THE MORNING OKEGOiil&N, THUESDAY, "DECEMBER 4,,:i902. Etre$ t the rostofflcc at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. KEVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. MftH postapo prepaid. In advance) r. with Sunday; per-montn ,.$ gajly. Sunday except!, per year 7 SO 5lr. th Sunday" per year. 00 Funday. pPr year......... ...... 2 00 2?" Weekly, per year 1 M To city Subscrlbtrs ;y. Der week, delivered. Sunday Mtcepte-l-JS? "JOV per weeii (Vllrercd. Sunday lncluded.200 POSTAGE RATES. -Un't'l Canada and Mexico: 30 to 14-rn- paper ...-.. .lo HJo 2S-nace paper Eorelgn rates double. Xew s or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oreconlan." The Oreronlan does not buy poems or stories from Individual, and cannot undertake to re tarn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. Ho stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office . 44. . 47. 48. 4P Tribune building. New Tork City: B10-I1-13 Txlbune building. Chicago: the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Franrl- - L. E. Lee. Pal ace Hotel news rtand: Goldsmith Bros.. 2M Putter street: F. TV. Plttr. IOCS Market street: 3. K. Cooper Co.. 76 Market street, near ths Palace Hotel: Foster & Orear. Ferry new tond: Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Tl-heatler. K13 Mission street. For rale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 2SD South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. tOS South Spring street. For ale In Kansas City. Mo., by r.eeker CJrar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. $17 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. M Washington street. For sale In Omaha by Barknlow Bros.. 1612 Farnam street: Megeath Stationery Co.. 130S Fa mam street. For sale In Salt Luke by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second South street. For rale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey Co.. 24 Third street South. For sale In Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 900-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence street: A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Occasional ratn; high rputhweaterly winds, decreasing during the afternoon. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 48; minimum temperature, 40; pre cipitation, 1.04 inches. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1002. We have It from The Dalles and Rose burg that The Oregonlan's charges con cerning public land abuses are baseless. Everything Is all right. Everything if as It should be. These assertions,, made by person? In collusion with the Land Office officials and financially interested In perpetuation of the present regime, proceed from Republicans who are nothing if not straight party men, and as such their attention may prop erly be invited to this passage In Presi dent Roosevelt's message: In their actual use the desert-land law, the timber and stone law and the commutation clause of the homestead law have been so per verted from the Intention with which they were enacted as to permit the acquisition of large areas of the public domain for other than actual settlers and the consequent prex'entlon of settlement. "We shall not Indicate to the Land Office officials who stand convicted of wink ing at frauds in Ptate land selections and neglect of duty in facilitating the timber and stone frauds, whether they should continue to declare the impecca bility of the public land regime or fall in with the opinion of the President. They are under obligation to do the lat ter, inasmuch as they subscribe to the doctrine of Presidential infallibility, so ably exemplified in the comment of our members of Congress on the President's message. Everything in it is sound, wise, lovely and perfect. It Is a wonder how anybody could for a moment sup pose such slavish adulation would pass muster as Intelligent criticism. On its face the latest utterance of the anti-imperialists, printed yesterday, is the announcement of the conviction that the Republican party is so hopelessly bound to "imperialism" that the party itself must be destroyed as the only means to kill "Imperialism." But in fact this utterance is .merely the proc lamation of an implacable but feeble revenge. "Anti-Imperialism" has died a natural death, and the only consolation left its promoters is the declaration of eternal war on the party that has been the adventitious and almost Involuntary agent of its demise. There is nothing sensational in the announcement of WInslow and his crowd that heretofore they have acted and hereafter purpose to act in conjunction with the Demo cratic party. Such a course is the only one compatible with their views and purposes. "Anti-imperialism" means simply opposition to retention of the Philippine Islands. No anti that we ever heard of complained about Porto Rico. The establishment of a principle was not so much desired as was the embarrassment of the Administration in charge of the Government This uni form and pronounced hostility to the Republican Administration in power Blnco 189S has arisen largely out of the fact that most of the anti9 were Demo crats, anyhow, and their activity has been more directed towards getting Democrats elected to office In the United States than to conferring any real ben efit on the Filipinos. This Is why the antis always grieved at an American victory, rejoiced at a Filipino outrage and refused to rejoice at a single re medial or alleviatory agency in troduced under Republican -auspices in the archipelago. The conversion of the antis to the Democratic cause is worthy to rank In history with the ex clusive sensation that the Dutch have taken Holland. DlHsatlsfaction with the tone and method of the President's message should not obscure his unquestioned sin cerity of purpose and the soundness of his point of view. What he means is one thing, and what he says Is another, and there is a great difference be tween the general theory and Its specific application. We said yesterday that President Roosevelt's contribution to the trust question is valueless, and so it Is, for any practical purpose; but we should have said also that his attitude t ward the trus is that of Ideal and ir reproachable justice. The trust is to be punished, not f orbeing a trust, but for what It does wrong, just as a partner ship Is, or an individual. The evils of the trusts are to be eliminated, but there Is no reason why a" trust cannot be operated without any cause of com plaint from consumer or competitor. Monopoly and overcapitalization are evils, and to be resisted, whether the offender Is a trust ot an Individual. This Is the position of the President, and the view is one that has found ex pression so long and so positively In these columns that acquiescence in It might well be taken for granted. If there were any prospect that Congress would attack the trust problem in this spirit, we might expect some tangible results, but It Is to be feared that when you have taken out the corporation agents in Congress, the men who ex pect to exploit the trust for political capital, and those who talk about Inter state commerce and currency reform for the sole purpose of diverting attention from the abuses for which the protected trusts utilize the tariff, the number left is an Impotent minority. The President will need all his nerve to wrest from this Congress an effective law against trust abuses. It was Governor Geer's original and cogent defense to the Plummer story, which he discussed at some length In one of his Senatorial campaign documents published in The Oregonlan, that even if he agreed to sell an appointment and then broke the agreement he should have received great credit for his strength of character in thus repudiat ing so unholy a contract. In some such ingenious and unprecedented way as this he now seeks to break the force of discoveries in the state land department. "Suppose I did wrong," he says; "didn't Dunbar and Moore also do wrong?" This is the Governor's defense, as we gather it from the Salem papers that have access to the executive think-tank. But if we were disposed to say that any fault in Secretary Dunbar or Treasurer Moore establishes by a rule of contraries an equal amount of virtue in the Gov ernor, the fapt would still remain that neither the Secretary or Treasurer of stt is resDonslble in any way for the operations of the State Land Agent. While the State Land Board as a whole has been held accountable for the land frauds in general, the Governor has ex clusive control of that department in which the questionable transactions have been carried on. The chief mm culty is in election ofj lieu lands, a function which the law definitely lo cates on the Governor, who discharges It through the State Land Agent, who 13 appointed by the Governor alone and happens to be a relative of his. If Sec retary Dunbar and Treasurer Moore have been monkeying with the lieu lands, as Is Intimated in print at Salem, the fact should be easyjjf demonstra tion, and they would be liable to severe censure for trespassing in the Govern br's game preserve. THE GENERAL STAFF BILL. The general staff bill, introduced by Proctor in the Senate and Hull In the House, is an attempt to cure a defect of long standing in our military admin istration. It Is not directed at General Miles, for the controversy which it seeks to end has given us great trouble since the days of General WInfield Scott, who was In constant quarrel with the War Department until he was retired by his own request in 1862. General Sherman moved to St. Louis because as General of the Army he was always in hot water with the War Department, and so was General Sheridan. General Schofield, as he confesses In his military memoirs, was able to manage the Army in all purely military matters only by aban doning the idea of Independent com mand and by assuming and performing the functions of a" chief of staff. Gen eral Schofield writes that when he as sumed command of the Army he wrote the President that he intended to aban don all pretense of being Commanding General and content himself with acting as chief of staff df. the Army under the 'Secretary of War. and the President. The present bill proposes to create a general staff, with a chief who shall stand between the Secretary of War and the Army at large, Including the various staff and supply , corps and de partments. A properly organized gen eral staff, possessing the authority or law for Its existence, could arrange in advance of war the details for the dis tribution, transportation and mobiliza tion of armies and the establishment of supply depots in such manner as to ef fect a vast saving of men and material. While the chief of general staff would be chief of staff to the 'Secretary of War, and stand as an adviser between him and the various Army commanders In the field, he would also have direction of the employment of general staff officers. It would be the duty of general staff of ficers to prepare all the Information de sirable for the General commanding an army in the field. This was the kind of work that Moltke had perfectly In hand In 1866 when Prussia defeated Austria, and In 1870 when Germany swept France with the besom of war. All probable lines of strategy were worked out maps were prepared, .depots of supplies desig nated and scheiries for the organization and concentration of troops drawn up. At Sadowa the lines of strategy were In Moltke's hands, but the battle tactics were left to Prince Karl and Prince Frederick. Without such a general staff the German Army- could not posslbly have been marched and maneuvered so rapidly and so skillfully as .to have com pelled the surrender of Sedan. When General McCleilan went to "the peninsula" in 1S62 he found his maps all wrong; so did Sherman on his way to Atlanta, and so did Grant in his pursuit of Lee In April, 1865. This could not have been otherwise at that time, for civil war was not anticipated, and the South was in a military sense unknown ground. But the same difficulty was encountered by the British Army in Natal. The army maps were inferior to those in the possession of the Boers, and the British commander paid dear more than once for his ignorance. If there had- been a general staff of good quality in London, its office would have had ex cellent maps, for the whole country had been fought over before by the British under Sir Harry Smith in his war with the Boers, and by the British in the Zulu and Kaffir Wars, and In tHe cam paign of Majuba Hill. This general staff corps should be selected solely with ref erence to ability, and its first organiza tion will be made by detailing officers of the highest repute from the Army at large. All subsequent appointments to the general staff should be made from those officers who have distinguished themselves in the various courses 6f in struction provided for the younger of ficers. Of course, the officers of the general staff serving with commanders of troops do not control them in any manner whatsoever. They are only detailed as staff officers of the various Generals to furnish them with Information, to assist them in the preparation of their detailed plans and orders, to. do what Marshal Berthler did so long and so well for Na poleon. Berthler was not a strategist nor a master of battle tactics like Moltke, but he was an admirable chief of staff In the .lower sense of keeping the strings of military details in hl3 hands so completely that he could quick ly draft Napoleon's plans and orders, could furnish him with the figures upon which to-base the. movement of supplies and troops, and thus save him an enor mous amount of labor, so that he could devote himself to the higher questions of command and grand battle tactics. Secretary Root has already attributed the frightful confusion attending the' Santiago expedition in the Summer of 183S to the lack of the -very kind of preparation for war that would have been easily possible through a general staff working in time of peace. -The general staff, would make Intelligent command possible by procuring and ar ranging Information and working out plans in detail, and could make Intelli gent and effective execution of com mands possible by keeping all the sep arate agents advised of the parts thay ate to play in the general scheme. IfT General Halleck had really been,'a Moltke when Lincoln summoned him to Washington, he was in a position to be an invaluable chief of staff to the Presi dent. But he was nothing but a mili tary pedant, who had early left the Army for the law, only to return to it too late to make a" soldier. THE GOLD END ALE ENTERPRISE. No single enterprise recently under taken by Portland capital outside of our immediate municipal field equals In its significance that which is now building a. line of railroad to connect the Colum bia River with the Kllckltat Valley. The situation is unique. Here Is a country as large as Yamhih County, and poten tially almost Its equal, near to Portland In miles, but cut off from effective means of transportation" by natural bar riers. Although beyond the territorial limits of the state, it is a country essen tially Oregonlan In its character and wholly dependent upon Portland for Its commercial connection. Separated from the general life of Washington and neg lected by the railroads, both domestic and foreign, it has long stood In a posi tion of desperate isolation, but while practically helpless It has by Its per sistent efforts to create more favorable conditions for itself commanded both re spect and sympathy. Portland Is reaching out with the strength of her Initiative and capital and is giving to this out-of-the-way cor ner of her business field facilities which will enable It to- take its placeamong the larger productive districts of the coun try. It lb Indeed a worthy project, second only in-Its importance to the eri terprlse by which an earlier generation of Portland men gave to the great in terior basin of the Columbia River its first connection with the commercial world, and through this connection the means of its primary development. And now, curiously enough, a great railroad company, which has long denied to the Klickitat Valley the aid which would have made Its fortunes, Is threatening the Portland enterprise with the weight of its rivalry eager, apparently, to ex pend In offensive operations funds which legitimately put forth would have gained for It the allegiance of the Klicki tat Valley and the good-will of Port land. It is not to be presumed that this threat . is serious, but if it shall prove to be so, the persons and the com munity back of the Columbia Northern project will know how to take care of themselves. This Klickitat enterprise, based as It Is "upon the extension of the basin of the Lower Columbia River to The Dalles, opens up a new view of the practical value of the great Government work at the Cascades; and it is sug gestive of the value of the. greater pro ject for breaking the barriers to naviga tion;between The Dalles and Celilo. The road to Goldendale would be imprac ticable were It .not that Its Columbia River terminus Is connected by naviga tion "with Portland. It has," as an Orego nlan writer points out In a letter from Goldendale printed this morning, a command of terminal facilities at Port land, and is therefore Independent of the favor or the fear of the great railroad lines which through their ownership of terminals commonly hold an oppressive authority over mirfor lines. j There is in this enterprise, too, a sug-.jl gestion of like development at otherJ points within the lower basin of the Co lumbia River. TheKlickitatValley is only one of many localities tributary to Port land which would amply repay Invest ment In transportation facllltiea -All such projects hitherto have been under the menace of the terminal bugabog, and It has remained for this Klickitat enterprise to exhibit a means by which the fangs of this dragon- may easily be drawn. The river 13 the ready instru ment for connecting with Portland, without respect of "terminal facilities,"' many potential districts which like the valley of the Klickitat He neglected all about us. -With the steamboat in co-operation with the "short-boy" rail road the way Is clear to a prodigious development of Portland's near-by busi ness field. PERTINENT SUGGESTIONS. The clause in the annual report of the Secretary of the Interior In which the enactment of certain laws for the protection of the pension service from fraud is recommended appeals strongly to the ordinary sense of justice with which every good and Intelligent citi zen is endowed. The first of these sug gestions is that any person convicted of an Infamous crime shall forfeit his pen sion. The second prohibits the granting of pensions to widows who were married to old soldiers after the names of the latter had been placed on the pension roll. Congress Is further asked to amend the pension act of August 7, 1882, so as to provide for the admission of evidence to prove marriages for pensionable pur poses by a standard that will be uni form throughout the entire jurisdiction of the United States. . Of the first sug gestion It may be said that since- the commission of infamous crime, which subjects its perpetrator to the penalty of the civil law, deprives him of the' privileges of ordinary citizenship, it Is proper that it should also deprive him of the sustaining care of the Govern ment. A pension is in some sense, at least, an Indorsement of the worth of the recipient. It follows that a law breaker Is not worthy of the Indorse ment of life and character which the pension implies. Of the "young widow" phase of the pensions abuse there can scarcely be two opinions. It Is perhaps the most flagrant and the most Indefensible of all the abuses with which the pension system is barnacled. There Is no more worthy pensioner In the great list than the widow of the soldier who laid down his life or suffered disability in the Na tion's service, provided' she was the wife of the man during the period of his service, or, as Secretary Hitchcock ex presses it, before his name was placed upon the pension roll. Indignation, though strongly rallied years ago against this altbgether shameless abuse of the Nation's mag-; nanimity, is an Impotent force, other wise it would, have had some effect years ago. The legislation suggested may be characterized as lon'g overdue. The Idea embodied in the recommenda tion Is not new. It has, however, been voiced by the press In times past'rather than by a member of the AdministraT tion, and there-Is a bare possibility, un fortunately nothing - more, that this plain, dispassionate and altogether just and logical recommendation of a Cabi net officer In" close touch with the Pen sion Bureau may stimulate legislation upon the points covered by the report. General Dewet In his book on the South African War shows a remarka ble blending of patriotism, reverence, jbltterness and humility, and withal a commenaaoie spirit of loyalty to the British dynasty in South Africa. The patriotism that led him to heroic ef forts on the field and In the bush dur ing three years of stubbornly contested war in the Transvaal Is of a quality the nobility and persistence of which Is unquestioned. HIa reverence "for an overruling powder, to which he accords all praise for his many miraculous es capes from death or capture, but which .stopped short of granting him victory, Is admirable because- of its ardor and sincerity. His bitterness toward faith less burghers, who, as he believed, threw away Victory, Is the natural ex pression of a man who waB himself loyal to the cause for which he fought to the very end. His ready allegiance to the conquering power marks a strong, heroic soul that accepts honor able defeat with proud humility. The character of General Dewet as a man, a patriot and a soldier, so strongly pre sented on the rough edge of battle, is well sustained In this account of tHe three years' war in South Africa. The book will not be Indorsed by that por tion of the British public that worships at the- military shrine of -Lords Rob erts and Kitchener, but it must-appeal to the admiration, even of these by ihe sternness of Its sincerity and the rug ged quality of Its patriotism. A little girl only 14 years of age com mitted suicide by drinking carbolic acid In New York City the other day. The circumstances are pathetic. The girl was a good child, who. had earned her living tending .babies since her father and mother died four years ago. The girl was unjustly charged with stealing a pocke'tbook. Here is her last letter to her brother, ofjvhom she was very fond: I can't help dolrtr this. Annie Zakfa said I took 10 cents from the baker, and her mother thinks I took her purse. I don't know any thing about it. It breaks my heart to think of It, and I can't stand It any longer. I'll Always cry after this If I live. The best thing I can do Is to commit suicide. I have always tried to do my best,but It didn't do any good. MARY. if this poor, supersensitive child had had any good friend to counsel her, as a good mother or father or older sister would have done, she probably wouid not have -taken her life. Such cases of youthful suicide are not rare. Children differ greatly In sensibility, and the un just Imputation of a disgraceful act has not seldom driven a child to suicide. The Oregonlan has heard of a case simi lar to the one recited above, in which a very fineboy, who .became a splendid man. attempted suicide when unjustly charged with a disgraceful action by a family he loved and respected. The boy attempted to hang Himself, but was dis covered and cut down after he had be come ..insensible Parents and teachers should cever4foj-get that children differ greatly in natural sensibility. James H. Hyslop, professor of psychol ogy and ethics at Columbia, has re signed, alleging poor health as the cause. He Is a believer in ''spiritism," and holds that the dead 'can communi cate with the living by means of a trance medium. The Rev. Dr. Minot J. Savage, of the Unitarian Church, be lieves in spirit communication, arid owes his conviction to the eamemedium that Imposed upon Professor Hyslop, a famous Boston seeress who has lately 'taken up her abode in New York. Abler and far more learned men than either Professor Hyslop or Rev. Dr. Savage have avowed their belief in spirit communication, from the days of Swedenborg to that of Professors Wallace and Crookes, but men of learn ing and ability are no't exempt from de lusion and error. Everybody knows more than anybody, and the consensus of the highest human intelligence, as represented by men of thought and ob servation, Is overwhelmingly against the reality of so-called spirit communica tion. The opinion that the clubs should pay a license as well as anybody else Is sound. It Is no concern of the public whether the clubs can afford to pay a license or not. The privilege of sale by the clubs cuts down the business more or less of those who are obliged to pay for the privilege of selling liquor. It is unjust to those who do pay for the privilege of sale to allow free sale by others. Suppose a drug store kept a bar. Should It not pay for the privi lege? Or a grocery store? If the clubs cannot afford a reasonable license they can close their bar, but It is not fair they should cut into the business of the liquor dealers and paynothlng for the privilege for which the liquor deal ers pay a large annual fee. The amount should be, of course, subject to equitable adjustment; but the 'hour is r.ot auspi cious for pleas In behalf of sympathy for barrooms of any sort The hunting season in the Northern" woods, i. e., the forests of Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, closed No vember 30 with a record of fourteen men killed and eleven seriously wound ed. Whether this record Is due to tem porary insanity caused by buck fever or to simple, commo'nplace carelessness in handling firearms. Is not stated. The result proves that the lives of the hunted are not in greater jeopardy than the lives of the hunters In these Winter forests, and emphasizes anew the need of the careful hand on the trigger. "There is a Judge Groescup holding, a minor position in a United States Court at Chicago" is an observation in the Boston Herald which betrays a strange and not creditable forgetfulness of- the memorable events of the Summer of 1894. . Mrs. Cralslc to Visit the Canons. London Letter. Tho exodus to India 'to witness the fes tivities of the coronation of Durbar at Delhi is now well under way, every steamer leaving for the Orient having a crowded cabin list; Among the notables who . will attend the celebration is Mrs. Carnegie, the American novelist and playwright, who writes over the name of "John Oliver Hobbce." She will be the guest of Lord and Lady Curzon and, it is expected. will, before her return, gather material for a play depicting Indian life. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST :PRESS Mr. Hsbbb la Not So Slow. LewlstoriTrlbune. Senator Hanna. in deciding not to monkey wlth, the Presidential lightning; is notiiKe' some fellows mat never tearn anything. And the End Is Not Xct. . . Pendleton Tribune. If every state gave the Secretary of the Interior so much cause for vexation as Oregon does, he would probably surrender his portfolio In despair. Action for Money Must Re Prompt. Joseph Herald. Governor Geer's refusal to call a special session of the Legislature will necessitate some prompt action, when the regular ses sion is contcned. In tho matter of an ap propriation for the Lewis and Clark Ex position. A Paying: Government Service. Newport News. For the money expended, .there is no more remunerative branch of ,the Federal Government than the Fish Commission,' which annually rplac'cs in the lakes and- rivers of the country from five to ten times the number of fish taken out by fishermen. ' The Trials of the Legislator. Prlncvllle Review. Now is the time of year when the pretty maids and ambitious young men make the lives of Oregon Representatives tired with their piteous appeals to do what they can In their behalf for the clerkship positions. It is no wonder men grow old" soon after becoming members of the Legislature, when such cares as thfa are thrust upon them, together with their other duties. "Unmerciless" Is Good. The Dalles Chronicle. The Oregonlan Is a powerful newspaper, and while It uses its efforts to some ex tent to the upbuilding of the State of Oregon, It more often stoops to low and unmefclless persecution. 'Baffled in argu ment. It drops to the coward's weapon. ridicule. Bring action for Its libelous words and you are unmercifully abused and cartooned, and finally a browbeaten jury brings In a verdict of "not guilty." A private citizen or a public official has no legal means of redress. All he can do Is to stand the attacks. Invite a full in vestigation and trust that Justice will be done. A Life to Be Shnnned, Albany Herald. John L. Sullivan, once champion heavy weight pugilist of the world, has filed a petition in bankruptcy, and declares that his world possessions consist of $60 worth of wearing apparel with debts aggregating, about $3000. Sullivan has squandered many fortunes, and has accomplished nothing for himself or the world. In view of the life he has led, the spectacle of the once strong man approaching old age, broken In health, and dead broke financially, is but the inevitable. There Is nothing in such a sporty life to commend itself to American youths, but there is everything In it to be shunned. IiCKlsIatnrc'a Duty to the Fair. Elgin Recorder. If the coming session of the Legisla ture makes an appropriation for the Lewis and Clark Centennial It Is to be hoped that It will be done as quickly as-possible after the session convenes, and that It will not be mixed up with the election of a United States Senator or any other legislation. The Exposition proposition should stand on its own merits, and the legislation looking to its advancement should be made without reference to any thing else. However, It Is scarcely among the probabilities that this will be done. The opportunities which this matter of fers for 'log-rolling" are so great that it will be almost impossible for the aver age legislator to resist the temptation. Attraction Other Fairs Didn't Have. Toledo Leader. , The Lewis and Clark Exposition, to be held at Portland in 1903, will have one great advantage over any previous affair of " the kind: It will be In a very attrac tive state a state that offers many In ducements to homeaeekers. This was not true of the expositions at Chicago, Oma ha, Buffalo or Charleston, and It will not be true of the one to be held at St. Loula Thousands from the East will attend the Lewis and Clark Exposition, not merely aa Idle pleasure-seekers, who have a little money to spend, but as homeseekers. Portland will be the distributing point, and Lincoln County should have some wide-awake representatives on the ground to see that this most attractive spot In the state la not overlooked. Thou sands will take advantage of the oppor tunity to visit Newport, our great Sum mer resort, and Lincoln County's share of the awful burden resulting from the Fair appropriation whatever that may be-rWlU probably return with big Inter est In one season. Advice to the Legislature. Tillamook Headlight. One thing we hope the State Legislature will do in a hurry, and that Is elect a successor to Senator Simon without so much political dickering. Then the state legislators would have ample time for the careful consideration of bills, but to rail road them through as In previous years Is certainly a very unsatisfactory proced ure. We would suggest, to prevent th!3, that the legislators be given two or three days to make their choice, and If they then failed tn acrree, then lock them up In a room and keep them there without food, drihks or smokes until they come to a decision, for It Is not good common sense to keep the Senatorial fight up for 40. days and 40 nights because this or that faction of the Republican party Is fool ish enough to go ort record as first, last and all the time for certain aspirants. Anyway, the state legislators are sent to Salem to legislate for the State of Ore gon, and if they would do this and not quibble so much over the Senatorial fight possibly the state would get better laws passed. Portland's First Offense. Corvallls Times. It has been figured out that, shQuld the Oregon Legislature appropriate J300.000 to the 1905 Fair, the farmers of Oregon would pay $142,000. or only about 2S per cent of the sum. In the state there are 53,490 peo ple engaged In agriculture, as calculated on the basis of the 1900 census. On a $5C0, 000 appropriation, of which J250.000 would be collected In 1904 and an equal sum in 1905, the-average. that ehch farmer would have to pay would be $2.43 for the two years, or $1 12& each year. Of the $500,000 Multnomah County would have to pay In taxes J1B6.150, or 'considerably more than would the farmers of the state. In addition, the City of Portland, by volun tary subscription has already contributed $350,000 to be used for the Fair. With reference to the appropriation, whatever it Is to be. It may be said that Portland, though a heavy taxpayer, Is rarely the beneficiary of appropriations at the hands of tho Legislature. That city has no Insti tution of importance that the state is an nually called upon to al. and her Legis lative members are not often at the capi tal as now, with their hands out for gold. For Bryan's Ear. Cincinnati Enquirer. Colonel Bryan has been advised to turn his paper into an agricultural and live stock journal till he can ascertain the di rection in which the political wind is blowing. The greater number of candid and unbiased people know already, but there are those who think that the Colo nel, brilliant as he is in other masters, is a little slow of comprehension on this particular, point. THE DEMOCRAT flOT EXTINCT. Chicago Chronlcfe. . : "I am not a Democrat as Democrats are today," says that veteran Democrat, Abram S. Hewitt. "I do hot belohe to; the Democratic party as it is now organs, lzed. I have no interest in the future of the Democratic party. The Demccrats. of today are Populists,," There is too much truth ur this last re mark. The Democratic party was led away captive to the Babylon of Populism.. "Great numbers of DemocratsCast off their" creed, like a garment and bowed down to the idols of Populism. The case is sad, but not hopeless. This Is not the time for old Democratic leader's to say they have no Interest In the' future of the Democratic party. The present de mand la not for Jeremiahs. It Is for hope ful, workful, inspiring and unwavering prophets of restoration. It Is for men hot to deplore the Democratic party as lost; butto lead It back from captivity to Its homo, and restore its faith and rebuild lis temnlf. This Is no time to desert the party and go over to the worship of Republican geds, 'which are no less false than those of Populism and whose worship is no less debasing and pauperizing because It is more fashionable. Brace up. Mr. "Hewitt! Take heart! Re new your youth like the ease's! Courage, patJenre, persistent Inculcation of truth these will restore the Democracy to itself and to its own. The Popullstic erase is passing off, as tho greenback craze passed off about the time of resumption In the late '70s and early 'SQs. The mental condition of the people Is becoming wholesome once more as to financial question?. The Republican party is hopelessly joined to the protection Idol the mother of trusts. Sane people will -let It alone and turn to a restored Democratic party as their best agent for ridding themselves of a tariff Incubus which too long has hindered them from making the most of their great re sources and taking the place among na tions for which those resources destine then. Insurance and' Christian Living:. Springfield Republican. Some, life insurance companies, we be lieve, have been induced to make a special lower premium charge to those who are totr.l abstainers from the- Use of intoxi cants. Apparently this has been done- more as a matter of sentiment and encouragement to a good pause than because of any con clusive demonstration that such Insurance can be sold at lower cost from a business standpoint. Mortality statistics certainly" at present lack the fullness which makes such a demonstration possible. However, RewC. M. Sheldon, of Kansas, Is organiz ing a life Insurance company to write policies only on those lives of Christians and total abstainers, and the churches throughout the country are to be asked to assist him. Rates, It is said, will be from 10 to 20 per cent under those of the old line companies, which Insure on the basis of physical rather than moral health. One trouble Mr. Sheldon will, encounter In that he never can be sure the nominal Chris tianity .of his policy-holders will mean a practical Christianity as applied In tem perate and healthful living In all things. Church membership of. the most approved kind may mask gluttonous habits, the use of deleterious drugs, medicines and narcotics and oher Indulgences aside from drinking, of an Injurious nature to the bodily life. Before his company is two years old. If he expects It to live, he will find It examining the physical state of the applicant for evidences of Christian living, rather than church records for evi dence of the existence of an insurable physical condition. Mr. Roosevelt's Dogmatism. Boston Hcraid. President Roosevelt should avoid .the tone of a dogmatist in his speeches.juHa may feel that he is the only wise man, the one person whose s'ay-sd makes .spec ulation vain and discussion impudent; but his utterances wll) carry quite as much weight with persons who think and per sons who have memories If they .are couched In a different form. The record In some points Is .not' so secure that ho can safely challenge, it In r.s3srtlng h's present opinions. He has given too many evidences that his "views" are not always well matured to assume the tone of Sir Oracle. It Is but a little while, for ex ample, since he was enforcing with em phasis and Iteration the Idea that a Con stitutional amendmnt would be necessary for dealing with the trusts. Now ho gives out that with regard to trusts he shall adhere to tho judgment of Attorney General Knox. Attorney-General Knox gives no countenance to the notion that a Constitutional amendment Is necessary. He thmks Congress now has all the power necessary. The people who accepted as the last word of wisdom what the Presi dent was declaring so earnestly In Au gust are left In the lurch. He has taken it back, to all Intents and purposes. There are other matters regarding which he has spoken with great posltlveness wherein he has modified his -view lh a noteworthy manner. Senatorial Contests. Omaha Bee. The Senatorial contests of the coming Winter will emphasize the dfcmands for the electlon-.of United States Senators by popular vote. Delaware, which Is not represented In the National Senate, elected a Republican Legislature, but owing to the Republican factional fight, another deadlock over the election of Senators Is expected. A bitter Senatorial contest Is foreshadowed In Colorado, with the prob ability that a successor to Senator Teller will not be chosen by the hew Legislature. Oregon may witness another Senatorial fight of the sort which has In the past kept It only half represented. The Repub licans have a large majority In both branches of the Legislature, but It ap pears that they are about evenly divided between the two factions which have long fought for supremacy. The' Democrats have just enough votes to prevent the election of a Republican unless the two factions agree to come together, of which there Is at present some uncertainty. It Is by no means assured that the Legisla ture of Idaho will be able to agree upon a successor to Senator Heltfield. Were United States Senators elected by popular vote, the Senatorial question In these states would have been settled at the late election. As It is, none of them Is certain of having a full representation In the Senate of the 5Sth Congress. A Wonderful Performance. Chicago Record-Herald Emperor William's shooting 'perform ances In England were wonderful. Probr ably no other monarch in the world could have fired as often without having a blis tered trigger finger. A ThnnlcsKlvinK Appeal. Baltimore American. My. friends; I seek important Information, Sing hey, a hungry fortune to dey; My stomach wants ah intimate relation Established with the turkey and the pte. The mrry. merry turkey. The toothsome sauce. cranberry. The succulent spiced oyater. And the pie! "Which of you has. the best Thanksgiving dln- ner? Sing hey, don't every one at once reply! For that one I'll dine with, as I'm a sinner! Sing hey. the tender turkey and the pie. The milky mashed potatoes. The apple "sass" so melting. The cider that's bucolic. And the nle! Of Invitations I'm a. champloa taker. Sing hey, for none of your "pot luck" sigh; As eater of good dinners I'm no faker. Sing hey, the plump young turkey and the plo! The soft and trembllnr Jelly. The cakes with sugar Icing. The punch a wee bit. strengthened, And' the pie I NOTE AND COMMENT. r Blessed are the rainmakers. What a fund-of material for. the artist in water colors! -A man is known hy the -use he makes of his . latch key. , S It Is necessary to keep going in order to f oliow' a good example. . Can Ella Wheeler- Wilcox "explain why a man always answers a woman's "?" with "1"? There's a bllzzard-hr Nebraska, -and Mr. Bryan will have some more to say about the ccl trust.' " "-.-. Something ought to be done to Seventh street. Dredging or filling seem the al ternatives. There are times when one may safely tell a lie, but those times are so hard to. judge accurately. Premier Sagasta h3s- resigned -again. So frequently has this news come that we are getting resigned, too. Anyway, resignation Is a Christian vlrtu.- Chlcago is horribly wrought up because Mayor Harrison uses the city Stenogra phers to copy his wife's novels. This is quite possibly a movement fomented by the said stenographers. Who knows? Seattle and Tacoma are fighting over the interpretation of a passage in Bret Harte. If Son Francisco gets mixed up in this quarrel the Sound cities will have their hands full. They had better keep their ' neighborhood bickerings to themselvea Poor Barry Johnstone! With brilliant prospects, with a good record behind him, he yielded to a passion peculiarly strong In men who have lived a feverish life, . and by satisfying Jealousy forfeited all claim to consideration. His victim was the happier, for she died unstained. Mr. Dunne, of Dooley fame,' has decided on matrimony, and has Induced a fair young woman to join him. Everyboly wishes Mr. Dunne long Hie and happiness. If he and his wife manage to keep, a sunny a horn as Mr: Dooley's cheerful humor would seem to predict, thar-i will be a small but entirely adequat-2 heaven In New York. Last night as a scribe was wndlng his way dlnnerwards. he listened to the fol lowing converatlon, which, while not In tended for publication, 'was so frankly public, owing to determined tones In the couple's voices, that no feelings can be hurt. The scribe observed a crious vi bratory, movement In the single umbrella. Then he heard: "Please hold it more In front' ' "Beg pardon," came in a mapculina tone. "Just a little over to the left." "I beg your pardon." , "'If you'll spare the trimming on my hat, I'll forgive you." "Awfully awkward chap, I am." . "I'm afraid this rain will ruin the col lar to this cape!" More vibration of the umbrella, followed by a pciiod of silence. "Did you ever see such weather? My hat is just drenched." I More shifting of the umbrella, and a muttered apology fromthe man. "Really, Mr. Jones, you'd better let me carry the umbrella. I must keep this package, dry." 'Tin horribly inefficient, h I , knowA fsald th-mn weakly. And. he waggled the umlirtlla soma more. "Tculble wind, isn't It? My skirts arc simply soaked." 'Yes." "But then we must expect It, I sup posar "Yes." "Well, here's my corner. Don't come with me. So glad I met you. I was fool l.h to forget my umbrella, and It's so kind cf you to lend me yours, (iood-hye " The man emerged, turned up his rent collar and hailed a car angrily. The scribe wondered what the matter was. Fit Punishment for Housebreaking:. Cleveland Leader. Human life, even the life of criminals is not held so cheaply In this country that men and women are ready to applaud the killing of any one, unless there Is very good reason for feeling that the homi cide Is both just and necessary. Many persona have escaped legal penalties af ter slaying their fellow-men, on the pre text of self-defense or other like grounds, when public opinion by no means ap proved their deeds of blood. In the two cases which have recently oc curred In Lorain County In which burglars have been slain by householders there is no such hesitation or division of opin ion Iri acquitting the men who have taken life. Practically all good citizens feel and say the killing was good for the coun try, entirely right and just The slayers of dangerous criminals shot In the very act of burglary are commended and "ad mired by the whole body of their fellow cltlzens. Tho reason Is that housebreaking, at night especially, and by armed and des perate burglars, Is a very brutal and wicked crime. Burglary, In Inhabited dwellings. Is always a threat of assassin ation. It is instinctively and naturally regarded as a crime deserving any pun ishment which may come to the law breaker at the hands of the man or woman whose home Is entered. Public opinion is quite right. Burglars deserve no consideration. They cannot be killed too often, while in the act of housebreak ing, for the general good of the country and the world. . PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Avoid whisky and water: it Is a dilution and. a snare. Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. "Arft you familiar with tho motives of Jlg g&rilni's new opera?" "Yes; he needed tho money,." Puck. Mother You must go to bed. Lemuel. The little chickens go to bed at sundown. Lemuel Yes, but the old hen goes with them. Chicago Dally News. Tourist Have you got Scotch whisky? Walter (in Irish hotel) No, sorr . we- don't kape It. And them as does only uses It to water down cur own! Punch. Miss Bunker Tour brother plays golf, does he not? Slnnlckson Yes,, but I assure you he's perfectly, ratlonali In every other respect. Phil adelphia 'Press. 1 Willie What did you see abroad, Archie? Archie I don't remember exactly; but r did three countries more than Keggle did In the Same time. Harvard Lampoon. Georglana Julia and Jack don't stay out at their new country place at all. Seorge Why? "Oh, they want to be In town all the time, to tell everybody how much they like It out la the country." Life. "Never marry a girl for money." "No?" "Certainly not. When you And an heiress Just shine up to her father,- and then flim-flam him. in some kind of a stock transaction. It Is much safer." Chicago. Evening PosU Edltbr You want to be sure, Mlsa. Scratchlns ton. that all the historical data at your novel are strictly correct. Miss Scratchlngton Don't worry about that, dear sir: people who know hlslcry never read historical novels. Brooklyn Life. "Mother objected to my playing on the teams at the college," remarked the fair college girl' "but 1 won her over this afternoon to my way of thinking." "How did you do it?" asked" her chum. "At that bargain sale of handkerchiefs If I hadn't bucked the center of the line and won a yard or two. we wouldn't hav gotten a. single one!" Cincinnati Comraerclal-Trlbune.