of a uv i net to he admired by outsid ers, but to be a comfortable home for its residents, and this Chicago nas at tained. . Portland can attain it by fol 1 mi-1 n tr thp same method. Other cities in this country have Anna the same thine, -some of them even better than Chfcago. As much as twenty years ago Baltimore began a great boulevard through tne neari or the city, to connect Patterson anij Druid Hill parks, with a connected se ries of encircling driveways. Boston Ai hotter vet Exnerts aeree that the capital of Massachusetts has the finest nark system in the world. It inciuo.es nn.nnc nth.r o-ortrl thinsrs. a long stretch of sea beach, which is free to ih. Tii,hli and easilv accessible. Port ontnvct natural crifts of hill. woodland arid river front which few cities can rival, but an intelligent plan is needed to bring out ana preserve their full ueauty ana pront. THE GREAT PRIZEFIGHT, The editorial hysteria which the prospective fight between Johnson and Jeffries excites in some newspaper oi flees is an entertaining phenomenon fine narjer declares with wild-eyed fer- vor that this meeting of two stupid and beefy brutes to pommel each other In the presence of a bloodthirsty crowd "takes rank over the North Pole controversy, the Chinese loan, the Ferrer incident in Spain," and so on through a formidable list. This shows how silly some people become under frenzied . excitement. Why in the world should anybody outside of an asylum for imbeciles, think the Johnson-Jeffries prizefight important? The writer w-e have quoted thinks so because, in his opinion, itwlll "settle the question of physical supremacy" between the black and white races. Johnson, the reader may chance to re. call, is a negro. Prizefights decide no questions of physical supremacy which are worth deciding, and the bodily traits which they cultivate and exalt are valueless in the struggle for existence. A farmer who can work all day in the field without excessive exhaustion exhibits physical prowess far superior ,to a prizefighter's, and of a kind which is incomparably more important to the human race. Over-muscled creatures like Jeffries and Johnson are abnor mal specimens. They may not be vie tims of the disease called acromegaly. but they have escaped it only by a hair's breadth. All they have gained in muscular hugeness they have lost in efficiency, and, what is vastly worse, in Intelligence. The human race has mastered the earth, not 6y muscular superiority .over other species, but by superior brain power. The instant we push the culture of the body beyond the point where it ministers to the in. telligence, we recede from the human plane and revert toward the status of brutes. We fall out of the evolution arv march and become degenerate, Prizefights are to be condemned, not because j-hey are inhuman, but be cause they are unhuman. Four men who attacked a non-union bakery wagon driver during a strike in Chicago last Spring were convicted in Chicago yesterday and sentenced to twenty-five years each in prison. A few sentences of this character ought to have the effect of checking the somewhat common Chicago practice of assaulting or killing men who attempt to work without the union label. The labor of the hands or brain is about all that a good many thousand American citizens have to sell, and when they are prevented from selling it at a price and in a manner that is satisfactory to themselves, they are Inclined to ques tion the belief that this is a free coun try. The naxt time there Is a strike in Chicago there will probably be less difi ficulty experienced in securing men to take the places of the strikers. The right of a man to quit work has never been questioned, but when this country reaches a state of chaos where it u unsafe for a citizen to accept a posi tion that has been abandoned by a striker, our boasted freedom becomes a byword. Republicans of Nebraska have steadily asserted that the vote of their state, cast last year for Bryan, was no indication that the politics of the state had shifted, but that Nebraska had voted for Bryan simply to secure for the state the honor of the Presi dency. Several of the more Impor tant counties, as Douglas, containing 'the City of Omaha, and Lancaster, containing the City of Lincoln (the latter the home of Bryan), reversed their -customary vote for this reason alone. It is noted now that they have gone Republican again. Out of a total vote of about 270.000, Bryan's plural ity in the state was but 4102. The ap peal to Nebraskans that it would prob ably be the last chance they ever would have to get the Presidency for their state took thousands of Republi can votes to Bryan; yet at the same time a Republican Legislature was elected, and nearly all other officials of the state. Now science- has undertaken to dem. onstrate that the -oldest injunction given to our forefathers for the pres ervation of health, namely, not to drink water with meals, is all wrong. Experiments conducted by the physio logical chemistry department of the University of Illinois are held by the professors to prove the digesting value of copious draughts of water taken while eating. One quart of water per meal was the prescription, and the subject thrived on it. The theory is that water, by diluting the saliva, causes the digestive fluid to assume greater digestive activity. An anxious world will now await a scientific test of the food value of mince pie and dill pickles, together with further light on the disputed question whether hearty meals before retiring are conducive to health. The Oregon Trunk Railway has filed articles of incorporation at Vancouver, Wash., for a railroad from a point op posite Celilo to a point at or near Klamath Falls. It will be forty-nine years next month since the Oregon Steam Navigation Company filed Its original articles of Incorporation at Vancouver. That company, in the twenty years following its incorpora tion, was a tremendous factor in the development of Oregon and Washing ton, and from a small beginning as a steamboat line developed into the greatest transportation enterprise in the Pacific North-west. Let us hope that this latest Vancouver incorpora tion will enjoy an expansion equal to that of the original company from which grew the Oregon Railroad & Navigation company. You may depend, if Charles W. Fairbanks shall go to China as Min ister for the United States, he will not set roaring war between two hem ispheres by talk. Idle talk, and Indis creet. He does make speeches, some times; but they are kept in cold stor age such a while before delivery, and come forth in such an icy manner, that you 'may depend they will not dis turb the serenity of the world, much less shake the earth, crack the zenith and knock' the poles over. Brother Fairbanks is the very man to succeed the warmly loquacious Crane. Mr. W. E. Critchlow, secretary of the Oregon Prohibition Committee, in a communication to The Oregonian corrects statements made by Mayor Rose, of Milwaukee, and then declares that arrests in Atlanta, Ga., for drunk enness decreased in one year 350 per cent: As a mathematician, Mr. Critch low is entitled to. the world's gold anedal. ' One argument against Judge Mc Credie's candidacy for Congress was that he "owned two baseball teams in Portland." One of them was a very good team, too. But the other was even worse than the Seattle, Tacoma and Aberdeen nines. Would it have htlped the Judge out over there if it had been better? The late election appeared to show that those cities which had been suf fering from a long spell of reform wanted the other thing; and some of the cities that had never been "re formed" were loud for It. The voter has a great aptitude for getting what he finds he doesn't want. Vancouver votes wet, and Clark County dry. In Washington the local- r option law does not permit the county to enforce, or attempt to entorce, pro hibition on the Incorporated towns against their will. The result is that law will be obeyed in both city and county in that state. .You can fool some of the people some of the time; but there are some farmers about Pendleton who have not been deceived by the specious ar guments of the Merchant Marine League. See their anti-ship-subsidy resolutions. New York bank clearings yesterday reached a total of $736,461,549. This will necessitate the enlargement of some of the checks which make fre quent trips through the Seattle clearing-house. Where did the Rev. Dr. L. R. Dyott get his information that Elsie Sigel bad not been murdered by a China man or anybody, and that the New York police had admitted it? Admit ted what? In proportion to the vote cast, the majority for McCredie in the western district of Washington seems to be quite as large as the vote cast hitherto in the district for Cushman. Columbia County again votes wet. Would state-wide prohibition make Columbia dry against local sentiment anddesire? And how? There are mothers-in-law and mothers-in-law, of course; but so are there sons-in-law and sons-in-law. Mr. Heney has at least found a graceful way of letting go of the bear's tail. THE Sl'PREMB COIBT. The Position la TVhleta It Has Beern Placed by Political Jugglera. Polk County Observer. To the average American citizen, no matter how rabidly partisan his politi cal belief, the court of justice and the public school are two of his country's Institutions which he would protect as far as possible from political influence and control. It Is a high testimonial to American citizenship that this desire for absolutely clean and uncorrupted courts and schools rises superior to all personal ambitions and desires for par tisan supremacy. Even In the most heated and bitter campaigns In Oregon, seldom has any effort been made to ftrag the candidates for judicial offices into the- midst of the battle. On the contrary, the opposing elements have. as If by common consent, been prone to protect the dignity and sanctity of the courts of justice to the greatest possible degree, and the voters havte chosen their Judges and Prosecuting Attorneys without undue influence, persuasion or Intimidation. It remained for a Direct Primary, Statement No. 1 Legislature and an as piring politician in the Governor's of fice to cast dignity and decency to the winds and use the courts as trad ing stock with which to carry out their personal schemes. In the recent ses sion of that body, the state courts were played with like pawns oil a chess board. Circuit Judgeships were created or shamelessly bartered and traded to make places for the Governor's politl cal pets, or to reward the friends of those Republican members who were willing to "stand in" on the game. Even the Supreme Court, itself, was not Immune from the machinations of these DOlitical Dlrates. Acting In open and direct violation of the constitution, the membership of that' tribunal was In creased from three to five Judges, and the Governor at once appointed two of his favorite partisans to fill the newly-created positions. It was a dis creditable piece of business and one which will yet arise to plague these political buccaneers and scuttlers, who, while sanctimoniously pretending to uphold the will of the people, were In reality setting the will of the people, as exDressed In two elections, at naught. ' It will be recalled that in two dif ferent elections attempts were made so to amend the constitution as to permit the number of Supreme Judges to be Increased from three to five, and it will also be remembered that each attempt was defeated by a decisive vote. It remained for an initiative and referendum, direct primary. Statement No. 1 Legislature boldly to set aside the will of the people and, in open and direct violation of the constitu tion, pass a' bill authorizing the en larged tribunal. And It was done prln clpally at the Instigation of a scheming and ambitious politician, who well knew that It was unconstitutional, but who cared for nothing else than his own selfish ends. The Observer has long believed that Oregon has reached a stage in its busi ness and commercial growth where more than three Supreme Judges are needed, but It also believes that the constitution of the state forbids any Increase in the number of members of that tribunal. 'It is our belief that the recent appointment of two Judges was Illegal; that the Increase was accom plished by those who sought to serve their own selfish ends, and who, know- ( ing full well that their action was not In accord with the constitution, resort ed to the sophistry and claptrap of the demagogue and political trickster In their effort to deceive the people Into acquiescence. It Is the further be lief of this newspaper that eventually these two additional Judges will be declared to have been unconstitutional ly and illegally elected, and that the way will thus be cleared for a' right ful method of procedure In increasing the membership of the Oregon court. LINCOLN'S STRANGE DREAM. Preceded Always Announcement of Some Great War Event. From the DISry f Gideon Welles, in the November Atlantic. , Inquiry had been made as to Army news 'on the first meeting of the Cabinet, and especially if any information had been received from Sherman. None of the members had heard anything, and Stanton, who makes it a point to be late and who has the telegraph in his depart ment, had not arrived. General Grant, who was present, said he" was hourly expecting word. The President remarked it would, he had no doubt, come soon, and come favorable, for he had last night the. usual dream which he had pre ceding nearly every great and important event of the war. Generally the news had been favorable which succeeded this dream, and the dream Itself was always the same. I inquired what this remark able dream could be. He said it related to your (my) element the water that he seemed to be In some, singular Inde scribable vessel, and that he was moving with great rapidity toward an indefinite shore. That he had this dream preced ing Sumter. Bull Run, Antietam, Get tysburg, Stone River, Vicksburg, Wilm ington, etc. General Grant said Stone River was certainly no victory, and he knew of no great results which followed from it. The President said (that) how ever that might be, his dream preceded that fight. "I had." the President remarked, this strange dream again last night, and we shall, judging from the past, have great news very soon. I think it must be from Sherman. My thoughts are in that di rection as are most of yours." I write this conversation three days after it occurred in consequence of what took place Friday night, and but for which the mention of this dream would probably have never been noted. Great events did indeed follw. for within a few hours the good and gentle as well as truly great man who narrated his dream, closed forever his earthly career. Uncle Joe Quo tea SaintPaul. Boston Globe. Just before the Taft party started down the Mississippi, "Uncle Joe" Cannon dic tated to a reporter the following answer to a. question as to what he thought of the fight the insurgents are making gainst him: "Old Paul, you will recol lect, if you refer to his journey, finally struck an attitude and said: 'I have been imprisoned, punished with stripes, met with robbers on land and have met the beast of Ephesus, but none of all these could discourage me.' That is all." , However, as the old saying implies, abil ity to quote Scripture isn't certain proof of virtue. " Aptest of Texts. Boston Transcript. "I regret to announce," said the sub stitute oreacher. "that your beloved .tnr ur. Pounder, is Indisposed and will be unable to occupy this pulpit for several weeks. Our- text this morning i from Hebrews iv:9: "There remain- eth therefore a rest for the people of And he could not think why some of the congregation smiiea. HERE'S A REAL FRENCH DI EL. Nobody Hnrt and Honor Is Fully Satln- fle-d. Paris Cable to New York Times, Octo ber 27. Challenged by M. Chevassu. a critic whom he had attacked In a published ar ticle, Henri Bernstein, the dramatist, fought a duel at Prince Park today. Neither combatant was injured. It was raining so hard that the sec onds had to load the pistols under um brellas, and they walked, about examin ing the ground with umbrellas raised and trousers turned up well over the ankles. Umbrellas were used to mark the meas ured 30 paces. When for a moment one of the com batants M. Bernstein closed his umbrel la and walked about in the rain. Pro fessor Pozzi. the eminent surgeon, who was assisting him, was afraid his poten tial patient might catch cold and strongly advised him to hoist his umbrella again and not to run more risks than neces sary. On arriving, the other principal Chevassu in a tall hat and frock coat, stopped for a moment to turn up his trousers as he conversed with his doctor and seconds. A little distance off, also sheltered under dripping umbrellas, stood Bernstein in a soft felt hat and lounge suit, chatting gayly with Pozzl and his seconds. On the word being given. Chevassu fired a shot which passed over Bernstein's head. Bernstein, instead of firing, placed his pistol behind his back. His weapon was taken from him by one of his sec onds and discharged. On being asked why he did not fire. Bernstein shrugged his shoulders and replied: "I forgot." Henri Bernstein seems to have resented the views of the .French dramatic critics since the presentation of his latest play, "Israel," In Paris in October of last year. When this drama was first produced the Paris papers expressed widely diverse opinions of it. some finding it diffuse and tiresome, while others praised it. Henri Bernstein was born in Paris in US'ib. His mother was an American, and when he became of age he was sent to Cambridee University, in England, to be educated. He has produced more than a dozen plays in the last two years, most of which have been successful. "Israel" Is now being presented in this city. r Among Bernstein's most noted plays are "The Thief." which had a long run in Paris and London before coming to this country last season; "Samson," which ran all of last season in this city; "Apres Moi," "Le Barcaii," "Le Detour," "Frere Jacques," "La Rafale" and "Apres le Deluge," which was recently produced in Paris. UNITED STATES PUBLIC LANDS. Vast Domain, Most of Which Is Unfit for Cultivation. Bonds and Mortgages. Seven hundred and fifty million acres seems like an enormous quantity of land. and It Is. It is really more than the hu man mind can appreciate. But much of this land Is of a character that absolute ly unfits it for human habitation, as it is in the desert and far away from any water supply, while other portions are mountainous and incapable of cultivation. A great part- of this land lies in Alaska, and the agricultural possibilities of this region have yet to be accurately deter mined. What little is known about it, however, would seem to preclude any hope of its ever becoming a great agrl cultural region, but Its mineral riches are incalculable, and so far have only ben scratched. The following table gives the states and territories, with the amount of land which each contains still open to the public: State or Territory. No. Acres. Alabama 1M.713 Alaska 368.021.509 Arizona 42.7tSD.202 Arkansas 1.0H1.1S5 California 29.S72.4M r-nlnrndo 23,Gl(6.0!7 Florida 414.942 Idaho 26.7S5.008 Kansas J,-1,': Louisiana "- Michigan . Minnesota Mississippi " 1.7S8.705 42,791 Missouri .. 27.480 46.5.-.2.440 ;i.074.fi.".S Montana . Nebraska Nevada ei.ni.u.iu New Mexico 44,ill, North Dakota 2-3:i2 Oklahoma . Oregon 16.957,013 Kr,.VAt. 6..-)lll.295 ir,i, 36.578.998 'w..hlnrton 4.635.001 Wisconsin - ,.,,-.-r Wvomine 37.145.302 Total 754,895,296 Oaage Indian as n Financier. Oklahoma News. , An Osaze Indian made a 10-cent pur chase In one of Bartlesville's dry goods stores, according to the Bartiesvllie- .en temrise. tendering a $10 bill in payment When J9.90 In change was handed to him, he said he had given the merchant a J20 bill. The merchant found no J0 Dill in the money drawer, but that didn t con vines the Indian, who went out and re- anDeared with all the Osages he could assemble. They held a war dance, but that didn't work. The Indian then tried to employ an attorney, who insisted that the Osage check his expenqnures since coming to Bartlesville. He did so reiuc tantly. Then his face underwent a look of abject humiliation. He recalled that he had purchased a J10 blanket, had given his 20 bill in payment and received the JIO bill in change. He apologized to the merchant and offered to set em up. Southern State Funds. In Bad Shape. Nashville American. Alabamar is said to be facing a deficit of Jl, 000,000 in its treasury. Georgia came so close to bankruptcy that it had to resort to a near-beer tax. Tennessee has no deficit as yet. but it is far from having as plethoric a treasury as it had a year ago. In the case of the latter state it would surprise no one if the funding board should soon be posting off to New York to borrow money. This condition is not encouraging, espe cially as there is a debt of approximate lv J12. 000.000 which must be funded within the next three years. The bor rowiner of money, if It has to be re sorted to. will not help the price of state bonds, and this will have Its ef feet when the funding time comes around. The Law's Delay. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. It has taken 15 years for' the courts to decide that Chicago must pay for cars burned in the riots of 1894, whether or not they were owned by the company on whose tracks they stood. A Supreme Court, having the last word, Is not apt to show unseemly haste In saying it. Mrs. Harrlman'i New Offices. Chicago Record-Herald. Mr.' Harrlman has opened an elaborate suite of offices In Fifth avenue, New York. In view of the S fact that she might have secured cheap desk-room somewhere, Mrs. Harrlman is likely to be considered by Mrs. H. Green to be fool ishly extravagant. In Politics 28 Years) Loses $50,000. New York Sun. An ex-Tammany man who is running as an independent in New York says: "I have been in politics 28 years, and I am $50,000 poorer than when I entered." Is it any. wonder that 1minany has abandoned so unbusinesslike a person? In Great Britain, 31 Idle Per 1000. Topeka Journal. Great Britain's army of the unem ployed is growing larger all the time and now averages 31 persons to every 1000 of population. Just suppose simi lar conditions prevailed In the United States. 'v Tariff Guiltless This Time. Indianapolis News. Anyhow, the tariff can't be blamed fol the kind of hats women Insist on wearing. Sentiment Out Weat Strong; for Govern ment Inatltutlon. "Ravmond" In Chicago Tribune. In spite of the edict that has gone forth from the controlling powers in Congress that there Is to be no postal savings bank legislation at the coming session of Cytgress, and possibly not until after the report of the Monetary Commision on the central bank, there Is every evidence that this phase of the financial problem is to be exten sively agitated this Winter. At the same time those who have studied the subject are aware of the fact that the postal savings bank sys tem cannot be adopted in this country without some radical changes In the National bank act, and such changes should hardly be maue while the pro cess of reforming the whole banking and currency system is going on. In eoliie into these financial ques tions I have found more really popular favor for the postal savings bank tian for anythinK else. Part of this faTor- able sentiment arises from pure ignor ance. Part of it is honestly the result of public observation of the banks themselves In time of stress. snrne part, unfortunately. Is due to the unfair feeling that the postal bank Is opposed by the bankers and capitalists, and hence that it must be a good thing for the people. a By far the most popular element In the demand for postal banks comes either from personal experiences or from tradition of the calamities whlcn have overtaken poor people from un safe savings banks. The savings banks ot Massachusetts. New York and other Eastern states have for years been conducted on con servative lines and failures have been rare. One finds, therefore, as I did In New England, that the demand for pos tal savings banks in that section is a mild one. the only vociferous shouters belonging to that class of people wno never have and never will have any savings to worry about. As one goes westward, however, the situation changes. In the first place, the country is sparsely settled. Bank ing facilities have been supplied to meet most commercial needs, but dis tance, instead of lending enchantment to the view of a savings bank account, tends rather to spending the money on mall order stock, or hiding the surplus In the ginger Jar In a dark corner of the .cupboard. , Furthermore, many of the states In the central and farther west have been more than lax in the regulation of sav ings banks, and the record of disas trous failures Is unpleasantly large. Tf the state west of the Alleghanies and south of the Potomac had as good savings bank laws as New York ana Massachusetts the demand for postal banks would diminish ' about one-half. Bankers and financial theorists are apt to misunderstand the indirect re sults of a single failure. In getting up statistics of losses, they ignore almost entirely the element of delay. . If a failed bank ultimately pays Its 'de positors in full it is asumed no one was hurt. The contrary Is generally true. Then the-e is the farmer class, which is undeniably behind the demand for the postal bank scheme. There are thousands of little villages from Maine to California w(iere the Government has found it profitable enough to es tablish a money order and registry office. Few of these villages are large enough to sustain a bank of any kind. The village merchants can afford to send their surplus funds to the nearest bank, but the farmers' wives who make a little pin money on their butter and eggs, or the "hired man" of a prudent tnrn and an eye on a farm of his own. do not find it convenient to send their pennies and silver miles away across the country to be handled by some stranger. Postal savings banks, however de sirable, could not be established In this country without a serious disturbance of existing commercial conditions. Here is a little table I have compiled from the last report of the Controller of the Currency, showing the actual banking business of the country on or about July ir ius: n -Vnmher. Deposits. J4.374.551.20S 3.47H.192.S91 2. 937. 129. 59 National 6-3s Saving 1-408 State 11.220 rreii.r fnm riant Aa ...... 4Z 1, SC6, 964. 214 These deposits are Individual. That Is. the figures exclaefe deposits from the Government and the surplus re serves of other banks. These figures show that In proportion to their num ber the savings banks have a stronger line of deposits than all the other banks put together. Manifestly, the field of the savings bank Is so import ant that it should not be disturbed by Government competition unless there are strong reasons for such a depart- "Tt Is generally admitted that the creation of postal savings banks would increase these deposits enormously. Bringing a savings bank home to the inhabitants of the village sections would undoubtedly stimulate the habit of saving. The increased security af forded by the Government would also attract depositors. . Careful investiga tors say that the postal savings bank would probably bring increased depos its or a billion or so, part being money now hidden and the rest tne result of Increased thrift due to the facility of making deposits In the local postoffice. Should Se n Good' Example. New York Evening Post. When it comes, however, to Mrs. Pank hurst's justifying militant ways because men have used force the answer must promptly be that two wrongs make no right Because men have torn down the palings of Hyde Park and broken every window in the main street of Winchester to obtain this right or that privilege, it does not follow that women ought to do likewise. We look to them to set a po litical example to men, as they do in most other conditions of life. If they do not. they are bound to find themselves gravely criticised. We are glad to note' that Mrs. Pankliurst refused to suggest or hint that her methods were advisable in this coun try they certainly are entirely uncalled for.' and coujd. in our opinion, be pro ductive only of harm. Bringing Up the City Boy. Cleveland Plain Dealer. A city boy is not doomed to failure nor condemned 'by birth to pursue a dif ficult path through life. He must merely be handled with some knowledge of con ditions and some consideration of the fact that what might apply to a country boy does not apply to him. The difficulty ... ... i. ,i,.f tin nttpmnt is marie to too uiieu " " - r - bring up the one after the manner of tlu other. The parents perhaps were them selves country bred and they fail to dif ferentiate, between their own childhood surroundings and those of their children. The city is a poor place to . bring up children, particularly boys. But it should not be, need not be, and the future ought to see the 'correction of the present ab normal conditions. General Howard's Empty Sleeve. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. The late General Howard will be re membered by the youncer generation of Americans as an interesting and forcible speaker, charmingly unconventional in his style and picturesque in his personality. His "empty sleeve was always eloquent in its remainder of those "iron days.' now almost half a century gone In the fading perspective of time. General Howard, on account of his popularity as a speaker be fore branches of the Young Men's Chris tian Association and other Christian bod ies, was probably a more familiar figure in the last decade of his life to the gen eral public than any of too surviyjae Civil War Generals. .f : .' .,