THE MORNING OBEGONIAN, TUESDAY,, AITGTJST .4, 1903. 'W the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, A , as second-class matter. MtriSED SUBSCRIPTION" BATES. 9r Ms.ll (pottage prepaid In advance) Dotty, with Sunday, per month 50.S5 PcSir, Xttnday excepted, per year I3Ur. with Sunday, per year T WAslrlF a mTitfcY""!I ......... TJr. Jr week, delivered. Sunday excepted. 10c yrweei. aeiiverea, tunaay UK""".-"' f POSTAGE KATES. TJatied State. Canada and Mexico 10 to M-pege paper... ........ ........ .lc 56 te'W-page paper............. 2 to 4 -page paper............... "c Foreign rates double. v livvre or discutrira. Intended for publication 3b Tfc Oregonlan should be addressed lnvarl abjf "'Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name oT Mr Individual, letters relating to subscription, or to any business mimer j k .MrMuA imnlr "The OregonUn. nrn Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 47. 48. 49 - - tmfMlne-. VpW TOrk City: 510-11-12 fTiMHe building. Chicago: the S. C. Beckwith gjwcltl Agency. Eastern representative. Pr sale in San Francisco by I. E. Lee. Pal ette Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 otler street; F, W. Pitts. 100S Market street; 3. K. Cooper Co.. 748 Market street, near the ?felce Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news sad: Frank. Scott. SO Ellis street, and Cheatley, 813 Mission street. Tar sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. M South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. South Spring street. ror sale In Kansas City. Mo., by Ricks ecker dear Co., Ninth and Walnut streets. Tve sale in Chicago br the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street; Charles MacDonald, 53 Washington street, and the Auditorium Annex krwt stand. Tor sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1612 -Jltrnam street; Megeath Stationery Co.. 1308 roam street; Mclaughlin Bros.. 210 S. 14th For sale Li Ogden by W. G. Kind. 114 25th msvitl James H. Crockwell, 242 25th street; T. R. Godard and C. H. Myers. Tor sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake- News Co., 77 West Second South street- .Tor sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett '7 Jfoure news stand. For sale la Denver. Cole, by Hamilton & ., JCendrlck, 800-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan Jt Jackson Book & StaUonery Co.. Fifteenth ,nd Lawrence streets; A Series, Sixteenth and Curtis streats. it- 'H TESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tern Terature. C8; minimum temperature, 52; pro. fcipltatlon, 0. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and slightly "Warmer; northwsterly winds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, AJJGUST 4, THE, TARIFF AS A CONTRACT. It has long been the theory of the pro tected interests that the Government would be guilty of a breach of faith In .summary withdrawal of the duties un der which many of them liave risen from the nursing bottle to their pres ent Titanic mould. This view of the tariff has been especially urged In an tagonism to the pending treaty of so called reciprocity with Cuba, and it is quite in the nature of things to find the American Economist, trusty watchdog of the infants referred to, giving utter ance to itself, 'anent the Cuban treaty. on this wise: Docs it not Involve the violation by the Government of a oontract of agreement with ofrtaln nroduclmr interests of the United States namely, the Dlngley tariff law? It is not our present purpose to inves tigate, or characterize as it deserves, this shameless utterance; but merely to present in antithesis the words of a Republican paper whose loyalty to pro tection no one can question, and whose editorial policy is a thing not lightly determined or blown about by every wave of doctrine. The newspaper re ferred to is the New York Tribune, which speaks thus: "Certain producing interest" have a con tract with the United States, have they? i contract, not that they shall be tased only at a certain rate, or shall not be taxea at an, but that somebody else shall be taxed for their beieflt? For how long does this contract Tim? Have the "certain producing Interests ttpoulred a perpetual lien on the country by the passage of a contract Instrument establish ing nn unchangeable tax? It is much more probable that the opponents of any chango In the ichedules to conform to the Cuban treaty are merely indulging in reckless assertions and advancing groundless claims. Certainly, if there had been any such bargain and eale of th taxinc wiwcr and the establishment of rates on a contract agreement, those who were enjoying the benefit of such a betrayal of nubile trust would be the last to boast of it. If there is any organ of public opin ion in this country deserving a setback. that organ is pre-eminently the Amer ican Economist, which has done the manufacturers of the country more harm through its idiotic efforts in their behalf than any ten free-traders in the land: and if there is any champion of protection qualified to administer that setback, it is certainly the child of Hor ace Greeley. We commend the Trib une's straightforward utterance to those who think that no light Is break intr udoii the tariff question in the United States, and that "reckless asser tions" and "groundless claims" can long continue to pass muster at the valua tion of their authors. REFORM, NEEDLESS .VXD NEEDED Mr. G. Grosvenor Dawes, secretary of the Society of American Authors, afill lated with the "American Author," Mrs. K. P. Ferris, editor, favors us with a circular letter in the Interests of lower postal rates on newspaper correspond ence and manuscripts. It is Incumbent upon us, as we understand It, to fill out and sign an lnclosure which he sends, and which reads as follows: Society of American Authors. 128 Broadway. New York City. You are hereby authorised to mention this periodical, as favoring the proposed referm In the postage rate on newspaper correspondence and manuscripts. Name of Editor. Name of Publication rostotnee State The following members of our staC also per mit the mention of "their names as personally Indorsing the movement: Begretfully, we must beg to be ex cused; and though our heart is not upon our sleeve for Dawes to peck at, the reason Is ready- The rates in question should be raised Instead of lowered. "What Is there. In all the varied assort ment of matter Incumbering Uncle Sam's pouches as they hurry here and there about the country, more heavily fraught with menace to the common comfort than these same letters to the editor and author's manuscripts? "What the authors manuscripts, take them as they run, must be, can only be Inferred from the Infinitesimal fraction of them that get Into print, most of which might better never have been printed. It should be put beyond the iower of nearly every person who perpetrates authors' manuscripts to bring them to the attention of another human being, and especially to compel another hu man being to listen to their contents. If Congress Is really craving sugges tions on the subject and cannot be oth erwise appeased, we are willing to pe tition for the following rates: Advice to young mothers........ ..$1 per pound Mint on health and beauty foods..; per ounce R4toM.dUcKsslos 6 months In Jail HaMcr oil venor Dawes or Mrs. Ferris have been led Into the belief that letters to the editor and authors' manuscripts must have encouragement from the Govern ment or else they trill become extinct. The census shows that they Increased Ithin the past decade, and there are believed to be enough letters to tne editor and unpublished works of gen ius in the postoffices and roallcars now to provide fuel for '7000 years for the uperheated future home of Fro isono Publico, Vox Popull and the lower or ders of poets. If Dawes and Ferris could devise some way of compelling authors and correspondents to prepay the postage on their lucubrations, they ould have an enterprise worthy their most elegant stationery and Illuminated text. THE CALIFORNIA PIONEERS. Among recent deaths Is that of John Carter Wlnans, a leading man of busi ness in San Francisco, who sailed for California from New York with 100 oth ers in February, 1849. when he was but 0 years old. He mined for a year on the middle fork of American River. Then, like most of the Intelligent pio neers of 1S49, he engaged In business. The story of Mr. Wlnans vicissitudes California does- not greatly differ from that of many others who rushed to California in 1849, but it recalls a day of romance that was never known our country before and probably never will be again. The rush of gold- seekers to California was peculiar In this, that It drew into Its flood the most energetic, adventurous spirits of every state in the Union, besides other men of push and venture from Europe and Australia. The result was that the civ ilization and society of San Francisco Included a very large number of men of superior native abllitv and not a few of excellent acquired education and cul ture. The first rush to California in 1849 had among its young men no less than twenty promising graduates of a small New England college. One of these young men was Fred erick Billings, who became president of the Northern Pacjflc. Some of them be came Judges on the highest court of the state: others became City School Super intendents; some became Congressmen; some leading merchants or lawyers. Few of these college-bred pioneers of 1849 returned dispirited to their homes In. New England, and o the few that failed it may be said that dissipation had already marked them for Its own before 1849. The reason why these edu cated men of 1849 generally succeeded In the new and strange land of Califor nia was that they were surrounded on all sides by a circle of men of high native and acquired Intelligence. Every man -of ability at the East who had suf fered a transient reverse of fortune rushed to California. In those days. when it took a six months Journey to reach San Francisco, whether .you went across the country or by sailing vessel. as .many .did, it was a difficult trip in volving considerable hardship, poor fare on shipboard, exposure to disease cross ing the Isthmus, which was then spanned by no railroad. The passage around the "Horn" was rough; the voy age along the coast of South America was tedious, and altogether no puny, faint-hearted fellow was fit for a Call fornla pioneer. The superior quality of the men who were leaders of public opinion in San Francisco on both sides to the famous "vigilance committee rule" of 1S56 shows how attractive California had become to men of superior energy and ability. William T. Coleman, a man of great ability, was firmly upheld as the head of the "vigilantes" by the vast majority of the people, but the opposi tion to his action included General Hal leek, Frederick Billings, General Will lam T. Sherman, T. W. Park, and Ste phen J. Field, afterwards a famous Jus tice oj. tne unuea states supreme Court. The native and acquired ability on both sides of this fatnous struggle was remarkable, and the -native and ac quired ability of the leaders and the rank and file of the "vigilantes" was most remarkable, for their admlnlstra tlon of popular justice Is the only in stance in the history of this country where a "vigilance committee" has per formed Its work with sobriety, delibera tion and respect for the forms of legal justice. The accused were carefully tried; counsel was assigned, witnesses for accused were patiently heard; the jury was carefully chosen and given ample time for deliberation. During their four months of rule, while many were tried, only four men accused of murder were convicted and executed; many scoundrels were ban ished. This unique usurpation of the regular machinery of legal justice which had broken down through a cor rupt and dismantled ballot-box, might have taken place anywhere, so deep was the provocation to popular insur rection, but the surprising thing: was the calmness, dignity and order of the proceedings of this .famous vigilance committee. It was no hoodlum's holi day; no brutal scene of manhunting and street murder by a barbarous mob. It was an organization comrS" of 1030 citizens of San Francisco, who enforced Justice with deliberation, composure, calmness and dignity, taking full time to examine Into the question of the guilt of the accused and giving the ac cused -full time to establish Innocence, The exceptional conduct of this vigi lance committee of San Francisco In 1S56 proves that the Intelligence and force of character of Its leading busi ness classes at that date were most re markable; there Is no parallel to it In the history of our country. In the so called "romantic" history of California there Is nothing more romantic than this page of the vigilance committee of 1S56. The explanation of It lies in the fact that gold discovery sent to Califor nia the best blood and brains of every state In the Union, not excepting Ore gon, which was represented In the early organization of California by men of the quality of Peter Burnett. v The pioneers of California must have Included a very large per cent of very superior men, or the vigilance commit tee of 1856 would have been Impossible. It would have begun and ended In a mere spurt of mob fury. The gold fever drew this remarkable .class of superior men to California, but Its climate, its soil and its scenery kept them there. The timber resources, the wheat and fruit productiveness, of California made it a pleasant and profitable land to stay with when the rich placer gold wealth of the state no longer tempted a. general rush to the mines. The day of 1849. the men of 1S49, will never be seen again in this country. If Alaska today was known to be far richer In placer gold than California was in 1S49, no such class of pioneers would sek her shores as flocked to California, after the first great d is coven, because Alaska In cli mate and all material conditions Is too Inaccessible and uninhabitable to tempt the superior class of men in intelli- hurried to California, and outside of Alaska there Is no section of our coun try that promises any unlooked-for dis covery of rich and .extensive . deposits of gold. The days of 1S49 and the re markable men of 1849 have gone, never to return in this country. - EFFECT OF "ft'ORTHLESS STATIS- TICS. The course of the wheat market for the past three months has most effectu ally illustrated the uselessness of the present methods employed by the Agri cultural Department" in collecting sta tistics. The superabundance of red tape and the lamentable lack of results of any value whatever have long been the chief characteristics of "this department of the Agricultural Bureau. As a haven into which place-hunters could drift in the absence of anything- better, it has performed a mission, but for present ing to the grain trade and the farm ers anything like accurate statistics or comment regarding the coming crops it has been a conspicuous failure. The percentages of condition returned by the Agricultural Department In Its April report were such as to Indicate a Winter wheat yield of 5S0.000.000 bush els. This, with 300.000,000 bushels of Spring wheat, a smaller yield than was turned off in either of the preceding years, wbuld have given us a total of 880,000,000 bushels, or about 100.000,000 bushels more than the largest crop on record. One hundred million bushels of wheat In any country, when piled on top of the largest crop on record, will break the market, and under the pressure of these decidedly bullish crop reports of the Government wheat sold down to the wrong side of 70 cents, and minions oz bushels of the old crop moved out of farmers' hands on a 70-cent basis. Some of this wheat was consumed by our own people, and they probably ap preciated Its cheapness, but a good many million bushels were sent to Eu rope, where the buyers made the most of the glowing Government report and hammered the American market with the very implement the Americans themselves had placed in their hands. Simultaneously with the disappearance of the reserves of old wheat began coming the reports that the new crop was being grossly overestimated, wher ever the 'percentages of the Government agents were being used. In the Pacific Northwest, where the evidence was be fore us, the error was palpable, for at no time during the entire season has the condition of the crop warranted such a high percentage as was given it In" the reports in the early Spring. Since the1 threshing returns have be gun coming, the glaring discrepancy between what the Government prom Ised and what was actually produced has caused a sharp rebound In the mar ket. It has moved up steadily but surely from 6S cents per bushel to better than SO cents, and this In the face of persistent bearish tactics in the European market Liverpool buyers taking the Government reports seri ously, or at least endeavoring to make sellers believe that they so regarded them. Perfect accuracy cannot be claimed or expected In forecasting the whea,t yield of a country as large as the United States, but It would not seem unreasonable to expect something a lit tle better than a percentage estimate which would indicate an 880.000,000- bushel yield when as a matter of fact the actual out-turns will show about 220,000,000 bushels less than that amount. This vast shortage might be in a measure excusable had there been a widespread blight on the crop, or generally unfavorable conditions ex tending over a wide scope of country. Such conditions have not been noted. There are the usual complaints of too much rain here, a 'drouth there, the Hessian fly, rust and other stereotyped causes that annually take something from the yield and keep It in propor tions which prevent unprofitably low prices. Summed up In figures, It would seem that the American farmers have lost 200.000,000 bushels of wheat which the Government declared they would have in addition to an average big crop. They have also lost about 10 cents per bushel through selling their old wheat at a price based on the presence of that mythloal 200.000,000-bushel excess. It Is reported that Secretary of Commerce Cortelyou Is desirous of adding the Bu reau of Statistics to his department. It Is to be hoped that he will get It, and that it will prove of more value than under the present administration. SEX IX IXDCSTRY. The Massachusetts Bureau of Statis tics recently issued a special report on "Sex In Industry." Though this sub ject, with Industrial conditions in Mas sachusetts as a basis. Is not a new one, this latest report presents many points of Interest that, both from a social and an economic standpoint challenge at tention. An encouraging feature of the report Is that which shows that- more than SS per cent of the women workers of the state are unmarried. This Is certainly creditable, since It distinctly proves that the far greater number of men who have undertaken to found families and maintain, as the main- spring of domestic order .and control therein, wives and mothers, free from the wage-earning necessity, are fulfill ing their . obligations. Much has been said in the pulpit and by social and moral reformers about divorce as an element that Is undermining American homes. Without stopping to discuss this question, it may be said that tire neglected homes and untrained children that are to be found In every urban community are more directly due to the necessity that has pushed married women out into the world as wage earners than to any other cause. And further and the records of the courts will sustain this statement a large pro portion of the divorces for which wives apply are based upon the plea of "fail ure to provide." It Is gratifying to note, therefore, that but 15 per cent of the vast army of women workers In a great manufacturing state are mar ried" women, who, under a mistaken sense of duty, are enduring domestic conditions that Involve the maintenance of husbands who are unwilling or un able to support them and their children. Let us hope that of this 15 per cent of earning married women the larger part belong to the professions, since this presupposes that few or no children have been born to them and that as a matter of choice they are teachers or are sharing the professional labors of their husbands In offices. According to this report, there Is a grand total of nearly 200,000 working or earning women in Massachusetts. Of this number, more than one-half work In factories. Of the remainder, a con siderable number have entered occupa-v tlons hitherto exclusively reserved by custom for "men and boys. For exam ple, there are 727 women employed as messengers and errand girls;. 44 .as hacK drivers; 245 as photographers; 5 as steamfitters; 7 as marble-cutters; 10 as brlckmasons, and-crowning Innovation and wonder of all 5 as butchers! The investigation of the question of sex in industry as set forth In this report is said to have disclosed a confident feel ing concerning the economic positions and prospects of the .women workers of Massachusetts. Very many are said to prefer the freedom that an income of their own earning brings to the re strictions of the marriage tie. This is the real source of menace to domestic life that has been evolved from Indus trial conditions that have .pushed women out into the field of wide en- deavor as wa ire -earners. The economic I. conditions of Massachusetts make that state a rich field for the Investigation of this subject First the fishing In dustry or hair a hundred and more years ago depleted through disaster and absence the male population of the sea- coast; then the great West opened and absorbed myriads of young men who found New England agriculture slow and unremuneratlve. Necessity, urged the surplus women left by these condi tions out into the labor field, the great factories with their enormous and grow ing demands absorbed them, and cus tom adjusted Itself to the new condi tions. This Is the brief outline of the story which makes "Sex In Industry" a subject of Investigation by the Bureau of Statistics. JAPAX TO EDUCATE CHINA. The Influence of Japan is reported as having grown greatly In China since 1900. A very large number of Japanese have sought residence in Northern China. There are more than 1300 in Tien Tsin and more than 500 in Pekln. Ja pan's agents are trying to win the con fidence of the great progressive Vice roys, Chang Chi Tung and Yuan Shi Kal. Several Chinese officials of rank have visited Japan during the last few years. They were warmly welcomed and the Japanese authorities sought to impress them with the community of Interests between the two countries. It is said that Japan is seeking to effect a reorganization of the Chinese army that there are many Japanese instruct. ors in the army, who have superseded Europeans who were in the service be fore the Boxer war. The Imperial University at Pekin has been reorganized by the Japanese. There are today 2000 Chinese students living In Tokio, and among them are the children of some of the highest offi cials and nobility. Japan's ultimate ob ject, it is said, is to obtain an alliance with China on the plea that together they could better resist the aggres slon of Western powers. Japan's rapid rise In fifty years has Impressed many prominent Chinamen, who recognize the helplessness of their own country by the easy capture of Pekln. If this policy Imputed to Japan should ever take shape In a military reorganization of China add an offensive and defensive alliance between the two nations, It would upset the dream of any partition or absorption of China by the Western world. The only question is whether nut of the millions of China a grea army could be raised and put In as good military condition as Is the Japanese army. The Japanese through the Malay strain in their bjood are an Intensely wariine people, une umnese as a peo ple are peace-loving, but they include thousands of warlike tribes In their four hundred millions. Whether Japan could turn the Chinese masses into for- mldable soldiers Is a question open to doubt, although European officers have made excellent soldiers of many Asiat ics. Still in India the Bengalese were never a fighting race, and cannot be made into soldiers today, although they are the most Intellectual people In In dia In trade, business and all the af fairs of civil life. The payroll of pensioners on account of the war with Spain now approxi mates $2,700,009. The war with Spain employedfewcr than 275,000 men. The losses by death fell short of 3000, and yet today, when the war with Spain is not yet five years past, the number of pensioners created by that war are esti mated to exceed 14,250. The Civil War engaged the services of more than 2,213,000 men, and of these only 1.727.000 survived the contest Five years from the close of the Civil War the disburse ments for pensions were a little more than $29,351,000, and this included the pensioners of the Revolution, the War of 1S12, the Florida War and the war with Mexico. The pension roll in 1S6S contained but 126,722 names, and the total number of pensioners created by all our wars, down to the outbreak of the Spanish War, and still on the roll. Is estimated at 990,000. If the list chargeable to the Spanish War grows In like proportion with the Increase of the Civil War pension roll In thirty- eight years, we may expect a pension list In 1937, due to the Spanish War alone, of H1.007, or. about, four pension ers to every ten men engaged. The fol lowing table shows at what a pace the pensions In the war with Spain have swelled: Fiscal Applications .?r- Erant 1900 1001 1511 .4212 1V02 ........ 1K03 (incomplete).. .4530 .4S00 There are now on hand -about 45,000 applications; 10,500 have come in within the last six months. Nearly S000 claims have been rejected in a single year. Russia, It is said, has sent Cossacks into Thibet instead of the promised geologists. It would be quite possible to -scratch a Russian geologist and find a soldier, but merely waste of time to scratch a Cossack in the hope of find ing a geologist The Pride of Maryland. Baltimore Herald. Maryland has 233" square miles of wa ter. 2000 of which are salt- " ine t;nesa- peake Bay Is a great river valley," de clared Professor Brooks, of Johns Hop kins University; "not as large as that of the Nile or Ganges, but of enough conse quence to play an Important part in hu man affairs, to support In comfort and prosperity a population as great as that of manv states." Along the bottom of Maryland's 2000 square miles of salt water crawl several hundred million crabs. Every year 30. 000.000 are caught seat to the market and devoured, bringing the people of the state a revenue equal to some gold mines. Yesterday the visitors from every part of the United States ate a few crabs, but bless your soul! they only consumed about 50,000! They did not even touch the normal catch, much less the natural sup-olv- So. In wishing them Godspeed to day, we beg to remind them that Mary land has yet millions or crans to wcicn they may return. And crabs, it should be remembered. make only one small Interest In this great state, which has more things to orrgrtfor the comfort and "delectation of mankind than any commonwealth In tho world. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS, neppaer Doiajc "Well. Heppner Gazette. Strange to say, notwithstanding the Heppner disaster, the volume of business here for the month of July just closed has been greater than the corresponding month of last year. Heppner la the logi cal business point of Morrow County and will continue to be one of the best towns In the Northwest. No Use Flaying; at Seattle's Game. Newberg Graphic "If Seattle knows it, Portland will not at tain any undue notoriety, even from her merry carnival of hold-ups. No sooner has attention been attracted to criminal conditions in our metropolis than reports from the Windy City .loom up In a way tbat Indicates that there Is also something doing up that way. A good brand ot Seattle enterprise. Not Popular With the Democrats. Albany Democrat. Tho new chairman of the Republican party of Oregon Is a dandy. The Republi cans of Polk aro In open rebellion. Every respectable Republican -in the stato feels insulted, and they ask. What next? The party has' received many Insults from Its leaders of late, but this one transcends all the others in impudence. It should mean victory for the Democracy at the next election. "Up to the Courts. Tillamook Herald. Every time a negro oversteps the bounds of civilization and humanity, and every lynching that takes place, widens the orcuuu uciwrai we ftiiuca anu uiacms ui our country, and brings nearer tho crisis that is sure to come it something of a de cided nature Is not done by the courts to punish these brutes without making it necessary for the people to take a hand In it themselves. About What Will Happen. Jacksonville Times. The Oregonlan struck tho keynote when It said the negroes have the remedy In their own hands to stop the burning of their race at the stake, and that is tq stop committing the unutterable crimes of which they are guilty. If they are pos sessed of-human instincts they will de sist of their 6wn accord; but if not they will and should go to the burning stake, even to extermination. The Difference. Salem Statesman. A "small" farmer living a few miles" from Portland reports that he netted 5150 an acre off his 15-acre strawberry patch. He manages his place in a sys tematic way and makes tho ground pro duce him a profit instead of little or nothing. Hon. Alexander La Follett who farms it a few miles below Salem, made one-third of an acre of Logan ber ries yield him 300 crates, which brought him $450; some farmers get practically nothing from the same size piece of ground. Why the difference? One does things, the other does not A Great Fair. Whatcom Reveille. It will be a great Fair in more respects than one. It heralds the day long looked for when old Oregon was to become the: gateway to the world's greatest trade, and the key to the hoarded stores o un counted centuries. The present develop ment is more than a fulfillment of the rosiest dreams of the hardy pioneers of a half century ago. They drove the fur- trader out to make way for the forward march of civilization. The young man can go no farther West The wilderness has been conquered. Tho Anglo-Saxon has planted himself on the ocean barrier across which the theater of the struggle of the ages Is about to be transferred. and there he and tho Slav must finish the contest and decide which Is to Im press his civilization on the future cen turies. Where their forefathers parted 50 centuries ago they are gathering again for the greatest struggle In all the his tory of human endeavor. The western shores of America must become the point where population will mass itself while the world Is In tho throc3 of the final tragedy. Journalism Under Dlfflcuiilen. Castle Rock Advocate. With this Issue, my connection with the Cowlitz Advocate ceases. My lease ex pires with the month, and the party own ing the plant Informs me tnat ne nas soia it Looking back over tho past two years, I am somewhat proud of my success, When I took charge of the Advocate it encountered opposition for the first time in its career. With the assistance of wife and daughter, and by persistent effort, worklnc early and late, sometimes 16 and even 20. hours a day, the opposition was overcome and this paper had a clear field acaln. The advertising patronage had In creased to such an extent tnaL it was my Intention to double the sizo ot the paper at the commencement of my third year. This unexpected sale to other parties Is thorpforo a stactrennt: blow, out l am scotched, not killed, and although labor lnir under the further disability of a brok en arm. will be heard from within the next 30 days. Sincere thanks are extended to all Datrons for the hearty support giv en me In the oast and for the many kind expressions of sympathy extended to mo and mine In this aisasier. Ana now, not farewell, but au revoir. Oregon's Dlnner-Pnll In Full. Baker City Democrat A "Baker City business man who has just returned from Portland reports that mldsummectrafflc In the metropolis Is innrer than for several years past al though the city appears to be somewhat quiet The wholesale and jobbing mer chants are . sending out a tremendous lot ot goods and the railroad tracks leading to Portland are crowded with cars loaded with merchandise and supplies of all Mnc Tf -irniilrl nnnear that a oerlod of r,m,mriK- not before known In the North west Is at a nign stage touuj. xtuhwhu has just marketed a large wheat crop and the new crop will soon be coming-in. The record of ships arriving and departing at the port of Portland shows a greater ton nage than at any of the other Northwest ports and crop reports show a decrease ot the grain business In California. With fruit Increasing in tonnage and impor tance in Oregon as against all competi tion on the Pacific Coast and with manu facturing in the Inland Empire on the rapid increase. Baker City being In the lead, the'most casual observer can draw but one'concluslon Oregon is the coming state and the Inland Empire Its richest section. With a Native Product. Anaconda Standard. His speech of yesterday would Indicate that the King is leaving no Blarney stone unturned In his efforts to placate the Irish somehow. Vesper. William Ernest Henley. A- late lark twitters from the quiet skies Ar-rt tram the west. Where the sun, his day's work ended.. Lingers as in content There falls oa the old. gray city An Influence luminous and serene, A shining peace. The smoke ascends In a. rosy-and-goMen haze. The spires Ehlne. and are changed. In the valley Shadows rie. The lark sings on. The sun. Closing his benediction. Sinks and the darkening air Thrills with s. sense of the triumphing night Night, with her train of stars And her great gift of .sleep. So be my passing! ( ily task accomplished and the long day done, ily wages taken, and In. my heart Some late lark singing,. Jjtt' me be gathered la the quiet west. The sundown splendid and serene. Death. BSE OF JUSTICES' COURTS. Dallas (Texas) News. The. Denver Post is stoutly opposed to the institution known as the Justice of the Peace. It argues that Justice of the Peace Courts are a relic of rude old Eng lish times retained in the American ju dicial machinery. Tney are essentially ru ral in their character and usefulness, and a good thing In a -village has become a grotesque nuisance In the large cities. In the first 'place. MtUe dinky courts, with their mimicry of the majesty of tho law. sow seeds of disrespect for justice. In many cities Justices' Courts have becomo a mongrel of the methods of the puller-ln, the point of view of parasites of the under world and the cheap but cruel wiles of the professional bleeders of poverty and ig norance. Courts soliciting business and pledging their decisions as a bait for shy ster lawyers; courts working the county for fees by dint of fake cases; the veriest offal of justice these courts. "Courts that smell bad, both figuratively and In fact with hyena and jackal Constables! Such has been the . experience in almost every large city in this country, resulting cither In the downright abolition of the foul thing or placing the Justices and Con stables squarely on salary without the sniff of a fee. Such is the arraignment of the Justices of the Peace by the Denver contempor ary, and, as such courts have been con ducted In some of the larger cities by de voted servants and favorites of tho "ma chines" and the "rings," there Is ground for the grave accusations presented. There -are notorious instances in which such courts, when manned by the vicious ele ment, have even played Into the hands of tne professional violators of the law. But the samft mav he s.ild of other courts and ot other public officials. There are some bad eggs in almost every basket General results rather than special Instances must be considered In the first place, the Justice's Court should be properly manned. It should have as magistrate a man who is competent industrious and reliable. Such a man to take over and consider the minor contro versies between neighbors, or to decide upon the less Important violations of the law, fairly and promptly, is ono of tho peacemakers, and is a telling force in the kind of civilization of which we boast Jus tices Courts when wisely and fairly con ducted are tribunals not of little Import ance, but of the greatest importance. While, as the Post says, such court Is a relic of rude old English times, It may be added that there Is not a country on earth, with even the semblance of order, in which a prompt peacemaker of the same kind has not been found necessary. There is room for great improvement both as to methods and as to men. Some Justices are a reproach to the communities in which they do a disgraceful business. The chief trouble Is that Incompetent men are chosen. There are other common mis takes that arc being made; but where It 13 possible to avoid these the service per formed by the Justice of the Peace of the right strips Is a service of the greatest value to any people who stand committed to local self-government ELIMINATION OF SPECULATION. Chicago Tribune. The figures printed In Saturday's Trib une show that railroad stocks whose par value Is $3,490,000,000 can be bought today for $1,122,000,000 less than It would have cost to buy them a year ago. Industrial stocks with a par value of $2,520,000,000 are cheaper by $544,000,000 than they were in July, 1902. The public, being less fever ishly speculative and better Informed at the present time, is of the opinion .that certain securities are worth $1,766,000,000 less than those who owned them a year ago tried to persuade the community they were worth. One Inference to be drawn from the in teresting figures Is that the men who bought securities a year ago and still hold them think the country is in a baa way. If they wish to sell they will have to do so at a loss. If they wish to bor row money on their stock they cannot borrow so much as they could when they bought it If they can hold on to their securities without Inconvenience they may take, comfort In the hope that In the course of time, when the properties represented by the stocks increase in value, or when there is a revival of spec ulation, prices will advance and they may be able to sell without a loss. The holders of a large proportion ot the stocks of railroad and Industrial com panies got them for prices much below those which obtained In the Summer of 1902. and ought to be able to view with comparative unconcern the present low quotations. They cannot sell their hold lngs to so good an advantage as a year ago. but quite possibly they do not care to selL More or less money has changed hands as the result of the decline in prices, The bears have been making money and the bulls have been losing It but the transfer of cash from one set of specu lators to another set ot speculators Is of real Importance only to the individuals concerned. The "lambs" havo lost com paratlvely little by the slump In prices. for they have been out of the market for some time, and the heaviest losers have been people who could stand it If there had been an actual shrinkage In values of $1,766,000,000 there would have been a panic here and abroad. Instead of a shrinkage of values there has been only a shrinkage of speculation, which has had no bad effect on the business in terests of the country. The Cnrlous Crowd. Tacoma Ledger. On Friday there was a dreadful acci dent at Portland. Crowds had gathered to see an armless man perform the feat of swimming across the Willamette. Many of these congregated on the bridge. and the structure fell with them Into the river. The first report of fatalities was appalling, and while the actual facts will bo less In the mortuary total, they will be greater than should have occurred, The accident must be classed among the preventable ones. In the first place, there are engineering tests to determine the strength of a bridge", and no such struc ture ought to be overloaded. But why should any crowd desire to witness the spectacle of an armless man swimming a river? There is nothing to be learned from It There Is no value to be attached to .the circumstance that man under this disadvantage can do the swimming, for the ordinary person has two arms, and the average armless per son, having to cross a stream, has the Judgment either to walk or to hire a boat The supposition was that this effort would lead to a tragedy. The crowd had no thought that its own members would he the victims of the tragedy. The gather Ing was Inspired by a possibility, vaguely realized, that an armless man was to risk his life, and that 'there would be a chance to see him drown. This Idea was not definitely formulated, but it wag the basic idea of the occasion, as of all similar occasions. Pope Leo's Poem on Death. (Another translatiom) The westering sun draws near his cloudy bed Leo, and gradual darkness veils thy head; The sluggish life-blood In thy withered veins More slowly runs Its. course what then mains; Lo! Death Is brandishing his fatal dart. And the grave yearns to .shroud, thy mortal part; But from Its prison freed, the soul expands Exulting pinions to the enfranchised lands. My weary race Is run I touch the goal; Hear, Lord, the feeble pantlngs of my soul; If it .be worthy.' Lord, thy pitying breast Welcome It unto everlastlnr rest! May I behold thee. Queen of earth and sky, "Whose love enchained the demons lurking nigh , - " The nath to heaven: and freely shall I own Twas thy sweet care that gained my blissful crown! NOTE AXD COMMENT. . Florida will send a five-legged cow to the St Louis exhibition. Somq ot our chickens could beat that. Japan is taking her placa among the great producing nations. One of her pro- " fessors has discovered a comet A column of stuff from Corbett's train ing quarters is aptly headed by the Den ver Times, "Where Dope Is King." And so a burial association in Kansas turned out to be a drinking club. Bury ing care instead of the careless, so to say. A flatboat theater Is cruising on the Ohio. A good point about it is the facil ity with which the show can be moved on by simply cutting the cable. A letter-carrier ran so fast after a Brooklyn street-car that he died after catching it. It is not often that a man dies In the moment of his supremest achievement Kansas City papers continue to joke about the marriage of the local "60)." So fqr none of them has said that she has exchanged the troubles of other people for troubles of her own. The Denver Times comes out with the announcement that a "prominent educa tor surprised his friends by marrying." An accompanying photograph of the edu cator is perhaps meant as an explanation of the word "surprise." The Fopnlarlty Jack. Tho Indianapolis News offers a prico for the most popular officer in the National Guard's encampment The men are to vote on tho matter. Scene: The Camp. Officer (with mind on tho prize): Gentlemen o the company kindly give mo your '"shun." : If sufficiently prepared, may I ask you to "guide right." Now may I trouble you to comply with tho request, "front." Pardon me If I ask you. provided you have no objection, to pay attention to the wish. fours right; guide right; march." Gentlemen. If you have walked far enough. might I desire you to "halt?" Thank you, gentlemen, for your attention, and remember that I am anxious to havo your votes for the Xews' prize. . Tennyson and the EuKles. Tennyson must have been thinking of Deputy State Grand President Flynn when he wrote "The Eagle: a Fragment": He clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun In lonely lands. Hinged with the azure world he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls Then like a thunderbolt ne falls. It was unlike Tennyson to leave untidy fragments littered over the crags, and It is solely In view of his usual good conduct that we take the trouble to give his slip shod work an artistic finish. The Eagle's name was Charles I. Flynn. His face was wrinkled in a grin. His ears were deafened by the din. He flapped his wings and backward flew, Back to his Baker's lofty blue: "There. That'll show 'em who Is who' Oregon's Xest of glnplng Birds. It seems that Mount Hood Is not the solo Insplrer of poetry In the state. There are other objects as grand, and one of them Is the Chief of Police ln this our City of Port land. A correspondent another modest person, hiding his Identity under the Ini tials "A. V." sends In a wad of poetry which Is of high merit, although lacking the lofty abstraction of the ode to Mount Hood, published in this column on Sun day. Tho first stanza follows. It Is evi dently supposed to be a soliloquy by Chief Hunt: "Where Is row the merry party I remember long ago Sitting round the office table, gladdened by the champagne s flow Planning how we'd win the battle Sharing equal every way But they've gone & do not know mo Far away far away Now they've gone & do not know me Far away far away There Is more, but It does not sustain tho level of the stanza quoted. The California Convict. As proof of his Insanity, the authorities say that a Russian nobleman tested his marksmanship by using as targets the peasants on his estate. It is difficult to see any trace of Insanity in this. Indeed, what better or more practical targeU could there be? Tho convict Is a naughty man. And not the least bit nice; He has a horrid jail-break plan. It might be called a vice. He leaves his friends, the guards, behind; His words are almost curt; He doesn't really seem to mind How much their feelings hurt. He leaves the armory bereft Of half Its stock of guns Such conduct might be classed as theft And then he runs and runs. The eoldlers ask him to come back. And yield his warlike loot; He merely says "Get oft the track. Or pretty soon I'll shoot." (His language Is not so polite. In fact. I fear he swears; But then no prison system's rlgnt, They leave out hymns and prayers). And so the convict runs away From those that wish him well: It seems It may be wrong to say He's on the road to perdition. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS. He I'd like to meet Miss Bond. She Why? "I hear she has thirty thousand a year and no Incumbrance." "Is she looking for one?" Life. "I think I'm not hard to get along with." "Faith, nayther am I. mum! "Whin a mlsthress is doln' her best, 't Is mesilf thot overlooks lots av things!" Puck. "I never heard Dlnsmore acknowledge that he was growing old before today?" "How did be acknowledge it?" "He announced that he felt Just as young as he ever dld.'V-Detrolt Free Press. "Bridget," queried Mrs. Scribble, "do you know why I am called a literary woman?" "Tlssum, Ol fink Ol do." responded the menial, with a despairing look at the room. Houston Post. Church "What an awful odd-looking hat Flatbush wears now! Don't you remember how natty be used to look? Gotham Oh. didn't you hear about it? He's come Into a lot of money. -Tonkers Statesman. The Yankee See here. Colonel Bluegrass baa forged my name to a check. The native Well, take my advice and say nothing". The Colonel is a dead shot, and always ready to uphold his honor. Kansas Independent. Miss Uptosnuff Yes; Clarence has been duly Inspected by the whole family, and It has been officially decided that I may marry him. It la clearly proved that none of his folks are con nected la any way with the United States Postal Department. Baltimore American. May He's awfully nervy. He tried his best to find out how old I am. Fay Yes. he ad mitted that to me. May And Just for fun 1 told him I was 34. Did he tell you thatl FayXo; but he did say you were the moat truthful girl he bad ever met. Philadelphia Press. The New Generation. He Yes, I suppose It was awfully good of the "governor" to leave me this place; but I don't care for it. He was too practical a man to have really good taste. She Still you ought to be glad to have a. placa Uke this to rest In "after your father's labors. Brooklyn "Life. Against the Sherman Law. "Hortense"" murmured the fond youth, "would you give nia a penny lor my thoughts V "Wllmot," aha replied with an arch look, "I fear such a pro ceeding would be contrary to the law. You know it Is held, illegal to control the enUr output ol any Industry." Judge. .It to .lve Mfag