EsUred at the Fostcfflce at Portland. Oreeoa. as eecond-clas matter. . REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATE3. 9c If .!! fTVtxfranrna!1 1. admuteW S&llv. with RnniinV nor month S 83 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year.... T 80 iauy, wn sunaay. per year...... yy Sunday. pr year..., ? 00 The Weekly, per year 1 aoe wc!icy s montns... TO CttV RllhvtHr Dallr. per week, delivered. Sunday xcepted.l5o uw per weeK. delivered. Sunday xnciuaevu POSTAGE BATES. TTnVf - ufMA I , . . i o t A iT.rr.r. . "7 to unuaiiy coming on. Scientific fnrrv u to 28-pase paper . m tie United States has a xrrent do.ni tv policy that is said to work admirably -iue vjrovernment sells the timhw , Keeps the land. Moreover, it maintain expert timber officials who not onlv eon that the intent of the law is realized but no select such timber, as is fit for lurti uer ana reserve the rest. Lumberlncr wiling are required to take out the product so as -not to Injure the growing trees. In this way the; Government con. serves its forest supply; and. Instead of turning it over to unscrupulous agencies of swift desolation, has a new crop con- Fcrelrn rate double. Newt or dlacusslon Intended for publication In The Oreconlan should b addressed Invaria bly "SdHer The Oregonlan." not to the name any Individual. Letters relating to adver tUlng. subscriptions or to any business matter should x addressM eimnlr "Thr Oregonian. The Oregonlan does not buy poems, or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 43. 47. 48. 49 Tribune building. New Tork.CIty; 810-11-12 a.iDune building:. Chicago; the 8. C. Becicwiui special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Franet - Tu E. Lee. Pal ce Hotel newr stand: Goldsmith" Bros.. 2S8 Sutter street: P. W. Pitts. 1008 Market street: J. K. Cooper Co.. 746 Market streetnear th Palace Hotel; Foster & Or ear. Ferry news and: Frank Scott n V.IHn street, and N. Wheatley. 813 Mission street. For rale in Los Anpeles by B. F. Gardner. B South Spring street, and Oliver St Haines. South Snrlne street. For sale In Kansas City. Mo., by r.:'3ecker ugsr Co.. Ninth and walnut streets. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co, 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. Washington street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnam street: Metreath Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News co.. 77 west Second South street. For sale 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., br Hamilton & Kendrick. 906-912 Seventeenth street; Louthan Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence street: A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. learn. It will not be adequate until it covers not only conservation of moisture and protection of the public forest do main, but also the protection of timber land from useless and deadly spoliation. l TODAY'S "WEATHER Occasional snow rain; east to south winds. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 37: minimum temperature, 34; pre clpltatlon, 0.02 inch. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, DEC. 1G, 1002, District Attorney Chamberlain's re peatedly announced determination to take no initiative in the gambling im brdglio other than what might be forced upon him by information filed in his office has been set aside upon no stronger basis than the newspaper dec larations of Judge Hogue. As assertions of equal definiteness have been freely made by others, the natural explanation of the District Attorney's action is that it arises out of sympathy with the pres ent regime, which Judge Hogue at tacked. This presumption, is heightened by the resentment displayed by the gamblers themselves, both at Judge Hogue's utterances and at the retalia tory moves of Chief McLauchlan. The moral effecT of the District Attorney's action, whatever be its purpose, is in aid of the gamblers, exactly as much as were the exploits of Mr. C. F. Lord's Daw Enforcement League, and even its purpose cannot be correctly estimated without recollection of the recent cam paign, In which the "wide-open" element was dragooned into voting for Cham berlain for Governor. It is perfectly idle for those who are in sympathy with the "wide-open" cause to profess anxiety to enforce the law. The hollowness of their whole procedure was ably demonstrated in Chief McLauchlan's effective closing order, sent out in wrath almost before the ink was dry upon his solemn assur ance that the gambling-houses. couldn't be closed because juries wouldn't con vict Let us again assure the "wide open" people, that the less stir they make the better they are off. The Dis trict Attorney's declaration of war Is no more competent to deceive or efficacious for results than Fred Merrill's recent flash ih the pan about a monthly license system. Does anybody suppose that George Chamberlain expects to land any of his "wide-open" constituents in the County Jail? The House looks forward with equan imity to the passage of an anti-trust bill,-possibly before the holiday recess, the while it protests the entire session is too short to pass a bill .removing the duty on salt or enacting the gold stand ard for the. Philippines or authorizing an emergency bank circulation. The time is long enough to do anything the House wants to do, but eternity would not be long enough to do anything it doesn't It is long enough for a liberal holiday recess, for example, and sundry appropriation bills in which Representa tives are -personally interested are al ready well advanced. There is no com plaint against this discrimination In general, except that it might be more honestly avowed. If Mr. McCall, for example, would say that he Is afraid of losing the support of cotton mills; or Mr. Grosvenor would acknowledge his subservience to the Ohio woolgrowers; or jut. uaizeu woum say he is beholden to the iron and steel corporations of Pennsylvania, and therefore that on the tariff question their souls are not their own, one would feel like refraining from animadversion so disarmed by confes sion. But no. "We must go on in the same oia patriot tergiversation. It Is the dear people and their sacred oaths of office that impel these precious liars and cowards to swear there Is no time to do what they don't want to do, and that rerorms are always desirable In theory dui m practice simply Inopportune. If the short session is too short to do any thing in, why noflimit it to three weeks or aoonsn it altogether? And why, af ter all, should we encourage our boys io enter public life? .wotning could be more admirable from an esthetic or more deplorable from a moral point of view than the alacrity with which evil-doers of various -sorts shoulder their shortcomings off on the law. Their works are evil, it is true, but the trouble is not with them, poor victims of circumstance, it is with the law. The law is defective, inoperative, loosely drawn, etc. This is the especial retreat of public-land thieves, and just now in Oregon and in C5ngress we have men affirming that there is no help JTor mcits oi uie pudiic domain except in PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE. More than fifty years ago. when Port land was a new but ambitious village. sue round her development thwarted by tne rivalry of neighboring towns. Ore gon City had established conriectlonii with the productive country of the Cen tral Willamette; Milwaukie, almost mid way between Portland and Oregon City, was at the head of schooner navigation, and was attempting to establish herself as the point of junction for the wagons of the settlers and ships of commerce; "Vancouver was still the center of the lower river trade. Thus subject to com petition on every side, Portland had to do something to establish her advantage over these rivals or accept the fate which already had befallen the town of LInnton. It was at this time that the project of making a road to connect Portland with the Tualatin Plain and the Yamhill region was conceived. The proj ect was a big one for a town of less than 500 population, with no established busi ness and no accumulated capital. But the people went at it, first with a town meeting, then with ax and shovel, and before long, with th& active .aid of the up-country people, who were In a posi tion to be benefited by a direct road to the "Willamette River. By these means the old Canyon Road was made. It left the town and plunged Into the forest at about Third street. crossed Tanner's or King's Creek by a bridge just beyond the present western terminus of Morrison street, thence past the house of Amos King and over the hill in a southwesterly course to a junc tion with what is still called the Canyon Road now entering the city tnrougn Jefferson street Before the road was completed the town began to gain bene fits through it . It made a route far more convenient tor me west omc farmers than the longer road to Oregon City; it had another advantage, in that it was accessible to ships; it had an ad vantage over Milwaukie in that, De- sides deeper and better channels, it lay on the side of the river accessible to settlers; it had every advantage over Vancouver, whose pretensions immedi ately vanished. These natural conditions were vastly important, and with the en ergy of the people won the prize, for after the making of the Canyon Road there was never a moment s doubt as to where the city of the future would be. Later there arose a demand for trans portation into the heart of the Columbia River Basin. It was a task demanding large resources of confidence, capital, -skill in boatmaklng and In navigation and, equally Important, the will to ven ture. If in these respects Astoria, St Helens or any other of thethen several ambitious points on the lower river had been superior to Portland, the prize of the Eastern Oregon and "Washington trade, which formed the secondary basis of Portland's develop ment, would have gone there. But Port land was equal to her opportunity. She found the men and the means to do what the situation demanded; she made the great interior tributary to "her own advancement, at the same time for in these matters reciprocity Is an essential principle giving to the country what was needed for its own welfare. It is worth while to recall these In stances because they are rich with sug gestion and inspiration"for those who, as the successors of Portland's. earlier gen eration, have now the fortunes of the city in keeping. Times have changed, to be sure; the day of small things is past and the day of large things is upon us, but the needs of the later day are in" their essential character singularly like those which appealed to the Portland men of the earlier time. Now, as then, we are called upon to help ourselves to fly with -out own wings, if we may bor row a fine phrase if we would gain for Portland the utmost of advantage which her situation suggests. The .fight for commercial greatness which began with the first stroke on the old Canyon Road, which made a great advance through the organization of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, which has been maintained from decade to decade with general wisdom and almost unfailing devotion and energy, has still to be prosecuted. "Very much Mias been achieved, but much still remains to be achieved. No city can claim to command" its own fortunes while the essential agencies of its business and commercial life are in alien hands. Portland, to speak plainly, is not secure in her relationships while strangers to her Interests have absolute power over the transportation facilities which serve her while it is possible for two men in New York to enter into schemes of possible mutual advantage which may disturb her connections, dl yert her business into other channels, establish freight rates without regard to cost of service, and estrange her from districts properly belonging to the field of her commercial activities. This, or something not very far from it, Is the situation of Portland at this time. But a great opportunity knocks at Portland's door. The National Govern ment, by its work at the Cascades, has brought. the western verge of Eastern Oregon within the range of river navi gation at Portland. Men of enterprise have already made a start toward a large practical use of this important condition; other Portlanders are operat ing under sufferance, so to speak, In re gions properly our own, in enterprises which may be affected profoundly to their advantage by the facilities for nav- has not lacked these qualities in the past, nor is she likely to lack them now or in the future. A REPRESENTATIVE WOHAN. The' announcement of the death of Julia Dent Grant at her home in "Wash ington Sunday night caused a sensation of regret in thousandsof homes through out the land. Not that Mrs. Grant was In any sense except the most womanly a great woman, but she was essentially a good woman. Like tens of thousands of her sex whose names have never been heard outside of the community in which their Jives were passed, she was In poverty as well as in prosperity de voted to her husband, her home and her children. It became her good fortune to shine by the reflected light of one to whom opportunity came when past mid dle life, and who rose to meet it grandly. The name of General Ulysses S. Grant is written upon one of the brightest pages of the military history of his country. Because Julia Dent was his wife; because he loved and honored her as, to him, the best among women, and because she filled the position that came to her through his achievement grace fully, bringing to It many womanly vir tues, she was respected, and loved by the people of the United States. Of good birth and lineage, the early years of Julia Dent were passed amid surroundings and duties consequent uci fciau.uii in me. .a. young woman of, 22, she was married in i848 to Captain 0rant then, just home from the Mexican campaign. After five years of ArmyMife, made unsatisfactory by rea son of his absence during "much of the time from his home and by the fact that his pay was Inadequate to the support of an Increasing family. Captain Grant resigned from the Army and faced the problem ofmaking a living with his hands. His wife was In this a true help meet Indeed, It is more than probable that she bore the heavier part of the burden of the years between the time that he quit the Army, in 1853, and the breaking out of -the Civil "War, for, though great in military achievement, General Grant was unsuccessful in the great hive of civil life. It has been said that Mrs. Grant estimated these humble years in which her husband pursued the vocation of a bookkeeper, wood- hauler and general laborer with his hands as .the happiest of her life, though he was child's nurse, cook and house keeper in her humble home, and wholly without wealth, public honor or position. "When1 these came to her, however, she accepted their duties and discharged their obligations with the tact and dignity of the American woman to the manor bom. As mistress of the White House, Mrs. Grant was hospitable, kindly and digni fied. She did not bring to it the youth ful grace and generous culture that dis tinguished Mrs. Cleveland's occupancy, nor the more mature but still abound ing energy tljat characterizes Mrs. Roosevelt's discharge of Its manifold du tiea But, having all her life discharged the obligations of her lot with serious ness and amiability, she succeeded to thesa naturally and performed them ac ceptably before all the world. When In the closing years of General Grant's ilfe financial failure again overtook him tnrough his son's failure, Mrs. Grant readily readjusted her life to meet the change in their fortunes and with wifely devotion walked close and still closer to his side to the end. All of this might be said of- thousands of women in all walks of life. But it would be but "stale repetition ham mered on the ear." The commonplace, though enjoyed most thoroughly, does not make an attractive pen picture. Is only when, as in this Instance, an hon ored name lends It luster that It shines with a glow that attracts public atten Hon. It is thus that the wifely devo Hon, the maternal qualities, the woman ly virtues, of Mrs. Grant are made to stand not only for her own honor but for the honor of all conscl entious, womanly women. .Her body win in aue time oe transferred to the magnificent tomb at Riverside Park where that of the great soldier rests. Taking her mortal remains to Its keep lng this mausoleum -will hold In trus tor American womanhood the tender memory of a good woman who adorned with, equal grace the exalted and hum ble positions in life, even as it holds in remembrance the achievement of the greatest of American soldiers. General Grant has his eulogy in the patriotic devotion of the American peo ple ana tne admiration of the world Julia Dent, his wife, has hers in the slm pncity and faithfulness with which she represented the womanly endeavor that sends a man out into the. world equipped to ngnt its battles and welcomes him back again, rejoicing in victory gained or comforting him in defeat suffered The achievement of the one will ever live in the Nation's history; that of the other reflects a tender light upon the home life of the American people, and togetner they may well be held "sacred to memory." French bark Frandois Coppee c arrival at Port Towneend will be ordered to Portland lor a cargo. An unprecedent ed movement of wheat to Puget- Sound early in 'the- season and a slow move ment to Portland enabled Tacota'a and Seattle combined to clear more' wheat last month and in October 'than was cleared from Portland.. Now matters are evening up again, and the tireless but tiresome yawp of the Tacoma News about the decadence of Portland's wheat trade will "suddenly cease. Portland's geographical location I such that a large amount of wheat grown In Washington cannot reach the market by the Colum bia River route.. We are also barred from' handling the wheat of the Dakotas and of Manitoba, but will, continue to handle practically all of the wheat grown In Oregon and a9 much of that grown In Washington as Is tributary to this port. It may become necessary to bring over the remainder of the fleet that has been lying idle for weeks in Puget Sound ports, but Portland will continue to do the wheat business in her own territory. Under the glare of electric lights from the handsome show windows, amidst the rattle of cars and the chatter of tnousandg of holiday shonners whn thronged the busy streets near Fifth and Washington streets last evening, the stump ot a massive fir tree was grubbed out. It had rested fnr mamj vann v I .....j JSIMO UC- neath the wooden sidewalk which now gives way to the modern cemerlt thor. oughfare, but It still retained substance enough to offer stubborn resistance to the men who were removing it Port land may be slow" and ancient In hor Dusiness methods, but a city of over iud.uuu people has grown up In thl? matchless location on the banks of th Willamette since the woodman's ax last worked on that stump that -was yester day exposed to view in the center of tho city. The old Portland has f and the old Portlanders are rapidly 5 following it into the unknown, but an occasional reminder like, that which was turned up on our busiest street yester day serves to show that after all we are moving at a more rapid gait than we are generally credited with. changes of the laws, for which, we may enterprises, if they were combined and be assured without inquiry, 'the short session is too short And yet, without shriving any of these malefactors, it is probably true that their offenses exist synchronously with imperfect legisla tion. The timber and stone acts could be improved in many ways. The Gov ernment should get what the land is worth when it sells it, for the practically free disposal of it to actual individual users has become too palpable a fraud to be longer tolerated. To go still farther back, it is doubtful whether the Gov ernment should not, after all, retain the title to Its forest lands in its own pos- fcestuon. oweuen. ior example, has a largely backed by the capital and public spirit of Portland, might be made to support the fortunes of the city in an absolute way and to command for It all that it has a. right to desire in the way of trade territory. Strongly held, they may be made to serve as a means of enforcing good conduct on, the part of those who dominate the railroads of this country. The opportunity is a great one. Its conditions are simple and easily within the resource of Portland. Initiative the spirit of self-dependence and the energy of self-help these are the chief requi sites of the present situation. Portland "S The French bark Lamoriciere arrived in from Tacoma Saturday to load a cargo of wheat and flour for South Af rica. The Austrian steamship Klek ar rived in from Vancouver yesterday, and will load lumber, flour and wheat at Portland for the same destination. The French bark Surcouf is due today front Puget Sound to load wheat either for South Africa or the United Kingdom. There are seventeen ships now in Port land harbor under charter to load, three more on the way down the river, and six at Astoria ready for sea, and yet Portland exporters are drawing on Pu get Sound for tonnage. There are but ten grain ships under charter at Ta coma and Seattle, and apparently car goes cannot be secured for others. The The death of Solomon Hirsch will come as a painful shock to the commu nity in which he was counted a busy and useful figure up to the very hour of his death, and in the wider .National and international circle where ne was widely and favorably known. Mr. Hirsch was a man of many virtues and great force of character. On the domes tic side he conspicuously exemplified the estimable qualities for which the home building and honor-guarding Hebrew race is justly noted. His business ca pacity is well attested in the mammoth establishment of which he has been for years the acknowledged head and whose unchallenged eminence In Its field Is a monument to his clear vision, energy and fidelity. He was a generous giver to deserving charities and In private life a loyal friend. His title to fame, how ever, rests more upon achievements in politics and diplomacy, where his excep tional intellectual power loved best to labor. His political talents were far above the average, and his diplomatic Guccesa was noteworthy. The passion for mastering the details of national and international politics he possessed to a degree that made him little if anything short of a political genius. His limita tion was that he seemed to have no con ception of the important meaning of fundamental questions on which think ing men divide. Politics to him was not a means to the establishment of great rrlnclDles. It was a game to play. But he loved It well and he played It well Nothing short of complete mastery of the "game would content .him, and lew shrewder or more accomplished heads have participated in the conflicts of do mentlc or foreign politics. To his state and city he leaves the record of great usefulness, and to his family a precious memory of fidelity and affection. ; i The only hope for Venezuela is that Great Britain and Germany may con sent to arbitrate their claims, if the United States should tender Its good offices to that end. The report that Ar gentina and Chile would'Jnterfere is probably without, foundation, for their interference would amount to nothing. Chile has two third-class battle-ships and three armored cruisers, and Argen tina has one 'third-class ba.ttle-shtp and four armored cruisers. The combined navies of all South America could not make any resistance to the allied squad ron, and as for land forces, they require a transport service which does not exist In South America. The intervention of the South American Republics Is out of the question. It Is a mere paper threat. The United States, and the United. States alone, can hope to persuade the allies. to arbitrate their claims. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS "Probably" Referring; to Charles "W. Albany Herald. Hon. C. W. Fulton, of Astoria, will probably be elected to the United States Senate at the approaching session. Sena tor Fulton Is an orator of ability, .a Re publican always in the harriess for duty, and a progressive citizen. He will be an able colleague of Senator Mitchell. Protection's Immemorial Nature. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The impression Is gradually gaining strength that whilp ndalmlng about the "eelflah interests" whlcht oppose reci procity with Canada, the ardent advo cates of that measure are prepared to sacrifice not only the material Interests of other citizens of this country, but the larger interests of the United States as a nation, for a relatively small trade ad vantage which will fill their own pockcta Selfishness is a mild term with which to characterize such an attitude. Hes Goliipr After Honornriams. Sheridan Sun. There Is not a man in the state that is better qualified to represent .Oregon in the United States Senate than Hon. Charles "W.. Fulton, of Astoria. There is not a man in Oregon that knows the needs of the state better than does Mr: Fulton. In the choice of a Senator wel want a man who knows the needs of the NO BETTER MAN THAN BARRETT. New York Journal of Commerce." ; In selecting Mr. John Barrett as the successor of Colonel Buck as Minister to Japan' the President has shown a proper sense, not only of the great services which Mr. Barrett has rendered In dis seminating sound views about the com mercial opportunities which the markets of .the Far East offer to the United States, but also of the qualities needed for the protection and furtherance of American interests In the Island Emnlre. Mr, Barrett has shown himself tos.be dfflr!nf nnM.. lu iorca nor suavity, and the one quality Is not less necessary than the other in dealing with a gov ernment like that of Japan, whose sudden elevation to terms of equality with the great Powers of Western civilization has been accompanied by a certain amount of what may be described as "headlines The fact that Jn some lines of Asiatic trade the Japanese and ourselves are rivals merely helps to accentuate the common interest of both in the mainte nance of equality of commercial oppor tunity in China and the consequent ne cessity of opposition on the part of both to any impairment of the territorial In tegrity of that Empire. Nb man who could have been selected for the Japa nese mission has a clearer or mora vig orous comprehension of this ouestlon state and is not afraid to make a ju3t than Mr. Barrett, and It would have been representation for Its claims. If the "Ore. j impossible to find one In closer touch with uary, eees .fit to send Mr. Fulton to Washington It will have elected a man who will see that Oregon gets her Just honorarium. Impervious to Sitle Doors. (Astoria A'storian.) The boy or girl whose home training is what It should be will seldom fall from grace. Children whose parents are lax drift naturally Into- bad company, pnd the back rooms of saloons soon claim them as regular habitues. Many young men fall victims to the temptations which surround them nowadays, but those .who have been jiropcrly reared soon break away from the vicious practices, thoroughly disgusted with the half world. What's bred In the bone will come out in the flesh, and the only safe guard against the downfall of youth Is proper home training. Will Hermann Help Fulton? Salem Sentinel. Exchanges are authority for the state ment that Binser Hermann. Commission er of the General Land Office of the United States, is a candidate for the United States Senate. This Is one of the established facts. It has been an In distinct understanding for many months. Furthermore, unless his plans change, Commissioner Hermann will come out from Washington eoon to attend person ally to his interests as a candidate. It may be, arid probably will be, that Mr. Hermann will stand ostensibly as a pup porter of C. W. Fulton. He will, so it is understood, remain in that column Ions enougn to demand a reward for loyalty end to be In a position to ask for Fulton support in the event .the latter comes to A field of Waterloo. the policy which Secretary Hay has fol lowed In dealing with present problems in tne i?ar iiiast. In the new commercial treaty between our Government and China, now In course of negotiation, it is extremely desirable that an under standing should be reached with Japan In regard to the crucial question of Import duties ana tne price which may properly oe paid ror tne abolition of Hkln. The conditions laid down in tho British ireuiy are as lime satisiactory to mer- cnants in Japan as they are to those Immediately interested in trade with China here, and unless ythe Governments or. ooth countries can agree on some al ternative plan to form a satisfactory substitute for that concluded by Sir James Mackay tho prospect of any essen tial change In the present obstructive system of Internal taxation ih China must be held to be very, remote. No man could possibly have been found better fitted to 'faclltate the work of bringing aoout sucn an understanding than Mr. John Barrett. Susan B. Anthony, in her tribute to Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the founder of the woman's rights party in the United States, does not do Mra Stanton too much honor as a practical agitator and reformer in America, but the first and most original thinker in this direction was Mary Wolstonecraft, the wife of the English radical, William Godwin, and the mother of the second -wife of the poet Shelley. Mary Wolstonecraft was a verl Intellectual woman,, and no woman that has followed her has added anything to her forceful plea for the liberty of woman and her equality in the matter of civic and legal rights. Her Ideas were adopted by the earlier English utilitarians, who inspired John Stuart Mill to advocate woman's rights In England. Congressional Districts for Wash ingrton. Seattle Times, , Senator Tolman, of Spokane County, has a scheme for dividing the state Into Congressional districts that will" probably provoKe a contest If it should be pre sented to the Legislature. . It districts the state as follows: First District. What com, San Juan, Skagit Island, Snohomish Jiltsap and King: Second District Clal lam, Jefferson Chehalls, Mason, Thurs ton, Pierce, Lewis, Pacific, Wahkiakum Cowlitz, Skamania. Clark. Klickitat. Ya kima; Third District, Chelan. Okanogan, kane, .Kittitas, Adams; Whitman, Frank Hn, Walla Walla, Columbia, Garfield, Aso tin. The "second district" described above contains the homes of both Con pressmen Cushman and Jones, and ex. tends from the Straits of Fuca to the Co lumbla River, and seems to go east to the mountains for the purpose of jrather- mg in "Congressman Jones." In the mat ter of population the districts stand as follows: First. 184.S62: second. 162.5S5 tnira, 171,150. It is stated as a matter of news, and evidently also with a. degree of surprise, that the bondsmen of A. J. Nellon. de faulting Sheriff of Lake County, must make good the amount of this officer's defalcation. What, pray, are bondsmen for if not to meet an emergency of this kind? Are names attached to a Sheriff's bond to be considered wholly orna mental? There have been instances (not to go outside of Multnomah County) where this view has received practical indorsement It is gratlfyiner. therefore. to note that a court In Southern Oregon takes the contrary view and affirms the validity of an official bond. Theshortage in the accounts of Sheriff Huntington, of Baker County, grows rapidly under investigation. It is now more 'than three times as large as when first discovered. Carelessness and want of proper- business methods axe the al leged causes of the deficit If this esti mate is correct, the limit to the shortage can only he definitely fixed by the amount of money taken in. Careless- ness alone is an element of mischief the power, of which has been too often tested to admit of a doubt as "to its ability to make an unrecorded outgo overoaiance an accredited income. The official returns show that Gover nor Odell, of New York, obtained a plurality of only 8803 In a total vote of 1,389,799. No wonder both sides were willing to bet on success up to the open ing or the polla It is clear that if the Democrats had not been overconfident through their strength in New York Governor JMcBride Xot the Offensive Spokane Spokesman-Review. Governor McBride la maklnrr no "as sault" upon the railroads. The assault comes from the other side of the field. nas long been notorious that the rail roaas of- this state have assaulted the people's rights, have attacked and cor rupted the legislative body, have arro gated to themselves the control of lecls lation ana tne administration of the laws the election of United States Senators, and the elections In the varlmto rmmMp The Oregonlan's regard for the truth wlli naraiy permit it to deny this alleeatlon The only way In which the advocates of a -state commission design to "assault tne railroads Is the way In -which the railroads have been "assaulted" In Ntvw York. Pennsylvania. Ohio, Massachusetts Illinois, Indjana, Missouri, Iowa, Texas! luicnigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and more tnan a score of other states. The uregonian must know that under tho United States Constitution the laws and tne decisions of the courts, no rallrnnri commission can inflict wronsrs unon common carrier. Its nowers are restrirtpri to tne office of forblddlnsr the carriers tn do wrong to communities and Individual shippera Tho right of appeal to the courts must ever He with the railroads against any finding or decree of a rail roaa commission. Governor McBrlda could not "assault" the railroads if 'fie so desired. Colonel Hifrgrlnson's Experiment. .Boston Herald. Colonel Thomas Wentworth HIgglnson Is preparing a life of the poet Whittler, which promises to be one of his best contribu tions to literature. Recently he was an nounced to talk to the Daughters of Mas sachusetts on "Whittler and His Friends and when introduced he appeared with a large number of closely printed sheets In nis nana. These, he explained, were nroof sneets or ms forthcoming book, and then, thinking, perhaps, some apoloiry was nec essary for what locked like an unexpected cnange in the programme, he said: "You will excuse me for offerlne these sheets. It Is an experiment I tried them on a gathering of Cambridge girls the other day, and they seemed to go all right nut then," he added reflectively, "they were inexperienced. Colonel HIgglnson then read selections rrom the proof sheets, and If the appro bation of the critical, cultured and "ex perlenced" body of women, that heard him can ue taken as a forecast of the verdict of the public, he need have no misgivings as to the success of his new book. York's Falling Water Supply. Philadelphia Record. The city's water suddIv han and Kings County, they would have got matter requiring Immediate attention, out their full vote In the country coun- Mayor Low has appointed a commission ties and won the day. The New York Socialists of all shades and parties polled 39,283 votes, an increase of 12,031 since 1900. When the public elects, not once but again, a man of well-known sportlntr proclivities to a position of public trust it has norlght to be surprised when he la iuuuu tuiiuut, spuria violating the law. If censure, plainly due in this case, is to fall, let it fall upon the voters or the political machine, or whatever in fluences, singly or in combination, con spired to place a "sporty" man in a posi tion of municipal honor . and trust Grapes are not gathered of thorns, nor figs of thistles. of experts to consider and report UDon it The commission is to look into sources of new supply and propose measures for stopping waste. The City Club, throuirh its president, Wheeler H. Beckham. ha5 written to Mayor Low asking for a rmh-l nc nearing. lur. recitnam says that no report of a commission is necessary to enforce the need of stopping the nresent immense waste of water. It will be 1904 before the pendlntr consti tutlonal amendment if adopted, will place the city In a financial position to begin the acquirement of new watersheds. It will be at least 1910, or more nrobahlv 1912, "beforo water from these watersheds can oe delivered to the city. Meantime, and so early as the end. of 1903. the oltv will begin to suffer from a shortasrA nf water. Hence the necessity of an im mediate stoppage of waste. The Sad Case of Castro New York Times. The total amount of the claims, British and German, has not been published. The only available source for meeting them 13 the seizure and, retontlonr by the demon strating naval powers of the customs re ceipts of La Guayra. For the. past six months these have been as follows, In bolivars," worth 20 cents ea.ch, and the figures must therefore be divided by five to reduce them to dollars: My 91.489 June ..687.R7R July : 670.743 August 672.372 September 511,480 ucioDer 708,201 Wei do not undertake to say what tho current Interest may be of all the obliga tions eitner incurred or indorsed by tho Republic of "Venezuela. But it will be seen that they cannot possibly be met by the exlguotis assets in question. It is even doubtful whether the current ceipts of the Collector of La Guayra, even snouid he, contrary to his Instincts and traditions, honestly turn them all in, would meet tb3 current expenses of the warships sent to collect them. The. most promising point of attack is evidently Castro. Castro says that as soon as he proclaims peace he will pay the debts of tne ropuoiic. He has already proclaimed NOTE AND" COMMENT. ; ClrtnA mrrr In cr I TTnva .'Vm'i crrtf- lilll f Second thoughts are an instant too late. The man with a tender conscience is sadly troubled about the other fellow's doings. It is reported that the Kaiser's eye Is still Inflamed. Doesn't Castro know enough to read the political sky? Judge Hogue will hereafter avoid evil companionship. At least, so long as he has to tell all about It the next day. Somebody ought for- the benefit of Portlind diners down town, to overthrow the text, "They also serve who only stand and wait" From a casual glance at the stories of the gambling controversy one might im agine that the police and society copy had got sadly mixed. It takes' nine tailors to make a man, and a look aroun'd the street corners these nights would lead a person to believe that tailors were awfully scarce It Is reported that the ladles of the W. C. T. U. intend to make, it warm for President Roosevelt for rehanglng a pic ture that the organisation disapproves of. Funny that they know so much about It Astoria Is waggling her plank streets and staircase walks with joy over the railroad rumors. But then a rumor drifts In over the town by the sounding sea every time a fog comes In. It will always remain a deep mystery why the gamblers, .who are so patriotic and so honest and so absolutely without reproach, can afford to pay this city so much money to be protected. Let it ba supposed that In the generosity of their hearts they have earned It In legitimate business and only want some not too pub lic way of presenting It to a needy city. It Is a very rare thing for General Baden-Powell to be at a loss for repartee, and his most humorous sayings, are gen erally spoken In a low, even voice, and with a serious look only belied by the twinkling of his eyes. At a luncheon party a celebrated doctor w'as chaffing him. N "And how do you feel when you have killed a man professionally?" he asked. "Oh," sald . Baden-Powell, imperturb- ably, "I don't mind It. How do you feel under the same circumstances." The following Incident Is said to hava occurred in a milliner's shop In London recently: A lady was choosing a hat. with the usual uncertainty of mind as to the kind of hat she wanted or whether, In deed, she wanted a hat at all when, after trying on nearly every model in the shop, she pounceu with glee on one she had overlooked. "Now, this Is something like!" she said. "Why did you not show me this before?" Without waiting for an answer she appealed to her patient friend. "There's some style about this, lsn'l there? How do I look?" The friend distinctly sniffed. "It makca you look a hundred and It's very dowdy," she said. The other tried the hat at another an. gle. "It's rather dowdy," she admitted; "perhaps I won't risk it, after all." A voice from behind her made Its third attempt to gain a hearing. "If you'va address to The VeYezueVan Army mhe' huite ne with.my hat,";it said, .very . best manner of cisatlantic. Castllian riw- bitterly, - snouia ratner nice to pui one, in which he thus proudly perorated: Thus united in the amrile bosom of national confraternity, the work will sprout and bloom. and the manifestations or our culture will shine eternally with Its own light In Time and His tory. In the favorite form of applause of an- otner rnetorlcal race, "Hurroo!" What tne President of Venezuela now appears really to mean, all the same.' is that hn is still douotrul of the Issue. If ho over- comes the rebels,, he will pay the bills of tne uncnivalrous foreigner, even If he has to pay them out of his own Docket: into which a considerable share of the foreign- have straggled. But If the rebels beat mm. and he Is forced to flee for his llf. then he will need his German and British money to cheer and console his declining days in Paris, to which the cruelty of the public creditors will have consigned him, while they go on holding the -port of La uuayra and threatening the walls of Ca racas; What Is the Lynn Canal ?v San Francisco Bulletin. 'Frederick W. Seward, son of the crreat mew xorK benxtor, and Assistant Secre tary or State under his father, has told the public what the Lynn 'canal reallv is. He says: "If the Lvnn rvmnn tc n great estuary, broad and deep, like the lower Hudson or the Delaware. It tra verses Southern Alaska and Ib the chief artery of commerce. ... It Is one of the most Important strategic points on our .Facinc Coast It Is a deeD. wide. semi-circular basin, safe In all weath ers, open to navigation all the year round, wun easy access to the sea. larsre enoueh to float not only trading craft, but the cruisers and battleships of tho British navy." This tells what Lynn Canal really is. vvnat may be made of It Is dis closed by tho statement that " it u nr. rounded by mountain heights which, when iorunea, would render It Impregnable." xne nrmness with which the Canadian Cabinet has refused to reooen neuotia tions concerning trade reciprocity, unless the Alaskan boundary were also Included In the differences which might eventually oe suDmittea to arhitration, warrants the conclusion that Canadian statesmen are better Informed as to the commercial and military- value of Lynn Canal than American statesmen. Our State Depart ment has qecllned to admit that there was a shadow on the American" title to iynn canai, Dut its attitude has not been so positive as to convince Cana dian diplomatists that further negotia tions on that point would be useless. If nothing better could be done, a proposi tion to purchase might receive considera tion. But Mr. Seward's article will set tle for all time the purchase proposition It is one thing to talk about parting with a few square miles of foreign territory and quite another to give title to a body 01 water mat wouia ename the Nation possessing it to dominate the North Pa clllc. To One In Paradise. Edgar Allan Poe. Thou was that all to me. love. For which my soul did pine: A green Isle in the sea, love. A fountain and a shrine All wreathed with fairy fruits and flowers. Ana an in& nowers were mine. Ah, dream too bright to last! Ah, starry Hope, that didst arise But to be overcast! A voice from out the Future cries. "Ont on!" but o'er the Past (Dim gulf) my spirit hovering: lies Mute, motionless, aghast. For, ,alas! alas! with me The light of Life is o'er! No more no more no more (Suoh language holds the solemn sea .. To the sands upon the shore) Shall bloom the thunder-hjasted tree, ur mo siricKen eagie soar. And all my days are trances. nd all my nightly dreams Are where thy dark eye glances,' r And where thjr footstep gleams In what ethereal dances. By what eternal stream. Ifron." Elejry on Shakespeare. Ben Johson. To draw no envy. Shakespeare, on "thy name) Am I thus ample to thy book and fame; While I confess thy writings to be such As neither man nor muse can praise too much. Soul of the age! Th applause! delight! the wonder of our stage! My Shakespeare rise! I will not lodge thee by Chaucer, or Spenser, or bid Beaumont lie A little further, to make thee a room; Thou art a monument without a tomb, And art alive still, while thy book doth live. And we have wits to read, and praise to give, That I not mix thee so, my brain excuses. I mean with great, but disproportion muses; For if I thought my Judgment were of years. I should commit thee surely with thy peers; And tell how far thou didst our Lily outshine. Or sportive Kyd. or Marlowe's mighty line. And though thou hadst small Latin and lesi Greek, From thence to honor thee, I will not seek For names; but call forth thund'rlng Eschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles to us. Pacuvius.. Acclua, vhim of Cordova dead, To live again, to hear thy buskin tread. And shake a stage; or when thy socks were on, Leave thee alone for the comparison Of all that Insolent Greece or haughty Rome Sent forth, or .since did from their ashes come, Triumph, my Britain, thou hast one to show Ta whom all scenes of Europe homage owe. He was not of an age. but for all time! And all the muses still were in their prime. When, like Apollo, he came forth to warm Our ears, or like a Mercury to charm! Nature herself was proud of his designs. And Joyed to wear the dressing of his lines I Sweet swan of Avon! what a sight it wero To see thee in our water yet appear. And make those nignts upon me DanKS oj Thames. That so did take Eliza,, and our James! But stay, 1 see thee In the hemisphere Advanc'd. and made a constellation there! Shine forth, thou star ot poets, and with rage Or Influence, chide, or cheer the drooplns stage. Which, since thy flight rrom hence, nam mourr.'d like night. A"nd despairs day, but for thy volumes light PLEASANTRIES -F PARAGItAPHEIlS Old Lady Does this parrot use any bad lan guage? iJira-ueaier iso m , uui ue a bird and easy taught. Judge. The Author (after the first performance)- Well, what do you think of my play? Fem inine Friend It was Just lovely: wno as signed the heavenly dresses? Brooklyn Life. Mrs. Church Is your husband the kind" of a man who believes In killing two birds with oni stone? Mrs. Gotham Gracious, no! Why, he'i president of the Audubon Society! Xonkeri Statesman. Novelist You rich men should be friends oi literature. Plutocrat You bet! Why, say, s'po3e I've sent out tons of pamphlets aboul my patent pump. Oh. yes, I'm fer literature everytlme! Chicago Dally News. Ethel On Edith's birthday I'm going to semi her three copies of "Cricket on the Hearth." Bertha Why three? Ethel Well, she's senl the book to me for four Christmases now, and it's high time toput a stop to it! Puck. "His retirement from the board was dm entirely to his poor health. "Sure Inert wasn't a squabble of some sort?" "Positive. If there had been a row the papers would have been full of Interviews with the other members expressing their "cordial apprecia. tlon of his services and their regret,' " etc. Philadelphia Press. Thunder and gun3!" exclaimed the old gen tleman, as he was given the bill for his onlj daughter's last gownt "but you cost a pile ol money." "Well, papa." she replied demurely. If you wouldn't sit in the hack parlor with the door open when I am entertaining Mr Blnkley In the front parlor, you'd stand a bet ter chance of getting 'rid of the expense." Chicago Evening Post. Burying on Trial. A Blairgowrie man. ac cording to an English exchange, had married a native of Kirkcaldy. Some years later, when the woman was dying, she said to her husband, "John. I've been a good wife to you, and I want you to do me a favor." "Weel, 'oman. what Is It?" "Weel, John, it's Jlst this, that ye'll bury me among my aln folk at Kirkcaldy," "Hoots, 'pman, it canna be; I tell you it canna be." "Weel, John, If yo dlnna tak' me to Kirk caldy I'll haunt ye; my speerlt 'ill haunt ye." "Aweel. If it comes to that, 'oman, I'll hae to do It; but I'll trye ye in Blairgowrie first."