1 ,1 THE MORNING OREGOMaN, WEI5NESDAyC i)ECE3tIBER 3,. ".. '--'V A u.crea at the Tostorace at TortUnd. Oregon. i s mcoik! -class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (poBtano orenald. In advance) mn "i salay. per month S3 B"nar excepted, per year ? M KWJth Sunday, per year. 9 00 n5a?. xfr year. 2 00 Th Weekly, per year 1 K The Wceky 3 months.. BO D P S wo- e"verefl. Sunday MPtc.Wn uaHr. per week, delivered. Snndny mauded.203 POSTAGE RATES".' inU.n"f? Sntw. Canada and Mexico: " li . l-rajr paprr 1c to ZR-page Tavr..... , creicn rats double. . or aicslon Intended for publication i .. -ine urcgonlan should be addressed Invaria bly 'Editor The Oregonlan." not to the nam of any individual. Letters relating to adver !ng. subscriptions or in any business matter IJ he &terf-sstl slmplv "The Oregonla'n." The Owponlan does not buy poemn or stories from Individual, aid cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Once. 4S. 44. . 47. 4. 9 If,bune bu,MJn. N'ew Tork Clty;510-ll-12 Tilbuae building, Chicago: the S. C. Beekwltb c,aI -AP'nr. Eastern representative. .;Tor le in Son rranr! ' E. Lee. Pal lets Hotel new? rfand: Goldsmith Bros.. 231 gutter rtreet: F. W. "Pitts. 1008 Market street: J K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the Pulace Hotel: Foster & Orear. Ferry new stand; Frank R-oit. R0 Ellis street, and N. WheatJcy. SI3 Mission street. For tale In Los Argrles by 71. F. Gardner. 50 South Sprint: street, and Oliver & Haines. COS South Spring street Tor sale Jn Kansas City Mo., by T"':aeclcer Cigar Co.. Klnth and Walnut streets. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. C3 Washington street. For 6alo In Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1812 Farnam street: Mcgeath Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnara street. Forsale in Salt Lak br tb Bait Lake News Ci," " "w"e5t Econd South street. For sale In Minneapolis by R, G. Hearsey & Co.. 24 Third street South, y Fcr sale In Washington, D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. Fcr sale In IVnvr. Colo., by Hamilton ft Ktndrlck. 006-012 .Fevontfenth street: Tyiuthsn & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth ard I.ar'rcnco street: A- Scries. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. '-'jTgDAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, with shjjwcrs by afternoon; winds shifting to south erly. SSTERDAVS WEATHER Maximum tem perature. V', minimum tessperature, 38: pre clpltatlon. trace. JeOIwTLAND, IV E D X E S D AY, DEC. 3. ,4T - ASPECTS OF THE MESSAGE. Alaska should have a delegate In Congress. In battle the only shots that count arc the shots- that hit. Insistence on the Impossible means delay In achieving the possible. A good Novy Is sot a provocative of war; it is the surest guarantee of peace. No independent Nation in America need have the slightest fear of aggression from the TJnlted Slates. The first and most Important step toward the ebeorption of the Indian Is to teach him to can his llvlaz. Owrs is r.nt the cred of the weakllne and the oowar.ch ours Is the pospel of hope and triumphant.- -endeavor. EiiMU'lty can do no harm to "the honest cor poration: and wc need not b? overtender about sparing the dishonest corporation. It is often necessary for laboring men to wrk In federations, and these have bocome intRortnnt factors of modem industrial life. Wo should always fearlessly Insist upon our rights In the face of the strong, and we should with ungrudging hand do our generous duty by the wfak KanVa arc the natural servants of commerce, and upon thorn should be placed, as far as practicable, the burden of furnishing and main taining' a circulation. ;iass animosity in the political world Is, if posjiDie. oven morf wicked. c-en more de structive to National welfare, than sectional, race or reltlous animosity. It may be questioned whether anywhere else fa modem times the world has seen a better example of real constructive statesmanship tnan our poonle have given in the- Philippine Islands. We are familiar with President Roose velt as one of resolute purpose and tire less energy. Thi9 message discovers? bim also as the man of -affairs. We are reminded at how many points his ca reer has tduched the things of which he-write.'.'. When he talks of the Army we remember the Rough- Riders; or of the Navy, we think of his Assistant Secre taryship and the 'dispatch to Dewey. His service for civil service reform and mu nicipal betterment is recalled by his discussion of a merit system in the Con sular service. When he talks about the evils of forest denudation, we are re minded of his studies in "The Winning of the West" He has roamed the West ern plains that he wants to ose irrigated and hunted the Rocky Mountain game that he wants to see preserved. The 3Ian of Affair. Few Presidents have brought to the office so varied an equipment in diver sified American activities. But the man of affair.? is pretty certain to be a super ficial student. He knows something of everything; but of no one thing does he know all there is to know, nor does he ao a rule know enough of any one thing to be proof against the mistaken coun sel of his advisers. We shall under take to show, a little later, that part3 jptthe President's message reveal this laultof Imperfect acquaintance -with. ththemes he treats. Meanwhile, It should perhaps be observed in passing that Imperfectly Informed Is apt to cover up hla weakness with a certain show of omniscience which may Impress the groundlings, but is certain to make the judicious grieve. If there Is any thing of this theatric quality in the President's manner, itmay be attrib uted to the consciousness of half-baked view.". A small but significant charac teristic of this message, for example, is the use of "The Congress" for "Con gress," though this studied archaism is not always maintained, and where the Up to "Congress" occurs it shows the artificiality of the- phrase. It was well enough for the Fathers to speak of "the" Congress, a body they looked upon as a new and dubious contrivance; but "Gongress" has become as thoroughly established In American vernacular as Parliament has in English. The Trusts. s When President Roosevelt said, as he many times has said, that a Constitu tional amendment is a necessary pre liminary to trust regulation, he spoke upon Imperfect Information. -He didn't know, for he had tackled the.trust pfob lecn, as he does all others. With a catch-as-catch-can hold, chiefly serviceable a a hook for his didactic aphorisms, so he just jumped at the conclusion. From Attorney-General Knox he has learned the still untried capacities of the Sher man anti-trust law and its entirely feasible amendments. Therefore he now sayo we have the power without the amendment, though at Boston In Au gust he assured the country that legis lation without a Constitutional amend ment would only be as bricks without straw. As a guide or stimulus to Con gress, this chapter of the measage la valueless: while the moral force of its perfunctory animadversions is consider ably broken by Its spirited defense of the corporation as such. It Is to be feared that most candid minds will con fess, under rigid heart-ssarching, the fear that this passage was not penned without some anxious consciousness of Thomas C. Piatt and Wall street. The Tariff. On this roost important topic, the mes sage" Is undeniably and lamentably weak. Here we .come across the Presi dent at his very worst. He says that withdrawal of duties In monopolistic fields will only help the trust and hurt independent producers, and that tariff agitation is an almost unmixed evil, and then proceeds to set all his reasoning at defiance by coming out In a blunt dec laration that "the. tariff on anthracite coal should be removed.". Surely the President does not want the anthracite tVt to be aided In Its efforts to put the Independent producers out of business! If anthracite can be put on the free list at once without danger, why not salt, also, and paper? To what extent pro tection enables the trust to war success fully on the Independent producer, or enables the independent producer to re sist the aggression of the trust, Is an obscure problem on -which authorities divide and which must have a different answer In different Industries. But the President announces, with an air of finality and universality, that "to re move the tariff as a punitive measure directed against trusts would Inevitably Tesult in ruin to the weaker competi tors who are struggling against them." We shall undertake to say that not the steel trust nor its Independent com petitors, riot the salt trust nor its Inde pendent competitors, not the paper trust nor its Independent competitors, not the anthracite trust nor its Independent competitors, will be ruined by free Iron, free salt, free paper or free anthracite; and the question Is not to be settled, as the President seems to think, by what the trusts or the Independent competitors want, but by what Is just to the masses of consumers of all thess necessaries,, an element in the tariff problem which the message entirely ignores. The reference to protection as covering the "difference In labor cost" between Europe and the United States might have been omitted, one would think, In full view of the an thracite disturbance and Its revelation In the actual factors of the wage prob lem at the mines "If you are going to change the tariff at all, how can you avoid at the same time prolonged agita tion and "too quick changes"? Strong: Points. ' With these exceptions, there Is much and nearly everything In the message to commend. The utterance on organized labor will go far to eliminate from seri ous dlscuslson In the United States the old theory that the back of organized labor must be broken and that unions are an insurmountable obstacle to In dustrial progress. The chapter on cur rency Is sound and aggressive, as It should be, and will doubtless strengthen the cause of banking reform. It means much for a President to commit his Ad ministration authoritatively to the prop osition that a circulating medium is the business of the banks, and that It should respond automatically to the needs of trade. The recommendations as to Army and Navy are abreast of the . best thought and the Nation's needs, ! and the warning to Latin America that civilization will require order at its hands at whatever cost of discipline Is timely and Justifiable. Reciprocity wit! Cuba is put upon the right ground of "generous duty by the weak." Incidental References. The President urges the reciprocity treaties, including one that Is to be pre sented to the Senate relating to New foundland; commends the proposed De partment of Commerce; asks enactment of the National Guard reorganization bill; bespeaks for the rural mall free delivery routes, 11.650 already in num ber, a liberal appropriation; Indorses the Irrigation undertakings; censures the public land frauds; advises amendment of the safety-appliance law; complains of the extravagance In public printing; proposes a merit system for the Con sular service; rejoices in the historic fidelity observed In the White House 1m ,provements; recommends an employers' liability act for the District of Colum bia; gives Alaska sympathetic recogni tion; points with pride "to Porto Rico as an Instructive exhibit In "Imperialism"; speaks a good word for the Smithsonian Institution, -sets out the admirable status of the Pacific cable 'negotiations, and felicitates the country on Its having been the first to apply to The Hague in ternational tribunal. The GoBpci of Optimism. Forty years ago a millionaire was a wonderfully rich man. HHe Is not so prominent a figure now, for wealth has increased. The postoffice receipts, for example, were $8,000,000 In 1S50, and $121,348,000 in 1902. At this ratio, a. mil lionaire of I860 would have to be worth $15,000,000 today to be entitled to equal recognition. In 1878 our money aggre gated $729,000,000; now it Is $2,500,000,000. In IS60 we had $1,000,000,000 invested in manufactures; today we have $10,000, 000,000. Then we exported $316,000,000 of merchandise a year; now. we- export $1,460,000,000. In 1860 we paid $39,000,000 In Federal taxes; now we pay $238,000, 000, with , less Inconvenience. In 1880 our deposits In National banks were $967,000,000; now they are $3,661,000,000. In 1860 our farm property was worth $7,000,000,000; now It Is worth $20,000,000, 009. These are some of the evidences the President might have adduced In sup port of bis cheering assurance that the great fortunes of today are "small in deed when compared to the wealth of the people as a whole." This Is the an swer to the Bryanlc cry that the rich are growing richer and the poor poorer. This Is the American spirit of optimism and resolute endeavor of which Theo dore Roosevelt is the personification. His Is the high resolve and rugged sin- h-cerity of purpose which the people love and love to follow, and out of regard for which thej "forgive any and all Imper fections of method and of mood. They wlllbeworthy followers of such a leader if they observe his counsel to bring to. the civic duty "the qualities of head and heart which were shown by the men "Who In the days of Washington founded this Government, and, In the days of tincoln. preserved It." The New York Times reports that a committee was recently appointed by the Government of Sweden to ascertain how many hours of sleep children of various ages ought to have In order that they may be able to study to the best, advantage. After due Investigation a report has been forwarded to the Min ister of Education stating that children 4 years of age should sleep twelve hour's out of the twenty-four; children of 7, eleven hours; children of 9, ten hours; children of from 12 to 14, from nine to ten hours. It Is pointed out in this con nection that: anemia and undue weak ness In children are frequently due to lack of sufficient sleep. Mothers the world over may profit by this report In Regulating trie hours lor bedtime for their children. It may be said that American mothera of the more progres sive class supervise the eating and sleeping hours of their young children carefully and systematically. The -old practice of feeding an Infant every time It cried has given place to the regula tion method of feeding once In two hours, while the old slipshod method of "piecing" that is, eating between meals by older children has given place to regular meals and no food between times. Furthermore, children. Instead of being allowed to follow their own sweet will In the matter of retiring, are now In all orderly homes put to bed at 8 o'clock In Summer and 7 o'clock in Winter, thus securing for them needed sleep and the family the benefit of quiet evenings. It Is well enough for experts to tell ug, how much sleep children of various ages need In order to keep them up to the required standard of mental development, but the mother who fol lows the 7 and 8 o'clock rule In putting her children to bed gives them time enough for sleep to fill all requirements and Insures for herself and the older members of her family good, long even ings In which to read, study, visit or work. Experts tell us that this Is the simple rule for "childralslng made easy," and the beauty of It Is that even a novice in the business can follow It. WE MUST BE A GREAT SEA POWER. The report that Senator Hale, chair man of the Senate Naval committee, does not approve of the President's views regarding the necessity for the construction of first-class battle-ships, but favors instead moderate additions to the Navy of armored cruisers and battle-ships of the Oregon type, Is dis appointing, for it Indicates that Senator Hale ,does not comprehend that the United States Is sure to be the great sea power qf the world In the future. If we ever have a serious ivar with any strong power, the Navy will have to bear the brunt of It.- Only In operations against Canada or Mexico would the Ariny oc cupy a first place, and there Is not the slightest probability that we shall ever have a war with England or Mexico. In any other conflict we should place our main reliance upon the Navy to pro tect our maritime frontiers and our vast material Interests. - In numbers, physical and mental vigor, Inventive and constructive skill and matchless natural resources, the United Stated Is fitted beyond any peo ple of ancient or modern times to fcg come a great sea power. Our frontiers are all maritime. We have 17,000 miles of coast line, and upon our harbors and great rivers leading to the 'sea we have more cities vulnerable from the sea than are found in all Europe, for the great powers of. Russia, Austria and even Germany have but a small num ber of cities subject to equal exposure. The maritime coast of Europe Is repre sented by France, Great Britain, Scan dinavia, Italy and poverty-stricken Spain. In time of serious war we need a Navy large enough to prevent the blockade of our ports and the Interrup tion of our enormous maritime com merce. If Great Britain should be at war with any of the great Continental powers of Europe, a great Navy would be indispensable to Insure our rights as a neutral and to prevent the making our transportation of foodstuffs to Great Britain contraband of war. When the day comes, as It surely will come, of attempted seizure and parti tion of China, the United. States, to pre vent that partition, will need a very strong fleet In the far East. Ih the coming market of China the only chance for the United States will be to prevent the partition of that vast coun try. If we allow, China to be conquered and occupied, by Europe, we may be sure that Europe will absorb the com merce of the conquered. The day of this proposed rending and division of the garments of China Is not far distant, and if the Chinese crisis comes and finds us without an adequate Navy, we shall have lost our opportunity; for If Ger many, France and Russia once get firm ly established In China, they can never be expelled by any force we could apply.- With the help of Gerat Britain and Japan we could keep Russia, France and Germany from seizing and absorbing China, but to do It we should need a powerful fleet that could seize and hold every port and all the gredt navigable waters of China. At a still more remote date the occu pation and exploitation of the markets of South America will be attempted by the powers of Continental Europe. If we mean to stand fast by the precedent of President Cleveland's Venezuela mes sage, we are likely to be called upon to vindicate Its dicta by - some of the threatened states of that country. We could not possibly Interfere today ef fectively against action of France or Great Britain, or the combined action of Germany and Russia. Unless we as sume that we are never to be at war with a great naval power, we ought to have the greatest Navy in the world In order to insure the future security of our vast and manifold interests, which include the security of our coast, the protection of our vast maritime commerce, the vindication of our rights In foreign markets, and the preservation of the Inviolability of the Monroe Doctrine. We are not going to allow China to be opened up as was India and Africa; we are going .to help China to Japanlze itself soon or late without partition among the powers of Europe, and In order to execute our pur pose we shall need as great a Navy at least as that of Great Britain. We shall not be mistaken for a great aggressive war power If we do this; we shall be respected as a Nation of busi ness common sense that provides-ships of war enough to defend Us coasts, to protect its trans-oceanic trade, to en force Its commercial rights In foreign lands, a"nd to uphold Its time-honored National policy. The creation of a great Navj would excite no political unrest among our people, as the creation of a great Army might. A great. Navy would not stand for the slightest tend ency to that militarism which so many Americans pretend to dread and which not a few, perhaps, really do fear. We are today only the fourth naval power, with 530;009 tons of warship displace ment. Great Britain has 1,800,000 tons; France has 715,000 tons; Russia has 20,--opo tons more than we have; Germany is but little below us, and has recently authorized a vast; Increase, equivalent to - doubling and trebling her entire naval force "by 1915-17. At the last session of Congress not a single new ship was authorized. It takes three years to build a battle-ship, while it took only 100 days to build a monitor Ironclad forty years ago. A French" fleet could leave Europe and ap pgar on our shores within two weeks after a declaration of war, and If we had not battle-ships enough to beat off the attack, every Important city from Portland, Me., to New Orleans could be i destructively bombarded by the enemy, We ought to appropriate money enough every year so that Germany shall not pass .us and that we shall ultimately become the first naval power In .the world. The weight carried by one of our in fantrymen, according to the report of the Chief of Ordnance; Is 76 pounds 15 ouncea This is not more than Union soldiers In the Civil War1 carried nom inally, but Ih point of fact during the Summer campaign, from the first week of April to the' first week of October, the veteran under Grant and Sherman outside of his arms and ammunition and equipments carried no overcoat, or woolen blanket; he- carried no extra shoes; his knapsack contained nothing but a change of underclothing and socks; he carried a rubber blanket and shelter tent; he carried about, the same weight of cartridges, viz., 60 rounds, in hla cartridge-box. and 40 rounds In his pockets, which was about equal to the 200 rounds of smalL cartridges carried today. The old Springfield rifle of 1861 65 was a muzzle-loader, and with the bayonet welgbed about 14 pounds, while the modern rifle and bayonet weigh about 11 pounds. The Union soldier when in campaign carried about 60 pounds if he was an eld soldier. If he was a recruit, he carrlsd a big kna'psack for conscience.' sake until the old sol diers taught hhn better. Probably in the regular Army a soldier would not dare be without his overcoat and woolen blanket In campaign, but the Union vol unteer.drew his overcoat and blanket Jn October and shed them the next April. Julia Reei met Warren B. Smith, a wealthy man of New Yorlc City, for the first time In June, 1901, and they subse quently, traveled abroad as man and wife. She sued .Smithjn the city court the other day .to recover two install ments of a life annuity of $300 a month which the defendant promised last Jan uary to. pay her as a compromise of a threatened suit for breach of promise of marriage. She received $300 per month down to July, when the payment stopped and she commenced her action. A letter written by the defendant was put in evidence. In which he wrote: "I shall s"end you a check for $300 on the first of February and $300 on the first of each month afterwards." The jury promptly gave the young woman all she claimed, and It this recovery Is sus tained by the higher -courts, Mr. Smith will have to pay this young woman of 26 years of age $3600 a year for life. Ao a matter of money, It would have been cheaper to have married Julia, for In event of subsequent divorce alimony would not have amounted to any such sum as Julia, who is very healthy, is likely to obtain out of Smith's estate. Selling liquor to minors Is an act ab horrent to the moral sense and shock ing to a true sense of public responsi bility. An expression of this fact Is found in the stringent state law which provides an easy way to the conviction of the conscienceless vender of Hqucyrs who would give or sell to minors, and severe penalty for the act when proven. That this Jaw Is flagrantly and fre quently violated in this city, there is no reason to doubt. There Is a dual responsibility here. The liquor vender Is not alone to blame; the boy or girl, being an Infant In the eyes of the law, may be counted out in the summing up. Other parties to the outrageous trans action are careless parents and Indiffer ent citizens. This thing is not done In a corner. It Is, to repeat the words of an attorney quoted yesterday, "an evil that needs remedying," and when It Is added that "It could easily be stopped," the moral sense of the community Is placed under serious. Indictment. The election of the Democratic can didate for Attorney-General In New York State through the fact that he was Indorsed by the Prohibitionists re calls the fact that Myron H. Clark In 1854 was elected Governor of New York by a combination of Prohibitionists, Whlga and Free-Soil Democrats. Clark's opponents were Horatio Sey mour, Greene C. Bronson and Daniel Uilman. Mr. Clark beat Mr. Seymour a few hundred" votes. Under Governor Clark's, administration a prohibitory law was passed by the Legislature and signed by the Governor, but the Court of Appeals, by a majority of one, de clared It unconstitutional. In the pub lished works of Samuel J. Tilden Is a very able address delivered by him at that time In opposition to the enact ment of a prohibitory liquor law. Gratifying Improvement In all lines Is reported officially from Porto Rico. The Secretary of the Interior In his annual report states that schools are being es tablished to teach girls telegraphy, and that an Industrial school is In opera tion at Ponce. The school attendance 13 60,000, while it is said there are up wards of 350,000 children of school age In the Island. This shows progress along educational lines that is gratifying If not altogether satisfactory, and, as com pared with the centuries of Illiteracy that have gone before, fully Justifies the conceit of our Government that It could do better by the Porto Rlcans than Spain could or did. The argument In. favor of admitting New Mexico into the Union Is, It Is said, handicapped by the fear that ex-State Senator Andrews, of Pennsylvania, who Is an exile In New Mexico, may be sent to represent the new commonwealth In the United States Senate. It Is up to the promoters of the admission scheme to disclaim this Intention If they would succeed In adding another semi-arid, sparsely populated state to the great Federal family. The mortuary and casualty record of the football season between October 19 and November 13 showed eight players killed and sixteen seriously Injured. The record of the rest of the season has not yet been made up, but no doubt the list will be duplicated. However, these pen alties are accounted light, as compared to the fun that the players and the en joyment that the public got out of these tussles upon the gridiron. The New York World found by actual count for three Sundays that 451,731 adults attended church in Manhattan. This left 997,189 who did not. This Is not a bad showing for a city estimated by General Booth, of the Salvation Army, to be one of the two wickedest cities In the- world. Still It leaves some margin for home missionary work. Ex-Presfdent Grover Cleveland has consented to preside at the meeting to be held In Philadelphia on the 11th Inst. In the intercsi of the colored race. When Mr. Cleveland was Presldenthe recog nized the colored people by appointing some of them to public office, and has always manifested a deep interest in the education of the negro. PORTLAND AS A MARKET! Corvallls Gazette. .Reports Indicate a falling off In the acreage given to Fall-sown wheat In the Willamette Vciley. If this 13 true it is either because a greater number of farm ers are satisfied with the returns from Spring-sown wheat, or that they have determined to glvo more attention to diversified farming. It Is probable this latter Is the main reason. . It has been proved that this kind, of farming gives larger and surer returns for the capital and labor employed than raising wheat for export. The conditions which render this sort of farming most profitable are permanent and cumula tive. The growth of population, the rapid Increase of a population engaged In other pursuits than farming, yet de pendent upon the products of the farm for subsistence. The City of Portland alone now furnishes the farmers of the Willamette Valley a more desirable mar ket for the various products of the farm than Liverpool does for their wheat. Tear by year the quantity of wheat and flour produced for export- will decrease until the home market will take all that Is produced for sale and many other products besides. Here Is an assured cash market, the demands of which will constantly In crease. The Willamette River wlli al ways provide transportation at reason able rates and protect the farmer against excessive demands by parallel" railways. He can reach the consumer without the Intervention of middle men, to whom he must pay commissions, storage' and other exactions, which too frequently are little short of robbery. The municipality of Portland will, at no distant day, provide one or more market-places .where the farmer miy place his products on sale and deal directly with the consumer. The city will pass ordinances regulating the markets, fix ing market days and making It a mis demeanor to forestall the .market. This will shiit out the huckster and all classes of middle men and bring producer and consumer face to face In an open mar ket, where prices will be. influenced only by the natural forces of supply and de mand. Portland mxist do this in the interest of her own citizens. In the midst of as productive lands as the sun ever shone upon, with abundance of supplies for human subsistence at her very doors, as It were, yet living In Portland is al most as expensive as In New York or Washington. The farmer, the producer of " subsistence supplies, has not been benefited by this condition. Quite the contrary. In common with the people of the city, he has been the prey of a lot of "commission merchants," "dealers In produce" and petty "go-betweens," who have long feasted on the necessities of honest citizens. It is simply amazing that such conditions have been so long and patiently endured. The signs are that Portland, is awaken ing to the untoward conditions existing and is seeking a remedy. If some of our farmer members of the Legislature would decline to support an appropriation for the Lewis and Clark Exposition un til Portland would agree to provide one or more country market-places, ft might speed "the matter. At all events, Portland furnishes, and must continue to furnish, the main home market for various farm products, and our farmers will make no mistake in ef forts to supply them. THIRD -PARTY MEN DISAPPEAR. Chicago Tribune. In the House of Representatives elected In 1S8 there were only Republicans and Democrats. Iri 1890 eight Farmers' Alli ance members were elected. From that time to the present the two great par ties have been unable to divldo the mem bership of the House between them. There have been members who called themselves Populists, Fuslonlsts or Silver Republicans, but who as a rule have acted with the Democrats. The elections of this month were disastrous to third-party men. Not one was elected, and In the next House" of Representatives there will be but Republicans and Democrats. -,The discontent among Western and Southwestern farmers growing out of the low prices they got for their products has died away. So has the free-silver agi tation, TVhlch was a result of that dis content. The belief so many people cher ished that a great third party able to compete on equal terms with existing par ties could be built up out of the producers on the farms and the producers In the workshops has been dispelled. The two old parties are doing business at their old stands, and will fight their political bat tics on the old lines. Matters will be In a much, healthier state than they were when now and unwholesome issues demoralized the Democratic party temporarily and alienated many Republicans, some- of them permanently, from their party. While the next Congress will be made up exclusively of Republicans and Demo crats, that simple and satisfactory state of affairs will not endure forever. There will be .times In the future, as there have been in the past,, when groups of men dis satisfied with the policies of the existing parties and the refusal of either to adopt their theories will set to work hopefully to get up a new political organization, and will send Representatives to State Legis latures ancL to Congress. Presumably they will win only limited and temporary vic tories, and their party will melt away, as have other third parties. So long as party government lasts It is desirable that there should be only two parties, and that the voters and the legislative bodies they elect should not bo split up Into nu merous groups or factions as in France and Germany. An Army Sensation. Boston Herald. The resignation last week of Lieutenant-Colonel John A. Johnston, Assistant Adjutanf-General, stationed In Washing ton, has surprised Army circles all over the country. It Is said that no officer of his rank has resigned since the Civil War. He had been In service since his gradua tion at West Point, 23A years. Reckon ing his academy service,, he would have been eligible for voluntary retirement within three years; but he has preferred to quit the service now. He is second on the list of Lieutenant-Colonels, and Is esteemed as an exceptionally able officer. He Is not yet 46 years old, and all friends were anticipating for him a brilliant fu ture career. The reason of his resigna tion is not an ordinary one; It Is because of the demands upon him of the care of a very large fortune which has come to his wife by the death of her father, he being the executor of hl3 father-in-law's! will. This fortune 13 in Standard Oil stocks, mines, land and other Investments requiring attention. The resignation is not to take effect untii February 1. Feeding Britl.ih Snilors. ' New York commercial Advertiser. Reforms in feeding the sailors in the British navy, which have been more or less acridly discussed for the lat 10 or 16 years, have at last been made. Under the old regime, breakfast was served at 6:30. and consisted of a pint of mllklcss cocoa and dry bread or biscuit. At noon meat and pudding were served and at 4 oclck came a slender supper, the last meal until the next morning. The result of this has been that the sailors have had to spend a good part of their pay In extras. In order to keep from being hungry'. Under the new rules two more meals will be given each day. one at 8:30, at which jams and preserved fruits will be served, and an other supper later In the evening, so that Jack may be able to do all his work on a full stomach and at the expense of his country. StlH Wome1. Philadelphia Press. v "I was shocked to remark your husband out gunning on the Sabbath," said the Rev. Mr. Stratelace. ' "You would have been still more shocked," replied the offender's wife, "if you had heard his remarks about his luck." THE RELIGION THAT LIVES. ' Chicago Inter Ocean. The Rev. William MacAfee, of Evans ton, In his Sunday sermon, sharply re sented the recent sneers by President Eltot, of. Harvard, it Methodism as an "emotional" form of religion, and thsre-J. ioij oppoaeu 10 true culture. Jir. jj.bc Afee held, and rightly, .that tBe success of Methodism had been chiefly due to It3 power to stir emotions and direct them Into channels of usefulness to man kind. The difference between President Eliot and Dr. MacAfee Is temperamental, and no agreement between them la to be ex pected. Nor"is It necessary that they should agree, for to the advancement of true religion both sorts of men are neces sary. The man who Insists constantly upon the reasonableness of religion, and the man with power to stir religious emo tion, are alike promoters of the general welfare. The deplorable thing about the present religious situation 13 that men of Presi dent Eliot's position, after first demand ing that religion shalL be all emotion, and all one emotion, should now turn about and demand that religion" shall contain no emotion at all. For precisely that Is the effect of recent tendencies which President Eliot merely voices. -First we. had men of supposed light and leading insisting that religion should ceaso to bo doctrinal and should be purely nn expression of the emotions of love of God and of fellow-men. Now doc trines are simply an effort to give re ligious emotions a philosophic basis, to supply them with a reason for existence. To reject doctrines Is to take away that basis and leave religion merely a cloud of emotions. Furthermore, we had the same kind of men Insisting that religion should be confined to one kind of emotion. jThey insisted that religion should reject all appeals to fear, and should appeal to love only. And thus by extracting from It all fear of punishment for wrongdoing they left .in religion nothing but hope of reward for rightdolng. And by such warm airs cf love alone they Insisted j men could be turned from evil and led to goou. Now, such men, of whom President Eliot Is merely a tj-pe, Insist further that, there shall be no emotion in religion, and that it shall be a thing of pure reason. And, having thus taken from religion first all philosophic baals, and then ex tracted from It all warmth, of emotion, they ask the world to accept what Is left as a power efficient to lead men to sal vation. Human beings may well be excused from attempting to breathe pure' nitro gen chilled to theN temperature of the interstellar spaces. For that is alii the religion that President Eliot appears to idl'IWI fa la Tf nnntxln: nnlHi rif tonorlhln doctrine which the mind can grasp as a reason for faith, nor the life-giving oxy gen of emotion. It Is dead with a. dead ness hardly conceivable by the human mind. If history and .experience teach any thing it Is that the religion that lives and works and gives Ufo to human souls is neither all cold philosophy nor all emo tion, but a judicious compound of these .two essential elements. Taking human nature as It Is, It Is Impossible for the average man to 'see how a so-called re ligion that lacks both these elements can be of any value whatsoever. The religion that lives and gives life must ybc, it would. seem, something like the air we breathe.. Like the air, it must have Its immutable laws the doctrines that give to believers a reason for their faith and point out to 'them whither and for what they are going. Like the air, it must also have its vitalizing oxygen, the emotions of hopo that reward will follow rlghtdolng and of fear of punishment for wrongdoing. The religion of emotion without reason is rejected by the intellect. The xe Hglon of reason without emotion chills the heart. Only the religion that con tains both reason and emotion both doctrine and faith would seem t to be efficient to turn men from sin and sorrow and lead them to righteousness and hap piness. Defying the National Government. Chicago Tribune. The Secretary of the Interior is more troubled with frauds perpetrated on the Government than the Secretary of the Treasury, the PostmaBter-General, ormy other member of the Cabinet. One reads frequently of the theft of letters and the coining of bogU3 money, of the defraud ing of the customs and-of illicit distilling, Fortunately there are many accounts of the arrest of counterfeiters, Smugglers, postofflce thieves and moonshiners to con sole the citizen anxious for the welfare of the Government. The Secretary of the Interior reports that millions of acrs of uovcrnmer.t iana are being uniawruily oc cupied by big grazing companies, which fence squure miles In violation of the statutes of the United States and defy the officers of the Government. The home stead raws are violated by scores and hundreds of families in the most bare faced fashion, with the assistance of land grabbing and especially timber-grabbing capitalists. The Secretary says in a re assuring way that steps are being taken to make this all right. One Isdriwn lr rcslstlbly to the conclusion that If a man Intends to defraud the Government It Is safer to do "It on the wholesale plan. If he uses a revenue stamp twice he will be arrested and Imprisoned, but If he tal-es thousands of acres he Is not molested. Perhaps some cf the strenuousness which animates the executive offices might be spared for the benefit of the Department of the Interior. The Afte of Criminnllty. London Chronicle. Wtlh reference to New York's special Police Court for childish offenders, it Is notcworthv that both British and Amer ican law fix the same age of criminality. In defiance of theology .the legal cqdes of all nations regard man as sinless by birth. Before attaining a certain age he is re garded as Incapable of crime. In England and America this age Is seven years, and before this a child cannot be prosecuted. After Its seventh, birthday a' child Is ac countable for its deeds, but if under 14 the prosecution must show that he was acting with criminal Intent. The same age of -criminality is held In Russia and Portugal. In France and Belgium a child must bo eight years old before being prosecuted. In Italy and Spain a further year of grace Is accorded. In Norway, Greece. Austria, Denmark. Holland and Switzerland, the age Is 10. The little German can play pranks -with Impunity until 12 years old, while in Sweden no prosecution is allowed when the offender Is under 16. A Mexican Ballad. The' Arsonaut. There was a Greaser bold and staid Don Gorr.ez del Gomazsa "Who loved a gentle Greaser maid. The Donna Frcntplazza. Don Gome rodo a mustans proud,. And wore a blocdy slasher. Of all the gallus Greaser crowa lie was the clddiest masher. Don Gomes once was tempted fore, Dwplte of law and order. To glut hin erepdy thirst tor core And cross the Texas border. "So fare you well, me lady fair Me pretty Jlttle Donna!" In vain she tens her rr.wn hair llcr Gomoz was a goner. , Then hlrd ho to the KIo Grand', With Yankee hordes to battle: He cro??fd Into the promised land. And v.-ont to stealing cattle. And thre, wlTh more than royal pluck. Ho did this pleasing duty. And, meeting with Uncommon luck. He started home with booty. But. oh! the Yankees, fierca and atronc, "While marchintr out to battle. Beheld Don Qnmcz come alone A-drlvlag them there cattle. They cathcred In the festive fteers. And irnafgcd that gallus Greaser, ' nd, with a round of hoots and Jecr3, They hanged him to a tree. air. Loud walled the Greaser maiden fair The Donna Frontalazza: Once more ehe tore her maiden hair For-Gomez del Gomazza! ' NOTE AjiD COMMENT. It is perfectly proper that it henpecked . husband should die intestate. "Kind words can never die," says tha poet This presages 111 for heaven. The reflections of a bachelor are usual ly reflections on a woman. 'Tls ever thus. The clubmen seem to think their bar3 are not run at ajsrofit. Everybody Is glad to hearthJs. Those actresses who barely escaped drowning will "now be In high favor with their press agent. ' Now 13 the season when wives make stealthy Inquiry as to the brand of clgara their husbands smoke. If Oregon got all tho weather that the United States officials think is coming to her, there would be trouble, and serlou3 trouble at that. The young women of a Nebraska town have organized an anil-'pro'ar.lty league. Their- method Is to cut the young men who swear. Only a woman could call this "anti-profanity." Since the clubwomen have taken up tho suffrage question, we may look for new light on it. The men have made light ot it .for many moons, but marriage changes the point of view, and these be married women. If there is one object more nt than an other for pity It is that mortal so men tally, physically and morally Incapacitated for enjoyment of decent living that he delights in a dirty story. Such men have thoughts that, like mushrooms, thrive only in decay. The woman who will tell one Is a mere iavellng off the dirty skirt ot femininity. Can it bo true that Seattle and Ta coma have an agent in the Eafct who ia making up a shipment of young women for the Puget Sound marriage market? The report seems authentic, and there is nothing to do but accept It. Let It ba hoped that this firpt consignment will prove so satisfactory that a regular trade may be Instituted. Then the rlvtil cities will be endowed with that pleasing femi ninity which dulls the edge of rancor, and the question of Mount Rainier and Mount Tecoma will "be suffered to lapse Into innocuous desuetude. President Roosevelt says In his mes sage: 'In battle the only shots that count are the shots that hit." If more people realized the truth of this observa tion, there would he lees random effort. Too many suppose that all work Is good. The strenuous life has been Interpreted ns -living to work incessantly without the ultimate condition that there must be steady aim. No man should comfort himself in physical weariness, assuring himself that he has worked, and there fore is entitled to reward. "The only shots that count are the shots that hit." A balky horse Is an annoying creature under any circumstances, says tho Youth's Companion, but the story of an incident which happened during a regi mental drill raises the question whether such a horse may not simply be over conscientious. The sun blazed down on a field of hot, tired horses and excited men, all waiting for a big raw-boned animal to succumb to the urglngs of the starter and get Into line. "Bring up that horse!" shouted one of the officers at la3t, his patience having given out. "You'll get into trouble If ydu don't." The youthful rider of the refractpry horse looked at his officer despairingly. "I'm as tired of it as you are, sir, ho said, with dull resignation, "but I an't help it. He's a cab horse, sir; fhat's what he Is. He won't start tlll-he .hears the door shut, sir, and I haven't got any door to shut." ' In one cf the downtown hotels each room has a sign under tho gas jet read ing: "Please do not blow1 out tho gas!" Not long ago a man from the b&ckwoods of Nehaldn came to Portland anil stopped at this hostelry. He seemed, perfectly satisfied for a couple of day., saw the town as he liked, and finally turned up one morning and nsktd for the bill. An Item caught his eye and he turned an in furiated face upon the propretor. "Lock here!" he roared; "what do you mean by charging me J2 for extra gas?" "Well," explained the Innkeeper, affa bly, "you burned tho gasa in your room all night. The chambermftld had to turn it off In the morning. We always charge for It under such circumstances." "You blame fool!" relied the back woodsman "you may ,chea some men, but I'm onto yc. You had a sign saying for me please not to blow out the gas, and when I don't, just to oblige you, you go and stick me ?2." And explanations were unavailing. PLEASANTRIES OF FAUAGHAPHERS Tender Turkey What awful slang Gobbler uses! Toothsome Turkey Yes; you see, he's trying to be tough. Puck. She My mind, I'd have you understand. Is on something hlghor than my dress. He Oh, Is It? On your hat, I suppose? Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. Tom Mr. Johnson has slJ daughters, but ho won't let any of them gtt married. Dick Probably he doesn't want, to break the set. Detroit Free Press. "I don't txpect a bust In Westminster Ab bey," said the youthful poet. "No." replied the old man. "That would be too fur reachhV; Jest keep on with the wrltln' business, an' you'll bust nearer home!" Atlanta Constitu tion. "Mr. Gotrox." begat the nervous young man, -I er that Is. your daughter Is the er apple of my eye. and" 'That will do, young man," Interrupted the granite-hearted parent. "Here's 55 for you: go consult an oculist." Chicago Dally News. Oaker Dobson. .(he young lmpresionlst, has scored a success beyond -his fondest hopes. Lake I am gla to hear It- How was It? Oaker He paliyed a picture of Washlnston crossing the rMaware, and the commltteo thought It was Eliza's escape on the Ice. Brooklyn Life Patience Hi has such nice manners. Patrice What maks you think so? ny, he was dancing wiA me, and he accidentally stepped on my foo." "And he apologized?" "Yes; he said If 'd come to his drug store he'd give me a box of corn plaster." Yonkera States man. Rupcrt-I say, papa, Ethel is so vtlred. and she would so like to have a ride. Couldn't you turd me iato a Jlttle donkey? Papa What do you; mean. Robert? You re talking dread ful nonsense! Rupert Why, papa. I've heard Uncle say you're always making a great asy of yourself, so you might this time make a little donky of me. Punch. Clark 3e here! You told me If I took a course of Instruction from you It wouldn't bo long before I'd be earning $100 a week. Pro fessor SMnner Well? Clark Well. I'm only getting $10 a week. Professor Skinner But, honestly, now. don't you feel that you're earn ing $10C? Every cleric feels he earns ten times as muth as he gets. Philadelphia Press. Flre Pianist Did you have much of an audlctce at your recital yesterday afternoon? Fecorf Ditto Splendid! There were two men thrr t women and a boy. The boy, I afterwards learied, was employed about the place, and the twt men came In for shelter, as It wa3 raining at the time. But the three women were all rljht. They came to hear me, I know, for 1 ffve them the passes myself. Boston Traa- 8-T1PU A