THE , MORNING QREGONIAN, MONDAY 'AUGUST 29, 1903. aJ Jts. - . side the reserves there "will he a ready ill Uri v i iaVtrVtttt iTTl market for timber now held by the Gov OlfaHIV vVlM 4 r VVy V ernment, and until then It will be well " ' - to protect the forests from fire and Entered at th Post-fun at Portland. Or await the future's needs. Industrial as second-class mattter. 1 development Is not being retarded oy revised subscription rates. reserves as long as the timber supply By mall (posta-a nreoald In advance) meets the demand. Dally, -with Sunday, per month $0.85 Daily, with Sunday excepted, per year T.50 sndaV r ray-.per 'rr::::::::: s.00 bryan and ms party. The Weekly, per year 1-50 This cynical old world is doing things weeKiy. d months........... fn "MV Bmn Ac Via Incoe 1- -alnroritv cented 15o land youthful enthusiasm, he Grains in "".'71 Pr "wee delivered, bunaay m- satracltv and self-controL All exoecta- ciuaea xuo i ... "... .. .. . pAMi . piTPc uon OI ms Doitmg tne Democratic uck- I f I 5 v..- rr v.- I a, 10 to 14-nace uaner lo aas been dispelled, ana he even ven 16 to 30-rmr-A nnrtn ........ .20 I iivraa in nhnta tYio. "Prtntillota xtrVin think" w "'S" paper t -n-,,,.!, V n- ti "h-Tr. Vie-t ParVpr The Oregonian. does not buy poems or I We reprint, though at some length, for etorles from Individuals, and cannot under- 1 It Is interesting and significant. What take to return any manuscript sent to .It l the Commoner says on this head: 'ul solicitation, wo stamps snou. - Some o the Eastern Democrats and some ""5ea I0r this purpose.' f the PoDulIsts have criticized Mr. Bryan's EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. statement giving his reasons for supporting (The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency) Judge Parker. The Eastern Democrats find New York: rooms 43-50, Tribune Building. I fault because the support Is given without Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune Building. I Indorsing the methods employed to secure KEPT ON SALE. the nomination and without holding out in-- rtt. xr t T.vtr jh- "Raller. nope oi economic reiorm. ne criticism ia Hews dealers, 23 Leeds Place. f ol ,VBa- -lr- oryan owes a uuiy lo ..u- Chlrn-n InHltirinm urnin! PoitoQUce '"" uwuocrais ui iora auu. iwu M News Co., 178 Dearborn street. as lo lne organization ana ne couia not neip Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend- "ie iicKei oy preienaing io oe aensmcu w rick. 000-012 Seventeenth street. lne nomination, nenner couia ne nep Kansas City, Mo. Ricksecker Cigar Co., "cues oy trying to deceive inose woo na- ,Ninth and "Walnut. trusted mm. He can do the most gooa ana La. Anrl-R. v. r.rAntr. 259 South render the best service to the ticjcet Dy Enrin-. and Harry Drankln. pointing out mat in spite 01 ail ne niraseu Minneanolis 1L J. Kav&nan-h. 50 South I nas saia in spite or ail any one eise can Third; Xu Regelsburger, 217 First Avenue say it is Better to support tne ucnet man South. to assist In the election ot presiaent xioose- New York Clrr X. Jones & Co.. Astor velt. He has given reasons that seem to House. him sufficient and satisfactory, ana ne nopes nrton w n nnflo to be able to give additional reasons .Omnhn, -Rrtrkniow Rros.. 1612 Farnam: arter Judge farKers letter 01 accept.' McLauchlln Bros.. 210 South 14th: Megeath ance appears. The good effect of Mr. Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam. Bryan's statement Is already apparent, iaany Salt lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 west have announced their Intention to support Second South street. I the ticket who before were In despair. j.ney St. Louis 'World's Fair News Co.. Joseph see now that they can support the ticket and CoDeland. "Wilson & "Wilson. 217 N. 17th st.; still continue the fight for economic reform Geo. I. Ackerxnann, newsboy. Eighth and they see that the election of Judge Parker Olive sta. will remove Imperialism, militarism and the San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 748 Liar- I race question and clear the way for a fight ket, near Palace Hotel: Foster & Orear, on economic questions. Neither Is the Popu Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros Se Sut- ist criticism valid. It is more important ter; L. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand: that reforms shall be secured than that F. "W. Pitts. 1008 Market:Frank Scott, 80 tnose ref0rms shall come through any par- Ellis; N. "Wheatley. S3 Stevenson: Hotel tlcular party. The total Populist vote Is small St. Francis News Stand. i compared with the number of Democrats who Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House 2ews ,je6ire reform. Mr. Bryan can do the cause of Stand. reform more good by helping these Demo in onntrol the Democratic party than he YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tern- , . . 1omln(r tne Populists. If Judge perature. 60 degreee: minimum temperature, 06 . . ,hp Democratic Dlatform degrees. Precipitation. -21 of an Inch. A .hj, k- nrOCTe.8 during his adminls- TODAY'S WEATHER Showers, southerly tratlon: if he refuses to carry out the platform winds. I iie .Kiii make it easier for the reform element to rtgaln control of the organization. i-oktland. Monday, august 23? low. h. of thl3 ingenious and elaborate plea is, of course, that Bryan THE record is THE guarantee. thinks his chances of political prefer We are not constrained to keep silent on ment are greater in the Democratic any vital question; we are divided on no party than outside it, to say nothing of quesuyu; our pua .uuuuu.,, auU the handsome revenues of the Com- -n, t. iu. -rmfi knt . moner which would be decimated by a Government ire ask the people to continue bolt. Bryan will preserve his regular in power, for our performance in the past, ity at all hazards, and. put himself in our proved governmental efficiency, is a nne for the next Presidential nomina guarantee as to our promises for the future t, 1nf nw fnr thp f?.na In iPresident Roosevelt. I ' , . . , , Nebraska Lfegislature. THE BIG STICK issue. At the same time he is not going to It irks the Democratic soul to hear j tear any clothes trying to prove that all the aphorism "Speak softly but carry a the party needed was to shelve Bryan big stick." This is the President's para- and that the country will approve the phrase of the historic dogma, "Suaviter reorganlzers after rejecting the Bryan in modo, fortitur In re." There is no platforms of 1896 and 1900. Lots worse objection to the latter term, if one Is things could happen than Mr. Bryan's so constituted that he cannot use Saxon election to the Senate. In one impor words except when he has no Latin tant respect he would be an improve- handy. Shakespeare himself seems to I ment upon Dietrich. He has learned have had some approximate adumbra- much in eight chastening years. Kis tion of the Roosevelt philosophy when 1 state would have a voipe in the Senate be put into the mouth of dear old Polo- I such as it has not had since Mander- niiis: son retired and Thurston fell. Beware Of entrance to a quarrel: but, being in. Bear't that the opposed may beware ot thee. All this; however, is beside the pur pose. Wno is going to vote ior .farKer because of a desire to see his country, in foreign affairs, the field to which the proverb was applied, carry a little stick? How many men have we, and where do they live, who share the "cra ven fear of being great" anf -ould fain see this Nation bandied about, by every power that Is tempted at sight of our weakness or lack of spirit. When Turkey insults us with repeat ed promises she has no plan to keep; when Russia intimates that it is of lit tle or no significance what our shippers think or say; when Germany proposes td lord it over "Venezuela or Colombia; when Germany's Admiral offers an af front to our Commodore at Manila; when Spanish officers at Havana make merry and curl the lip of scorn at the murdered Maine; when Morocco suffers .an American citizen to be treated with violence then what? "Why then there is no American who is worthy the traditions of Bunker Hill and Lookout Mountain, no American who rejoices in the names of "Washing. ton and Grants P.erry and Decatur, who will want in his Nation's hands, to assert and preserve our honor and our right, a broken reed, wielded by men who cannot speak aloud on any burn ing issue of the day, and would per haps treat the enemies of the flag abroad as condescendingly as they treat enemies of honest money and law and order at home. "What is wanted then is the big stick, the bigger the better. cities handsome dwellings, new brick see It that the car contains grain, from blocks, paved streets; etc., all tell a Oregon or Washington, the land ot story full of meaning and more elo- plenty, where crops never fall, ana are auent than that which Is re'lated by the not only large enough to feed our own Bradstreet fleures I people, but also the Callfornlans, Orl- "When the wave of financial trouble entais, Europeans and Easterners less rolled over the Pacific Northwest a few favorably situated. years ago, the growth of the cities had far exceeded that of the country. The latter has since more than regained its place, and there can be no pause or retrograde movement in the city until the wonderful prosperity of the coun try has pulled It at up to at least even terms with the country from which all prosperity springs. Hard times can gain no foothold In the Pacific North THE PARKER ARMS. New" York Sun.' A coat of arms Is an article easily cut to order In these days, when the Demo crats are returning to Jeffersonian sim plicity. Indeed, this garment may bo had ready made. Now regarded by many "vThlle there is convincing force in the persons as a luxury or superfluity, a coat reasons given why the Legislature should enact laws that will tend to pro tect the forests from destruction by fire, It would not be wise for the lawmaking body to create a forest protection sys tem that would be costly to maintain. The Government already employs a larc-e number of forest rangers who of arms was once deemed a necessity of every gentleman's wardrobe. Jefferson and dlver3 other "Fathers" had one on hand. It Is gratifying to know that Judge Parker, or rather the ancient and respect nhl family of Parkers, has a coat of MR. LAWSON'S PRETENSIONS. "Holland's," New Stock Letter. Some disposition has been noticed among a certain element which desires to be of ficious In Democratic politics to make use of recent articles in a magazine, written by Thomas W. Lawson, of Boston, in which there were alleged exposures of the method adopted to float the Amalgamated Copper Corporation. No doubt Mr. Law son's article will be read by many per sons either ignorant of financial methods, or having only a superficial knowledge of them, as confirming their own Idea, and that so often "NOTE ANDC0MMENT. , Samovar and Samlsen. - Our great serial story of the Russo Japanese War: (Summary of previous chunks Michael Pop off Falls In and Is Out a. Rouble. Disguised aa a Bale of Hay. he makes his escape from a Japanese Prison, and Is on his way to Nluchwang when there la a Terrific Explosion and Popoff is thrown Into a Cloud, which carries Him to St. Petersburg. He wakes the Czarevitch, and his Fate Is Trembling In the' Balance when Port Arthur Falls. Slid ing Into the Yellow Sea, Popoff discovers a Mine, the sale of which brings him a Fortune, and he proceeds to Japan to buy a suit ot vigorously exploited by 1 rll -D, , .1 ltl l""1'" lu uiyaii. i arms of proper cut and duly laDeiea, a u', Satsuma Ware. By settling a disputed race Buffalo 1 "wo can people nrmiy Trunin us tentacles. good old coat.' According to a west so long as the territory as a whole guard against fires in the reserves, and dispatch to the New York Times, the Hon. That ,g clearjy mtimation in Jin is producing and selling so much more than, we are buying. The balance of trade is all In our favor, and It prom ises to remain In that position for at least a number of years. the large timber corporations maintain at their own expense a system of pri vate timber protection. If the number of rangers employed by the Govern ment Is not sufficient, doubtless the force will be Increased upon a proper Henrv Beverly Deas of this town, skilled transplanter of family trees and chief of the American Genealogical Bu reau, has brought from England much In formation in regard to the Parker family: He finds that the Judge is a- direct descend- Lawson's article, and he attempts u. some what bewildering and, to men of finan cial knowledge, a very amusing, although not less dangerous, explanation of mod ern finance. Mr. Lawson's article is a fine illustra tion of what half-truths, stimulated by WELCOME, SPIELERS ALL! Portland, Oregon, Is to have a World's Fair next year, so the Pike attractions will be under no Immediate necessity of looking for new Jobs. Chicago Record-Herald. Our esteemed contemporary has acci dentally called attention to one of the main advantages to be derived from the Lewis and Clark Centennial. What would a world's fair be without the barkers? Echo answers, nothing worth while. So that as we share the Chicago paper's pleasure that these useful and laborious gentlemen of the Pike will be provided with a new job soon after the old one falls them, let us also on behalf of Portland tender them a right royal welcome to the White City on Guild's Lake, A man who made the circuit of the National conventions and the St. Louis World's Fair says that the finest ora tor he heard in 'all his travels was a gifted young man who held forth on a platform just outside one of the worst attractions on the famous Pike. What musical cadences, what moving periods, what persuasive countenance, what graceful gestures! This young man might have been the valedictorian of his class or a revivalist on a vacation, such was his earnestness, such his grace. And the proof of his power lay in the fact that at the close of his elo quent oration, repeated every thirty minutes or so, his hypnotized audience marched up to the ticket window in obedience to the motion of his magic wand and left their dimes in the full consciousness that the whole show had already passed them in review as in troduced to their notice on the platform by the orator of the day. It would be unjust to Ignore also the able assistants of this and many an other talented spieler, who parade the Pike with staff in hand, greeting cheer ily each new arrival on the way, with assurance that he is "just in time," as if this solitary sideshow had been the only object the pilgrim had in mind or required to see. It Is worth many a long day's ride to see these faithful workers at their strenuous task, and persons have been known to take their meals at an expensive restaurant just across the way. for no other reason than to see and hear the champion spieler of the Pike. Such is the fidelity of these tireless workers that no one of them has ever been "known to minimize the virtues of the show he represents or exaggerate tne merits or a rival establishment. You can talk about your Government exhibits; your art galleries, your manu facturesbulldlngs and the rest; but for County of York. England. Tracing the ParK- era Of York In a direct ilne to the New Eng land Parkers, from whom the Judge is de scended, Mr. Deas finds that Judge Parker Is entitled to the following representation in tne armorial records of American families: Arms Vert, a chevron, between three stags heads cabced. or. Crest On a chapeau, a stag trlppant proper. Motto Non fiuctu nec flatu movetur. A Darker is a park keeper. The stags' heads and stag trlppant proper are thus especially appropriate, as Is the color vert. - . I v i nun ul nuai. iicul-ui uuio, aijiiiuiaicu. showing by the commercial bodies and ant 0f the Parkers of Broweholme and Newton, confessed feelings of resentment, dlsap- by the Oregon delegation in uongress. Private concerns can well afford to em ploy a few men to guard their property during a month or two of the dry sea son, for the timber land cost them com paratively little in the first place ana is rapidly increasing in value. Experi ence seems to Indicate that the solution of the forest-protection problem lies not so much in providing a means for extinguishing fires as in preventing the startins: of fires that are likely to get as Df the ereenwood tree; and or (gold) beyond control. Doubtless much could agrees with the telegram or by Its yellow v,, onnnmniiH hv a low flxincr time color witn tne piationn. ... iut ,-v, fio chnit nor The New England Parkers are a stock m,u. sturdy of mind and body. Among them be set, ana tne aanger oi nre in uie r- nave'been sucn men as Issac chief Jus serves could be iessenea n every per- fJrft of Manaachusetts: Joel. Chief Justice son entering the reserve were required f New Hamnshlre: Theodore, Dr. Wll- to first secure a permit and notify the jarjt Amasa, who emigrated from Con nearest ranger of the exact location of necticut to Delhi and Albany. Presumably his camn. Such regulations would not the famous Joel, of New Jersey, was of only make men more careful but would aid in fixing responsibility In case of damage by fire. When the assessea valuation of all Oregon timber land has been raised to an amount comparing favorably with the valuations placed upon other property, the people of the state will not complain at a reasonable expenditure for forest protection. The state has the same interest in prevent ing the destruction of the forests as it has in the preservation of the salmon Industry, for which a considerable ap propriation is made every two years. 4 The utter folly of parents who, In their age and helplessness, barter the home that shelters them for a promise to pay, in care and protection through life, given by a son who has other and paramount interests, has been again shown in the lonely death, following months of isolation, lack of care and scanty food, of an old man of SO In his cabin near Stayton, Marion County. After a futile attempt on the part of relatives to send .him to the Insane asylum, the old man retired to a cabin on the corner of the farm that he had deeded to his son in consideration of care in his old age, and thefe, after he had been dead two or three days, his body was found by passing neighbors. Aged parents cannot be - expected to heed this warning. A simple statement of Will Carleton In his poem "Over the Hills to the Poorhouse" gives the all- sufficient reason for this: Every couple's children Are a heap the best to them. The old people do not believe that their boy will turn them out. This Is the whole story. It Is dictated by Na ture herself, and the sad sequel, so often written in sorrow and neglect, the same origin; also Cortland, of New Jersey, a great la.wyer who refused great offices Notable In another way and still piously remembered in Boston Is Harvey D., whose monument is In School street. The present Attorney-General of Mas sachusetts Is Henbert Parker. We don t know whether the famous English Arch bishop Parker was of the Yorkshire Par kers or not. If so he came of a branch that had settled in Norfolk. Most ot the American Parkers of distinction have been lawyers, but there have been ministers In the tribe, which counts at least two bishops, Samuel, of Portsmouth, consecrated bishop of Massachusetts in Trinity Church. New York, 100 years ago next month, and Linus, of Rome, N. Y., made a Methodist bishop in 1882. Joel, of Vermont, a Hamilton Col lege man, was president of the Union Theological Seminary and pastor of tne Broadway Tabernacle 50 years ago or so, A successful race, these Parkers, brothers in name, at least, of the Fores ters, the Du Bols; and. distant cousins, we suppose, of the Woods'. We leave it to thfe heralds to say If this coat of arms belongs to the Staggs, the Roes and the Harts likewise. The dictionary tells . us that "caboshed," "caboched," "cabossed, after the French "caboche," from " ca- boche," a head, means, In heraldry, "rep resented alone and affronte; said of the head of a stag or roebuck when no part of the neck Is seen." Is there any- ety mological connection between "caboshed" and the modern technical expression to "kibosh," to "put the kibosh on?" The motto "Non fiuctu nec flatu mo vetur" (he Is not moved by wave or wind), Is scarcely of auspicious interpretation now. "Non flatu movetur," he takes no stock in windy claims Of committeemen and politicians claiming everything, has good sense. But If Judge Parker is not moved by wind, how can he And the St. Louis platform "admirable?" "Nec fiuctu movetur. is fatal. Only wave, a tidal wave, can move the Judge Into the White House. To be sure, the polntment and personal animosity, may be made to show. There is more than a half-truth in the general suggestion of the article, namely, that many finan ciers, many men of capital, were disposed to buy properties cheap, to merge them, to manufacture stock representing arbi trary and excessive capitalization and then by the familiar and hoary devices by which the public cupidity Is tempted to persuade the public to pay its money and to receive these securities in exchanges therefor. But that is not the method exclusively of the little group who conceived the Amalgamated Copper proposition, and who Mr. Lawson intimates deliberately bunkoed the American people. It Is a de vice of which the history of speculative bubbles gives numerous examples. It is not confined to New York City. During that period of financial frenzy that pos sessed so many of the American people between 1SS9 and 1902 that method was adopted all over the United States. The first check to this speculative frenzy was brought by the very bankers of New York whom Mr. Lawson insinuatingly holds up to public reproach. They by concerted action began to limit excessive borrowing, to call loans, and that policy was followed by a demonstration made by the people themselves of the fact that they had had sorrowful and sufficient ex perience and had paid dearly for their cupidity. That Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller de llberately conspired to secure control of copper properties, to create a corporation which should excessively capitalize these properties and then persuade the Ameri can public to accept tHIs stock with tho intent after that to cause a depreciation in the price of these securities, so that Mr. Rockefeller and Mr. Rogers and the little Inner circle could buy these stocks back at depreciated prices, Is to be only inferred from Mr. Lawson's article, for it Is not directly stated. But If they did this they did no more than to exploit on a great scale a certain feature of modern finance which has been In practice all over this country at one time or another from the time of Daniel Drew and even earlier. England knew it in the South Sea bub ble and Law taught It to France. That does represent a certain feature of so called Wall-street methods, but it is pos sible to use this method successfully only in times of very great speculative excite ment, when the public has lost Its head and everybody Is in a frenzy to get rich upon the instant. The demonstrations that have been made here since the first of the year make it clear that the public will not, in this generation at least, be induced again to participate in great corporate promotions. The lesson of the danger that it Is In that has been well learned. For Instance, in the case of the United States Realty Company, by which locally almost as many were as badly bitten comparatively as in the case of the Amalgamated Copper proposition, there was absolute demonstration that the vlsl- between Kuroki and Kuropatkln. Popoff -wlna Great Honors from the Czar and the Mikado. In the meantime. Count Serge-Suit, the dreaded Chief of the Third Section, forces his Atten tions upon Mrs. Popoff. Furious at his Re jection, Count Serge-Suit visits the Popoff cot tage and raises his pistol. Popoff in the meantime is reminded of hi9 Wife by a blow on the head, and plunges Into the Trackless Forests of Central Wisconsin. He makes his way to Havre, when he io confronted by one of1 the Third Section hands. Mrs. Popoff. after Count Serg'e-Suit Is killed by falling upon a bullet he fired at her. wanders to New York where Russell Sage takes up a col lection and ships her to Havre. There Popoff and Mrs. Popoff meet and after greeting one another with a few blows they hire a Franc and set out for PJoxtnsky.) CHUNK XI. The driver of the franc at once broke out his spinnaker and, close-hauled with the wind on his port quarter, bore away for Pjoxtnsky. As they rattled past the Peterhof palace, the vehicle was stopped by a sentry, who Informed Popoff that the Infant Czarevitch ha been pleased by the noise of the franc on the rough pave ment and that the Czar had ordered then to drive backward and forward be fore the window until further orders. For six days and two nights the frano was driven furiously to and fro without a stop, and since it was evident that the Czar had forgotten all about the orders he had given, the Popoffs seemed doomed to grow old and die in their con fined quarters. They were reduced to the last morsel of ice cream, and Popoff was seriously thinking of killing the curly little Samovar and a beautiful Samlsen ho had been given by a Geisha girl for his aquarium. At this juncture he was struck senseless by an idea. He jumped out of the franc, and running into tho palan he placed, the Samovar and Samlsen in the hands of the Czare vitch, who goo-goo'd with joy. For this service Popoff was decorated by the Czar, who had been, before. ascending tho throne, a painter- and decorator by trade. He gave the Popoffs the best house in Pjoxtnsky and 1,500, 0C0 tobacco tags. And they lived unhap pily ever after, thanks to Samovar and Samlsen. THE END. "-l'u'ra uu"u'"f'3 "c -, , .. fv,0 ,., "v" " , , v- was aosoiute demonstration tnat tne visi- genulne entertainment sit down for .jnakes no Impression upon the loyal stags are more cheerful and might be bl e oi corp0raU on, both in cash SAFETY IN RESERVE SYSTEM. There is nothing whatever in. the ar gument advanced in the last few days ithat .Government forest reserves should "be thrown. open so that the timber may be cut and turned to account before it is destroyed by fire. AH around the edges of the reserves are valuable tlm ber lands owned by large corporations or syndicates, and the timber upon these lands Is not being cut into lum ber. In Lane County some of the lar gest mills in the state are operated, and the proprietors have timber enough to keep them supplied with raw material for a quarter of a century. If the Cas cade reserve were thrown open now It would be taken by large corporations by means of scrip, and the timber would vbe for all practical purposes continued In a reserve, except that It would be in a private instead of a public reserva tion. It is the policy of the Govern ment to permit the matured timber on the reserves to be cut whenever there is a demand for it for milling purposes, and until there Is such a demand there can be no industrial advantage secured ' by offering it for sale. While few who look at our vast for est resources today would think it prob able that our timber supply could ever be monopolized by large corporations, the assertion has been made by men familiar with timber-land affairs that the timber in the reserves is practically all that remains uncontrolled by lum ber companies and speculators. If this be .true, we may some time find that the Government holds a balance of power which will enable it to regulate lumber prices. To throw all the timber Jand into the hands of syndicates would permit some future Standard Lumber Gompany to occupy the same position In the lumber business that the Stand ard Oil ompany does today in the oil -iss. When logging companies com Aavrthat they can't find timber out- ON A WAVE OF PROSPERITY. Bradstreet's last weekly report, show Ing the bank clearings of the country, credited Portland with a heavier per centage of gain than was shown by any other city west of the Rocky Mountains. With an average of over $500,000 per day, the gain -was 31.4 per cent over the corresponding week last year. This is highly satisfactory, but not surpris ing, for never In the history of the city has the business outlook in Portland territory presented a brighter aspect. The wheat crop of Oregon, Washington and Idaho Is smaller than some of its predecessors but the shortage is nearly all In the remote portions of Washing ton, not tributary to this city. In what is known as strictly Portland territory, the crop Is the largest on record; and It is selling at higher prices than nave prevailed at the opening of the season for more than ten years. This big crop and big prices will follow a number of other good crop years which had al ready lifted hundreds of fanners from poverty to affluence, and but little of the money received will be needed to made good deficits due to the mlsfor tunes of the past. But the wheat farmer has no monop oly of this general prosperity that has struck the Pacific Northwest. A news dispatch in yesterday's Oregonlan stat ed that fruitgrowers at Hood River had refused an offer of ?2.25 per box for ap pies. Hood River is not a large place and the area of fruit land tributary Is In a measure restricted, but out of that little station rolled 125 carloads of strawberries this season, and the other fruits that are following and to fol low will In the aggregate make a much greater amount of business. From the erstwhile desolate-looking "bars" lying at the mouth of the ravines along the Snake River, and from the sand fiats lying higher up, this year is moving a crop of fruit which will require 300 cars to carry It to market. From Southern Oregon and from the Willamette Val ley fruit Is now moving by the train load. The industry gives employment to thousands of people, and the money paid them immediately goes into clrcu lation. It quickens the pulse of trade and permeating every vein and artery of commerce, shows outwardly In glow ing colors that are but a reflection of the health within. Hops. 25 cents per pound, what a sound of prosperity rings in that figure, when we hark back to the time when the crop sought in vain for buyers at 6 to 8 cents per pound! And our dairy industry, not yet developed into propor tions sufficient ,to meet the demands of half an hour and watch the able and accomplished orator beguile from the passing throng their dimes Or halves or quarters, as the case may be. Here at Portland the Midway Is to be called the Trail; and President Goode will fall in his duty unless he secures the young man we have mentioned to stand some where along the Trail and make the peninsula vocal with his melting tones. There is a good deal of promising local talent here that might be utilized to good effect, but names cannot be men tioned now for lack of space. hearts of aged parents' who- are asked to surrender their right to live in their own home for the privilege of living In that of another. The daughter-in-law in this case was the offending power that drove the old man out. One can but wonder what the son was doing In the three, days that the body of his father lay unvlslted In his hut after death "from natural causes" gave the old man release. supposed to run well. But caboshed stags have no legs to run with, and a trlppant stag Is only walking, or at best, trotting. He has three hoofs on the ground. One fore hoof Is lifted. He may have good action, but he lacks speed. MOST EFFECTIVE ADVERTISING. It costs nearly 10 cents per bushel more to ship wheat from points east ot the Cascade Mountains to Chicago and Minneapolis and other Middle Western markets than It costs to ship to Liver pool by way of the Pacific Coast ports. In spite of this handicap of freight rates, the fancy prices which the Amer ican markets east of the Rocky Moun tains are paying for Oregon and. Wash Ington wheat have resulted in a very heavy movement In this new channel. This wheat is going out df Oregon and Washington in immense quantities to supply the demands of a territory that in former years was regarded as the principal wheat section of the United States. At the same time, wheat, oats and barley In shipload lots are being sent from the two states to California to meet the home-consumption require ments of a state which was formerly a factor of great Importance in the world's wheat markets. The opening up of these new markets for the surplus from our big grain crop may cause a loss of some prestige which Portland would otherwise have held In the foreign grain trade. The figures of the Agricultural Department on grain shipments give no credit to Portland or Puget Sound for the Coast wise grain traffic of the ports, and for this reason the importance of the Ore gon and Washington ports will not be fully recognized by the World at large. In the case of the Eastern shipments, there are mitigating circumstances which may offset to a certain extent the attendant loss of prestige. As an advertisement of the great resources of our country nothing to equal this wheat movement to the East and South has yet appeared. Our wheat Is pouring Into the Dakotas and into Minnesota, where the blight of bad crops falls much more frequently, than It does In the West. The prices at which it Is selling are also a powerful inducement for the Eastern agriculturist to forsake The Victoria papers have at last an nounced that the sealing schooner Tri umph is lost with all on board. The story of the disappearance of the ves sel and the subsequent finding of wreckage on Entrance Island was printed In The Ore'gonlan several months ago. Notwithstanding that the report was based on the testimony of masters of other vessels which were in company with the tender oldsealer dur ing that terrible March gale, and that the vessel's name board and other iden tified wreckage came ashore soon after- Ward, The Oregonlan writer who se cured the story was roundly berated by the Victoria papers for printing it. In extenuation of this attitude, the Vie torlans argued that the publication of the story caused much suffering and misery for the families of the unfortu nate crew that perished with the veS' sel. It was and still is difficult to un derstand how the suffering of these people has been alleviated by prolong ing their suspense and agony of uncer tainty for months, especially when the story of her loss as printed In The Ore gonlan was corroborated by competent authorities at Victoria and West Coast points at the time it was printed. Another Champion of Sane Education. Chicago Journal. Present reaction against fads and frills In primary education has found an able champion In Whitelaw Reld, chancellor of the Board of Regents of the state of New York. Mr. Reld wants the three R's well taught. He holds that second until ample provision has been made for outrlgnt these stocks. and in real properties estimated as the New York Tax Assessor estimated their value, was some $6,000,000 In excess of the aggregate value of the stock, common ana preferred, of this corporation at the mar ket quotations for that stock, and yet it was impossible to Induce the public to buy a single share of this stock. That to some extent is true of the United Steel Corporation. The expert authorities are sure that the corporation possesses In mines and ores developed, developing or yet to be developed, assets that are far in excess of the market value of the pre ferred and common stock. But the public will not buy a share and the great capi talists are compelled to carry or to buy giving every child a thorough primary education. Schools managed on advanced pedadogical lines are doing more harm than good, Mr. Reld avers, and he cites the startling fact that a large propor tion of candidates for admission to West Point Military Academy are rejected for lack of basic elementary qualifications. It is encouraging to note that a strong tide of public sentiment has set in against fads in primary schools. School authorities should not insist upon giv ing a child baubles when It asks for the substantials. Some other way will doubtless by and by be developed so that there may be again seccessful temptlngs of that cu pidity which seems to be a fundamental passion of human nature. But it will not take the form of promotion of the stocks of merged corporations. Aside from the general truth of this kind, that is hinted at in Mr. Lawson's article, his exposition of modern finances makes it clear that he Is either ignorant himself of the details of true financing or that he hopes that his readers are Igno rant thereof. One of the best of the entirely new attractions at the State Fair next month will be the complete working exhibit of road machinery. Steam rock- crushers will be in operation every day, crushing granite from the quarry In the Cascade Mountains, trap rock from Valley hillsldesvand boulders from river beds. Screens, spreaders, rollers, gra ders and scrapers will be at work as in practical roadbulldlng. This exhibit alone will be worth going to the Fair to see, and the efforts which have been made in order to secure it are cred itable to the State Fair management and others who have taken an interest in it. The Fairbanks Solemnity. Everybody's Magazine. Tne solemnity or rairoanKs is more than skin deep. It Is constitutional. For instance, he has never in his life made a speech In which he has not mentioned a graveyard or a coffin. His nomination to the- Vice-Presidency does not seem to have broken the spell. The other day. when his fellow-citizens of Indianapolis met to express the honor they felt he had conferred upon them by accepting the Vice-Presidency, he began nis response thus: "Ladles and gentlemen: In yonder city of the dead, where are laid the bodies of so many of the great leaders of the Re publican party " At this inopportune moment some carp ing scoundrel laughed. But unless Sen ator Fairbanks reads this, I doubt if he will ever know why. The Curse of Money. Harper'3 Weekly. Patrick A. Collins, Mayor of Boston. tells a story of a negro who was arrested for stealing. He had been caught helping himself to the contents of the cash- drawer in the store of a Mr. Appleton. The Magistrate before whom the negro was brought knew him, and was much surprised to learn the charge against the prisoner. Looking at tho negro earn estly, ho said: Sam, Im sorry to see you here. Didn't "you know that no good could come from stolen money? Theres a curse on it "Well, Jedge," replied the prisoner, "I didn't know dat Mlstah Appleton stole dat money. I couldn't tell dat by je3t lookln' at It. Report From the Seat of War. General Kuroki's favorite food Is said to be beans. New York. Evening Sun. We notice that weather forecast of ficials don't try to pick winners at. the races. The editor of the Coosa (Ala.) Argus hardly meant exactly what he said when he wrote this paragraph: Owing to the crowded condition of our col umns a number of births and deaths are un avoidably postponed this week. In the event of the birth of a Czare vitch, says a European exchange, Drs. Ott and Hirsch were each to receive $50,000. Had the baby been a princess, they would have received only a fourth of that amount, , . - This beats horseracing. Among the attractive features of a book soon to be issued by Dodd. Mead & Co. Is "A Chapter on New Netherland to 1628 and Forty-six Spellings of the Island Now Known as Manhattan." Even forty- six spellings of one word will hardly be a strong enough Inducement to persons accustomed to dictate letters. There are many candidates for the meanest-man championship, but an English thief, who was arrested recent ly, seems to have great claims to the title. This man's plan of operations was to get three or four small boys to run a race. They would take off their shoes. leave them in his charge and he would start the race. When the boys were off, the thief started in the opposite direc tion with the shoes. A circular advertising the . "Interna tional Congress of Advanced Thinkers," to be held at St. Louis in October, has been received. It conveys the cheerful announcement that "the Managers expect that every Rationalist will do his,., Duty," and cries aloud in black-faced type Jubilee Year of Science and Reason! Scien tists will be fully Justified at the World's Fair Congress, October 13-18, in their speclflo work, of uprooting the great, delusivo super stition, known as Christianity. Further we are Informed that "REA SON Is alive, though Christian theology IS DEAD." 'Rah for Reason. WEX. J. Vanity of the Very Rich. Kansas City Journal. The rich are insufferably vain. The Goelets lost $200,000 worth of jewels and let the whole country know about It. When a poor family loses $200,000 worth of Jewelry it modestly keeps quiet and nobody Is the wiser. The Two Tides. his less favored region and come to one home consumption, but already adding where.there Is less liability of the crop vast sums to the agricultural collateral proving a failure Just at a time when which keeps the wheels of trade mov ing! With butter at 25 cents per pound and eggs 25 cents per dozen, the 'dairy ing and poultry business cannot be wheat commands the highest prices. Wheat has been the cornerstone on which all of Oregon's agricultural greatness has bullded, and it will for The New York Herald's forecast of Republican losses in the House of Rep resentatives is simply the usual bien nial scare. On election day there Is nothing to It. The Republican major ity may be somewhat reduced, but not to hurt. The chief effect of the Her ald's enterprise will be to stir up the efficient Mr. Babcock and his Republi can Congressional committee. The New York Times, in an editorial much less profitable proportionately many years continue to be the most we bring by wire this morning, shows than the wheat business. It is a long stnrv this detailed review of all of thp wealth that is now being created so rapidly in Portland's territory, but the results are so tangible and prominent that none can overlook them. In the more recently opened agricultural dis tricts, new villages and towns have come into existence within the past year or two, and in the older districts every city, town and hamlet show in disputable evidence of prosperity. In the smaller places this prosperity is re fleeted In numerous new dwelling- houses, a store or two that were not Is casting gloom over the Democratic camp. What the Times says about milk-and-water statesmanship Is per fectly true. There Is only ruin In such letters as Parker's and speeches like Bailey's. powerful factor In the commercial life 1 how the .Parker policy of equivocation of the state. There are still large areas of land throughout Oregon and Wash ington which will for many years prove more profitable in the growing of the premier cereal than for any other pur pose. - The distribution of pamphlets and the writing of letters may call the attention of Intending settlers to these lands In the Pacific Northwest, but neither of these methods nor In fact any other method can equal In effect iveness the sight of the wheat Itself. It Is a. splendid opportunity to adver tise our resources, and .on the side of Heres wishing the nopplckers a drenching rain to settle the dust and wash off the vines, followed by bright, cool weather in which to pick1, the. hops. David B. Hill says he Is going tp re tire from politics. This is important- there last year, sidewalks and other lm- .every car leaving the . Pacific North- pthat is to say, What game is he up tp provements. In the larger towns and I west should be a banner, telling all who noyv the Governorships Edith M. Thomas, in Scribner's. Child, I beheld thee, one night, swept In by the Tide on this known shore of Being; . Naked thou wert, and unfaln to be here, and thine eyes were averse to all seeing; Bitter and small was thy first uttered cry, and filled wtlh unnamed desolatlon- Thou, so encompassed by Love and "by Joy In their marveling proud salutation! Child, in thy turn thou shalt see me, rapt by the refluent Tido swiftly flowing: AH sound shall be stopped from these Hps save only the last sigh of breath in outgoing; The face thou shalt watch will grow strange; the word thou wouldst hear It shall not be spoken! Then shalt thou sweep the dim seas for beacon, and storm the locked heavens for token! O child, in that hour of the Ebb, left alone on the Ignorant shore, crying "Whith er?" I charge thee, Remember, naught didst thou know of the Tide that once brought thee hither. Loth to thine heritage thou, the darling of Life, whom the banquet invited; So much, and no more dost thou know. what awaltoth tho outbound pilgrim benighted. What sovereignty royal what dream be atific fulfilled In Youth's restoration- What galaxy crowding In welcome what guest fltcs what marvelling proud- sal utations - A Warning. "r Lincoln Journal. Two Omaha physicians nearly lost their lives recently from the use of pat ented headache tablets which they used without suspecting the presence of dan gerous ingredients. No unfavorable symptoms developed until the men were in a state of collapse. When accidents of this kind occur to men skilled In the use of drugs the general public certainly needs a warning against the indiscrim inate use of mnknown remedies. An oc casional dose taken under proper advice to alleviate pain may do no harm, but cases of persistent headache require a search for and a removal of the cause rather than the palliation offered by the ordinary remedy. Ask Me No More. Chicago Chronicle. (Tho following pathetic lyric In which Henry Gassaway Davis voices his anguish to Tom Taggart. Is after the fashion of a poem of the same name by Thomas Carew, an English poet of the 16th century, who Is said to have gone to School with the Democratic Vice-Presl. dentlal nominee.) Ask me no more. Tom Taggart, please. In suppliahce on your bended knees. My wealth was given to have and hold, I will not throw away my gold. Ask me no more; you've asked enough. I dare not, must not, cough up stuff. Leggo my leg and let me go. You've made It too long by a foot or so. Ask me no more to loosen up And pour my money In your tin cup. 'Twas pelf, and that alone, I see. That made them make me a-nomlnee. Ask me no more, with tears that flow, To let my hard-earned dollars go. Thougrf I may seem decrepit, old, I'm not too- old to hold my gold. Aak me no' more. Begone! Away! Why hanker for shekels night and day? I gave you a nickel one day last week; For. mercy's jaKe, JCoriiny, tafce a sneak. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. Wo all have our trials, and most of us like to report them In full. Philadelphia Record. Alice Herbert says he Is a self-made man. Kitty How he must suffer -from remorses- Harper's Bazar. 'De Bible tell de sluggard ter go ter de ant; but In dese days de most er dem goes ter-.de father-in-law." Atlanta Constitution. 'My husband Is a fatalist; he always main tains that men are not free agents." "You must remember that your husband Is married." Town and Country. There is quite a color scheme Involved In the attempt of Russia to get her fleet out of the Black Sea, through the Red and into the Yel low. Toledo Times. First Doctor Then we decide not to oper ate? Second Doctor Yes. wnat ao you minx we ought to charge him for deciding not to operate? Brooklyn Life. 'Do you believe everything you tell.thepub- 11c?" "Certainly not." answered henator faor ghum; "and I don't believe the public believes It either." Washington Star. , 'Some men." said Uncle Eben, "is habitually ontruthful. foh de reason dat dey wants' to be In de conversation an' ln't smaht enough to dig up any real facts." Washington Star. She After all, George, I think a public wed ding would be better. He And give up the elopement? She Yes. You see. papa has re fused to lend us his automoDiie so waat s the use? Judge. Passenger (on ocean liner of the future) Will you please direct me to my stateroom? It's No. 727. Clerk It's about half a mile aft. Take trolley car on starboard promenade. Chicago Tribune. 'Your wife Is rather strict in her Ylews on the temperature question, lsn t one?" "i should say so! Why, since our district voted dry she has abolished the mosquito bars," Cleveland Leader. Senior Partner What's the new cashier's name? Junior Partner John P. Johnson- Most people call him "Honest John." Senior Part nerThey do, eh? Well, you Just hand him two months' salary and ask for his resignation at once. Houston Chronicle. Mrs. Hiram Offen Tell me, -why did your leave your last place? Pretty Maid The mis sus caught the master kissing me, but you needn't be afraid of that. Mrs. Hiram Often Well. I should think not. Pretty Maid No. ma'am, I've seen your husband, and he ala t a my style. Syracuse- Telegram. i