THE MORNING OREGON IAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1903. , tie xzgcvaan Entered at the Pcstofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION" RATES. Br Hall (postage prepaid In advance) Bally, with Sunday, per month.. ril Dally, Sunday excepted, per year - Dally, with- Sunday, per year Sunday, per year, rrr The Weekly, per year -J The Weekly. 3 months M To City Subscribers . tally. ntr week, delivered, Sunday excepted.l5c Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.-oc POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to J i-page paper......... . ...lc IBto 20-page paper.... ..........c 52fto -44-page paper......... ....... .-.-.So Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended' for publication in The Oregonlan should be -addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name oj any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription, or to any business matter hould be addressed simply. "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories trcm 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. 45, 47, 48, 49 Tribune Building, New York City: 510-11-12 Tribune Building. Chicago: the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Sutter street; F. W. Pitta. 1003 "Market street: J. K. Cooper Co.. 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear.' Ferry news tand; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley, 13 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 205 South Spring street. For sale In Kansas City. Mo., by Ricks ecker Cigar Co., Ninth and .Walnut streets. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street: Charles MacDonald. 63 Washington street, and the Auditorium Annex Hews stand. For sale In Minneapolis by M. J. Kavanagb, 60 South Third street; For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Famam street; Megeath Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam street; McLaughlin Bros.. 210 S. 14th street. For sale in Ogden by W. G. Kind. 114 21th street; James H. Crockwell, 242 25th .street; F. R. Godard and C H. Myers. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 West. Second South street. For sale In Washington. D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For saie In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 006-912 Seventeenth street: .Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth ad Lawrence streets: J. S. Lowe, 1520 faeven teeth street, and Julius Black. - YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 04" degrees; minimum temperature, 40. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and warmer; northerly winds. t JPORTLAA'D, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30. WRONG OX BOTH SIDES. We shall mention only to condemn the riotous acts of the Soo laborers. They have earned the punishment of the law and they are in a fair way to get it The way to collect wages or any other debt in this country is not to organize mobs and wreck property. They are wrong:, their conduct Is Indefensible. And yet the fair-minded man can but see that all the wrong: Is not on their side. The dispatches say that this mob of rioters consists chiefly of ignorant Italians, Finns, Norwegians and Frenchmen. It 1s not to be supposed that they apprehend the majesty of the law as fully as It Is understood and venerated by the educated American. They are ignorant. All they know is that they were promised wages and the promise has been broken. The "Wall street difficulties of Lake Superior Con solidated are unknown to them. They are broke. They are hungry. They are readily Influenced by the hot heads among them who counsel violent re venge. If men of wealth and power could only find it in their hearts to sympa thize with the poor and helpless; if men of education could summon up the. resolution to look at things as they must appear to the Ignorant foreigner, unused to our language, our ways and our fine financial operations, there "would be less arrogance on the one hand and Jess bitter resentment on the other. Perhaps, also, there would be less putting men to work when there Is no money on hand to pay them with. HOW TO SUPPRESS GAMBLING. District Attorney Jerome, of New York, has been taking soundings of the situation since the moral wave brought in' by Mayor Low's administration sub Sided, and he is enabled to announce that the gambling-houses are again "wide open." A little while ago the District Attorney , instituted active pro cedure against the gamblers, broke into their establishments, scared some of them out of town and collected from others large sums in fines, forfeitures and confiscations. For a time all went swimmingly. Now he reports that again the "games are wide open." This is not an unprecedented experl-. ence. It is, in fact, so far as American cities are in general concerned, the rec ord of, all precedents. Reform ls spas modic, normal conditions are the con tinuance of mankind In the Vices which It craves. The man of 21 who wants to gamble or get drunk, the woman of 18 who Is unwilling to practice chastity can rarely be restrained by courts and policemen for any great length of time. Sometimes a chagrin at- this spasmodic system Impels municipal authorities to adopt a steady policy of stated fines with modified privileges. This, however, is not the point of the' story. "What. is. significant is the con clusion that District Attorney Jerome draws from his discovered state of facts. He is against Mayor Low, but it does not occur to him to denounce the Mayor as the author of the gambling Tevival or call upon all good citizens to join Tammany Hall as a means of civic righteousness. He recognizes, instead, that if gamblers are to be convicted as well as arrested, his own responsibil ity in the matter Is not to be evaded. This, therefore, is what he says: I have spent tho money I received last In securing evidence against the gambling houses and closing them. I have been kept In touch with the gambling situation, and know what should be done. I am reliably Informed that the gambling houses in- Man hattan are wide open now, and I want to get the money so that I can go against these places as I have gone before. The fact that District Attorney Man ning has done nothing to suppress gam bling in Portland, if emphasized, as The Oregonlan is endeavoring to emphasize it, will Increase the sense of obligation to him felt by the gamblers of this city, and may not be distasteful to him as he reflects upon the political possibili ties of future elections. This is unfor tunate, because we have the right to look for the Jerome quality in Prose cuting Attorneys as we look for Seth Low qualities in Mayors; but it is not so unfortunate or unfair as is the per sistence of reformers in ignoring the District Attorney and putting all re sponsibility on the Mayor. The fire that, fed on the tules, dry grass and hay of Chewaucan Marsh, in Lake County, in the southeastern part of this -state, raged fiercely for many hours last Monday, is the most disas trous blow that the livestock interests of that section have suffered for many years. The nature of the swamp floor, which is of sod from ten to twelve Inches in depth, and the growth, dry as tinder, that covered it, gave both sub stance and wings to the. fire. The ra pidity with which the flames spread and the hold which the Are took upon the tangled m'at of dry roots which com posed the sod defied the most heroic efforts of the farmers and ranchmen to check Its progress. When it is stated that thousands of tons of hay were con sumed with the' standing! growth of" the great swamp, the extent bf'the disaster to a section where the Winter is severe arid cattle-raising, the chief industry may be understood. SCARECROWS UNDRESSED. . We must resist the advances of Rus sia In China, we are told, because the humane and progressive spirit?" of the Dowager Empress must - not be ex changed for the murderous and con servative policy of the-Czar. Russian domination will not increase business, China will continue to invite the foreign devil to her domain and give him every facility for "trade and comfort This is not the most convincing line of thought in the "world, but It is a miracle of logic compared with the view that the development of Mongolia and Manchuria by Russian enterprise will injure the United States by depriving it of trade it might-otherwise ha"ve had with these Chinese provinces. It has been seriously contended that Russia can ship grain from Odessa to Man.: churia, 6000 miles more or less, by rail, and drive out American wheat and flour going from Portland or Puget Sound in ocean bottoms direct to Vladivostok or Port Arthur. . An Odessa dispatch to the London Standard, appearing In yesterday's ca bles, punctures this swollen tire of Anglo-Japanese concoction. .It' seems that a conference of Siberian " mer chants and traders was recently -held at Tomsk, Siberia, with the object of developing Russian commerce with China: The meeting arrived at unsat isfactory .conclusions, the bulk of the evidence adduced .proving that 'in the existing circumstances.it is practically Impossible for Russian products . and manufactures to compete successfully in China against those of Western Eu rope and the United States. The ad ministration of the Siberian Railroad has -declared it impossible, without a "ruinous loss of revenue, to make any great reduction in the freight rates. Another stupendous bugbear has been the agricultural production of Siberia, which was about to swamp the farming industry of the United States. Possibly this grand catastrophe will be post poned, for the moment at leastr by an other report from Askahbud. capital of Russian Trans-Siberian territory, that 2,000,000 acres of cotton, wheat, barley and vegetables in that district have been destroyed by the locusts. The Oregonlan has never had any pa tience with the alarm of our Russo phobists, many of, whose spasms have been exposed to the public gaze through Its news columns; and the chief rea son for its skepticism in this reirard has been its insurmountable repugnance to the crazy notion that a teeming Eu ropean population in North China. whether agricultural or otherwise, bodes menace to the industries of the United States. Precisely this craven fear of a neighbor's prosperity was cul tivated in European minds 300 .years ago against colonization of America. The sequel has revealed to Europe an almost limitless market In this hemi 'Sphere for the products- of European labor, and the development of food producing areas without which the Eu rope of today would simply starve to death. . . It will be so with China. The more 'people there are in Siberia and Manchuria, the . more they raise, the more they manufacture, just so much the better for us. They are certain to spend a dollar somewhere else for every dollar they take in. A teeming population In Asia, especially a- flour eating, cotton-wearing, tool-using, bll burning population, is just what this Pacific Coast needs to make It great. The man who fears to have his neigh bor prosper lest It injure him; the mer chant who should pray for disaster to the farmer, would not be more silly than the American diplomat who trem bles lest the Europeanlzation of China, whether by England, Japan or Russia, will put the American farmer out of business. Look back at this assertion fifty years hence, and see if it wasn't right' "THE B ATA VI A SYSTEM." In conjunction with the opening of the public schools throughout the. coun try, and to the ever-recurring question "What shall be done with the dull pu pils, to the end that they may be prop erly advanced, without unduly retard ing the advancement of the larger num ber who learn more readily?" the sys tem that has been working successfully for several years In Batavla, N. T., Is claiming the attention of educational authorities. This system, it is held by those who have watched Its develop ment, offers a solution to this, the most serious problem that the rapid growth in the public school system of the coun try has produced. In the necessarily large classes of graded schools the task of getting the whole number of children over a speci fied ground in each subject, without having many pupils fall far behind and miss promotion to the next grade, is an exceedingly vexatious, not to say Impossible, one for the teacher. The system which has been carried into ef fect by the Superintendent of the Ba tavla schools Is an exceedingly simple one. It consists In putting an extra teacher into a crowded room, "not to hear classes, but to give personal, indi vidual instruction to the pupils who are falling behind." The experiment, as stated by the Out look, met with startling and immediate success in the one room In which' it was first tried. The teacher soon found that the weak spots' in her class were be coming the strong spots. The more backward children began to Improve In scholarship with wonderful rapidity, and before long to catch up with the brighter ones. In many cases the for mer were even surpassing the latter, so that the leaders of the class found It .all they could do to keep up with the "dull" scholars. Best of . all, perhaps, from the standpoint of o'erwearied par ents, It was found that evening study was no longer necessary, as all the les sons were learned to better advantage in school hours, while better order pre vailed in the schoolroom and the whole tone and spirit of the class improved. Further than this, the regular teacher was relieved from a tremendous nervous strain, and was in consequence able to do better work with the bulk of the class. Continuing the story of the experi ment, the Outlook says: "The trial was so successful that the system was ex tended to the other classes and schools in the town, with equally encouraging results. There are now seven Individ ual Instructors employed in the Batavla schools, one teacher In many cases go ing from room to room. In some cases, where the rooms are not overcrowded, one teacher acts as, both class Instructor and as Individual instructor. The 'in dividual teachers are not regarded as assistants or under-teachers in any sense, and they receive the same sal aries as the class teachers of the same grade. The testimony of teachers, par ents and scholars Is unanimous that the 'Batavla ssytem Is a success.' Many authorities on educational subjects' who have Investigated the Batavla schools testify that a, revolution, has been ac complished. One says 'there cannot be found In America a healthier, happier, busier lot of pupils than are today In the public schools of Batavla. Teach ers are equally "well and happy. The scheme of individual Instruction is so simple 1 and practicable that It could easily be followed In every city in the country. A prominent ' English edu cator says: 'These methods will revolu tionize the schools of England.' " This system may be commended to the consideration of the school authori ties of this city as worthy of 'trial. It is not necessary In making the test that additional expense to any appreciable amount should be incurred. There are many ambitious young women fresh from the High School or from other schools who In the role known as "pupil teachers" are anxious to keep In touch with the schools and at the same time get experience In teaching that will pave the way for promotion In the teacher's ranks. Why . not place the backward pupils In one or more of the rooms of each building, according to their number, in charge of one of these and give this system a trial? A plan was inaugurated by City Superintend ent Rlgler looking to the solution of this problem. It was in the interest of the bright rather than of the dull pu pils, and' It has served to complicate rather than to settle the question. The Batavla system is simple enough. There are no doubt a number'of High School graduates in this city who as "pupil teachers" would be willing to take up the work and who would labor earnest ly and intelligently to make a record in it A RIGHTEOUS DECISION. Tomorrow the three brothers Van Wormer will be electrocuted at Clinton prison Dannemora, N. T.f Governor Odell having firmly refused to interfere with the sentence of the law. The youth of- these murderers, despite the cold-blooded, deliberate cruelty with which they shot their victim to death, has been, pleaded in vain with Governor Odell; he has decided that they are .per fectly sane, are clearly murderers, and are not young enough to "plead the baby act" for an awful crime. The firmness, of Governor Odell has drawn forth from Hon. Andrew D. "White, our late Ambassador to Berlin, a letter of warm thanks for his "manly, judicious and patriotic stand." Mr. White refers to the contemptible condition law and justice have been brought to in some of our sister states by the weak or dema gpglcal or whimsical use of the;pardon lhg power, and concludes by saying that '.'mistaken lenity has been one of the greatest causes of the fearful num ber of high, crimes during . late years, and the frequent exercise of the par doning power has proved to be, not mercy, but cruelty." These are words of truth and sober ness, uttered by a man who In his 72d year can look back upon a life of varied experience both as a scholar, a states man, a legislator and philanthropist The sober judgment of this eminent man Is that all convicted murderers whose sanity Is clear and whose guilt is fairly established should suffer the extreme- penalty of the law. The law Is very humane. It hangs nobody for homicide committed in hot blood, and under the names of murder In the sec ond degree, or manslaughter, any homicide outside of a cold-blooded, de-. liberate murderer escapes the death penalty. This is the law, not only In America, but in France and Germany, and even in England no man Is hanged unless the evidence is clear that the crime was the result of cool, deliberate purpose to take life In order to rob or to satisfy revenge. Homicide wrought in the heat of passion and conflict is not punished with death in any civil ized country in the world. But the de liberate murderer Is a standing menace to society as long as he lives; a mur derer hanged will not murder any more in this world, but Imprison a murderer and sooner or later sentimental human itarians' will obtain his pardon. - The dread of the gallows is shown by the vigor with which a cut-throat bat tles for life and how warmly he wel comes even the gloomy alternative of 'life1 Imprisonment. Did anybody ever hear of a convicted murderer who did not plead for commutation of the death penalty to life imprisonment, unless it be In Italy, where the murderer Is not Executed, but suffers such barbarity in prisonthat he soon becomes a lunatic, as did the assassins of the late King Humbert?. Men face to face with the gallows anxiously seek for means of suicide, showlng-that a public. Ignomin ious death does have something of a deterrent Influence upon the vilest man. All murderers should be made to "suffer the death penalty. The prison of the grave Is the only one that cannot be unlocked by the turnkey of the Gov ernor's pardon. The dead murderer will never murder again5; he will never become the parent of a possible brood of murderers; when he Is dead society Is safer because one less human tiger has been hunted to death, and it breathes freer, even as does a Hindoo village when a "man-eater" has been slain. It is not society's business to reform human tigers, but to kill them. It is not society's business to remonstrate with burglars and pickppekets, but to send them to the penitentiary. No Jury pretends to determine the exact degree of the moral responsibility of muf derers and burglars for their so-called heredi tary thirst for crime, any more than we can determine the exact moral re sponsibility of the Apache Indian whose hereditary Impulses led him to torture helpless women and children horribly to death. The settler, however, gave the savage a short shrift and let the sci entist moon over his "moral responsibil ity." Government must protect society against murderers; must hunt them to death, even as we exterminate animals and birds of Insatiable predatory in stincts, and habit The Inexorable law of moral, social evolution Is only sat isfied with the survival of the fittest and society never did stop and never will' stop to consider the moral weak ness or mental deformity of the Apaches of civilization who cut their neighbor's throat to enjoy his goods. Governor Odell is right "We wish his stern sense of executive responsibility might find Imitators in Oregon, whose" Governors, both past and present, have been prone to exercise their preroga tive of pardon with more zeal than dis cretion. Governor Chamberlain was reported the other day as having par doned out of prison three young mur derers whose crime was as deliberate and wanton as" that perpetrated by the Van Wormers that die tomorrow in the electrical chair. The Duke of Richmond, Lennox and, Gordon, -who died on Sunday last, is descended from Charles Lennox, first Duke of. Richmond, who was the son of King Charles U and Louise de Quer- ouallles. When the Duchess of Orleans, the sister of Charles n, visited her royal brother at London In 1670, she brought among her attendants, at the desire of Louis XIV of France, this Louise de Querouallles, whose beauty so Impressed the libertine King that he made her his mistress and created her Duchess of Portsmouth, and continued attached to her during his whole life. The blood of this famous French woman. flowed in the veins of the great English orator, Fox and also in the veins of the famous English General, Sir Charles Napier, and his brother. Sir William Napier, whose mother was Lady Sarah Lennox, daughter of the Duke of Richmond. The present Duke of Queensberry Is a descendant of the Duke of Monmouth, who was the ille gitimate son of King, Charles U and Lucy Walters. The Duke of Grafton Is the descendant of Henry Fltzroy, the first Duke of Grafton, son of King Charles II and Barbara Vllllers, Duch ess of Cleveland. This Duke was killed at the siege of Limerick. The present Duke of St Albans is the descendant of Charles Beauclerk, the first Duke, who was the son of King Charles II and Nell Gwynne. The return of President Roosevelt and his family to Washington marks the period of the resumption of official du ties vwhlch have, as far as possible, been dropped during the past two months. The President has no doubt employed his leisure at Oyster Bay In preparing hiSs annual message, and is ready to begin with a clean slate work upon the problems of government that await his consideration. Mrs. Roosevelt still has some weeks of respite from the more strenuous social duties of her po sition. These duties are quite as exact ing, in their way, as are the more seri ous obligations of official life,, and, in a way, their acceptable performance is quite as necessary to the popularity of the Administration. All Washington Is glad to welcome the President and his wife back to the White House, having with the rest of the world become weary of the vacation season. A flower or rose show held at Forest Grove furnished entertainment of a dis tinctly "cultured" type to the citizens of that old university town last week. Not only so, but the preparations for it which had .been In progress more or less intermittently during the entire season had given healthful, Interesting and de lightful occupation to the participants. People of sub-rural communities do well to encourage exhibits of this kind. So cially, Industrially and esthetically they will find it well worth their while. The study of flowers leads to a knowledge of their habits and' the possibilities of their development 'that is full of fre quent and delightful surprises. To be able to call the different roses by name and coax them into their best develop ment Is an accomplishment of which the most refined woman might well be proud. A remarkable instance of longevity Is witnessed In the life of Mrs. Mary Ramsay Wood, of Hillsboro. As at tested by that most veritable of all wit nesses, the old family Bible of a past century, this venerable woman was 116 years old on the 20th of May of the present year. Feeble In body, she Is by no means helpless, and her mind Is clear, especially in regard to events In the far-away days when she was young. While such an extreme length of years is not a hoon to be desired, the man or woman who, has attained thereto is an dbject of wonder and of veneration. Dave Waggoner, of Napavlne, Wash., whose name sprang suddenly Into fame of the kind that no man courts, when his wife found Convict Merrill's body, and, upon the strength of the opportu nity offered for becoming acquainted with the latter's brother, eloped with him, wants a divorce from the faithless Mary. He will probably get it. ULYSSES IN PARK ROW. New York Sun. The "Ulysses" of Stephen Phillips has put a grievous load upon some of the Manhattan dramatic critics and proof readers. The Times speaks learnedly of "Poreidon" and "Eurypides" and tells us that "the .circle of Mr. Bhlllips Olympians had an unmistakable air of the minstrel show, In which Zeus was the middle man and Hermes and Aphrodite the end men." Aphrodite as end man must have been worth much more than the price of ad mission. The World, carrying all that weight of learning lightly as a flower, asserts that "Ulysses" Is "based upon the story of the hero of Greek mythology as all the world knows it from the Odyssy of IJomer." The learned Theban of the World finds Miss Rose Coghlan's Penelope "naturally overmature." How old does he suppose Penelope was when her husband came back to Ithaca? Penelope was no chicken and Telemachus was at least of voting age. The eminent Hellenist of the Journal is severe with the actor who played Anti nous. "If you ever met Antinous," cries the Porson of Park Row, "you must have realized the .fact that he was a beauty, with the beauty of a Greek god, clean cut and well chiseled." Apparently the Park Row Porson holds the interest ing theory that Antinous ofx Ithaca, the suitor, was Antinous the Blthynian fa vorite of the Emperor (Hadrian. The troubles of the much-enduring Ulysses' were nothing' to those' whidh Mr. Phillips has inflicted upon some of the Manhattan Grecians. New York: Cows for Tuskegec. New York Times. Booker T. Washington has purchased 88 head of cattle from S. R. Bradley, owner of the famous "White Farm dairy herd, near Suffern, Rockland County, New York. Mr. Bradley, who is wealthy, started the White Farm herd some years ago, and has since been supplying the market, with milk that was . absolutely pure. There was no money in the business forhim, nor did he expect to make any, his object being to furnish milk to Ms patrons that was chemically pure. When he decided to go out of the business Mr. Washington heard of his intentions and purchased all of the cows In the herd but 12, which Mr. Bradley will retain for his own use. The cows will be shipped to the. Tuskegee Institute In Alabama October 1. SPIRIT OF THE. NORTHWEST PRESS Apply to the District Attorney. Woodburn Independent. The Portland Ministerial Association, In its efforts to suppress gambling, must proceed without the aid of Mayor Will lams. There is a state law. . Times Files. Whatcom Reveille. . The Spokesman-Review la pleased to note the wonderful prosperity of the Pa louse country. Yet five or six years ago the Review was positive that resort to the peculiar policies advocated: by Mr. Bryan alone could save the country. The Horse Before the Cart. Lane County Leader. It Is a well-known fact that enforcement of laws only keeps pace with public senti ment. Enforcement does not blaze the way. Rather it follows the trail. When the people set the pace make the path, as It were the officers Invariably follow. They do not lead. Then They Decline to Support Him. Colfax Commoner. Over in King County thej Republicans have an amusing method of entering can didiates in the race for United States Senator. A man announces that "he In tends to become a candidate. Then his friends sign a petition asking him to be come a candidate, and next he issues a letter thanking them for asking him and assuring them that he Is' willing. Aa Much as lor Buffalo. Tacoma News. Congress will be asked to appropriate $2,125,000 for the Lewis and Clark Centen nial Exposition at Portland. This Is a larger sum than will be granted, but there Is no doubt that the Federal Government will fend substantial aid to the Portland Fair. At least? as much should be appro priated as was allowed the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo in 1S01. Yamhill Farmers on Easy Street. Salem" Statesman. A retired farmer over at McMlnnville, who has been In this country since the earliest settlement and who has had large experience, said a day or two ago- that never before has he seen the farmers in as prosperous condition as now; never be fore did they have such ready sale for all their products at good prices, leaving substantial profits for themselves. He says all the Yamhill Oounty farmers have money now. Chastened, -But Not Humbled, .Prlneville Journal. The Deschutes Valley has had another slap. Hitchcock's National playgrounds took off a slice the entire length of the district, and now a lumber syndicate rep resentative, upon the opening up of al most the last remaining township, steps up and, with the politeness of a Chester field, lays 10,000 acres of scrip upon all the available timber. But even with the nu merous bruises which the valley has re ceived during the past few months, the day 19 not far distant when it will thrust Its head above the surface and Indulge in the last proverbial giggle. The Hot End for Hermann. Dalles TimesMountalneer. This termination of the controversy in the Lakeview district cannot be consid ered a victory for anybody, though it is somewhat of a slam at Hermann, who was determined to retain Brattain. About the only Inference that can be drawn is that the majority of the delegation real ized that they were jeopardizing their own interests by standing out for Her mann's choice, and rather than have the President take the matter in his own hands 'and appoint two officials of his own choice, let Mr. Hermann drop and recommended men despite his protest. Mayor Won't Be Stampeded. Prlneville Review. The reform movement is about to com mence In Portland again. Mayor Williams has seen probably a dozen of these spas modlc "reform crusades" and immedi ately after each of them he has seen the city lapse Into its old habits of vice. It Is not likely he will listen very atten tively to the plaints of clergy or laity, knowing from experience It Is useless In a place the size of Portland, The Mayor's shoulders are broad and he will bear up under all kinds of Imprecations rather than make himself known as conspicu ously wanting Jn practical business sense. Beprin Now for 1005. Eugene Register. The Lewis and Clark Fair Commission announces this early In the day that the county exhibits made at the State Fair next year will be purchased by it for exhibit at the 1905 Fair. This is a timely warning that should put every county in the state on its mettle In getting to gether for the 1904 State Fair the best possible display of Oregon products. Lane County should begin laying plans at once to capture first prize at Salem next year and carry that honor up to the Lewis and Clark Exposition, where, with the record as prize-winner, we can secure a splendid advertisement of the county. They Have Sio Such Connection. Aurora Borealis. This community has been thoroughly canvassed by a set of individuals who claim they are compiling a history of Oregon for the Lewis and Clark Fair In Portland. It is the biggest graft that has been worked here for years. The grafters soft-soap their victims till they believe tho world would have gone to the dogs long ago had It not been for their valuable services. By this time they are asked to give a short biography of themselves, which must, of course, be signed by the victims as a token of good faith. Later it develops that they have subscribed for a book containing their little song, at a total cost of J18. Those who were talked Into having their pictures appear, together with their biographies, were directed to come to a thirteenth-rate photographer at Portland, although the same workcould be done better here at one-fourth the cost, thus showing that It Is simply a scheme by Portland grafters and has probably no connection with the Lewis and Clark Fair management whatever. Have Weakened Confidence. Ashland Tribune. Tho Ministerial Association of Portland has weakened the confidence of the peo ple of the state in the good sense of its members by Its silly threat to Mayor Williams, that It will use the religious press of the country to Injure the Lewis and Clark Fair enterprise if the Mayor docs not accede to their demand, that the system of imposing monthly fines on gam blers shall cease. It Is understood that the Mayor takes the ground that It Is not practicable to suppress gambling abso lutely; that In spite of ordinances there will be gambling, and that the gamblers will bribe the police, and that the hidden gambling joints will be more harmful than when allowed to run openly and subjected to monthly fines. Looking over the Issues between Mayor Williams and the Portland Ministerial Association in every aspect, as we are able to see It from the newspaper accounts, the one fea ture, to which we have referred, seems to indicate that there is a want of "the sav ing grace of common sense" In the cleri cal set of Portland, or those who are delegated to speak for it An Icehoat for Commercial Use Detroit Free Press. Alvln A Southern, of North Lansing, has Invented an- Iceboat for commercial use, which he expects to put into commis sion on Gull Lake, this county, as soon as Ice forms sufficiently. The boat will carry passengers regularly about the lake, and Is now under construction at Lansing. Southern Is 75 years old. has been an en thusiastic Ice yachtsman for years, and thinks he has discovered In pivoted run ners the secret of easy manipulation of Iceboats. The boat will carry. a good-slzod cabin for passengers,. NEW YARNS ABOUT ROOSEVELT New York World. Senator. Shelby Cullom. of Illinois, went to the White House one day to. see the President "Who's In there?" he asked of Captain. Loefller, the doorkeeper.. "Some body who -was In the Rough Riders," Loefller replied. "Oh, well," said Cullom, as he turned away, '"what chance has a mere Senator?" Senator Bard, of California, took a con stituent to see the President The friend had. served In the Rough Riders. "Mr. President" began Bard, "I want to pre sent my friend" "Why, hello, Jim!" the President broke In. "How are you?" Then there was ia ten-minute' talk In which Bard could take no part As the two men were leaving, the President exclaimed: "By the way, Jim, come up to dinner to night,, and bring Bard with you." After General Miles made his comment on the Schley court decision the Presi dent sent for him. Miles went to the White House, and the famous colloquy occurred, wherein the President became so angry. One part of that conversation has never, been printed During his rebuke of Miles the President said excitedly: "I have teeth! I have ,teeth! I have teeth, and I can use them." This remark was ac companied with a demonstration that proved to everybody that the President has teeth and that, moreover, the cartoon ists have not succeeded In making him think that teeth of his particular kind are bad thlnes to have. Edward Lauterbach asked the President to speak at the laying of the corner stone of the College of the City of New York. "What other speakers are there to be?" the President asked, "Well, ex Presldent Cleveland Is to" "I cannot ac cept," snapped the President Chauncey M. Depew was at the State Fair In Syracuse when the President spoke. The crowd called for Depew after the President had finished. Depew spoke for 15 minutes and was heartily cheered. There had been few cheers for the Presi dent's speech, although plenty for himself. "I thought I was to be the only sneaker." f said the President to Lieutenant-Governor Higgins, as they were leaving the stand. The President takes more physical exer cise than any other man in Washington. His favorite enjoyment is to go horse back riding and to get somebody to go with bim. If the friend can't ride very well, the President Is fond of dropping back a bit and then riding up at a hard gallop and shouting, a cowboy ''whoopee!" at the top of his voice. He does this to Senator Lodge very often, and Lodge hangs grimly to the pommel of the saddle while the President laughs. The President Is very sensitive to news paper criticism. He lectures reporters se verely when they print anything he does not like. He thinks nothing should be printed in Administration papers that is in any way Incompatible with his dignity, whether the story Is true or not. He has had two reporters removed from their assignments within the last two years for printing things he did not like. He wrote personal letters to the editors about these reporters, too, and both of them had printed true stories. Similarly, the Presi dent is fond of praise. He likes to read nice sentiments about himself in the news papers. He Is not so great a newspaper reader as President McKInley was, but he patronizes the press-clipping bureaus and pores over the clippings every day. Presi dent Roosevelt is generous with his con fidences. He will tell his friends anything, and then bind them not to reveal what he has said. This makes It Inconvenient sometimes for newspaper men who go to see him, for the President tells the same thing to everybody, and often the story gets out when the man to whom It was told originally must hold It In confidence or break his word. The President gets angry easily. He says harsh things to those who run afoul of him. When he gets excited he can use triangular words with anybody. When he isn't excited, his favorite words of em phasis are "By Godfrey!" and "By Jove!" The-President Is a very hearty eater. His appetite is prodigious. He likes a bottle of white wine with his dinner. He drinks very little besides that. The President says he Is "de-light-ed" 50 times a day. He Is "de-llght-ed" to see you, "de-fight-ed" to hear you are well, and "de-lighted" everything else. He uses many su perlatives. Everything to him is the best or the worst ever. ?. Mr. Roosevelt always starts his speeches the same way. He says: "Ladles and gen tlemen, and you, Sons of Veterans, or "you" something else, or "you" thus and so. He likes to pick out a man in his audience and talk to him. He did this at Syracuse when- he opened the state fair, picking out a Grand Army man and ad dressing him exclusively for five minutes, much to the embarrassment of the Grand Army man. Mr. Roosevelt Is not an at tractive public speaker. He generally reads his speeches from printed slips, and keeps close to the text. He writes and dictates fluently, and has an especial fondness for the word "very," which Is sprinkled through his public addresses and documents and his private corre spondence. The President's enthusiasms are violent, but not long-lived. He always wants to do everything himself. He takes a hand In all arrangements and gives orders about the most trivial affairs. He form erly had no compunction about saying things about his enemies. Now he thinks It is as well to eay nothing if nothing good can be said. His actions in the last two years have been mainly directed by the chart of 1904. He is sharp and stern with .his subordinates, dictatorial and se vere. He sometimes makes a joke, but really has a poor sense of humor. His jokes are generally sad. Witness the famous Secretary Shaw Joke, when he told Shaw during the coal strike settle ment he would send him "back to de mines (Des Moines)." Shaw comes from Iowa, you know. The President lectures Senators and Representatives at times as if they were schoqlboys. He calls them up to the White House and lays down common statements of fact as If they were new discoveries by himself. He thinks in conventional lines, notwith standing his reputation for originality. He is platitudinous. When the President's special train dur ing his recent tour of the country reached Nebraska Governor Mickey of that state joined the party to escort the President across the state. The President was dc-Hght-ed to meet the Governor of Ne braska and asked him about a hundred questions, political. Industrial, social and personal, winding up with: "How many children have you, Governor" "Nine," answered Governor Mickey. "You are a d d good man," exclaimed President Roosevelt. "You are a better man than I am. I have had only six." And Gov ernor Mickey, who is a Methodist elder, gasped with astonishment. When Mr. Roosevelt first became Gov ernor he called all the Albany corre spondents Into the Executive chamber and said: I propose to receive you ail freely and to talk to you very frankly, but If you ever print anything I say with out my permission I shall deny it." "Do.you know Piatt?" asked the Presi dent of a friend, and meaning the ven erable and sage Senator from Connecticut. "I do." said the friend. "Isn't he a bully old boy?" asked the President, enthusi astically. . Once Rich, Now He Is a Bntcher. Chicago Chronicle. Formerly worth nearly 51,000,000. Paul T. Schuster, an 82-year-old German, is working in th'e City Market of Trenton, N. J., as a butcher. He says he accu mulated $500,000 while In the butcher busi ness in Poughkeepsle and New York City. He then went to Chicago. Invested the money In real estate and was wiped out by the fire of 1871. Then his wife and two children died, and under the nressure of his misfortunes he failed in business. For some months he lived from hand to mouth ana recently he started to tramn East-to look up a nephew to. whom he had formerly loaned money. Two, weeks ago he reached Trenton and cot his Dresent job. . N.0TE AND COMMENT. , Iidve in the Leaves. The limb of a tree as a. resting place Is something that can't be beat,. And even a girl may sway with grace In the airy fairy seat. For trees that grow at the modern pace Provide a rest for the feet. The limb of a tree Is a funny thing, .And funny the things it sees. If close to Its bark a- girl should cling. There comes -before you can sneeze A broth of a boy, who is having his lllng. And ready the girl to squeeze. Concealed in the shelter of fancied leaves. Canoodle the boy and xnlss;. It's a glorious chance to garner thi sheaves That grow In the fields of bliss But surely the watchful ear deceives. Or was It the chirp ot a kiss? It maketh the jealous heathen rage. Such unshared-In-Joy to see. Yet the lovers up in their painted' cage Are as glad as glad can ber And who In the world If on the stage But wouldn't be up a tree? The Difference. Some say that Wall street's like1 a girl, Half-scared of all It sees: But this is foolish, for we know That Wall street hates a squeeze. Mast Be a Duck. -Reverend Drake preached on his new charge last Sabbath. We miss him. Pelt la (III.) Tribune. Soo. Sault Ste. Marie. Even the enemies of Parks are keeping off the grass. The cigar named after Lou Dillon must be a two-fer. The primrose path is all very fine, but It's full of stumps. In Belfast, says Bob Gibson, brlck3 are called Irish confetti. Jabour, apparently, was unable" to fight the elements and his elephant Motorman German's case manifests anew the cruelty of wanton Fate. A cuff on the cheek is sure to attract at tention, and so is one on the arm. If these dynamite outrages continue, there will be an explosion in Montana. The best way, Count Pulaski, to keep lc good spirits 13 to keep good spirits in you. Her principal varnish factory having been burnt, Chicago may now progress to veneer. A dramatic critic would be fired from the union if he didn't spell motive with an "f." Forger Burke Is In, but Forger Becker Is out. "Here we go up, and here we go down." The action of "A Royal Family," we gather from some of tho players, begins on a Toosday, . It Is very accommodating on the part of a lawyer to keep whiskers for his laundress to pull. Porto RIcans are crowding the schools. There's no kick coming, as that's what the schools are for. The fSresbytery of New York has a portable church. What somo people need Is a portable religion. Hanna has "nothing to discuss." Many an arraigned man would like to tell the Judge the same thing. In the case of Mrs. May Ramsay Wood, of Hillsboro, the age of "sweet 16" Is ren dered especially significant by having 100 prefixed. "What shall we give -Jack on his birth day?" asked the wife; "a bicycle?" "And train him for a scab!" retorted hubby, who was a plumber. According to the Pekin (III.) Tribune, the cold weather is Increasing the num ber of marriages in Tazewell County. Apparently the frying pan isn't warm enough in the Fall. "Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter," might have been said of Chicago, where the Musicians Union was told to go hang when It re fused to play with the Marine Band. Th'e New York Press, having written a "josh" on the lingo of the diamond, an Oregon paper solemnly deplores a, half column deplore that the Press has ceased to drink at Its own well of pure English undefiled. Humor Is a dangerous thing. The Mayor of New York was Invited to shake for the drinks. "No use," he replied; "I'm always the Low man." When this was reported to Jerome ho saw that he would be considered JeaIou3 In saying Low was destitute of humor. Alexander Kindness runs a saloon at Colfax. On Sunday the Sheriff went there and placed half a dollar In the dumb waiter. Back came a pint of whisky. As it is Illegal to sell lntosslcating liquor on the Sabbath, the Sheriff arrested the sa loonkeeper. In other words, Kindness was pulled for his kindness. FIEASAXTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Mesmerist's Wife Carlos! Mesmerist Well, dear' Mesmerist's Wlfe-r-I wish you would come here and tell baby ha is asleep., New Yorker. "Yes, my husband Is greatly afflicted by In somnia." "What does he do for It?" "Stays out until 2 o'clock every morning." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Pleasures," said Uncle Eben, "Is a good deal like mushrooms. De right kind Is fine, f but Vou has to be on de lookout foh toad stools." Washington Star. "Are the mosquitoes very bad around here?" "Bad!" echoed the native, derisively. "Mis ter, did you ever hear of a mosquito being converted?" Wathington Star. "I daresay the cost of living has been great ly reduced in SrtO years." "Oh, yes! In the nineteenth century, the ancient records tell us, a simple operation for appendicitis cost $200." Puck. Callerton Did vou employ a typewriter to copy your manuscript? Scribble ton I thought I did. but on looking over the copy I discov ered I had employed a typewronger. Cincin nati Enquirer. Miss Nancy I wonder why It is that sailors are such terrible swearers? Cousin' Tom Why. don't you know? They learn profanity of the parrots. I thought everybody knew that. Bos ton Transcript. "This drama," said the young, author, "is taken from, the French." "Well." replied the manager to whom It had been submitted, I don't believe tho French will ever miss It." Chicago News. She (at the review grounds) What an im posing figure Captain Borrows, has! He Yes; naturally so. She And why naturally, pray? He Oh, he's always imposing on his friends. Philadelphia Inquirer. "Do you think those new people will make good neighbors?" "Oh, delightful! Why, I can see already that they're going to do enough scandalous things to keep us In gossip all Win ter." Chicago Post. Mary I'm sorry to hear that you've not been feeling well. What seems to. be the matter? Jane I suppose I am run down. Why, for the last , month I haven't "been able to. put any heart even into my shopping. Brooklyn Ufa,