THE MORmNG OSEGOI&Aaf. FBIDAY, JA2TUABY 19M. J Xlerd at the Posfofflce at Portland. Ore gon, as second-class matter. REVISED. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. DfiJly, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dully, Sunday excepted, per year .. 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9.00 .Sunday, per year . 2.00 The "Weekly, per year 1.50 The Weekly. 3 month J50 auy, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted .lSc Ually, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE BATES. United SfotM CflSflJa m.1 Mexico 10 to l-t-paCe paper......... .........lc 16 to SO-pag paper... ............. ......2c -82 to 44-page paper.......... ...........3c Foreign rates double. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency) Jcw Tork: Booms 43-40. Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512, Tribune Building. KEPT OX SALE. Chicago Charles MacDonald. 53 Washing- ton St. and Auditorium Annex; Postofice News Co.. 176 Dearborn. Colorado Sorters C. A. Bruner. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton Hendrick, 906-912 Seventeenth St.; Louthan & Jackspn, Plfteenth and Lawrence. Kansas City Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth sad Walnut. Los Angeles 3. F. Gardner, 259 South Spring; Oliver & Haines. 205 South Spring. Minneapolis II. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; L. Regelsburger, 317 First Avenuo South. New Tork City L. Jonas & Co., Astor Ogden V. C Alden, Postofflce Cigar Store; F. R. Godard; W. G. Kind, 114 25th St..: C Ji. Hyers. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam; JicLaughlln Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Bait Lake News Co., 77 "West Second South St. St. Louis World's Fair News Co. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co.. 740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster &Orear, Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter; L. 33. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market: Frank Scott. SO Ellis; N. Wbeatley, 83 Stevenson. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. TESTERDATS WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 44; minimum temperature, 39; pre cipitation, .39 of an Inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Occasional light rain; possibly part snow; westerly winds. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY , 1904, RUSSIA'S EXTREMITY. The bellicose spirit of Japan has at length achieved Its purpose of putting Russia In a very deep and uncomfort able hole. The strong: desire of the Czar for peace .is -well known; and Japan has presumed very far upon this in its multiplied demands. There is no course for Russia but to fight or yield; and, however galling it must be to Ro manoff pride, the Indications certainly are that the Czar will choose the more pacific but less glorious horn of the di lemma. It is evident that this result is' due not only to the benevolent nature of Nicholas, but to the representations of European powers and something also to the show of Interest made by the United States in urging speedy ratifica tion of the treaty with China. No other Interpretation can be placed upon this our action than sympathy with Japan or at least lack of sympathy with Russia. The debatable status of Manchuria, part and parcel as It is of the questions at Issue, entirely justifies the Russian view of our precipitation in wringing cpneessions from China as If we felt in danger of losing them in case of Rus sian victory. It is impossible at this time to foresee whether our participation in this affair will eventually afford us satisfaction or regret What is certain Is that need lessly to court the suspicion and unfriendliness- of Russia is as unwise as it is uncalled for. What Russia may have denied to her age-long rival Great Britain and her cocky enemy, Japan, she has never denied to the United States and may never deny. We owe nothing In Asia either to Great Britain or Japan which Justifies us in depart ing from a dignified and fair neutral ity. As for the Powers themselves, it is the least they can do in decency to stop this war before it begins, if it is within their power. How they rejoice to step in coolly after a cause has been won at Immense sacrifice of blood and treasure, Russia learned In bitterness In 1878 at Berlin, and Japan in sorrow at Chee Foo in 1895. It Is quite likely that after Japan and Russia had worn themselves out against each other their dear friends would appearon the scene to divide China up among themselves and appropriate the fruits of victory. It Is more decent for London, Paris ajid Berlin to counsel peace now than to urge their trusting allies into a strug gle where they mean to desert them and wrest the spoil from whichever wins. ARMOUR'S WHEAT DEAL. The millions of Mr. Armour, taking advantage of a fairly strong statistical position in wheat, have succeeded in pushing the May option on the premier cereal well up within hailing distance of the dollar mark, with every indica tion that the top notch has not yet been reached. Not since Joseph Lelter made his meteoric "swish" across the com mercial horizon and vanished Into financial eclipse has there been such excitement In wheat as has marked the course of the now celebrated Armour deal. The disastrous termination of the Lelter deal is a matter of history. The result of the Armour deal will not "be known for several weeks In fact, may never be known, for the public Is not takento the confidence of great spec ulators when losses are scored and there is money enough behind the los ers to cover up the deficiencies that result from an erroneous gauging of conditions and speculative sentiment At present prices, with the possibil ity of a poor wheat crop in this country in 1S04. it would be impossible for Mr. Armour to make such a colossal failure of his deal as was made by Mr. Lelter. but if his own opinion and the pressure of conditions beyond his control should send wheat up to Lelter prices. It might require all of his millions and perhaps more "millions than he can control to prevent an expensive collapse. The Ar mour deal Is exclusively an American affair, and its success or failure Is de pendent almost entirely on American conditions, while with Lelter foreign demand and foreign prices were such as at least to warrant the foundation for that structure of bullish speculation which he bullded with such great care and which burled him beneath its ruins. The failure of the wheat crop In France, one of the greatest bread-eating nations on earth, was a big factor In giving the Leiter deal such a success ful start and this was aided by short crops in other parts ot the Old World as well as here at home. Mr. Armour has none of this foreign aid with the ideal which Is rapidly becoming un wieldy on his hands. Instead of a strong market and good demand, abroad every one of his hilarious advances In Chicago has been followed by a con temptuous decline in Liverpool. He has worked prices up to a point where wheat is worth more in Chicago than it is In Liverpool. This precludes the possibility of shipping any of his accu mulating line or cash wheat out of the country, and Iflfaust remain here to be come a portion of the "corpse," the dis posal of which in nine cases out of ten absorbs all of the paper profits, and enough more to break the speculator who fathers a corner In wheat Telegraphic advices from Chicago in yesterday's paper credited Armour with profits of $300,000 on the day's transactions, and yet It ls extremely doubtful whether any portion of that vast sum could have been actually saved had an attempt been made' to realize. In fact the market yesterday started off with a wild slump,- which would surely bave carried prices down low enough to have wiped out all of .this paper profit, had not Armour promptly come to the support of the market and frightened all of the short sellers to a standstill by buying all of the wheat that was offered. As mat ters now stand, May wheat Is worth 92 cents In Chicago because no one dares to sell it for less than that figure so long as Armour is in possession of such a tremendous long line which -he must protect What it will be worth' when these prices attract wheat from all parts of the United States will depend on the amount of money that Armour can raise to handle it American shippers have been sending wheat abroad recently at the rate of 2,000,000 t6 3,000,000 bushels per week, and, now that wheat is higher in Chi cago than in Liverpool, this business will cease and the wheat be neld for May delivery to Mr. Armour. Mean while, the men who have the actual wheat are expressing no anxiety as to how high the market may be forced by manipulation. The Lelter deal Is said to have added $200,000,000 to the value of the American grain crops, and if Mr. Armour stays the limit in the large and rapidly growing transaction which is now occupying his time, talents and money, similar good results may follow. BURNS. Our citizens of Scotch lineage will this evening do honor by speech and, song to the memory of Burns. The fame of Burns grows and glows brighter with the lapse of time. His most severe critics bave been Scotch men like Carlyle and Robert Stevenson, who, while doing full justice to his poetic genius and his power as an orig inal and permanent literary force, have not made sufficient allowance for his. early environment Burns was a poor plowboy, who had the head of a man of genius, but his native genius did not protect him from youthful in temperance and irregular relations with women, which were the rule in the rus tic life of Scotland in the last half of the eighteenth century and to a much later date. Carlyle, peasant-born and man of genius, was sent to a univer sity, which helped -him to habits of self control and ameliorated his native boorlshness, though even with this ad vantage, Carlyle all his days showed traces of his barbarous early training. The genius and culture of Goethe did not lift him to a high plane of per sonal morality in his early life, and there are many other Illustrations which might be cited to show "that the intemperance and other irregular hab its of 'Burns wery not unexpected or exceptional, considering his early en vironment and the low standard of so cial morals that prevailed in his day, when clergymen not seldom drank to excess, when men of the highest repu tation for learning and scholarship In literature, law and medicine were given to frequent conviviality In public and private. There is no evidence, however, that Burns drank to excess until after his ill-starred marriage, which began in a low intrigue without love or expecta tion of marriage on either side. Burns, to save the woman from disgrace, of fered to marry her, but her parents spurned him with contempt as a social Inferior, and persuaded the daughter to burn the lines he had given her. When Burns obtained 400 for the second edi tion of his poems the wonumagain sought him; her parents turned her away, and out of compassion for her situation Burns married her, although he did not love her arid she did not love him. Burns' action showed a kind, manly heart but it was a marriage bar ren of any chance for happiness, for the woman was a light silly, frivolous creature; the kind of flirt that ends by flying, moth-like. Into the flame. An unsuccessful farmer, a petty officer of excise, who did not agree In opinion with the government he served; too proud and manly to dance attendance on the aristocratic society of his time and play the court jester at their feasts, Burns grew low-splrlted and allowed himself to become a victim of alcohol Ism. Had he not been a man of excep tionally powerful poetlcgenlus, his fate would not have excited much attention or required much explanation, but a man of such conspicuous gifts that the younger Pitt himself a fine university scholar. Instantly pronounced him a great poet, could not pass away with out all his personal frailties being dragged into the glare of "the fierce light that beats upon a throne." The same unreasonable obloquy fell upon Bjron when he separated from his wife; if he had been an ordinary Eng lish gentleman, nobody would have wondered very long that Lord Byron did not like his wife well enough to live with her, but because he was a famous poet all England went wild with rage and excitement. So with Shelley, whom Mark Twain bitterly denounces because of his treatment of his first wife. Shelley married the woman from a chivalrous impulse, believing that she had been turned out ot doors for de fending his skeptical religious opin ions; he left her for another woman when he believed her to have been un faithful; he allowed her $1000 a year until she drowned herself while mis tress of a man about town. Consider ing that Shelley was a mere boy, he be haved far better in this matter than most young fellows do when a woman throws her head at him. - but Mark Twain pounds Shelley to a fine pulp for no reason apparently save that Shelley was a great poet who, when a boy, made a fool marriage, as many other boys have done who were never great poets or anything else in partic ular. These illustrations are sufficient for the argument that Burns in his vices was the child of his early rustic en vironment while In his very great vir tues and his powerful poetic genius he was the greatest man that Scotland ever produced, and next to Shakespeare he is the greatest poet of human nature whose name Is found in the annals' of English literature. It Is because Burns is the most forceful and original poet of human nature, next to Shakespeare, that he has obtained such eloquent trib utes from men so diverse as Tennyson in England and Whittier and Holmes in America. Tennyson says that the songs of Burns are the finest 'In all English literature; that not even the beautiful songs in Shakespeare's plays are equal In variety to those of Burns. This praise comes from a university bred English poet a. man of scholastic culture and fastidious, critical taste. Holmes -praises him as "a Hying man set beyond the pedant's tether," and Whittier clearly led on the muse of Burns, and. so has James Whltcomb Riley. His greatest poems are "Tarn o Shanter" and "The Jolly Beggars." There are coarse lines In both of these great poems, even as there are coarse lines in some of the greatest plays. There are no coarse lines In the poems of Goldsmith, who was a squalid vaga bond with all the gross vices that the word Implies until he was 30, and who died In his 46th year, a bankrupt gam bler, a man of filthy vices all his days. Burns was a far better man than Gold smith; he was" never a gambler; he died very poor, but out of debt; he was not an associate with low-lived people of both sexes, as was Goldsmith, and yet the ordinary reader thinks Gold smith was as pure and clean as his works, and thinks of Burns as intem perate as "Tarn o' Shanter" and as dls soluteas "The Jolly Bectrars" Thi difference Is due to the fact that Burns sketched alL human nature, high and low, virtuous and vile, with his artist hand, while Goldsmith touched lightly only certain superficial phases of hu man nature with the hand of a literary mechanic rather than a great genius. Furthermore, Burns had a conscience and spoke the bitter truth about him self, while Goldsmith had no con science whatever and never shows In any -way that he was ashamed Of his exceedingly dirty private life. Some authors are better than their books and -some books are better than their au thors, and of Burns It can fairly be said In Whlttier's lines: He meant no wrong to any? " He sought the good of many; He knew both sin and lolly; May God forgive him wholly. EXPANSION OF THE DAIRY INDUSTRY. The transfer of the headquarters of a great creamery company to jthis city is k stroke of business which is more than suggestive of the possibilities of the dairy industry in Oregon. It pro claims as a fact which has been thor oughly established by several years of experiment that Oregon, and especially the Willamette Valley, Is unexcelled for dairy purposes arid that Portland Is the legitimate center of a great dairy In dustry. With a soil that may be made to pro duce without limit pasturage and for age for dairy stock; a climate .in which it is relatively easy to keepepws com fortable and In good condition for" milk; an expanding market on every side and transportation facilities equal to any and all demands, this region certainly equals for dairy purposes any in the world, and as certainly excels In ad vantages of climate and grazlng,faclll ties those sections of the Middle . West in which dairying according to modern methods has been so signally success ful In recent years. Under the old single-crop regime ag ricultural growth In Oregon was Impos sible. Looking back over those sluggish years, one ceases to wonder at the stag, nation that prevailed or to censure the placid, tranquil farmers of that period. They raised wheat year after year with out special effort to Increase their acre age, and lived contentedly upon the proceeds of their crop, whether these were less or greater, In accordance with the condition-of the far-away market to which they contributed. There was then absolutely no means whereby per ishable crops could be moved and the home market was always glutted. Con tentment under such conditions was wisdom. No amount of chafing would have built railroads, developed mines or opened up a demand for; lumber. Wheat would keep; when the demand was slack It was stored; when It was active It was sold. Every one of aver age Intelligence in the agricultural dis tricts knew even then that Oregon pos sessed all of the requirements of a good dairy country. But the entire state was, as Tillamook County now is, only in a more complete degree, bottled up. But progress has worked its way and the dim possibilities of the pioneer era have at length become realities. Ore gon Is not only a great dairy state In theory, but It is now on the verge of actual demonstration op-its capabilities in this line. It will be readily seen that the farm ers of the state, far and near, will be benefited by this expansion of the dairy business, according to the enterprise Which they display in meeting the new demand upon their industry. It is not considered as among the probabilities that they will fall to meet this oppor tunity. The great object for which the State Board of Immigration has striven for years a substantial Increase of the farming population will in the natural course of demand and supply follow the expansion of this dairy industry. The demand is specific. Hundreds of thrifty people In the Middle West, who have been bred to farming and have found the conditions of their vocation hard where drouths beset, cyclones threaten and blizzards are accompaniments of Winter, are possessed of the laudable desire to better their situation. Vague statements do not satisfy them. The truthful declaration that Oregon is a great dairy state, made definite by th assurance that there will be a market at their very doors for all the milk of all the cows they can take care of makes specific answer to a question that is suggested to these people by a proposed or desired change of location. The breeding and care of dairy stock will henceforth be a business in Ore gon in which no man who has been bred to farming should hesitate to engage. Conditions jire exceptionally favorable to the keeping of a dairy herd, and there is no danger that the supply for the great creamery will exceed the de mand or that the smaller creameries that flourish In various parts of the State will be cut out by this expansion of the dairy Industry. These are posi tive statements, and they are amply supported by the facts In the premises. They are based upon business and not upon sentiment; upon a condition, not a theory. Harold Latta, 3 years old, died Janu ary 13 at the Pasteur Institute In Chi cago while under treatment for rabies. He was bitten by a mad dog at Madrid, la., October 28. A girl of 13 years, who was bitten by the dog at the same time, is under treatment and Is not ex pected to recover. The father was bit ten by the child on the hands, and the mother, whose lips were Infected fey kissing the "boy. are also fighting death by the Pasteur method. The utter laiocy displayed by otherwise intelli gent persons in kissing sick people has seldom produced more distressing results than in this case. It is a form of persecution of the helpless to kiss a sick child on the lips, and the out rage Is one of which few humane or Intelligent persons are guilty. ,Former ly there was some excuse for It insigr norance. But the germ theory has been so thoroughly exploited that this ex cuse no longer holds good. Those who kiss the sick upon the lips Invite dis ease, and itIs not surprising that the Invitation Is frequently accepted. The "menace of the Hohenzollerns" Is likely to descend In another fatal blow upon the imperial house. Prin cess Charlotte, the -oldest sister of Em peror William, and within a year of his own age, has been found to be suf fering from cancer. Dr.'Morltz Schmidt has furnished this startling diagnosis of her case, and the discovery has add ed to the apprehension felt on every hand over the condition of the Kaiser. The Princess, wife of the hereditary Prince of Saxe-Meinlngen, was mar ried In her early girlhood, and, though still a young woman. Is a grandmother. She Is a dashing woman, exceedingly unlike her mother, the late Empress Frederick, though withal the' most sprightly and Intellectual of the daugh ters of that gifted and unhappy woman. Her close relationship to the German Emperor makes her personality inter esting and her malady little less than appalling. The most suggestive tribute that has been paid In death to. the life of George Francis Train is that presented by thousands of children who, with a ten derly subdued air foreign to the im pulses of childhood, hav. passed into the mortuary chamber where his body Plies to take a last look at the placid face that through all his life lighted up at the approach of a child. "He was a friend of children." This Is a eulogy that any man might desire and few would" despise. It is the unquestioned eulogy of George Francis Train, and it very properly overshadows many of the eccentricities of his character which, excited wonder, amusement or derision. No man has lived In vain whose departure the children of an entlre community mourn as the loss of a "friend. According to Consul Keene, a, large and growing part of the export trade of Florence Is "antiquities of every kind, description and alleged epoch, most of them such clever Imitations as to require experts to detect the decep tion." This Is one of the cases In which the deceived purchaser Is no worse off than before. The millionaire with a taste for Roman jewels or coins that rang In cash registers in B. C. some thing Is just as happy with one of mod ern make. Ignorance is bliss, and to be wise is to lose self-respect Let the In dustrious Florentine pursue his skillful craft, and turn out antiquities that will arouse wonder in many American minds and cause not a few American tongues to wag platltudlnously on "the muta bility of human affairs." The sympathy of all good citizens is with the broken-hearted "woman of this city who Is the mother of the young woman convicted Of the murder of her husband In San Francisco a. few days ago. The onlyconolingeature In the case is. found in the fac that a person so wayward as was this convicted woman will be kept from further crime or misadventure by having "been so sternly brought to penalty for this crime. As a convict Under a life sen tence at San Quentln, the career of Martha Bowers as a criminal Is ended, whereas her acquittal would most likely have been but its beginning. The way of the transgressor is deplored, but, after all, the penalties that beset it have a touch of wholesomeness not to be despised. It would seem to be an easy matter to keep a bottle containing carbolic, acid out of the reach of a 2-year-old child. The parents of Charley Johns, of Kalama, however, seemed to find this simple' feat Impossible, and as a result the little one is in great agony from having sampled the contents of the bottle. Just here It may be said that more deaths result from taking f arbolic acfd than from any other one poison, yet it is of all poisons the easi est to get from the druggist and., the one most frequently found upon the family medicine shelf. A home for working girls to cost $20, 000 Is to be built on a site not yet chosen In honor of Mrs. Harriet Hub bard Ayer, a brilliant writer who died a short time ago. It is to be estab lished upon lines suggested by Mrs. Ayer In her famous Dickens story of "The Seven Ppor Travelers." The plan, though unique and in a way ideal, Is said to be a practical one, and its fulfillment will be a tribute to the work of a brilliant woman and a monument to her memory. The university that attempts to do High School work cripples and under rates Itself for university work. For this reason, among others, the Matrons of the University of Oregon are to be congratulated In that the board of re gents has abolished the -preparatory department that' has heretofore been maintained in connection with that in stitution. Let students go to Eugene prepared for freshman work, and let the local High School of that town do its duty. The annual election of the Chamber of Commerce Is a fitting time, on behalf of the community, to acknowledge ob ligations to that body's, active and able efforts for Portland's advancement, and to wish the new board of officers the same success that has attended' the la bors of the year that Is past This we do in all heartiness, and look for- ward, with the Chamber, to" the most progressive year in the city's history. All lesser forms of gambling, how ever pernicious, become insignificant when a grain gambler turns a hand which increases by Its showing the price of the bread supply of the country- ' Condensed Eggs. New York Press. Did you ever use condensed eggs? They are prepared somewhatafter the manner of condensed milk, and will keep till eternity. First they are deprived of their surplus water, then sugar Is added, and they' are packed In cans and hermetically .sealed. When being used for cooking or scrambling, etc., a little water Is added and the mixture Is quickly beaten. A big trade is. done In condensed eggs with South Africa, where fresh eggs bring as high as ?L2 a dozen. A FORGOTTEN HEROINE. , Tacotna Ledger. The St Louis Globe-Democrat reminds the present age and generation that it ought to erect a monument to the .mem ory of a heroine who has been dead and forgotten at least forgotten for nearly 100 years. She was never widely known to fame. She was dead long before many people knew that she had lived. Her name was Sacajawea, the Bird Woman, and she was an Indian. Lewis and Clark found her at the Man dan village which stood near the site of the present town of Mandan, on "the North ern Pacific Railroad, during the Winter ot 1904-05. She was a Shoshone, but had been stolen from her tribe when a child and sold to a French half-breed named Cha boneau, who had subsequently married her. Chaboneau was engaged to be the Interpreter for the expedition, and al though his 15-year-old wife had a babe only a few months old. he took her along with him. He proved to be not over valuable as Interpreter or anything else, but his wife well earned the $500 that was paid him. Dr. Elliot Coues says "she con .trlbuted a full man's share to the success of the expedition, besides carrying her baby."" Whoever will read Lewis and Clark's journal, or Noah Brooks' "First Across the Continent ' which gives its story in most reliable form, will indorse Mr. Coues remarfif During the trip of nearly 4000 miles through the wilderness she bore her full share of all perils and hardships, and on one or two occasions rescued the party from great difficulties. She always con ducted herself creditably, no matter what fatlgue-or dangers were encountered. Once when a boat was upset on the Upper Mis souri she rescued from the river many valuable papers while also saving her child. When the party neared the big mountains her services Increased in value. Partly from recollection, partly from In stinct, she was able to choose, among the rivers that unite to form the Missouri, the one that led them the most directly to the headwaters of the Columbia. She piloted the expedition across the roof of the world where the waters which flow by way of the Mississippi and Its tributaries into the Gulf of Mexico are separated from those which flow into the Pacific and Into the Gulf of California; inter preted among Indians with whom her husband, who was paid for doing 'the talk ing, could not converse; obtained a wel come and horses for the party among her own people, the Shoshones, west of the di vide; gave up articles of her own in bar ter with other Indians for the use of the expedition; and, though stricken with serious illness once or twice from ex posure, exertion and insufficient or Im proper food, she rallied quickly, and bore all the hardships, including those attend ing the care of her child, cheerfully and courageously. As a mark of the explorers appreciation of her services they named one of the tributaries ot the Musselshell, in Montana, Sacajaw.ea's RJver; but civilization, which has profited so much by her hardship and trials, has changed this to Crooked Creek., The Globe-Democrat Is right The 20th century ought to make compensation for the neglect of the 19th. The bird wom an ought to 'have a monument Grave Defects In English Manners. National Review. Madame de Stael, after a year spent In England under conditions that gave her an opportunity of seeing all that was dis tinguished in society, recorded her admira tion for our constitution, institutions, par ties, principles, laws and by-laws-, but she was reluctantly obliged to admit that our men had no manners and that our social Intercourse lacked one great essential, namely, conversation. According to her, English 'men and women speak only when they have something to say, and then they exhause every phase ot the subject and themselves. The collapse which ensues In the conversation, .says the vivacious French woman, does not seem to discom pose the hostess or disturb the company; It is accepted as quite natural. The defects in our social system must remain characteristic of us as long as our men remain as indifferent as they are to society in fact, as long as they are still only partially civilized. The French na tion has undoubtedly put women on a higher platform than ha3 the British, and the greater refinement of their social con ception Is no less Indisputably due to this fact The position of a wife and mother in a French family Is legally and Instinc tively a more honorable one, and the mother-in-law, though often the subject of ridicule on the stage, enjoys an author ity and consideration which that relation ship is totally deprived of with us. Wife beating 13 unknown amongst our Gallic friends, excitable though they are; and, as every one knows at home, that pastime Is commonly indulged in by our lower classes at the expense of a 2s 6d fine. In England many little things testify to the accepted "superiority" of the male sex. A woman bows first as to her lord and master; in France a man salutes his Idol, whether noticed or unnoticed, and stands with his head uncovered if she stops to speak to him, while the younger men never omit to kiss a lady's hand, to shake which would seem an Impertinence! To assert that all these formalities are mean ingless Is the abrupt conclusion of most "self-respecting" Englishmen, but they are nevertheless-the evidences of a refined civilization and have their value if life in society Is desirable and useful. The addition, therefor, of these finishing touches to the manly qualities of our British fathers, brothers and sons would make of our male belongings the para gons of the whole earth.- Strong in New England. Brooklyn Citizen. We have, come to regard the New Eng land States as hopelessly Republican, but it is by no means certain that Mr. Roose velt, for Instance, can carry New Hamp shire, Connecticut or Rhoqe Island against Richard Olney. Mr. Tllden and Mr. Cleve land, neither of them a son of New Eng land, carried Connecticut, and the state of Franklin Pierce, with a voting popu lation of about SO.000 is normally Republi can by not more SOOO or 4000 plurality. In Rhode Island the Democrats twice In suc cession have carried the state for Gov ernor and by increasing pluralities. Rich ard Olncy Is by all odds the greatest clti zen of New .England today, and there Is little doubt that his candidacy would unite th" Democrats In New England as they have not been united since 1S92. With the added strength that will come to him as a son of New England, there Is every Justification for believing that he can carry Connecticut. New Hampshire and Rnode Island. Tammany for Cleveland. New York Press. "No, I'm not for Judge Parker and I'm not for McClellan. and I haven't 'said I was for anybody." said Tammany Leader Charles F. Murphy, yesterday.-Tm not against Judge Parker, either. "The fact is. It Is tod early for anybody to speak for Tammany Hall." "You were quoted from Baltimore &n saying Mr. Cleveland would be a winning candidate." "I say so now. Mr. Cleveland would carry Illinois and Indiana, and, of course. New York. New Jersey and Connecticut His nomination would not endanger any Democratlc state. But Mr. Cleveland Is not a candidate, I understand, and of course I do not know that he could be nominated." "Are you against Parker because of Hill?" - T never said I was opposed to Judge Parker, and I have no trouble with Mr. HUL I regard New York State as safe for any candidate we nominate." Negatively, His Mind Js Clear. Detroit Free Press. The average Democrat is hot certain whom be would like to see nominated for President but he has very strong con victions as to whom he doesn't want to see nominated. GOOD WORDS FROM BROOKLYN! Brooklyn Standard Union. The glories of the St Louis World's Fair, promised by those who should know to be the greatest should not completely eclipse that attPortland. Or., next year, for which preparations are already well advanced. Senator Mitchell, the veteran Oregon statesman, the other day accompanied a bill committing the United States to the enterprise with a luminous and exhaustive exposition not only of the undertaking it self, but ot the momentous events which it commemorates, and demonstrates the great importance of tae Oregon country Indeed. It is doubtful whether the fruition of the great Louisiana Purchase, Its com plete assimilation Into the scheme of the American republic, is not due fully as much to the historic exploit of Lewis and Clark as to the genius and courage ot Jefferson and his associates In the original purchase. There can ne no longer any doubt that had it not been for the prompt and adequate action of President Jefferson and the admirable manner in which the expedition of the Virginians was handled. ana periormea its duties, not only the Interior but the exterior of the United States would today be very different from what It is. No one .knew what we owned when we had bought Louisiana. Mount, ains ot salt savage giants and other chim eras were believed in. and the Lewis and Clark expedition was Imperative, not only for a knowledge of our own possessions. I but for a determination of our own bound aries. To the undaunted spirit and cour- over-appreciated, is undoubtedly due the hold of the United States upon the Coast of the Pacific, a factor without which we would have cut but a sorry and minor fig ure in the family of nations. It Is Inter esting, moreover, to note that Senator Mitchell declares In the most unqualified terms that our "54-40" claim was in every respect sound, and that had we insisted upon undoubted eights we would have had another slice of what must now re main Canadian territory. The Portland undertaking, though not on as large as a scale as that of St Louis, i3 in the best hands, and on account of its proximity will more adequately pre sent the industries, the attractions and the opportunities of Japan and China to the American trade than any former similar exposition. The whole Oregon country, moreover. Is teeming with resources and achievements, to which it is anxious to invite the attention ot the world, and par ticularly Its sisters ot the East No por tion of the history of the United States is more dramatic or more significant than that of the far Northwest American soil long before California, with Its gold mines and 3000 miles of coast line, engrossed at tention, and which, with the development certain- to follow the great awakening In Asiatic commerce, with Puget Sound Its entrepot i3 to become from year to year of much greater Importance to the Mls elssfppi Valley and to the Atlantic slope. Mr. Hanna and Zach Mulhall. New York Sun. A Washington correspondent of our es teemed uptown contemporary, the Herald, makes this diagnosis of the psychology of Mr. Roosevelt's friends: President Roosevelt's friends regard with growing suspicion the delay of Senator Han na and Ferry S. Heath, as chairman and secretary respectively, of the Republican Na tional Committee. In issuing the call for the National Convention, and are growing firmer In. the belief previously expressed that Sena tor Hanna Intends to try to defeat Mr. Roose velt's nomination. j We cannot believe that Mr. Roosevelt and the other propellers of his boom have so lost their confidence In human nature as to suspect that Mr. Hanna seeks to re sist that Imperious popular demand which Mr. Roosevelt is so obligingly ready to further and supply. That Imperious de mand Is beard In the District of Colum bia. It swells and thunders in Oklahoma. The Hon. Zach Mulhall, of Oklahoma; gives the glad news that "Oklahoma will be for Roosevelt In the convention, even if the people cannot vote in the election." Even If Mr. Hanna cherished those sin ister designs which are attributed to him. prudence and enlightened self-interest would forbid him to try to carry them out. The Hon. Zach Mulhall has given a plain warning: Cowpunchers, irrespective of party, all over the West, are ready to fight for Roosevelt. Clearly, Mr. Hanna will have to be good even if he doesn't want to be. Less Profanity Than Formerly, Washington Times. The habit of swearing Is not as common as It used to be in this country. Gentle men no longer use the language with the unvarnished freedom of the days of Sheri dan, when a gentleman was accustomed to consign himself, collectively and In sec tions, to the lowest depths of perdition in the presence of ladies while paying trib ute to their charms. Undoubtedly many youths who were not brought up to swear do swear now and then under provocation, but there Is, all things considered, an in creasing respect for the English language. The Hearst Boom. Mr. Hearst's boom is getting a lot of ad vertising in the Republican organs Just now. Minneapolis Times. "William Randolph Hearst's editorial page docs not shovr,hIm a candidate for President so much as his news page. Sioux City Trib une. r The platform of all the Hearst clubs so far formed consists of the significant words; "We need the money." Qulncy (111.) Her ald. The $ William $ Randolph ? Hearst $ Presidential $ boom $ Is S still S resounding $ up 5 and $ down $ the $ land S. Burling ton Hawkeye. The combination of Hearst and the Hearse drivers' Union appears to have been a little more than the National Committee was will ing to-tackle. Louisville Times. Mr. Hearst is having the time of his life, so what matter if he is only chasing a rain bow? The chase pleases him and profits his hired men. Philadelphia Press. There are many Democrats who believe the Hearst candidacy is not a Joke, but there have always been Democrats who had no sense of humor. Detroit Free Press. If Mr. Hearst Is nominated we shall all have a lively Summer, though we think the late Autumn will be particularly enjoyable to Republicans. Philadelphia Inquirer. When the Honorable Bill Hearst gets to be President he will probably order the Con gressional Record to suspend publication and then establish a yellow Journal to take Its place. Des Moines (la.) Capital. Hearst Is not considered a candidate by anybody but by his own newspapers and by the Republican newspapers, which would like to see him nominated. The Idea, of Hearst for President Is absurd. Washington (la.) Democrat. The Presldentlaf boom of William Ran dolph Hearst is again somewhat conspicuous for being "broke up" on itself without much rivalry in that respect, and the prospects are that It will receive a comic valentine. Bir mingham (Ala) News. ' So some of the Democratic National Com mitteemen feared there might be "too much Hearst" In Chicago. Any sign of the right eous fear of yellow Journalism and money is quite in order, if political suicide is to be avoided. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. The belief has gained currency that Wil liam Randolph Hearst is willing to pay 12.000.000 for the Democratic nomination, but poor as the Democratic party la it could afford to pay $5,000,000 to defeat his aspira tions, the money to be raised by general contributions. Cedar Rapids Gazette. The Democrats of Evansville had long and widely advertised to the world that Hearst was to come and speak to them. They had received assurances from him that he would come and they really expected him. All which showing touching confidence on their part. For have they ever heard of his being present at any meeting at which it was ex as ex- j ny one I 1? In- I pected that he should speak.? Has any ever heard of his making a speech diaaspolis News. .-NOTE; AND .COMMENT " The Fifth Avenue Highlander. Mr. Carnegie keeps a Highland piper at his New York house, and sports a tartan designed in his honor by a London, shop keeper. Up, piper, an gla him a blaw, a blaw. Up, piper in tartan, an a', an' a' r Be earning your pay wl a blaw, ablaw. In plaidle and sporran, an' a", an! a His foot is on Fifth-avenue heather, ' He climbs the bonnle braes. Forgot is a his pawky blether. as name the chieftain gaes; Nae skene dhu hangs aboon his Heel, " Although he loo'ei his "trusty steeL" Attended by nae falthfu' gllUe-i The last yin lost Ids Job, He acted aye sae unco silly His Hie' Ian" name was Schwab Content ta scatter f rae fits. sporran Toom libraries, balth home an' foreign. . But noo he nears the chieftain's shieling. The harae o' ancient clan. Built, frae the modest floor taa celling Upon a simple plan A plara bit hoosle. cost not ower" Three millions, or at maist but rower. Carnegie tartan flaunts its checker; Carnegie's piper hits the pipe; Carnegie plbrochs hall the trekker-- A welcome o the HIe'lan' striper Carnegie a; for. note it doon. Wha pays the piper ca's the tune. Sae up an' gle him a blaw. a blaw, Catnegle pibroch an a', an a' Hall tae the Chief wi' a blaw. a blaw. In Bond-street tartan an' a', an' a'. The Strollers. The Scappoose Opera House has been closed indefinitely, pending changes in the exits. Thfr villain does not scowl and glaze, And hiss, "X must haveb!ood"; The hero does not paw the air. - His name, in fact. Is mud; The light comedian's ieellng light, He knows sharp hunger's goad. He's left the ties once bound him tight For those upon the road. "Is life worth living?" Irving sobs: Says Mansfield. "Whafs the use? "We may as well throw up our Jobs . We can't go near Scappoose." The heroine no language slings. Instead she's slinging hash; First having soaked her priceless rings For thirty cents In cash. The ingenue wants none In her No drama if she knows She's washed Her hands of theaters, And now she's washing clothes. "Is life worth living?" Maxlno sobs: Says Lillian. "What's the usel " We may as well throw up our Jobs: We can't go near Scappoose." The actorlnes now cannot find Upon the boards their board. And so their painful way they wind- Where once in cars they roared. Forgotten all their Ps and cues. They leave a showless land. Where frosts fall In the place of dues. And handouts beat a hand. "Life's not worth living." Sothern aobs; Says Goodwin. "Oh. the deucel "We may as well throw up our Jobs, And sorrow for Scappoose." An Elizabethan song says, "there Is no armour against Fate.'" What the wheat shorts want Is ' armour against Armour. Louisiana, which has a candidate for Governor named Jastremski. has a sym pathetic feeling for Santo Domingo with its General Jiminez. Messages received through his stomach urged a New York banker- to kill the president Our stomachs at one time or another have made most of us fti Hta murder. - .... A New York millionaire committed sui cide rather than undergo an operation for appendicitis. Thrifty to the end, he preferred to kill himself rather than pay another to do the work. The Dalles is interested In the case of a bigamous barber. It Is curious to note, in this connection, the effect of allltera uon upon character. How is one to ac count for lying lawyers, prying preach ers, grafting gamblers, saucy stenograph ers, loafing longshoremen and all the others? A Pendleton paper draws a very fine word picture of Mrs. FIshbeck demanding her money back from Gambler Erlckson, who Is described as wearing a white vest and a shining silk hat Virtue is rebuffed by Vice with more than customary melo dramatic brutality. Without in any way detracting from the fidelity to life of the gambler's portrait, It Is open to reason able doubt that the woman's Is accur ate. It seems to be a case of the devil being as black as he is painted, but the angel not quite so white. And by the way. while gambling is to the fore, why doesn't some dive-keeper follow the example- of the grocers and hang out a shingle announcing. "If not .satisfied, your money back?" But the rapture of a whlte-and-gold morn ing,, when the air Is like wine and the sun like heaven, when the snow sparkles so that the Jeweler's windows may as well go out ot business. AVnere are we at! Is this the Post Intelligencer? It is; and there is more of It A morning like yesterday summons the good citizen, buoyant with the Seattle spirit and contented with bis lot, to walk humbly and think upon the forgotten merits of an earlier home until he steps on a slide, and damages his prospects of a future home above the snow. Perhaps if the man is sufficiently full of the "spirit" referred to he I3 too buoyant to fall with any force. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. Agent The price of this house is $10,000. madam. She I don't care to give that much. Agent Well, then, how does $9,009.0S sound? She I'll take It. Chicago JpurnuL Friend What are you going to do with all those presents? Ton have no family? Smart Going to send 'em to my friends in St. Louis. I'm going to the Exposition next y?ar. Chicago Daily isews. "So the doctor's making money. Is he?" Well. I should say so. Why. he's reached that point of prosperity, where fashionable women send for him to treat them for Imaginary ills." Chicago Post. "Where have you been. Tommy?" "Been out watching people sit on the sidewalk." "Nonsense I No one sits on the sidewalk this weather." "Yes they do; after we make the bricks slippery." Chicago News. Josh They said that when that lawyer got to town everything would be laid bare. Jonah And did he fulfill the promise? Josh Nq; the hens are still laying eggs with shells on 'em. Tonkers Statesman. Mr. Hlghmus I can't say I think much of the new- kitchen girl's cooking. Mrs. Hlgh- mus I know she Isn t a first-class cook. Horace, but it's so restful to reflect that she's perfectly bald. Chicago Tribune. Vandyke was instructing in the first prin ciples of art. "It Is very easy," he declared; "you simply paint the country green and ' the town red." With a tug at his patented beard be congratulated himself on the clear ness of his formula. New York Times. Father The idea of your thinking of mar rying that mant He can't scrape enough money together to buy a square meal. Gwen dolynBut that doesn't make any difference, papa, dear; we haven't either of us had an appetite for a month. Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. V