T.HE MOKSTNG- OBEGONIASr, AT0KDAT. JEfE-BKUAITSr, 2T, 190. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Ore son, as second-ciassT matter, HEVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) fally, with Sunday, per month fO.S5 Daily. Sunday excepted, per year 1.50 ally, with Sunday, per year 3.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 Jhe Weekly, per year 1.50 The Weekly. 3 months 50 Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted, l&c -"ally, per week, delivered, Sunday included .20c POSTAGE RATES. , V nited States, Canada and Mexico JO to 34-page paper 1c 10 to 20-page paper. .....2o - to 44-page paper ...............-3c foreign rates double. The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to it without solicitation. Ng stamps should he Inclosed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Iieckulth Special Agency) New York: Booms 43-45, Tribune Building. Chicago: Booms 510-512, Tribune Building. KEPT OX SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex; Postofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn. Den-i'er Julius Black. Hamilton & Hend rlck, 900-912 Seventeenth St.; Lou than & Jackson. Fifteenth and Lawrence. Kansas City Rleksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth npd Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 239 South Spring; Oliver & Haines, 205 South -Spring, and Harry Drapkin. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; L. Begeisbuger, 317 First Avenue South. New York City L. Jonas & Co., Astor .House. Ogdcn W. C Alden. Postofflce Cigar Store; F, B. Godard; W-G. Kind. 114 25th St.; a H. Myers. Omaha Barkalow Bros. 1012 Famom; McLaughlin Bros,. 210 -South 14th; Mogeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Salt 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. E. Leo. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market; Frank Scott, SO Ellis; N. Wheatley, SS Stevenson. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific Ave. N. W.; Bbbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tern, perature. 47 deg.; minimum, 40. Precipita tion, 0.91 inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers; south to west winds. PORTLAND, SATURDAY, FEB. "COMMENDABLE AND "UNUSUAL." A movement has been started by the cultured and ambitious Jewish women of Memphis, Tenn., for the erection of a monument to commemorate the life and work of Emma Lazarus. This young Jewess was for some years con spicuous for her endeavor to ameliorate the hard conditions of immigrant Jews la New York, and while yet young-, strong and full of hope she died at her post of self-imposed duty. This move ment, says the Memphis Scimitar, is "as commendable as It is unusual." Great men who lived, worked, succeed ed and passed on are "done In bronze and marble," all over the land, but it is seldom Indeed that the life and achieve ment of a great woman has been thus honored. The influence of Emma Laz arus, says the journal above quoted, "Is still potent, her example still alive, her philanthropic plans still palpitant in the h-arts of her followers. Her writings were as firm, as virile, as her charity work, and are monuments to her great character. But. lasting as these are. they have not the forcefulness in im parting lessons that chiseled marble hv)fc, nor do they leave as lasting Im pressions upon the young mind." When the victories of peace are com memorated as are the victories of war, monuments to women will not be the unusual spectacle that they are today. The monument to Emma Lazarus will commemorate a life of rare philan thropic endeavor. That which will.be raised to Sacajawea will perpetuate for future generations the story that would otherwise be forgotten, of the patient, courageous, much-enduring Indian woman, whose sagacity and devotion made it possible for Lewis and Clark to explore the North American Conti nent in the early years of the nine teenth century. Lessons of history in widely divergent lines will be presented by these two monuments. There is room and opportunity in the wide field that lies between them for many oth ers that might fitly tell of woman's part In promoting "Western civilization. Justice and generosity may well go hand In hand in setting up these tab lets of history. And when . they thus work together, monuments commemo rating the work of women in science, in philanthropy, in education, in war, in temperance, will not be, as now, "un usual." STORMBOUND SHIPS. Puget Sound papers are indulging in the usual amount of misrepresentation regarding the delay experienced by the "Tnited States transport Dix at Astoria. cr.J, as usual, are very inconsistent in their arguments against this port. The d lay of the Dix is a matter of regret. It w iuM have been equally a matter of regret had she been spending her time lying snug at anchor at Neah Bay. a!ong with other craft bound out from PUofl Sound, but which have been lIr,g there awaiting abatement of the sar. storm which has strewn wrecks along the Coast, and which has kept the Dix inside the bar. No human agency h.i5 yet been able to control these svms. but wise navigators do not f"-pt fate by. rushing into them when thn is nothing to be gained by the .ryvement Puget Sound papers in their news columns, unconsciously per h ?s, explain why the Dix has been un cIe to got to sea. The News on Wc Inesday printed the following: Te steamer Umatilla arrived In port this sr lng. The Umatilla experienced some t'Tlbly rough weather on the voyage up c :leI from S&n Fraacisco, but received no C rr.age other than delay. Speaking of the r .ah weather . which has prevailed during t" past month or more, an officer of the c" p said: "I have never seen rougher vcihor on the PaotSc Coast. There seems t " ae been a succession of storms, one wing another, and a vessel has to be 1 " . ared at alt tlmos. The lower part f t Sound has also been rougher then usual. N .-Ty all the lime there are strong east s'" . vlnds prevailing in the Ftralis. and as r n is you get outside you run Into strong c pasterly gales. v' "hf-n we came to the Straits there were c" -ai vessels stormbound at Port Angeles t" i Clallam Bay. Some of thorn were there f t two or three days. but. I uaderstaad they g t away today. The same conditions have cx ed at Gray's Harbor and at the Colum l.a Liver mouth. On the same day the Ledger, under a S" Franclsoo date line, printed the f: .-wing regarding a .schooner bound X-crr Coos Bay for San Francisco:- It t as the superior seamanship of .Cap Juckeon. master of the schooner North H r;d, that saved the vessel and a nif c e of lives from destruction..- Fir two Cze .he schoenor battled with a hurricane, tr? wallowed In seething seas. She was ti.;aa en her beam ends, her deck l&shlngt were snapped like twine, her- fore staysail torn from Its bol tropes and. her boat was smashed Into kindling wood. Captain Jackson -weathered the schooner and under bare poles fled before the fury of the wind. Even then the seas came roll ing Over the stern, flooding cabin and galley and washing all movable gear overboard. The skipper states that the storm, was the severest of his experience on this coast. The Ledger on the same date also prints an item regarding the movement of the lighthouse - tenders, in which it states that the Manaznlta was at Port Angeles waiting for the weather to moderate some before she comes round to Portland, and the Heather was at Astoria waiting for a moderating of the storm before she proceeds north. Con sidering the fury of the storm which has wrecked so many vessels and left such a trail of destruction in Its wake, it is highly probable that, had the Dix been ar sea, she would have sustained injuries much more costiy than has been the slight delay experienced. At the same time The Oregonian does not contend that the Columbia Bar is in perfect condition. "Were such a claim at all reasonable,- po further effort would be made to Improve conditions at the mouth of the river. The unob structed passage of the Dix from Port land to Astoria shows the river to be in excellent condition, In fact larger and deeper ships than the Dix have been passing up and down without delay on a smaller stage of water. Puget Sound papers, with a desire to conciliate their large constituency in Eastern Washington, have always pro fessed a desire to do everything possi ble to open the Columbia River. If there Is any sincerity in their profes sions, and the Dix matter is one-half as bad as. they are endeavoring to make it, here is a golden opportunity for them to join with Portland and aid In placing the bar at the mouth Is as good copdition as Portland has placed the channel above Astoria. RUSSIA'S CHANCE TO WIN. It is over S00 miles from Port Arthur to the Amur River; It is 615 miles from Port Arthur to Harbin. To hold the line from Port Arthur to Vladivostok would require at least 250.000 men, and another 100,000 would be needed for communlca cations. Under the circumstances It would be sound military sense for the Russians to retreat to Harbin and de fend the line from Harbin to Vladivo stok. When the Russians recover com mand of the sea they can utilize Port Arthur, but today, with the Japanese In control of the sea. Port Arthur is worthless as a point for the landing of troops or supplies. General Joseph Wheeler, a West Point graduate, and a distinguished Confederate soldier, ex pects Russia to win, but in order to win he thinks she will be obliged to regain command of the sea by strongly rein forcing her fleet in the Yellow Sea. He thinks Russia will bring up her Baltic fleet and four big warships she has near completion, and that If necessary she can and will buy more ships. General Wheeler does not believe that Jt Is pos sible to bring up adequate supphes over the Siberian Railway, but thinks that it will be necessary to bring up supplies by sea, and that to do this it will be necessary to fight desperate naval bat tles next Spring. It is not easy to see how Russia can reinforce her fleet. In face of the fact that under the neutrality laws which have been proclaimed by all the great European powers no nation has a right to do anything more than to give the Russian fleets In European waters enough" coal to get to the nearest home port. Under this regulation the Russian Red Sea squadron found It impossible to get farther east than Jibutil or Aden. These Russian squadrons cannot get East, be cause Aden Is from 2000 to 3000 miles nearer to Russia's European ports than It is to Port Arthur and adjacent Man churlan ports. Therefore, as Russia has no coaling stations between Aden and Port Arthur, her naval end of the war will have to.be fought out with the fleet Russia has at present in the Far East Russia cannot build an armored ship at Vladivostok or Port Arthur; she cannot buy any on the Pacific Coast. She can not bring any ships that she may buy or build in European waters to the Jap anese waters. Where could Russia buy any first-class armored vessels tomor row? - General Wheeler in our judgment is mistaken. Russia will be obliged to win by her land resources. Her sea power is ''crippled and she cannot re cruit its weakness by reinforcements from Europ.e. Unless Japan loses her present naval whip hand, Russia will have to win by her armies alone. France cannot afford to help Russia out of her naval straits, for "Great Britain would at once resent such intervention, and the moral effect of such action on the part of Great Britain would be to make China Insist on the occupation of Man churia and fill the whole line of Russia's railway communications with Chinese guerrillas. The Chinese are not for midable regular soldiers, but under in telligent, daring leadership they would make most vexatious guerrillas. Gen eral Wheeler thinks the Chinese, organ ized and under good officers, would make as good soldiers as any in the world. Russia could not afford to rouse a gathering storm of Chinese against her Manchurlan communications; she could not afford to lose her prestige at Pekln by asking any help of France against Japan. It looks as if the battle would be fought to a finish between the two orfg- inal parties to the quarrel. Russia's re sources are very great. She has 121. 000,009 of people; her annual revenues are $900,000,000. On a peace footing her army is l.OOO.WO strong, and on a war basis it is 4,500,000, but all the outlying provinces of the Russian Empire need a constant garrison; the cities of Rus sia need troops. So corrupt Is the Rus sian military, naval and civil admlnls tration that nobody knows how much of Russia's military strength on paper can be brought Into the field. The rapid fire magazine rifles have revolutionized modern warfare. A nation of small nu merteal strength. If it is well armed and can shoot straight can stand off a powerfu! nation that makes a frontal attacK as easily as jaexson at .New Or leans with 500 Kentucky and Tennes see riflemen stood off the attack of 15.000 veteran British regulars. There is nothing incredible in the assumption that Japan may win; if she has 260,000 soldiers that are as brave and intelli gent, as enduring and as good marks men as the best regulars in the Brit ish, French or American armies, Japan ought to win, if she maintains her pres ent control of the sea. This view is taken on the assumption that no intervention In behalf of Rus sia or Japan is made by outside parties to the conflict. But suppose, as is not Improbable, that the Sultan -of Turkey declares war against Bulgaria in the early Spring; suppose the Sultan of Turkey refuses to execute the promised reforms in Macedonia, then we are sure of a severe war into which all the Bal kan States will be drawn, and. perhaps Austria. Turkey In her heart hates Russia with more Intensity than she does any power in Europe, because since the days of Catherine II Russia has been the most dangerous foe of the Sultan. But for the other powers of Europe the Turks would have been" ex pelled from Europe nearly a century ago. But England and France inter fered to save Turkey in 1S29-30, and England interfered again in 1S39, 1854 and 1S7S. Turkey knows that her most dangerous and Implacable foe In Europe has been Russia. If Russia receives any serious check from Japan, we may expect Turkey to defy the intervention of Russia and work her own cruel will against both Bulgaria and Macedonia in the Spring, and Russia would be obliged to enforce her commands or ac cept war with the Turk before she Is done with Japan. When war once be. gins troubles thicken; they "come not as single spies, but in battalions." INCREASE IN INSANITY. Insanity according to the latest report Is Increasing In Oregon, and so it is in nearly every state in the Union, and also In every Important country In Eu rope. The only plausible explanation offered Is that under the conditions of modern life the struggle for existence Is more severe; that Is, the stress of In dustrial existence is increased by more complex systems of labor and competi tive effort. A larger number of people follow brain exhausting pursuits; hab its of diet are less simple. The assump tion that the increase of Insanity Is due to Increased consumption of alcoholic beverages has no authentic record of facts to rest upon, as the alcohol-consuming countries do not show any marked Increase in the number of in sane over the non-alcoholic countries. The consumption of alcohol in Russia is almost universal among the peas antry, and there does not appear to be any marked Increase In the Insane over countries like Spain, where drunken ness Is almost unknown. Statistics show that Great Britain consumes far less ardent spirits and more beer than she did fifty years ago. It Is certainly true that in proportion to the population there Is far less con sumption of alcohol among the whites of the United States than there was fifty years ago. The negroes probably drink more than they did In the days of slavery, because they have larger opportunity and more ready money. The whites of the South do not drink nearly as much ardent spirits as they did even thirty years ago. There is a great change in this respect In Georgia, Alabama. Mississippi. Texas, the Caro- linas and Arkansas. On the whole it would be difficult to prove that there has been an Increase in the consump tion of alcohol In Europe or America in proportion to the Increase of population. and it would be difficult to prove that the lunacy of the majority of the Insane was due to alcohol. The abuse of al cohol Is destructive, but In many cases It kills the body before it upsets the brain. Women as a rule consume little alcohol, and yet many women lose their wits. Lunatics were so rare among the American Indians that the savages treated them with superstitious regard. In Cooper's novel of "The Deerslayer" feeble-minded Hetty Hutter Is as safe among the Indians who murdered her father as If she had been a member of the tribe. If everybody lived as simply and sluggishly as do the natives of Corea,- "the Land of the Morning Calm," there would be few lunatics. Outside of the victims of the morphine habit there are said to be few Insane In China and other Oriental countries, but when these Orientals come to this coun try and wrestle with more complex con ditions of life they show an increase of insane. Unnatural conditions of life, nerve-depress lng occupations, would probably show an Increase of Insane. A considerable per cent of farmers are said to be found among the insane, due probably to overwork under discourag ing conditions and depressing environ ment. FOR THE SAKE OF HUMANITY. The Jewish Consumptives' Relief So ciety, recently organized In Denver, tells Its purpose in its name. The con dition of the homeless consumptive who has spent his last dollar in the effort to reach a place where, as he fondly hoped, he would "get well," is one that appeals strongly to human sympathy. Unable to work, without money or friends, a stranger In a land that has denied, to him the promised healing of its air and sunlight; shunned because of the slg' nals of his dire distress which pitiless disease displays; sensitive, suffering the lot of a human being who finds him self in this position is one that appeals strongly to pity and practical benev olence. That It does not always appeal in vain Is attested by the formation of the society In Denver for the relief of Jewish wanderers thus afflicted. In our own city a movement "lias been started looking to the same end that of establishing a home for indigent, home less consumptives. Since human need Is the magnet that attracts philan thropy, this movement should not tarry on Jts way for lack of funds. The need is not so conspicuous here as it Is In Denver. That city is one of the points upon which a legion of the pale host that is suffering from consumption con staatly presses In hope of relief. Hence the number needing'asslstance there is very large. But the few who are with us (and there are always at least a few of this class) appeal in mute misery for a home in which to pass their few re maining weeks or months a quiet. comfortable place In which to die. The hospitals will not take them, boarding- house keepers do not wage them, even If they have money, and 'private fami lies, filled with alarm at their appear ance and the lingering death that it forebodes, shun them. Medical and sanitary scientists insist that they be isolated. But where? This is a ques tlon that could be answered, as far as this community Is concerned at rela tively slight expense. It should be an swered promptly. Of course George D nephew of J. Plerpont Morgan, Is embarrassed to find himself and his little Japanese bride pursued by camera fiends that swarm American cities in the Interest of Illustrated journalism. But he should recognize the fact that he has made himself an unusual object of interest to his countrymen. They are but dutifully anxious to see what type of Oriental -beauty and winsomeness captured his fancy in the land of the Rising Sun. If curiosity is ever legitimate It surely is so in this case, and the sensible thing for Mr. George D. Morgan would be to pose with his laughing bride. In her quaint costume, on his arm and have a really good picture" taken for the press. Otherwise, in spite of his utmost vigl- lance and regardless of his sarcastic remarks and display of 111 humor, "snap shots" will be taken and scattered over the country through the newspapers. His choice of a wife may be criticised as showing a lack of taste and of proper regard for posterity, but he had the deciding voice in the matter, and with Sir Edwin Arnold for an example doubtless feels that he did not do such a dreadful thing In marrying a Japan ese woman of quality and culture. He hould stand by his act in the presence of his countrymen gooa-natureaij ana with proper self-assurance, and give authorized pictures of himself and bride to the press If he would escape annoy ance. Governor Bachelder, of New Hamp shire, has appointed an engineer who Is at work mapping the roads of the state. and under the Governor's direction a comprehensive system of permanent road Improvement Is being outlined. The Improved highways are designed to provide every section of New Hamp shire with a well-ballasted, well drained and well-surfaced gravel road, whose cost, using the present roadbed for a base, will be from ?S00 to $1500 a mile. On this calculation, by the state appropriating $100,000 a year for six years. New Hampshire at. the end of that time would have 600 miles of the best roads In the world for light travel and mountain scenery, traversing the state from Its entrances at the south west to the WhlteJVIountalns. It is in tended to divide the cost of completing the roads among the etate, county and towns, the same as in New York. The Governor of New Hampshire says that within a day's ride of Mount Washing ton there are 10,000,000 of people; that In order to get one-tenth of them to visit the state every Summer the state should plan to improve Its highways so as to make a good impression on its visitors. If New Hampshire can get 1,000,000 visitors o visit Its mountains during the year and leave $10 apiece, she has provided for the spending of $10,000,000 in her borders during the Summer months. The opposition of Chairman Burton to sundry civil bill appropriation for continuing work at the mouth of the Columbia River and The Dalles Is diffi cult to understand. Outside of the members of our own delegation In Con gress, there are few If any men at Washington who are more familiar than Mr. Burton with the Importance of pushing these Improvements without delay. Mr. Burton personally inspected the proposed Improvements at .the mouth of the river, and also at Celllo, and he has expressed himself as favor able to both propositions. As the work which will be accomplished with the money already available for these Im provements will be placed In jeopardy If sufficient funds for Its continuation are not forthcoming. It Is certainly a measure of economy to provide against any interruption after the work Is un der way. Serious loss would result, es pecially at the mouth of the Columbia River, if the jetty was left In an un finished condition through lack of funds for continuing construction, now it has begun. Following' the advance In wheat prices and an attendant demand for tonnage, shipowners are asking higher rates for freight to Europe. For the past two years rates have been so low that shipowners wave lost heavily In operating their ships. Their loss has been the wheatgrowers gain, but "the laborer Is worthy of his hire," whether he be a shipowner or a wheatgrower, and it is but natural to expect a res toration of rates to a figure In keeping wlthl the service performed. Three years ago the shoe was on the other foot, and he shipowner at the farmer's expense received abnormally high prices. Most of the surplus accumulat ed at that time has since been ex pended In meeting the losses Incurred since the. pendulum swung back the other way. Pronounced advances or declines in freights, or in other lines of commercial work, are In the long run unsatisfactory to all concerned, but as yet no method has been-devlsed for reg ulating the law of supply and demand so as to prevent '.'bulges" and "breaks." The bears had' an Inning in the Chi cago market yesterday, and as it was the first they have had for several days, they hammered wheat pretty hard The May option suffered the worst, losing nearly 3 cents as compared with the closing price Thursday. The Liverpool market closed slightly lower for futures, but Walla Walla cargoes were quoted at the highest point of the season. The war scare continues to be the dominant factor In the wheat situation, and until the end can be foreseen a feverish, ex citable market may be expected. This unsettled state of affairs may extend over into the new-crop season, and from he precent outlook America Is in a better position to appreciate high prices than any other country. Crop prospects are unusually bright for Win ter wheat, and the high prices are cer tain to cause an enormous acreage of Spring wheat. With a big crop and present prices for September wheat ob tainable when September Is here, the American farmers are In a fair way to. continue on the high road to prosperity. J Switzerland was, neutralized by the treaty of Vienna irf 1813; Belgium was neutralized by the Joint action of all the powers In 1839, and again In 1870 France and Prussia reaffirmed this neu trality by treaties. In 1857 Luxembourg was neutralized. It Is difficult for a weak nation alone to protect Its neu trality. In our war with Great Britain the American brig General Armstrong, commanded by Captain Reld, U. S. N., was attacked by a British squadron In Fayal, a neutral Portuguese port, and destroyed. The recognition of the neu trality of China has plenty of prece dents In the history of Europe. Corea has an area of about 79,000 square miles, inhabited by about 10,000, 000 people, which include 15.142 Japan ese, 5000 Chinese, 269 Americans, 104 Britishers, 79 Frenchmen and 42 Rus sians. The total number of foreigners of all sorts Is 2L7S3. Seoul, the capital, has a population of about 200,000, and Is one of the filthiest and most backward cities of the world. The Coreans are a timid race, by whom the Japanese are held In great hatred and contempt, be cause of their cruelty in past wars, and because of the levity with which they have always treated the ancient cus toms of the people. Major-General Chaffee, U. S. A, per sonally observed the Russian and Jap anese troops on the expedition to Pekln. In his opinion Port Arthur Is likely to fall Into the possession of the Japanese, but the probabl? outcome of the war he will not discuss. FINDS GREATER P0E POEM. Chicago Tribune. New Tork, Feb. 15. (Special.) Alfred Russell Wallace, codlscovcrer of the the ory of evolution with Darwin, announces in the current Fortnightly Review that he has just unearthed a new poem, by Edgar Allan Poc. And now he discovers the lyric by almost the most brilliant star of the galaxy of American poets, and which, in Wallace's own words, "is In some re spects superior to most and perhaps all of his similar productions." and was never Included In any collected works of Poe. The story of how he came by It Is in teresting. He tells us his brother, who died in California In ISSo, sent to him before his death his own manuscript copy of the poem In question. The Initials JiE. A. P." suggested It was written by Poe, and the internal evidence and style seemed conclusive to Wallace's mind. Poe Poem Wallace Has Found. Here is the poem: LEONAINIE. Leonalnle Angels named her; And they took the light Of the laughing stars and framed her In a smile-of white; And they made her hair of gloomy Midnight, and her eyes of bloomjr Xoonshlne, and they brought her to me In the solemn night In at solemn night of Summer, Wben my "heart of gloom Blossomed up to greet the' comer Like a rose in blocm; All foreboding that distressed me ' ' I forgot as Joy caressed me ' (Lying Joy! that caught and pressed me In the arms of doom!) Only spake the little lisper. Tet I. listening, heard her whisper" "Songs' are only sung , ."" Here below that they may grieve you Tales but told you to deceive -you So must Leonalnle leave you While her love Is young." Then God smiled and It was morning, Matchlesj and supreme. Heaven's glory seemed adorning Earth with its esteem; Every heart but mine seemed gifted With the voles of prayer and lifted .Where my Leonalnle drifted From me like a dream. E. A. P. Here Is the Plain Tale. Now mark how the plain tale shall put down Mr. Wallace. In the year 1S7B, living in the State of Indiana was an ambitious young man named James Whitcomb Riley. His am bition ran to poetry. He could not, how ever, get the great magazines of the coun try to further it, and his contributions to the local papers died with their birth. To a friend he once laughingly complained if he could sign his poems with a big name they might not only be accepted by the magazines but win him fame. Then a friend demurred. Thereupon young Riley wagered he could write a poem, sign It with a big name, and It would be copied far and wide. As a result of this wager there appeared in the Ko komo (Ind.) Sentinel a copy of verses entitled "Leonalnle," with the following explanatory Introduction: "In the house of a gentleman of this city we saw a poem written on a fly leaf of an ' old book. Noticing the initials, 'B. A P.,' at the bottom, It struck us possibly wo had run across a bonanza. Strange Young Man Left It. "The owner of the book said he did not know who the author of the poem was. His grandfather, who gave him the book, kept an Inn In Chesterfield, near Rich mond, Va. One night a young man. who showed plainly the marks of dissipation, rapped at the door and asked if he could stay all night, and was shown a room. "When they went the next morning to call him to breakfast he had gone, but had left a book, and on the fly leaf he had written these verses." Riley won his wager. The poem was widely copied throughout the newspapers. It was eagerly commented upon and ac cepted by some as a genuine Poe treas ure trove, and It was scornfully rejected by others. But among those whom It im posed upon was so good a poet, so keen a critic as William Cullen Bryant. Was Russia Our Friend? Chicago Inter Ocean. In April. 1SGC an attempt upon the life of the Emperor of Russia was made, and It brought forth from the Congress of the United States a warm resolution of congratulation on Ms escape. It was determined to have the resolution carried to St. Petersburg in one of our ironclad raen-of-war. and Mr. Fox. the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 'was detailed to deliver it to the Emperor. This action was taken In reciprocation of the visit ot tho Rus sian fleet to our country in the midst of our Civil war, made as an exhibition of the friend Uqefs of that government at a time when most of the nations of Europe were sympathizing with the Confederacy. Foster'a "A Century of American Diplomacy." The above paragraph from John W. Foster's "A Century of American Di plomacy," chapter ten, page 405, Is printed in answer to several letters questioning the fact of Russian friend ship to the United States during the Civil War. At a great meeting held In Boston on the occasion of the visit or the Grand Duke Alexis to that city, a poem by Dr. O. W. Holmes was sung to the Russian national air, In which were the follow lng stirring lines: Bleak are our shores with tho blasts of De cember, Throbbing and warm are the hearts that re member Who was our friend when the world was our foe; Fires of the North In eternal communion. Blend your broad flashes with evening's bright star; God bless the empire that loves the great union. Strength to her people! Long lire to the Czar! Either the' American people of 1863 were blind. President Lincoln and his Cabinet wero utterly ignorant of our foreign affairs, and Congress was com pletely hoodwinked, or the Russian fleet came to these shores to help the Lincoln Administration save the Union. The Unexplained Compass. Simon Newcomb In Harper's Magazine. Among those provisions of Nature which seem to us as especially designed for the use of man. none Is more strik ing than the seeming magnetism of the earth. What would our civilization have been If the mariner's compass had never been known? That Columbus could never have crossed the Atlantic is cer tain: in what generation since his time our continent would have been discov ered Is doubtful. The fact that the earth acts like a magnet, that tho needle points to the north, has been generally known to navigators for nearly a thousand years, and is said to have been known to the Chlneso at a yet earlier period. And yet today If any professor of phy sical science Is asked to explain the magnetic property of the earth, he will acknowledge his inability to do so to his own satisfaction. One Genius Is Left. Springfield Republican. The University of Chicago will seem dull without the genial presence of Dr. Oscar Lovell Trlggs, who ranks Rocke feller and Pullman with Shakespeare. but there still remains Professor William Cleaver Wilkinson, who has showed us how Keats might have written some.real nice poetry if he had enjoyed the ad vantages of Chicago. Professor Wilkin son has been under an eclipse of late with tbe departure of Dr. Triggs his effulgent light may once more shine forth. Th: Mild Season at Valley Forge Washington was spending the Winter' at Valley Forge. "Cheer up, men!" he cried to the troops. "This is nothing to the old fashioned Winter of 1904." Thus, with far-seeing sagacity, ie once a sain rallied the patriotic host, CHINA'S BOASTED NEUTRALITY. Minneapolis Tribune. The question of the rights of belliger ent war Vensels in neutral ports is mak ing some stir In Europe. The theoretical rights of belligerent naval vessels in neu tral ports are clearly denned by interna tional law. But they are subject to wide variation, according as they are inter preted by a friendly or a hostile neutral. The theory is that neutral ports cannot be used by either belligerent against the other, either as a refuge or a base of operation, or a snare. No belligerent warship can remain more than 24 hours in a neutral port; unless compelled by stress of weather, of which the neutral authorities must judge. If she does remain, she must be under constant observation of the neutral, to see that she does not take on board arms or mili tary supplies. A belligerent warship can obtain, in a neutral port, only coal enough to take her to the nearest home port, and she may not get coal again from the same neutral for three months. When warships of powers engaged In war meet In a neutral port, that which leaves first Is given 24 hours' stact before the other is permitted to leave, to prevent lighting close to neutral waters. France, which we believe has not pro claimed neutrality violated international law by permitting the Russian squadron that has Just turned back through the Red Sea to Temaln several days in one of her African ports. No interest of Japan suf fered, and her frank explanation that the ships were, sheltered In the. Interest of humanity was accepted by the Mikado's government. Nevertheless It Is thought that France may suffer by the precedent she has established, should she engage in war herself later. More serious questions are involved in the detention of a Russian cruiser in the harbor of Shanghai. This is near the scene of war, and the Japanese complain that their merchant shipping is endan gered. A Japanese cruiser is waiting out side the harbor, and the Russian natur ally does not want to run Into her arms. The position Illustrates the anomalous and equivocal position of the Chinese government. The authorities have or dered the Russian cruiser out. The cap tain refuses to obey, and Is sustained -by the Russian and French Consuls. The neutral powers tried to bring about an agreement that the ship should be dis mantled and laid up until after the war, but Japan would not consent. Of course China has no navy to enforce her order of expulsion, and probably would not dare use it against the Rus sians if she had. The danger is that, in tbe circumstances, the Japanese cruiser' will feel authorized to enter the port and attack the Russfan. There are a number of British and probably other foreign ships in the harbor, and it may be imagined that serious complications are possible. This may explain tbe hurried sailing of the American cruisers from Chefoo to Shanghai. Naturally they want to be In a position to observe and report. The Irishman and His Horse. Vance Thompson in Outing. The ample facilities for the disposal of horses have made the Dublin Horao Show what It Is. The Irish hunter, as you know, is king. The dealers In Brussels, Paris, Berlin and Vienna know the way to Ballsbridge as well as you know your way to your sideboard. As much as any thing else, the facilities offered by the horse show are responsible for the creation of this market. In the old days it was different. I can remember well enough when, in order to pick up a few hunters or ponies, the dazed foreign er would have to travel from Chalrmec, in County Cork, tot Balllnasloe, in Coun ty Galway, from Limerick to Spanoll Hill; those were prosperous days for the Hungarian breeders, but 'twas hard on the Irish farmer and small dealer. Give the Royal Dublin Society its due. By bringing together JO.COO. people who love the horse, and buy and sell him, It has done well by Ireland. But the main- interest of the Dublin Horse Show lies in the -hunter. It Is to ' see this splendid creature that we have come up from all parts of tbe world. And Ballsbridge is cosmopolis. Here In the broad promenade, running east and west, by the tearooms. In the pleasant shade of trees, you will touch elbows with men from the world over. There are young hunting men, In the widest and whitest of Panamas, and the thin nest, blackest leggings, from all the shires or counties of the islands. San dy's burr cuts across the soft speech of Devon. All the Irish brogues from Cork to Cushendall, and from Kllliney Hill to the Headlands of the Kllleries fall sweet upon the ear. Xonder bustles Chicago, and here comes the polite Gaul, knowing in horseflesh. Swarm, too, the ladies and the healthy, rosy girls. Im mune to wind and weather. In horsy coats and boots, or, winsomer. In frocks and feathers from Paris. They drink tea and gossip of things we know not of; of the Lord Lieutenant, and vice-regal receptions, and other matters of impor tance. Suddenly there comes a ripple of cheers out by the carriage-drive. Royal ty arrives; It Is the King's brother, the Duke of Connaught; come, too. His Ex cellency, the Lord Lieutenant, In an open carriage: a Duchess of Westmin ster, a Duke of Lelnster, a countess or two. Harbin as a Military Base. New York Kvenlng Post From vague and conflicting dispatches from the Far East may be safely gath ered only that neither Russia nor Japan has crossed the Yalu In force, and that the "withdrawal" of Viceroy Alexieff to Harbin does not at all Imply the aban donment of Port Arthur. On this point there has been abundant misconception. Harbin, at the junction of tho railway with Vladivostok, 300 miles southeast, and Port Arthur, 4C0 miles southwest. Is the natural military headquarters. From this base the reinforcements may bo rapidly massed in either direction, and a Japanese advance to either the north or south promptly met. On the other hand, the very unlikely event of the taking of Harbin would completely cripple the Russian communications. It 13 natural, then, that the" Viceroy com manding should select this city for- his headquarters In spite of Its remoteness from the probable points of contact be tween the armies. There is not the slightest evidence that as much as a battalion nos been withdrawn from Port Arthur or Niu Chwang. It maj be as sumed, on the contrary, that the Japanese will meet the stoutest opposition at thld vital point. They may even be exposed, as unconfirmed rumors suggest, to an at tack from this direction. Keep Smiling. The thing that goes fhe farthest toward making life worth while. That's worth the most and costs the least. Is Just a pleasant smile. A smile that bubbles from the heart and loves Its fellow men. Will drive away tho clouds of grief and coax the sun again. It's full ot warmth and gladness, too, with manly kindness blent. It's worth a million dollars, and It doesn't cost a cent. There Is no room for sadness when you see a pleasant smile. It always brings the same good luck, it's never out of style; It nerves us on to try again, where failure makes us blue, The dimples of encouragement are good for me and you. It pays a higher interest, for It- Is only lent. It's worth a million dollars, and It doesn't cost a cent. v A smile comes very easy; yon can wrinkle up with cheer. A hundred times before you can squeeze out a single tear. It ripples up, moreover, to tbe heartstrings that will tug,. And always leaves an echo that Is very like a hug. So smile away, folks always know what by a smile is meant. It's worth a million dollars, and it doesn't cost a cent, - 5 - NOTE ANDsCQMMEST; l Sacajawea. "Boat-launcher" they say, moans Sacajawea, "Bird-woman" is not la the word But foolish 'twould be to take such an Idea, For the woman was .surely, a, bird. : Sacajawea sounds like a Russian Gen eral. " One of the personr figuring In a New York divorce case at present I3 A. Royal Guest, - ,. If Corea is as wild and woolly as the war maps of It, the Japanese soldiers are In bad luck. New York bakers are high rollers at present They have boosted" the price 2 cents a dozen. "It's an ill wind that blows nobody good," remarked the moth as he read that a war had sent up the price of camphor. The Czar has sent an Imago to his forces In Manchuria. He might have spared himself the trouble, for the Japs will make Ms whole army look like Images. It was not strange that'N. Auger should have found himself In a hole, but when he allowed himself to. be driven Into tapping a till he wa3 simply bor ing his way Into Jail. A union label for buildings has been In troduced in New York. The label for public buildings Is 14 Inches long and is made ot bronze, the label for residences being; a smaller one of aluminum. In explaining war news to Its readers, the New York Globe says: "Cuba, in Spain, is a. point which all powers would like to seize upon." This la commendably accurate, with the slight exception that Cuba Is not in Spain, but in Morocco on another continent, in fact. They havo an Out for Fun Club in Harlem. The club recently held a re ception and a Miss Flora Kinlne danced for the entertainment 8f the visitors. To obtain freedom of movement. Miss Kinlne had entirely discarded clothes. Five of Mr. Jerome's. detectives were out for busi ness and raided the Out for Fun people, finding in the crowd 20 of the regular police. Evidently the News York cop must have some amusement. Two amusing newspaper blunders have been discovered by the New York Even ing Sun. An Irish paper, in giving the story of a burglary, said:" "After a fruitless search, all the money was re covered except one pair of boots." The Bangkok Times surely they must have Irish editors in Slam made a correction In this way: "The piano which fell Into the Klpng on Sunday was, our reporter now points out, a motor car." Chicago Is becoming famous. What Its haberdashers call the "corset vest" Is a Chicago Invention and product. The "vest" Is not a corset; it is a waistcoat that fits excruciatingly tightly around the waist, and Is cut to swell out around the chest. Chicago's young men and gents will con sequently present the hour-glass appear ance that was once so much admired in the. weaker but no more foolish sex. Fat men will be unable to wear the new crea tion, and the "corset vest"-may lead to dieting on an extensive scale. The sight of half a girl sticking- through a transom arrested the attention of the Rev. James Coleman, a New York fire cnapiam, one cold morning last week. Two legs were kicking wildly and a muffled voice yelled "help" from the In side of the doorway. As the reverend gentleman was gazing at this strange spectacle, one of the policemen came along, and his trained mind grasped the situation instantly, his trained hand grasped a leg immediately afterward! and In a moment, a comely girl of 18 was safely extricated and brought to tho pavement. She has been sweeping out her father's store, she explained, and tha door had swung behind her, fastening the spring lock. ,-The gallant fireman at once offered to clamber through the transom and open the door. He stuck halfway through and had to be released. Simple as thl3 little story Is. It teaches us that It Is not so easy to be a second story man as one might think. Now and then the strain of state af fairs relaxes sufficiently to permit our reverend Senators to Indulge in a little of that delightful badinage 'for which they are justly famous. Never was there a more enjoyable exhibition than the recent passage at arms between Warren and Tillman. Whilst the latter electri fied the listening chamber. Warren play fully abstracted a bottle from the pocket of his confrere, and pretended to exam ine its contents. Discovering that it held whiskey, the jocular Warren re turned the bottle, while another Senator showed his utter lack of intelligence by sneerlngly alluding to a "vaudeville per formance." which, even a Senator should know. Is usually nothing but horseplay. When Tillman perceived the joke, ho carried on the fun In the same pleasant vein. "I don't get drunk," he stated, "except at banquets," adding, as a harmless elap at Warren, probably, "and even then I don't have to be carried home." And the best part of It all la, that In these humorous remarks there Is something of gravity. A man that can leave a banquet without being carried Is surely almost a Prohibltlonlst- WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. "My face Is my fortune." He GO, yet ar dent) And let me assure you, my dear, you have spent none of It. New Yorker. Little Willie Say. pa, wnat Is a luxury? Pa A luxury, my son. is anything you hap pen to want when you haven't got the price. Chicago News. Young Husband When I used to kiss you you slapped me. Young Wife Well, you won't get slapped now unless you forget to klaa me. Illustrated Bits. She Why do they call the woman the better half after her marriage to a man? He I'm sure I don't know! I always supposed that the marriage made a tie. Yonkers Statesman. He (on the honeymoon trip) Do you know I once thought you were tho last girl I should ever have! She (pouting Welt, you think so now, don't you? Yonkers Statesman. "Ma." 'Yes. my son." "Can a thing be created more than once?" "No. my boy$ "Well, why did you tell pop I had been creating -hat rumpus again?" Yonkers Statesman. The Blltons are in very much reduced circumstances." "How do you know?" "Well. BUton has resigned from his club and Mrs. Bilton has stopped going to church." Town Topics. "They drive their motor car more than fifty miles an houV. Is that like parvo nucs?" "Ah, but observe. See them waver when they meet anybody, as' If they were about to turn out." Judge. Myer Tour friend Kagsley tells me he Is an actor. Gyer Yes, he plays a wondering part. Myer X wondertoff part? Gyer Yes. he Is always wondering where his next meal will c ma from. Chicago News.