THE MOKNINO-OttEGONIAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1901. , ' GETS UNO AT LOW PRICE RESULT OF THE FIRST CONDEMNA TION SUIT IN HAWAII. Pearl Harbor Naval Station Site "Will Not Cost the Government Much Ovcrdne Ships. HONOLULU, Dec 18, via Victoria, B. C Dec 25. The first of the suits brought by the United Suites to condemn lands needed for the naval station at Pearl Harbor was decided last week by a Jury in the United States District Court, which awarded the land to the Govern ment at a price far below the demands of the owners. The case was that of the United States against the estate of Bernice Pauahi Bishop, involving over 600 acres of land at the site of the pro posed station. The Bishop estate de manded about $600 per acre for the land, while the Government's price was about $30. The jury brought In a verdict awarding the defendants about $75 per acre The verdict Is taken to indicate that the Government will get the land wanted for a naval station for a small sum. Two other suits brought by the Gov ernment have been compromised, the United States getting the lands without cost. The John II estate agreed t( and has deeded to the Government a strip of land amounting to 23 acres on Ford Island and the suit against the II estate for the whole of the island has been with drawn as It Is held to be unnecessary to take It all. The Oahu Sugar Company also surrendered its leasehold interest in the same land. The suit against the Oahu Railway & Land Company for the land covered by its right of way has been settled. The company deeds the lands to the Government with the under standing that its tracks shall not be dis turbed until a new right of way is pro vided. The most Important condemnation suit now pending is against the Honolulu Plantation Company, to secure the com pany's leasehold interest in the lands of the Bishop estate already condemned. A suit against the Dowsett estate for 4SS acres of this same land is also pend ing. A special election held in HIlo district last week, to choose a successor to the late J. E. "Wallko, member of the House of Representatives, resulted in the elec tion of James Lewis, who was the de feated Republican candidate at the for mer election. The campaign was a quiet one. President Roosevelt's message is com mented on here as adverse to the sugar interests of Hawaii. The declaration against allowing more Chinese to come here was a disavpointmont to the plant ers. The pros-vtct of reciprocity with Cuba; the possibility of free admission of sugar from that island and the Philip pines, as well as from Porto Rico, are also disappointing in Hawaii. In spite of these Inferences, however, sugar stocks remain firm. Attorney-General .Dole will leave for "Washington in the near future, to make an appeal for the territory in a case in volving the legality of trials without grand jury indicates under the Ha waiian law allowing jury verdicts by nine jurors after an examination. Considerable alarm Is felt in marine circles for the safety of several overdue vessels from Pacific Coast ports. Among them Is the ship C. D. Carleton, 44 days out from Tacoma. The barkentine Klickitat is 35 days out from Port Lud low and the bo.rk Ceylon 24 days from Port Gamble. From Gray's Harbor, the schooner "W. F. "Wltsemann is 35 days out and the H. D. Bendlxen is 44 days out from Port Blakeley. The W. H. Diamond, Amy Turner and Gerard C. Tobey are each 24 days out from San Francisco. Yesterday, the S. G. "Wilder arrived from San Francisco after a "trip of 24 days. MR. MARKHAM STILL HOES. His Familiar Qualities Held Up to Mild Scorn. The New York Sun. Fame came to Mr. Edwin Markham late in life, as liberty came to the shepherd in the First Bucolic tamen sera respexlt and he enjoys It all the more on that ac count. Does any other versemaker have so absolute and unwearied delight in his own verses? He goes about reading them liKe an ancient rhapsode. Go to a teach ers' meeting, a congress of mothers, a discussion on some aspect of contempo rary sociology, a reunion of forty-niners or of volunteer firemen or of gentlemen's son of the Ninth Ward, and Mr. Mark ham. Is sure to turn up with a recitation. it we can't say conscientiously that we pine to hear him. at least we love to see him playing and "looking" his part. If in dustry diligent study of the dictionary and handsome, flowing metrical hair and beard can make a. good poet, he is one. At any rate, if his inward joy in his work is one millionth part of his visible satis faction therewith, he is the happiest man on earth. In "Lincoln and Other Poems" Mr. Markham shows his familiar quali ties. He combines the sentimental political economy of Professor George D. Herron and of Professor Bemis, formerly of Kansas, now of Cleveland, with the studied and affected rhetoric of a Latin poet of the decadence. Add capital letters by the bushel. Sure, never wis such another spendthrift of them. Clearly Mr. Markham holds that there Is a mystic power and magic in them. So you have "First "Whisper." "Perils of the Street." "Lean Hunger" (we like to kn6w that Hunger isn't -putting on ilesh), "Worm of ' Misery," "Tradition," "Book of Pedigree," "Privilege," "Dream," "Kingdom of Fra ternity," "Brother-Future," "World-State,-" "Mighty Deed," "Purpose, La bor Angel," "Hidden Hand," "Secret Vast." "Powers of Water," "Fire and Air," "Naked Fact," one Law, one Pur pose, one Advance, "Comrade-Future." "Seeptered Power," "Rulers of the Spheres," "Lyric Seven," "Mighty Hun dred Years," and so on. If capital letters w ere wings, Mr. Markham would be whiz zing through the empyrean all the time. A specimen of Mr. Markham's ambi tious, and, as it seems to us, essentially ludicrous, manner, may be had in the blank verses on Lincoln: "When the Norn-Mother saw the "Whirlwind Hour, threatening and darkening- as It hurried on. She bent the strenuous heavens and came down To make a man to meet the mortal need. A man that matched the mountains and com pelled The stars to look our way and honor us. The last line is in Mr. Markham's sublime-ridiculous manner.' Nat Lee might have written them when he -was maddest. Kyd and Gongora and Euphues would have admired It. Well, Fate, or the Norn-Mother, as Mr. Markham prefers to say for the sake of getting in another capital letter, foresees some time In 1S09 the Whirlwind Hour. A Norn-Mother that understood the Norn business wou'd have looked at the barbmeter earlier. She bends the strenuous heavens. What with? Presumably with her weight. A good sol id Mothern Norn, like a Wagnerian Scan dinavian heroine played by a German prima donna. But let's see what Mother Norn did: Tho color of the ground was In him, the red earth. The tang and odor of the primal things The rectitude and patlonce of the ro;ks. If the first line means ' anything. It means that Mr. Lincoln was red-headed. The second line mean's nothing that we can discover. The tang and odor of the primal things must have been con foundedly, unpleasant. The early and still steamlng.earth must have been more like Barren Island than Araby the Blest. "The rectitude and patience of the rocks!" A poet's license should not be Inspected too closely. This poor devil must get his metaphors and his similes somewhere. But a rock is no more capa ble of patience than of suffering. And what is the rectitude of rocks? In a moral sense the phrase is nonsense. If Mr. Markham uses it in a physical sense, why. not even his system of maudlin political economy is more gnarled, slab sided and out of plumb than most rocks arc Keats' "Sat gray-haired Saturn, quiet as a stone," is absolutely perfect. Mr. Markham's rocks are what the mod ern classics call "rocky." But the catastrophe. Mr. Markham's cheeks are distended. He is pulling away at the straps of his boots under the im pression that he is soaring: So camfc the Captain with the mlshty heart; And when the step of earthquake shook the house. Wrenching the ratters from their ancient hold. He held the rldegpole up, and spiked again The rafters of the Home. What the deuce Is the Captain doing here, and why has he beaten his sword Into a hammer? Where are the walking delegates of the Carpenters' Union? The truth is that the whole passage is pre posterous. Against the Immeasurable powtr of earthquake Is matched an ama teur carpenter with a hammer in one hand and a bunch of ten-penny nails in the other. The "tame villatic" stroke is never missing from Mr. Markham's at tempts at strength or sublimity. The old red flannel undershirt sticks out from beneath the purple singing robes. One more instance: He Is the stone rejected, yet thn stone Whereon Is bu'lt metropolis and throne. Out of his toll come all their pompous shows, Their purple luxury and plush repose. Plush repose! The footman's breeches. Mr. Markham should take something to relieve the swelling In his style. Ono delicious stanza we must quote: You were kept hidden In a secret place. With white Sierras, white Niagaras Hid under stalwart stars In this fair space. Ages ere Tadmor or the man of Uz. "Uz" and "Niagaras": the worst is not so long as we can say this is the worst. Now, the naturnl vein of Mr. Markham is sweet and simple and Mother Goosey. For Instance: There are three eggs In' a small brown rocket, And the breeze will swing and the gale will rock It, Till three little birds on the thin edge teeter. And our God be glad and our world be sweeter. By kind permission of Professor Henry van Dyke. PUBLIC OWNERSHIP. Government ."Waste Uwunlly Equal to Private Profit. San Francisco Call. The railroad combination recently effect ed has commanded approval in some quarters because of its" expected demon stration that the united systems can oe operated from one center, and, therefore, that their operation in concentration by the Government under public ownership, being possible, will be so desirable that their acquisition by the Government will follow. As we have said heretofore, the evolu tion of American roads from the link to trunk lines, and from trunk lines to sys tems, was to secure convenience to their patrons and economy in operation. 'This economy, of course, reappeared in in creased profit and this was divided with the patrons in the form of cheaper rates. Take what is now the New York Cen tral system as an illustration. In 1855 the links which now compose It charged an average passenger rate of 3.72 cents per mile In 1S99 the average rate over the same links consolidated Into a system was LKJ cents per mile. The average pas senger rate on the Central Pacific in 1S72 was 3.83 cents per mile, and by 1897 on the Southern Pacific system, of which the Central had become a part, the average rate was L9G4 cents per mile Describing the "Jink" roads as the prim itive and the "systems" .as the Improved method, the reduction in freight rates re sulting from the change was on the New York Central 84 per cent, Pennsylvania Central SO per cent, Milwaukee & St. Paul 75 per cent, Illinois Central 78 per cent. Southern Pacific &i per cent. In passen ger rates the average In this country In 1S9S was 1.994 cents per mile, while the rate in Great Britain for first-class pas sengers was 4.24 cents and for third-class 2.02 cents, in France first-class 4.04, Ger many 3.03, Russia 3.63, Austria 3.83, Italy 3.63, Holland, 3.23, Belgium 2.43 cents per mile This Includes the group affected by government ownership of the roads, and In them all the rate for second-class passengers Is higher than our first-class rate, and In most of them the third-class rate is higher than jur average In all of the Continental countries which own and operate government roads pri vate corporations also own and operate roads. Italy appointed a commission to report on government ownership In re spect to its economy compared with cor porate ownership. That commission re ported that in the six countries, Austro Hungary, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, the ratio of ex penses to earnings on government roads was 67.66 and on private roads 56.16 per cent. So that in that group the cost or .government operation exceeded private operation by 20.7 per cent. The same commission reported that In France the ratio of expense to earnings was, on government roads 81.5, on private roads 53.S; Germany, 54.9 to 54.2; Nether lands, 59.9 to 5L9. The Italian commission reported that: "The state Is essentially a political insti tution, which has for its object the pro tection of private rights and the promo tion of public good, not the exercise of in dustrial pursuits; that railroad manage ment could not be considered a state func tion; that the state should not or could not undertake that which should be lett for the citizens, either alone or associat ed, to do; that it restricted the held or individual action and enterprise, was a social and political Injury and tended to diminish liberty." Thereupon Italy divested herself of rail way . management by turning the state roads over to private parties, and in three years the wages of the employes were in creased 14 per cent and the ratio of ex penses to earnings decreased. The government statistician of New South Wales reports that In Australia the government railroads cost $64,450 per mile, while private lines operating in the same territory cost only $18,000 to $36,000 per mile. The earnings of the government roads, charging three to four times the rates of the United States, were 3.02 per cent, and the Interest paid was 3.99 per cent, leaving an annual deficit of .97, or nearly 1 per cent, that was levied as a general tax on the people, amounting to $5,607,063, which they had to pay In ad dition to railroad rates three to four times higher than In the United States. These are authentic stat'stics. and they prove beyond dispute that in the conduct of industrial enterprises government waste is equal to corporate profit. We have contended that if submitted to piop er accounting and actuary methods It would be demonstrated that the same rule holds good In the municipal ownership and operation of such public utilities as gas, water and street railways. The same Infirmity Is found to be common to strong autocratic governments like Rus sia, bureaucratic systems like Germany and qualified democracies like France and Australia, and if there are any reasons for anticipating anything different under our popular form of government they are not yet proved. Schwab "Will Go to Europe. NEW YORK, Dec. 25. Charles M. Schwab, president of. the United States Steel Corporation, will sail for Europe tomorrow on La Savole, of the French llnei He will be accompanied by Mrs. Schwab and has planned to remain abroad for two months. Your complexion, as well as your tem per, is rendered miserable by adlsordered liver. Improve both by taking Carter's Little Liver PiUa. NO DECREASE IN TRADE REASON FOR APPARENT REDUC TION IN EXPORTATION. Caused by Lower Current Prices for Commodities and the Ab sence of Data. WASHINGTON. Dec. 25. That the re duction in exportations of manufactures is largely due to reduced prices and ab sence of data on the commerce with Ha waii and Porto Rico is apparent from some figures Just compiled by the Treasury Bu reau of Statistics. The reduction in the total value of exports of manufactures Is, as has already been stated, chiefly in" iron and steel, copper, and mineral oil. The. reduction in mineral oil now amounts to about $3,000,000 in the 11 months ending with November, while in quantity export ed there has been an actual increase of 70,030,000 gallons, as compared with the U months of 1900. In exports of wire during the 10 months ending with October the value of the exports shows a decrease, while the quantity has during that time increased over 11,000,000 pounds, as com pared with the same period of last year. Of locomotives there is an Increase In the number actually exported and a decrease in value amounting to nearly $500,000. Of bar Iron the average export price per pound in the 10 months of 1901, compared with the corresponding months of 1900, shows a decrease of 20 per cent; wire rods, a decrease in price per pound of over 34 per cent; billets, ingots and blooms, over 12 per cent reduction In price; steel rails, a reduction of 10 per cent in prlca per ton; tin-plates, a reduction of 25 per cent in price per pound; structural iron and steel. 9 per cent; cut nails, 12 per cent; wire, 16 per cent, and other articles of iron and steel show about the same rate of reduction in prices per unit of auan tity. Among ell the articles of iron and teel exported in which quantities as well as values are given, and an opportunity thus afforded to determine the export price per pound, about three-fourths of them show reduced prices. The fact that none of the merchandise sent to the Hawaiian Islands or Porto Rico have been Included in the statement of exports to foreign countries also takes away from the statistics of manufactures exported about $15,000,000, which would be Included If the methods followed in former years, when Hawaii and Porto Rico were foreign territory, were applied at the pres ent time. Estimates by the Bureau of Statistics based upon statements obtained regnrding shipments between the United States and these Islands during the present year put the value of the exports to Ha waii in the 10 months ending with October at about $24,000,000, and to Porto Rico at $6,500,000, making It apparent that our exports to these islands In the 10 months In question amount to about $30,000,000; while an examination of the class of mer chandise exported to them in former years indicates that more than ope-half is man ufactures. This would Indicate that a considerable share of the apparent reduc tion in our exports of manufactures Is due to the absence of statistics of shipments of manufactures to those islands, the exports to which were formerly Included in the statements of our foreign com merce Add to this the facts shown In the above statement regarding the reduction In export prices of Iron and steel and min eral oil, and a large proportion of the apparent reduction In exports of manufac tures Is accounted for. The tables which follow, prepared by the Treasury Bureau of Statistics, show the quantity and value, and the export price per unit of quantity, in those man ufactures of iron and steel In which the export statement includes quantities as well as values: Exported during 10 mos. Iron sheets, pounds Iron sheets, pounds Safes, number Iron ore, tons Pig Iron, tons Scrap iron, tons Bar iron, pounds "Wire rods, pounds Other steel bars, pounds Billets, Ingots, etc., tons Hoop and band Iron, pounds... Steel talis, tons Iron rails, tons Tin and terne plates, pounds. Structural Iron, etc, tons Wire, pounds Cut nails, pounds Wire nails, pounds Other nails, pounds Car wheels, number Cash registers, number Fire engines, number Locomotives, number Stationary engines, number Quantities. ... 16.561.698 ... 16,869,033 1.613 46,846 ... 227,596 43.277 ... 15.S62.13S ... 16.793,920 ...13S.024.373 70.S45 ... 4.446.0SO ... 325,525 5,314 ... 203,076 54,761 ...146.872.524 ... 20,483.920 .. 54.269.703 ... 3,517,169 19.3S4 11 374 1.123 Export Price Per Iron ore, tons '. Pig Iron, tons Scrap Iron, etc, tons Bar Iron, pounds Wire rods, pounds Other steel bar, pounds Billets, Ingots, etc, tons Hoop, etc. Iron and steel, pounds Steel rails, tons Iron rails, pounds Iron sheets, pounds Steel sheets, pounds Tin and terne plates, pounds Structural Iron and steel, tons Wire, pounds Cut nails, pounds Wire nails, pounds Other nails, pounds Safes, number Fire engine, number Locomotives, number Increase COMPASS VARIATIONS. Earnest Study Nott Given to the Subject. According to the present plans, the year 1902 will be made memorable for Its prog ress In the Investigation of terrestrial magnetism. All the civilized nations of the world are co-operating, and the United States, through its Coast and Geo detic Survey, is doing Its full share Few branches of the scientific work of the Government are more interesting than this, or have, because of Its relation to land titles, more practical Importance, says a Washington special to the New York Evening Post. The discoverer of the "variations of the compass" is supposed to have been no less a person than Christopher Columbus. Before his day It was assumed that the needle held true to the pole. A common school history of the United States which Is' at hand states on Its flrst page of nar rative that 'the compass and the astrolabe an Instrument for reckoning latitude had been Invented, and voyagers were no longer compelled to creep along the shore, but began to strike out boldly Into the open sea." A few pages later the same text-book records that, to the dismay of the sailors on the fleet of Columbus, "the compass no longer pointed directly north, and they believed themselves going Into a region where the very laws of nature were changed." Dr. Tittman, the superintend ent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, re gards It as rather remarkable and a trib ute to their astronomical attainments that the party of Columbus happened to dis cover this error, for It was not great. When Columbus sailed from Palos the needle there pointed slightly east of north. As he moved westward the amount of the easterly deviation grew gradually less, till, on September 13, he crossed the so called agonic line or line of no magnetic declination or variation. This lay a little to the west of the Fayal Islands. For a century or two before Columbus' time, the needle had pointed approximately to ! the true north, or by only a small amount east of It. over the entire Mediterranean region. Where any variation had oc curred In the needle, the surveyor as sumed that it was due to some mechanical defect, and promptly shifted his compass card. It thus appears that there had been little occasion to question the trustworth- mess of the north-seeking needle until Columbus crossed the agonic line, and a slight deviation to the westward began. It has been popularly explained for years that the needle pointed to a mag netic pole which has been located at a spot northwest of Hudson's Bay by Boothia Felix, but recently scientists have not been so sure of the fixity of this mag netic pole. The fluctuations In the needle from time to time through secular periods, to say nothing -of the slight variation at different hours of the day, indicate that many elements enter Into the reckoning, and science has by no means settled the cause and meaning of them all. It is easy to account for local eccentricities of the needle by the presence of deposits of iron or other metals attracting or repelling the needle, but the theory underlying the whole thing still remain? much in the dark. Just now the work of this Government, and of most of the others co-operating with It, is decidedly practical. From a large number of observations It 16 expect ed that the reasons for them will event ually reveal themselves. Our Government will soon have established four magnetic observatories, besides many temporary places known as magnetic stations. The observatories are situated at Sitka, near Honolulu, at Baldwin, Kan., and at Cheltenham, Md., 16 miles from Wash ington. The Germans have recently decided to establish a mngnetic observa tory In the Samoan Islands, and the pres ent antarctic explorations have a direct relation to terrestrial magnetism. It la expected that they will throw some light upon the magnetic pole at the south, about which less has been known than about the one in our hemisphere. Mag netic observatories have been established all over the globe, and they will begin February 1, 1902, to make simultaneous magnetic observations on certain selected days, generally the 1st and 15th of each month, and to continue them for at least one year. At these observatories, about 40 In number, observations of magnetic va riations will be recorded continuously by photographic appliances. Our Government Is also co-operating with the land surveyors by Issuing to them charts from time to time showing the variations of the compass at all points throughout the country. The surveyors In return report to the Government such discrepancies as they discover, and so form a useful adjunct to the work of the regular magnetic parties. The Govern ment charts take the form of maps over which lsogonlc lines have been traced con necting places of equal variation of the needle on the same principle as- the more familiar Isothermic lines of the weather maps; they have to be changed occasion ally, but not often enough to make intel ligent surveying very Inaccurate. Tne conclusion one would reach on looking over the literature of the magnetic bu reau Is that the needle Is. of little value, and that for the obvious convenience In Its use we pay a large price in trouble and error. Nevertheless, one of the East ern States Is still so far behind the -times as to recognize on Its statute books the magnetic meridian as the meridian of ref erence for land surveyors. In many states no systematic effort has been made to put its land surveying on a practical and sci entific basis, so as to save costly and unnecessary litigation in the future. The total change between the morning and afternoon extremes is only about 11 minutes in midsummer, and perhaps half this amount in midwinter; yet this Is a quantity which must not be ignored in precise work. In Germany,, mine survey ing has been brought to such an. art that some of the principal mines maintain small magnetic observatories, where the declination is recorded continuously throughout the day by photography. The mine surveyor then uses the value of the declination to the nearest minute as pre vailing at the time of the day when he is running his line. In land surveying no attention is commonly paid to this diur nal variation, although It Is a quantity that may at times make itself apprecia bly felt. Magnetic storms may In this latitude produce variations of from 10 to -1900 Value $ 502,674 1,201.141 107.033 141.925 3.S20.002 766.2S6 329.432 387,045 2.316,992 2,013,492 90.494 9,934.613 U7.676 14.149 3.052.786 3.931.759 519.792 1,393.775 227.10S 140.92S 661.567 24.07S 3.919,127 678.925 -IDOL Value $ 381.446 S72.925 103.177 151.6S4 897.650 19S.296 619.509 202,714 943,090 65,0S0 50.192 7,753.471 32.357 49.673 2.445.720 3,883,410 405,744 76S.512 21S.561 160.832 797.050 17.635 3.453,445 709.244 Quantities. 13.3S5.022 49,550.140 1.859 60,534 57, iol 12.552 36.8S3.6U 13.460.310 60,733,131 27,196 2,313.231 2S5.3S0 901 955,818 44.267 157,645,742 1S.731.552 37,034.229 3.52S.60S 22,367 9,447 8 378 1.061 Unit of Quantity. Per cent decrease. 17.16 7.44 10.7S 20.00 34.78 11.76 12.66 10.00 10.88 .62.33 3.33 12 50 25.70 .90 7.41 12.00 16.00 4.62 16.40 .70 12.82 1900. 303 16 79 17 71 02 023 017 2S 42 02 30 52 22 14 03 016 07 55 75 , 027 025. 025 065 1901. $ 251 15 54 15 80 105 015 019 24 82 022 27 20 25 94 029 018 052 55 25 025 022 021 062 55 50 2,201 40 9,136 10 ..$ 66 39 2.1S9 00 10,480 00 20 minutes of circular measure Other small spasmodic fluctuations sometimes occur, more frequently and violently In years of maximum sun-spot activity. In November, 1SS2, during a great sun-spot period, a magnetic storm occurred which moved the needle at Los Angeles more than one and one-third degrees out of its normal place But It Is the secular variations that concern the surveyor most Intimately. At a number of cities, records of the mag netic declinations for more than three centuries are on file. London seems to have been one of the places where the needle has been most erratic It was 11 degrees east of north In 165S, and 24 degrees west of north In 1812. It Is now receding towards the true north. In Bal timore, the needle pointed six degrees and 1 six minutes west In 1670, and In 1S02 was only 39 minutes west. A street a mile long laid out by the compass In that city In, 1670 would have had its north terminus 504 feet too far west in 1802. It is related that a magnetic party, while establishing a meridian line for the use of surveyors at Chestertown. Md., the county seat of Kent, found that the main street ran nearly magnetically northwest and south east. Assuming that the street had been laid out to run exactly so, it appeared from old magnetic data that the town must have been laid out In the early part of the 18th century. Upon looking up the records the assumption was found to be correct. The town had been laid out In 1702. The historic Mason and Dixon's line was fortunately run. In 17J56, by the stars and not by the needle. If, In the year 1S00. it had been run so as to be mag netically east and west, beginning at the eastern end, and supposing that the sur veyor would not have encountered any areas of peculiar local disturbances, the boundary line would have thrown. Em metsburg into Pennsylvania, making a deviation of two and a half miles. But w.ere the line to be run under the same conditions today. It would drop 19 miles to the south, which would surrender the richer portion of Allegheny and Garrett Counties to Pennsylvania, and would cut Maryland's short western boundary line In two. This Illustrates the Inaccuracy of surveying by the uncorrected needle. Great Fire in a Yucatan Town. 1 MEXICO CITY, Dec 25. Word reaches IS IT AN EPIDEMIC? Vital Statistic Show an Alarming: Increane Jn an Already Prevail ing: Disease Are Any Exempt f At no time In the history of disease has there been such an alarming increase In the number of cases of any particular malady as In that of kidney and bladder troubles now preying upon the people of this country. Today we see a relative, a friend or an acquaintance apparently well, and In a few days we may be grieved to learn of their serious Illness or sudden death, caused by that fatal type of kidney trouble Bright's disease. Kidney trouble often becomes ad vanced into acute stages before the afflicted is aware of its presence; that Is why we read of so many sudden deaths of prominent business and professional men, physicians and others. They have neglected to stop the leak in time. While scientists are puzzling their brains to find out the cause, each Indi vidual can, by a little precaution, avoid the chances of contracting dreaded and dangerous kidney trouble, or eradicate It completely from their system if already afflicted. Many precious lives might have been, and many more can yet be, saved by paying attention to the kidneys. It Is the mission of The Oregonlan to benefit Its readers at every opportunity, and therefore we advise all who have any symptoms of kidney or bladder trou ble to write today to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamton, N. Y., for a free sample bottle of Swamp-Root, the celebrated spe cific which Is having such a great de mand and remarkable success In the cure of the most distressing kidney and blad der troubles. With the sample bottle of Swamp-Root will also be sent free a pamphlet and treatise of valuable Information. here from Merlda, Yucatan, that a great fire has been raging at Progreso, starting In the warehouse of Eshanov Bros., and spreading to the warehouses of Gabriel Escalante and the consignment shipments of the Merlda Railway. Some 10,000 bales of heniquin were exposed to the flames, and Vt Is believed much of It has been destroyed. The loss Is estimated at $1,000, 000. JAPAN'S FASHIONABLE WOMEN In the Smart Set at Toklo Forty Dresses Suffice for a. Lifetime. Mrs. Hatoyama, one of the most, culti vated women of Toklo, is just now re ceiving her first Impressions of America. In the most charming and candid way she confessed the other day some of these Im pressions, and added a few comparisons between the women and the customs of her own country and of this. She Is the wife of Kazua Hatoyama, a student of Yale 20 years ago, who has Journeyed from Toklo, where he Is a pro fessor In the" Imperial University, to New Haven for the week of the Yale celebra tion. They are the guests of Mrs. George Ladd, who lectured on philosophy two years ago In Toklo, and to whom 10 other Japanese guests are coming this week. Her name Is Haru, which Is "Spring." Her face is oval and olive, with wide set, wide-open eyes. Her black hair Is high on her head, and caught at the side by the breast of a strange bird fashioned In a pompon. She is a bit of Buddhaland which America seldom sees. "Thirty or forty dresses," she observed, on being led to speak of her wardrobe, "are not many for a Japanese lady to have when you remember they are the collection of a lifetime, maybe." "Now, see," she said; "your women have 10, 15 dresses in one year. Next year the style, you say, all changes. You throw these away and ask for new. Well, In Japan we have three five It may be new In one year, and the next year there Is no new style. We have then three, five more, but the first are stllj very nice So for many years till we have a great number. all very nice. So we may have 60, 70 dresses, but we have them the way you have your furniture In your home a piece and a- piece at a time." Then she gave a charming glimpse Into a very American Japanese household economy. "And." she said, "these go to the old est daughter, too. She Is very proud to have them nicer than her own from the merchants. In my country your moth er's dress made into yours Is better to have than a new one. It Is necessary only to change them a little, and our women can do things very well with their hands. Every Japanese woman knows how to make her klmona," she said. "Dress reform?" repeated Mme. Hato yama. "I remember. They told me in Washington how I wear what you say? dress reform, because I have the high waist and what is loose. Now they say, 'Will you have dress reform in Japan?' Now, when we reform our kind of dress In Japan, It will be to wear shorter skirts and American waists. When you reform you wear long, straight skirts and Japanese waists. I wish I can tell you which Is the reform." Mrs. Hatoyama laughed out like a child at this, and twisted the broad ends vpf her sash Into gray ropes, and laughed until she closed her eyes with the mirth of It. "All the white things they are almost American," she said, speaking of lin gerie, "only we have not the lace and the ribbon. We have very fine embroid ery or else no embroidery, and we have the thin silk. But we have not the lace all in our stockings like yours. We have them of silk, that we could draw through a tiny, tiny ring." Presently she stood beside her trunk with her arms filled with shining folds of yellow. "Now you will see." she said. "I have nothing grand as your American dresses with something that shines sewed all over them. You all like things that shine." commented Mrs. Hatoyama, "Oh, yes," she went on, "we do imi tate the American ladles. Why may we not? They are the happiest race of women in the world, except the how do you say? secret race who loves some one very much. They are the only really happy ones. To be like you Is why we have a class In Toklo called It Is a curious name we think, too the Interrogation Club. We speak only English only English. Whenever there Is an English or American lady In Toklo we can Invite, we do. Then we " Mrs. Hatoyama stopped and thought and smiled and turned her head, and laughed delightedly at last. "Oh." she cried, "we 'pick her brains. I read that in your American book your Emerson on the steamer. I read, your Longfellow, too," she added, proudly, "on the steamer, so I would know." "I belong to very nice clubs," she said, "In Toklo. We try to make education. The Woman's Educational Correspond ence Society," she explained, the long words falling quaintly and prettily from her lips, "that Is one And the Woman's Health Society that Is one. We are all doing what we can to teach the English and the American customs. We want to teach the mothers. In your country you have to what you say? bring up your children. In Japan we must bring up the mothers for a while." Then she told what she thinks about the bringing up of children, and It de veloped that she, who looks like a child, herself. Is tho mother of two boys. "In Japan, she said, with, educated people, the mother studies now. "She stud ies with her boys. And she does with her girls, too, among the very educated. She has them know English. "But the most we can do Is when they are little. They are not children long In Japan. When they are little we show them only beautiful things you know? only beautiful th'ngs. Little silk balls, little carved things of Ivory. Oh, your children's things how do you say? Toys! They are In this country so ugly, are they not? We would be afraid of what our children would be If we save them your children's toys!" The Wheat of Argentine Republic. Nineteenth Century. Three great economic developments have MASTERY OF DISEASE The Copeland System Now Perfected So That It In cludes the Treatment and Cure of All Chronic Dis eases at a Price Within the Reach of the Most Slender Purse. $5 a Month-All IMtineS Free$5 a Month To those unacquainted with the great work carried on at the Copeland Insti tute the reach .and range of that far-famed medical system and Its admirable adaptation to the needs of every class of Invalids may be indicated by the diver sity of disease accepted for expert treatment. The Copeland system includes catarrh and all catarrhal maladies, the treatment and cure of deafness, of asthma and bronchitis. Incipient con sumption, diseases of the nervous system, the stomach, liver and bovrela, rheumatism, kidney diseases, and all affections of the sUih and blood; under the nominal assessment of Jf.5 a mouth, including all appliances, medicines and treatments until cured. The advanced methods employed In thetreatment of the maladies here enumer ated are the development of many years' experience in the largest and most di versified practice ever known, and their success is indelibly written in the multi tude of recorded cures. The Proper Cure for Sufferers. Great numbers of people suffer from the malign poisons of catarrh, as from other chronic maladies, without any correct or definite Idea of the nature of their afflic tion. The following symptoms have been carefully arranged to enable many suf ferers to understand just what It Is that alls them. Many diseases, known under various specific names, are really of a catarrhal origin and nature. Every part of the mucous membrane, the nose, the CATARRH OF HEAD AND THROAT The head and throat become dis eased from neglected colds, en lim ine Catarrh vFhen the condition of the blotd predispose to thlt con dition. "Is the voice husky?" "Do you ever spit up slime?" "Do you ache all over?" "Do you inure at nlgntV" "Do you blow out bcaoj?" "la your none stopped up?" "Does your nose iliscnarge?" "Does your nose bleed easily?" "1 there tlckllnc In the throat?" "Is this worse toward night?" "Does the nose Itch and burn?" "Do you hawk to clear the throat?" "It there pain across the eyes?" "Is there pain In front of head?" "Is your sense ot smell leavlnc?" "Is the throat dry In the morning 7" "Are you la?inc your sense of taste?" "Do you sleep wltn your mouth open? "Does your nose stop up toward night? CATARRH OF THE STOMACH. This condition may resalt from several causes, but the usual cause Is catarrh, the mucus dropping down into the throat and being; wallowed. "Is there nausea?" "Are you costive?" "1b there vomltlns?" "Do you belch up gas?" "Have you waterorash?" "Are you lightheaded?" "Is your toncue coated?" "Do you hawk and spit?" "Is there pain after eating?" "Are you nervous and weak?" "Do you have sick headache?" "Do you bloat up attet eating?' "Is mere disgust for breakfast?" "Have you distress after eating?" "Is your throat filled with slime?" "Do you at times have dlairhea?" "Is there rush of blood to the head?" "When you get up suddenly are you dizzy?" "Is there gnawing sensation In stomach?" "Do you feel as If you had lead In stomach?" "When stomach Is empty do you feel faint?" "Do you beich material that burns throat?" "If stomach Is full do you feel oppressed?" CATARRH OF BRONCHIAL TUBES. This condition often results from caturrh extending: from the head and throat, and if left unchecked, extends down the windpipe into the bronchial tubes, and iu time attacks the lungu "Have you a cough?" "Are you losing tlesh?" "Do you cough at night?" "Have you pain In aide?" "Do you take cold easily?" "Is your appetite variable?" "Have you stitches In side?" "Do you cough until you gag?" "Are you low-splrlted at times?" "Do you raise frothy material?" "Do you spit up yellow matter?" "Do you cough on going to bed?" "Do you cough in the mornings?" "Is your cough short and hacking?" "Do you spit up little cheesy lumps?' "Have you t disgust for fatty foods V "Is there" tickling behind the palate?" "Have you pain behind breastbone?" "Do you feel you are growing weaker?" "Is there a burning pain in the throat?" "Do you cough worse night and morning?" "Do you have to sit up at night to get breath?" HOME TREATMENT You can be cured by the Copeland Physicians right In your own home under their perfect system of mail treatment. Write for Information and Home Treatment Symptom Blank. The COPELAND MEDICAL INSTITUTE The Dekura, Third and Washington IV. II. COPELAND, M. D. OFFICE HOURS From O A. M. to 12EVEXIXGS Tnesdays and Fridays. XL., from 1 to 5 P. 31. SUNDAYS From 10 A. M. to 12 M. SPECIAL NOTICE Office Hours New Year's From 9 A. M. to 12 M. taken place In Argentina during the last few years, which are largely responsible for the increase of Its wealth. The first Is the enormous Increase In the cultiva tion and export of wheat. It Is difficult to believe that 20 years ago the country did not produce cnougTi of this cereal for lt3 own consumption, and that It actually Imported in 1SS0 177.000 tons. In 1S93 It exported 1.090,000 tons, and In 1SS9 2.273,000 tons, and the cultivation now extends to 8,500,000 acres. It Is estimated that at least 20 times this area Is suitable for the cultivation of wheat. The second Is the great extension of the valuable alfalfa grass, or lucerne. The value of this prod uct has only been generally recognized during the last 12 or 15 years. It has been found that where there is water from Ave to 10 meters below the surface, as is the case over very large areas of the Provinces of Buenos Ayres and Cor doba, this plant sends down its rooty, often as thick as one's arm, and draws from It moisture, which makes the alfal fa Independent to a great extent of rain on the surface. Under these favorable conditions the plant becomes perennial. Even after long drouths it remains green. It produces four or five and often more full crops in the year. In the Winder It dies down and another natural grass takes Its place, so that there is always feed. A field In alfalfa carries four or five times more cattle and sheep than when in nat ural grass, and the cattle are double in weight. For the most part cattle and sheep, or even pigs, are turned Into the alfalfa to feed and fatten upon It. In such case a part of the field Is left In the natural grass, as the alfalfa Is too moist for cattle to lie on. They feed on the alfalfa and then repose on the dryer natural grass. Fifteen years ago the area laid down with this plant was Inconsid erable. In 1S91 there were 1.500.000 acres of It, and in 1S93 3,000.000 acres. Exaction on Tourintft. NEW YORK, Dec. 25. The exactions on tourists arriving at the port of New York will, it Is said, be made more stringent, and tourists arriving In this country will be called upon In future to pay full duty on all extra wearing apparel as well as on everything else not on the free list. In other words, according to a customs official, "tourists will not be favored at the expense of Importers," throat, eyes, ears. head, lungs, stomach, liver, bowels, kidneys and bladder, are subject to disease and blight by catarrh. The proper course for sufferers is this: Read these symptoms carefully over, mark those that apply to your case and ! bring this with you to Drs. Copeland and j Montgomery. If you live away from the I city, send them by mail, and ask for mall treatment. In either instance, and whether by mail or office treatment, tho patient may be assured of the speediest relief and cure possible to medical science. I SYMPTOMS OF EAR TROUBLES. Deafness and car troubles result from catarrh ia.NsliiK ulonc the Eu stachian tube that leads from Ui throat to the ear. "Is your hearing falling?" "Do your ear dlscnarge?" "Do your ears itch anu burn?" "Are the ears dry anu scaiy?" "Have you pah. behind the ears?" "li there throbbing In the ears?" "Is there a buzzing M)und heara-?" "Do you have a rinsing in tne ears?" "Are there crackling ound, heard?" "Is your hearing bad cloudy days?" "Do you have earache occasionally?" "Are there sounds like steam escaping?" "Do your ears hurt wheu you blow your nose?" "Do you constantly hear noises in the ears?" "Do you hear better some days than others? "Do the noises In your ears keep you awake?" "Wi.en you blow your nose do the ears crack?" "Is hearing worse when you have a cold?" "la roaring like a waterfall In the head?" CATARRh OF THE LIVER. The liver becomes diseased by ra ta rrli extending from the stomach into the tubes of the liver. "Are you Irritable?" "Are ou nervous?" "Do you get dizzy?" "Have you no energy?" "Do you have cold tcet?" "Do you feel miserable?" "Is youi memory pourr "Do you get tired easily?" "Do you have hot flushes?" "Is your eyesight blurred?" "Have you pain In tne back?" "la your flesh soft aud flabby?" "Are your spirits low at tur.es?" "Is there bloating after eating?" "Have you pain around the loins?" "Do you nave gurgling in bowels?" "Do you have rumbling bowels?" "Is there throbbing in the stomach?" "Do you have a sense of heat in bowels?" "Do you suffer from pains In temples?" "Do you have a palpitation of the heart?" "Is there a general feeling of lassitude?" "Do these feelings affect your memory?" CATARRH OF THE KIDNEYS. This condition results either from colds or front overwork of the kitf neys in separating from the blood the poisons that have been absorbed from catnrrh. "Is the skin pale and dry?" "Is your hair getting gray?" "Has the skin a waxy look?" "Is the hair dry and brittle?" "Is tho skin dry and harsh?" "Do the legs feel too heavy?" "Is there nausea after eating?" "Dc the Joints pain and ache?" "la the urine dark and cloudy?" "Are the eyes dull a..d staring?" "Is there pain In small of back?" "Do your b:nds and feet swell?" "Are they cold and clammy?" "Have you pain in top of head?" "Has the perspiration a bad odor?" "Is there pulliness under the eyes?" "Is there a bad taste In the mouth?" "Is there a desire to get up at night?" "Are there dark rings around the eyes?" "Do you seo spots floating before the eye3?" "Have you chilly feelings down the back?" T you see unpleasant things while asleep?" "Does a deposit form when left standing?" J. II. MONTGOMERY. M. D. Ha3 been responsible for much of human mortality. Men and women die by thou sands in an Indian famine, not because of lack of food but be cause caste superstition prevents them from accepting it. Even in America there are still to be found those who believe that healing herbs lack virtue unless gathered during certain phases of the moon. The great foe o.f superstition is science. Every year science increases the terri tory of the natural at the expense of the super natural. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery achieves its successful cures because it is a scientific preparation orig inated by a scientific man. It cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, purifies the blood and establishes the body in sound health. As the writer of the following letter says, "It is the best thing for nervous ness and for a weak run-down condition that anybody would want. It gives a person new life and new blood." "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol and is free from opium, co caine arid other narcotics. "I must again send afew lines to you to let you know how I am :ettin; along since taking the wonderful medicine which cured me two years ago." writes Mjss Bertha. I is" EJ)t,er. ot 16 Benton Street, si. i.uuis, .wo. "i still continue in very good health and think there is not a better medicine on earth than Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is the best thing for nervousness and for a weaic. run-down condition, that anybody would want. It gives a person new life and new blood. I can now work all dav long without feeling the least bit tirecL I was verv nervous and weak last summer. I took five bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and it just made me feel like a new person.1 . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets stimulate I the liver. sursnfiiM' M Mm S