THE MOBNEJG OEEGOMAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 190. 1 t te-ftmhm Entered at the Postofilce at Portland, Or., as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By moll (postage prepaid in advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month .85 Dally, with Sunday excepted, per year. . 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year. ........ 9.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 The "Weekly, per year.................. 1.50 The Weekly. 3 months . .50 Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted 15c Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday In cluded 20a POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada und Mexico 10 to 14-page paper lc 18 to 20-page paper .....................2c 32 to 44-page paper ..'.....2a Foreign rates, double. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. (The S. C. Beckvrlth Special Agency) Jiew York; rooms 43-50, Tribune building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune building. The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from Individuals and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. 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Pitts, 1008 Market: Frank Scott, 0 Ellis; N. Wheatley. S3 Stevenson: Hotel St. Francis News Stand. Washington. D. C. Ebbltt House News Stand. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, NOV. 24, 1004. IN MASSACHUSETTS. Thomas W. Lawson, frenzied litera teur and fantastic financier, continues to tell his story of "Amalgamated" in the same way Mark Twain ascended Mount Vesuvius by laboriously and conscientiously describing in his pros pectus a trip he did not make. Mr. Xiawson makes a new excursion, in his last installment, to the abode of the sacred codfish, and describes with great wealth of detail and startling incident the misdeeds of the Massachu setts Legislature. It is shocking to hear that under the dome of the temple of Puritanism there is bribery of the most open and unblushing sort brib ery in wholesale, bribery in retail, brib ery In high place and in low. The cor rupt use of money is, we are told, the staple method of Mr. Henry M. Whit ney, who has bought franchises and other legislative privileges outright, and to that end had organized and main tained a most ingenious and elaborate system under the immediate charge of his paid lieutenants. Mr. Lawson loud ly calls for a Folk or some other Alex ander of reform seeking new planets to conquer to hurry to Boston, where, he says, he may "expose to the world a condition of rottenness .more rotten than was ever before exhibited in any community In- the civilized -world.". If we have had occasion to complain here tofore that Mr. Lawson has confined himself almost wholly to sounding his stage thunder, while his audience wait ed in vain for real action in his "Amal gamated" drama, or tragedy, or com-, edy, or farce (we do not know yet which It Is), it must be admitted that In this belated curtain-raiser the hys terical author has dropped reverberat ing generalities and made himself spe cific and certain. "We have long been accustomed to stories and charges of legislative brib erybut not from Massachusetts. "We have been told that United States Sen ators were elected in Delaware, "Wis consin, Montana and throughout the "West by the use of money but never in Massachusetts. There the staid and honest yeoman who makes up the bone and sinew of a pure state government summoned Cincinnatus Hoar from the plow, or Herodotus Lodge from his study, and, placing upon his brow the laurel wreath of the common people's favor, then on bended knee besought him to go to Washington and take his place among the reverend Sena tors as representative of thev Puri tan commonwealth of Massachusetts. That's the picture in our mind's eye. Lawson does not say the Senatorshlp was ever bought. He says nothing about It at all. Undoubtedly It was not bought. But the marvel is, from his circumstantial description, that the average Massachusetts legislator ever did anything for anybody, except for money. The presumption Is that here was an unprofitable business the elec tlon of Senators that should be dis patched as speedily as possible, so that the Legislature could devote Itself to more productive matters. We cannot pretend to know the exact truth about the Lawson indictment of Massachusetts. But that It should be answered by Mr. Henry M. Whitney, or by the Legislature Itself, or by the new Democratic Governor, goes without saying. Boston is the chief seat of all the superior virtues. We know, be cause Boston has never left us in doubt about it. But it cannot be so far lost In admiration of its own beautiful qual itles that It can afford to Ignore the public animadversions of one of its best-known citizens, sensationalist and notoriety-hunter though he may be In other states It may be different. Lin coin Steffens may Inform us of the wickedness. pf Wisconsin, and of the low civic status of Minneapolis, St. Louis, Pittsburg, Philadelphia and others; and we grow a little sad, and forget it. Ida Tarbell may impeach the Standard Oil Trust for various high crimes and misdemeanors; and we are wearied and lay down the book before the end of the chapter. Walter Well man and Ray Stannard Baker may convict trades-unions of Inciting an archy and promoting revolution in Colorado; and we observe with only a faint show of Interest that Peabody is beaten lor Governor and Adams elect ed. But Massachusetts ah, that was a body blow. We shall not soon get over it. We await breathlessly for Massachusetts to speak. With the session of the Oregon Leg islature six weess and four days dis tant, It behooves those who aspire to the Presidency or the Speakership or .committee places to get busy; Indeed. they are doing just that Henceforward it's to be a competition to get in on fe "srwtaA fleer." To race may no, be to the swift nor the battle to the strong-, but the good things are to them that pick the winners. Gentlemen, the winners are to be either Dr. W. Kuy kendall, E. V. Carter, George C. Brow nell. C. W. Hodson, Dan J. Malarkey, F. P. Mays or John Xu Rand, and T. B. Kay, A. A. Bailey, W. I. "Vawter, or somebody else; therefore, gentlemen, make sure of the good things for your self Still, if you fall, you may win a place on the committee on Federal re lations or Indian affairs. ONE IMPORTANT STEP TAKEN. ' The special Council committee holds City Engineer Elliott directly responsi ble for the faulty and careless con struction of the Tanner-Creek sewer; implicates Assistant Engineer Scoggin with him; declares Inspector Caywood "Incompetent and unreliable"; pro nounces the Contractors Riner "dishon est"; and endeavors to save expense to the taxpayer by withholding so much of the moneys due the jobbing contract ors as will rebuild the sewer. The com mittee pursued, its investigation with commendable activity and unquestion able determination to arrive at the facts. The damning evidence of the rotten sewer itself was a plain founda tion to build on; and the City Engineer was in no Important particular able to explain away the unanimous and in escapable finding of the four experts. In one conspicuous instance where he undertook to contradict the experts as to the length of the old and new sew ers, and the apportionment of payment therefor it was clearly shown that he did not know what he was talking about. The committee " hesitates to charge positive collusion between the City Engineer's Department and the contractors; but that Is what it comes to, just the same. If the City Engineer and his assistant were ignorant of what was going on, they should be Impeached for sheer incompetency; if they, or either of them, did know, they should not only be dismissed from office, but they should be indicted by the grand jury for criminal conspiracy to defraud the taxpayers. This man Walter Thomas, who gave such astounding testimony as to the nature of his em ployment and the dirty character of his work, should, not be let go until it shall have been ascertained whether he is a thrifty sneak or a colossal liar, or both The whole truth about the contract ors' pool, the method of its operations and the nature of Its relations with the Engineer's Department should be ex posed if possible. The City of Portland has undertaken through the City Engineer a number of Important and costly public works. The public is just now in a humor to flndBut the history of every transac tion, proposed or consummated, In which the City Engineer has, or has had, a voice. What about specifications? What about original estimates, and how are they made? What about extra work? What about inspection? What about contracts to favored bidders? What about unnecessary and unac countable delays in beginning or com pleting work? What about farming out a contract to one person that he may peddle it to another at an advanced figure? What about every phase of this business of building sewers, or streets, or bridges for the city? The taxpayer has justly had his suspicions aroused and he proposes, if he can, to stop fraud and theft and criminal work and place things on an honest basis. UNIVERSAL CAR, SHORTAGE. The car snortage in -the Pacific North west is causing wheatbuyers consider able anxiety, and the railroads are coming In for a full share of the ad verse criticism that is being made over the inability of shippers to secure facil ities for moving their freght. Railroads in the Far West have always claimed and been allowed a certain exemption from censure In these emergencies on account of conditions which are vastly different from those of the older-settled portions of the United States. In Ore gon, Washington and Idaho the princi pal business of the roads is the haul Ing of grain to market, and it is an ex ceptlonal year when this business is not handled with a fair degree of satlsfac tlon. The roads serving the territory usually have available a sufficient num ber of cars to move the wheat to mar ket without causing loss through delay. The maximum haul from this terrl tory to market has in former years "been about 450 miles, and, for the bulk of the crop, less than 300 miles. This year, owing to abnormal conditions elsewhere in the world, it is Impossible to market this wheat to advantage at tidewater ports on the Pacific, and the railroads are forced to haul it from 2000 to 2700 miles In order to land it at the best markets. Under such condi tlons the car which formerly hauled its load to tidewater and was back in the interior ready for another load within five or six days is now in use for five or six weeks hauling one load to the East ern markets. It Is not an unhealthy sign when a country has produced so much traffic that the railroads are un able to handle it, and in this respect a great many other localities in the United States are experiencing the same trouble that is now confronting wheatgrowers and dealers in Oregon and Washington. It is somewhat remarkable to learn that such an old and thoroughly organ ized railroad as the Lehigh Valley sys tern, with its immense equipment. Is unable to handle the business offering. Yet a prominent Lehigh official who has Just returned to New York from Buffalo, where he has been endeavor ing to straighten out a car-shortage tangle. Is quoted by the New York Journal of Commerce as follows: We are willing- to frankly admit our In' ability to supply a sufficient number of cars to meet the farmers' needs, but we to eether with the other railroads which trav erse the territory are doing our best to get as large a proportion of the crops to mar ket as possible and at the same time take care of our regular traffic As things now stand it will be Impossible for the railroads to movo the entire crop of apples, grapes and other more or less perishable produce, and the farmers stand to lose to that extent. Similar conditions are reported on the Delaware, Lackawanna &. Western, New York Central and the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Some of this, car shortage in the East is traced to the demands of the Far West for equip ment for moving wheat East, but when the immense -volume of business han died by the big Eastern trunk lines is considered, this Western traffic from the Pacific Coast seems Inconsequential in comparison. This congested traffic situation is, of course, certain to entail heavy loss on some shippers, but the conditions which have brought it about on the whole offer reasons for congrat ulation. There Is an immense move ment of iron and steel products,, not only to the seaboard on both coasts. but to all parts of the United States. The purchase of this material for rail roads, bridges, business blocks and other purposes reflects a general pros perity in the country. To pay for this there is an immense corn crop now moving to market, and the crop of other grains and agricultural products is suf ficiently heavy with the aid of present high prices to make the purchasing power of the people greater than ever before. For the good of all concerned, it is to be hoped that this pleasing condition of affairs will continue until the rail roads -will feel Justified In increasing their equipment and general facilities to an extent that will enable them to meet future demands more satisfactor ily than they are able to meet the .pres ent emergency. WOMEN IN WAR DISPATCHES. Now that Oyama and Kuropatkin are watching each other in the manner of two gamecocks after the first exhaust ing flights, the ornamental supers upon the stage of war receive some recogni tion. The great public cares nothing for the dull details of organization and of planning even If the censor would allow such details to reach the wires and in default of the "greatest battles in history" the purveyors of war news must find some minor-details that will interest their customers. Need It be said that their obvious recourse Is woman? Since Adam lost his rib man kind' has had a lively interest in the creature fashioned therefrom, and, as some one has remarked, as long as woman remains upon the earth there will always be something new to be said about her. In war woman is a rare enough' ap parition to add novelty to the perennial Interest she excites, and the strange ness of the setting further enhances her attraction for the public that has to bear none of the worry that her pres ence is sure to bring upon the combat ants. Consequently when the serious work of the campaign affords no news, the experienced correspondent digs up a story about a woman at the front. We may be Bure that Moll Pitcher's brav ery in overcoming the repugnance of her sex for the bang of cannon was the subject of little comment while there were stirring gains or losses to report. and that the lady's name is more fa miliar to the Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution than it ever was to the wives of the same movement. Indeed, with the exception of Joan of Arc, no woman's name seems to have sounded over the din of fighting, although many have been heard when the battle lulled. In the war that is now going on sev eral women have been "mentioned in dispatches." In the lulls of the fight ing we have heard something of the daring woman who rides at the head of a squadron of Cossacks. Unfortunately for the full effect of this story, the Cos sack has lost much of his old prestige since he tackled the little brown Japs on their little shaggy ponies. Before this war broke out there was magic in the phrase "a Cossack of the Don," and there were visions of the bearded horse men sweeping entire regiments oft the face of the earth. Now the Cossack has so sunk in the popular estimation that the dashing woman who wears all his accoutrements, except the beard, ' has not been received with the favor that her sponsor expected. Then there was the woman who did so much to ani mate the defenders of Port Arthur. Sad to say, she, too, has fallen upon evil days. With long-range guns and sneak Ing trenches, she was not able to ap pear upon the battlements and bid the foe defiance, as all the ladles of old' time were accustomed to do when their castles were besieged. With the pass ing of the spectacular from war the modern woman amazon Is placed at a serious disadvantage. In just one field, and that not exactly amazonlan, does she hold her own. The Red Cross offers opportunities for romances, as well stage-managed as Eleanor's sucking of the poison from her consort's arm. So It comes that while Oyama and Kuro patkin eye each other In the north, we have a Russian nurse allowing herself to be captured by bandits so that she may find the young officer with whom she fell in love while saving his life. Of course, It is a roundabout way of finding a man in Japan to .be captured by outlaws, but It adds greatly to the possibilities of the story. Now if the public Is provided with a beautiful Rus slan woman of noble birth acting as a spy, the tally will be complete before the lull in the fighting comes to an end. FARMERS AND GOOD ROADS. If there is one class of people who above all others should Intelligently and persistently Indorse the movement for good roads, it is the agricultural class. That farmers are not blind to thi3 fact Is In evidence In the report submitted by the commlttte on high ways of the National Grange, now In session In this city. Preliminary to the indorsement of a bill which asks Con gress to appropriate a large sum for road construction throughout the coun try, it is declared that "impassable roads, during considerable periods each year, are yokefellows with the spin nlng-wheel, the sickle and the oxcart.' No one will take issue with the sent! ment implied In this statement. Im passable roads have long been in dis grace with the spirit that dominates growth and keeps a good, long step in advance of improvement. That they still are found throughout the length and breadth of the land is without ex cuse at least as far as the more thick ly-settled and thoroughly cultivated portions of the country are concerned, They are wasteful to a degree that farmers can 111 afford; they are the dread of rural life, and the edict of Its isolation during the Winter months. All of these things are readily con ceded. All do not agree, however, that the remedy lies In an act of Congress carrying with It a large appropriation for roadbulldlng. Many are of The opinion that the 'remedy lies closer than that, and that the principle of self-help should be applied to road construction not In the go-as-you-please manner with which we are all too familiar, but according to carefully planned methods systematically carried out In each and every section where there Is a demand for good roads, backed by agricultural prosperity and necessity. Multnomah County has done some roadbulldlng on its own account In re cent years, and the result is that it has many miles of roads that can be trav eled in comfort at all seasons of the year. The methods by which these roads have been built have not been in the long run more expensive than were the go-as-you-please methods of the Road Supervisors of a past era. There are stretches of good roads in other Oregon counties notably Jn Mar Ion and Clackamas that illustrate fur ther the possibility of good roadbulldlng without Federal appropriation. The plan proposed Toy the Curry tUL which is indorsed by the National Grange, has, however, a contingency of self- help. Each state, county or town re ceiving aid from the National Govern ment must add to the amount received like sum before the paternal allow ance can be made avaiiaoie. This makes It incumbent upon the people to do something If they would come In as beneficiaries of the bill. They should do something without this incentive. Self-Jnterest than which there is noth ing more forceful Is at stake. It was through Intelligent self-Interest that the sickle gave place to the harvester's cradle, the flail to the threshing ma chine, and both in turn as the years ent on to other implements up to the great "combined" that makes 'short work of harvesting throughout the great wheat belt. Enterprise combined Its forces and the demand for improved farming machinery was met. The hand loom and the spinning-wheel were sup planted by like forces which found ex pression In factories: the oxcart was too slow and It was superseded not by act of Congress, but by Individual and cor porate enterprise. If roads through wealthy farming sec tions are impassable for a considerable period each year, the remedy lies with those whose Interest It Is to have good roads. It is a slow and difficult process to get a bill for a public utility through Congress. Let our friends the Grangers urge the passage of the Curry bill If they will, but In the meantime it will be well, If they wish to realize the blessings of highways over which it is pleasure to travel at any season of the year, for them to urge upon farm ers as a matter of economy in time. In horseflesh and In vehicles, the wisdom of roadbulldlng upon their own account. Farmers need good roads; they want good roads; they ought to have good roads. Let us hope that they will find and take the shortest and most certain way to get them. Another good, fast coasting steamer has been placed on the Portland and San Francisco route, giving the oppo- tlon lines about three regular steamers to every one operated by the Harrlman system. Mr. Schwerln, who has charge of the coasting as well as the' Oriental steamers out of this port. Is undoubt edly carrying out a plan of his own. He has driven so much freight from Portland to Puget Sound t.hat this port will receive credit for but little more than half of the flour shipments to which we are entitled, and he has inci dentally Incurred the enmity of a num ber of fajrly heavy shippers, who will do what they can to divert freight, to Puget Sound. With this freight di verted to the Puget Sound lines, the P6rtland & Asiatic will soon be enjoy ing a protracted period of light cargoes, while on the Coast route the outside steamers will continue their inroads on the O. R. & N. business. This will of fer Mr. Schwerln an argument for still further reducing the service. As mat ters are now drifting, the ancient Elder will be the only vessel needed by the Harrlman system on the Portland and San Francisco route, and the Colum bia can be used to handle that portion of the Oriental trade which Mr. Schwerln may be unable to drive to Puget Sound or San Francisco. The news that the channel over the Columbia River bar had been deepened three feet since last June will be re ceived with becoming satisfaction. That the statement of the increased depth is true finds corroboration in the actual condition of the bar yesterday, when several deeply loaded vessels passed "aut In safety although a violent gale had been raging for several days. Never under the old conditions was it possible for the bar to quiet down so quickly after a big storm. Further cause for congratulation will be found in the statement that the bar dredge Chinook Is to be laid off for repairs at the end of the present month. The holes which the teredo has eaten In the jetty plies are small In comparison with the holes which the big dredge has eaten in the jetty appropriation, and it has not yet been successfully demonstrated that the Chinook has served any other pur pose than to absorb a good many thou sand dollars which could have been used to much better advantage on the jetty extension. Judge De Haven, of the United States District Court In San Francisco, has handed down a decision limiting the liability of the owners of the wrecked" steamship Progreso to the appraised value of the wreck. In the case at issue the value of the wreck was but $15,020, while the claims of the heirs ot the victims who were killed when the vessel was destroyed amounted to more than 5100,000. This decision, if It Is sus tained, offers great opportunity for speculation as to the status of the claim had the vessel proved a total loss or had she been comparatively uninjured. If it is good law, steamship owners In the future would do well to Instruct their captains when In trouble to make the wreck "total," If possible, in order to avoid any kind of litigation. If the liability of a vessel-owner is limited to the value of that vessel, no matter what shape the disaster may leave her in, it would be the part of prudence to elim inate her totally. "Repeatedly," says President Roose velt, "I have refused to nominate . a man to succeed, some public servant who I felt had particular claims to be renominated or whom I regarded as markedly superior to his proposed suc cessor." The renomlnatlon of Governor Brady, of Alaska, needs no remark in vjew of the President's utterance. The liberal movement in Russia can not be mistaken nor disguised. Its leaders realize that its best success lies in their ability to ward off violent out break. If they can convince the Czar that the security of his crown rests on them ratHer than the bureaucrats, he may harken to their counsel. W. L. Douglas paid ? 35,000 campaign expenses for an $S000 Job as Governor of Massachusetts for one year. Mr. Douglas will have to g'et even by mak ing one' $3 shoe grow where two grew before, if that sort of thing 13 to pay. The Insurance companies now say thai total abstainers from alcoholic drink live longer than anybody else. More water on the prohibition wheeL But, all the same, It'jt tough to have to believe it. . " Judge Fraser appears Inclined to lay down the uncomfortable doctrine that a gentleman on the witness-stand can- sot He in his own behalf. Even Dr. Swallow comes out of the Presidential race with something like 3Q0.0M votes. Where Mi Parker .get his J vofe anyway? THE SIMPLE LIFE. New York American. Pastor Wagner, the advocate of the Simple Life, was at Carnegie Hall last evening for the benefit ot Hampton In stitute. He spoke in his ingenious man ner. His hearers were learned and com plicated, doubtless. He captivated them entirely. He said: want to tell you how I came to preach the Simple Life, because nothing in the world Is so attractive as to watch j Ideas growing up. Humanity is a great. shadowy forest, with big. old trees, undar which youns trees have much dimcuity to find air and light. Or children are like young trees. They have no time to do children. Their Ideas of children are crushed In them in the germ. There are two kinds of education, and I must tell vou what mine was. "My father gave me independence to see nature and to think. I had a good, religious mind. I looked at the birds, the ants, the trees and the stars. At night when the stars smiled at the darkness and made It light. I knelt cn the ground fervently, and worshipped, the moon, i am sure that my father, peeping between the curtains at the window, saw me wor shipping the moon. He dldn t shout at me: 'Get up. little pagan:' He let me ao as I thought best, because he knew that I would learn to worship only the Spiritual God when I became a man. I retained of that early love of nature a great love for what is direct, sponta neous and simple. And I have formed from it my first rule of simplicity let children be children. Let them learn them- selves that there Is an endless life, of which this Is only the beginning. I wa3 tho happiest child In the world. But I had as a student the most tormented life that you can Imagine. Theologians were fight ing around me, and my grandmother and mother sighed, saying: 'Oh, for a word of the gospel I France and Germany were at war. The Germans of Franco and tne French of Germany were hurling insults and threats at one another. I would go (neither to France nor to Germany, be cause I loved them both. My grandmother was a uerman, but my motner was Frenchwoman. I was a piece of iron out of tho furnace, between hammer and an vil. It Isn't comfortable. I could not speak, because I had not yet the power to speak. "When I could speak I was a voice In the wilderness at first. But If you speak the truth you shall not stay In. the wil derness. My- congregation grew around me, accepting my arguments for love and simplicity. Some said that I ought to nut Into books What I said to them. I wrote 'Youth' and 'Courage' for the younsr. because I love young people, i want to be a boy among them. 'Simple Life came by accident. It came as If I took a step forward and fell from this platform. "I spoke at a wedding. We Frenchmen make speeches at weddings. The daugh ter- of M. Ferdinand Busson, a man who had done much for education In France, was there. When she was to be married, two or three weeks lateY, she came to me and said: 'Please come to my wedding and say there the things that you said 'the other day.' I replied: You can't think of It seriously, my child. She In sisted. "I said. 'The other wedding was of poor, simple people. At your's are to be 2000 persons. Including State Ministers, members of Parliament, secretaries of Le gations, members of the Academy, writ ers and artists. I am not learned enough to talk of them.' But her father came and urged, and I spoke to that brilliant com pany. I was applauded and great men came to me to' shake my hands and say, 'You have spoken well!' "This was not all. There was a pub lisher In the crowd. There Is always publisher In a crowd, listening to learn what he may publish. He said to me that I ought to write a book named 'Simple Life.' When I called on him by appoint ment the next day. I had written on sheet of paper the titles of all the chapters of my book. It had always been In my mind. But I had not known it, until the publisher spoke. "Now, let me tell you how It Is that I have come here. My bookrfell Into the hands of President- Roosevelt and he found It nice. I learned this on an Island where I was resting in the sun. Oh, I like to rest! When the holidays come, I am a fisherman. I forget that I was ever a pastor. A letter came to me on that Island from the editor of the Outlook, saying, 'Do you know that President Roosevelt has read all your books, likes them all and says that it you come to America he will present you to the pub lic hlmselfr "You can imagine how glad I was. 'But, I said to one of my friends, the fisher men, 'I can't go to America. I don't know English. He replied: Isn't that English language that one can learn from book?" I got the book and I learned Eng lish. Oh, yes, I learned English, since you laugh! He was more Interesting than this exact report of his speech may be. His ges tures, his walk on the platform, all his attitudes were those of a good, old-fash ioned peasant His hearers were charmed by that simplicity. They laughed and applauded with cordiality. "I sing my song of simplicity. he con tinued, "In this tremendous city as the prophet of the Old Testament sang In the body of the great fish. This city of sky scrapers and subways is the proper place to taiK of simplicity. I heard In Paris. when I was a boy, the song of a lark in a garden, and It brought me back to the fields around my village. An explorer has said, 'All the great desert dreams of one thing a drop of rain to make a flower. "is not simplicity the flower that you wish? It Is at the heart of your National life. Be true to youd traditions and you shall be simple." Pastor Wagner said afterward: "I am glad that I came. What a grand ovation I have received!" The Biggest Warship. New York World. The British Admiralty has ordered two new warships, one of which Is to be known- as the Lord Nelson. They are to De tne biggest in tne world. Each is to cost $7,500,000:" A duplicate In thl3 country would "come to much more. owing to tne steel monopoly. Each ship will carry four 12-inch guns pf increased power gained by making them 4o feet long the depth of an aver age Brooklyn house. There will be ten guns of 9 1-5-lnch cali ber, all on the upper deck, untouched save by the heaviest seas. Five torpedo tubes and a lot of small guns are added. The protective plates are 12 Inches thicks. The displacement Is to be 16,500 tons. only a little above that ot the King Ed ward class. Our heaviest ships, the Con- necticut class, weigh 16.000 tons. The Bal- uc displaces aoout si.aw tons. The Lord Nelson Is 410 feet long, but luch wider than any merchant vessels, of much which several are over 700 feet. Hard Luck for Two' Democrats. Klamath 'Falls Republican. The following story came from Poe "Valley: The first men who arrived at the polls were sworn in to act on the board, among these were two Demo crats, who were not registered. There were only seven votes cast and it was impossible at any time durlnsr the day to get six freeholders to swear the ger- tiemens vote in. so tnev naa to serve all day on the board and were not even allowed to vote. Proper Place for a Scrub Horse. Wallowa News. The custom of running horses can be carried to extremes. Not every horse in the country is a racehorse and there is no need to- try to make him so. Speed Is all right boys but it is useless to waste time witn a scrub racenorse. Put mm to the plow where he can earn soat- thing, and ktep alia tker WHERE TURKEYS COME FROM. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Of course, the turkey has an Inalien able right to strut; he has figured so long as the gastronomic center of at traction on Thanksgiving. But in the light of recent investigation he Is not the whole show that he evidently thinks he Is. and the majority of the good people of the united States hold him to be around Thanksgiving time. In the first place, and. astounding as It may seem to the small boy who Is already punching extra holes in his belt In forehanded preparation for the com- Ing feast, not enough turkeys are raised in all America to give every one of Uncle Sam's thankful 16,000.000 families a Na tional bird for the Thanksgiving dinner. All told, the states raise yearly only about 6,500.000 turkeys on their 5,000,000 farms, and If all these turkeys were killed to make a Thanksgiving festival. some 9,500,000 families would necessarily have to go turkeyless to bed. But the yearly crop of the National bird is by no means marketed in toto around Thanksgiving week. According to the poultry statistics of the country, only about z.x,x turkeys find their way Into the stomachs of thl3 happy people during the month of November, despite tne fact that those of us who are sc fortunate as to get a slice of tender breast or golden-browned drumstick fondly cherish the thought that all the rest of our fellow-countrymen have been equally favored. Such sentiments, if at tall appropriate. were better saved for the Christmas holi days. Indeed. Christmas not Thankseiv- Ing, is the real turkey day. Last Christ mas Uncle Sams nephews and nieces took care of about 1,500.000 more turkeys than they did on Thanksgiving. Thus all except 1,000,000 members of the an nual-turkey crop are accounted for. Of these the statistics would have us be lieve that half are killed and plucked to supply the market at other times than Thanksgiving and Christmas, while the remaining 500.000 are kept by the farm ers as breeders for the next year's crop. This remnant of a once mighty strut ting army Is entirely sufficient for breed ing purposes. Each turkey can be count ed on to lay about 25 eggs, and every egg to produce a poult. Over 11,000,000 poults are hatched annually, a number sufficient to give all but 5,000.000 families a turkey for holiday time. The real turkey state of the Union Is just plain Texas and has been for sev eral years past. It has produced on an average about three-quarters of a million turkeys every year since 1900. Missouri Is a close second and the other leading turkey states are Illinois, Iowa, Ohio and Indiana In the order named. These six states raise half the turkey crop: with Nebraska and Kansas, they produce considerably over half. Let the weather during the early stages of the season be wet In any two of these states and the Thanksglvlngturkey Is bound to come high to -the purchaser. Les3 than a decade ago Ohio and In diana were the leading turkey states. and poulterers will tell you that only within the last five or six years have they been receiving-shipments from Tex as and Missouri, the present leaders. In recent years, too, the Iowa turkey has come to the fore as being the finest of all turkeys raised outside of Rhode Island, and the tatter's equal In all re spects. Iowa turkeys universally com mand the highest prices In such discrim inating centers as New York, Chicago and Philadelphia, the last-named town even paying more for them than its own dearly beloved Philadelphia turkey. wnicn holds a place in the Quakers mind alongside Philadelphia capon. Can He Resist This? Savannah (Ga.) News. It is announced that the President will not come South this Winter, but will wait until next Spring. He is making a mistake. The South is never more delightful than in Winter the mild, balmy Winter peculiar to the sec tlon. It is in the Winter that the nine and oak logs blaze cheerily on -the open hearth and give off an aroma that makes the man in whose nostrils it enters glad that he is alive. it is in winter that nome-made sau sages, hung in long links from the rafters, are at their best, and the souse in the stone crock is seasoned to a king's taste. It is then that the persimmon beer, the walnuts and the sweet potatoes combine to delight the palates of all healthy men. And then there are 'possums and chestnuts and corn pone and frost- nipped collards and "dodgers, all holding out the promise of cheer and Inward delight to him who knows the unsurpassable plecsures of the simple and strong life. Wo feel almost sure that if tha Presi- blazing in the fireplace and "grandma" sausage cooking in the kitchen ha would not wait until Spring. The Liquid Air Failure. Philadelphia Bulletin. The statement that employes have brought suit to get their salaries from concern formed to demonstrate that liquid air had practical value as a mo tor force recalls the abundant predlc- tlons made several years asro that this agent was destined to work wonders In various ways. Companies were created to exploit it and to sell stocks to the public, and many people were led to believe that it might ultimately worn Bomeimns apyrauemus vuu- tion in the expansive power which this intensely cold substance exerted as it gradually returned to normal condi tions. In addition it was confidently as serted that the methods of manufac turing it would soon be developed so that It would be possible to cool houses in the heat of Summer as readily as I they are now warmed in Winter, since I all that -would bo required would be to send the cold alrthrough pipes as hot! air Is transmitted through the flues from an ordinary furnace, xet it has been a long time since these promises were made and apparently nothing has come of them. Three Queer Animal Tales. From Edmund Selous "Romance of the Animal World.' The Indians say that if a beaver sent out from the parents' lodge falls to find a mate he. is set to repair tne dam. it ne falls a second time he is banished. An Arab writer has the same story. He tells us that those who buy beaversklns can distinguish between the skins of mas ters and slaves. The latter have the hair of the head rubbed oft, because they have to pound the wood for their masters food, and do It with tneir beads. One more story is about the puma, the "friend of man." A certain Maldonada, a - girl of Buenos Ayres, was falsely accused of having sought to betray the town to thR Tndlarm and was condemned to be ex- i posed In the forest. An enormous puma warded her all night from the attacks of other beasts. The next day she was taken back to the town and pronounced to be innocent. He Knew the State. Savannah News. A New York newspaper sent a letter to its correspondent in Columbia in- structlns: him to "send early the re sult of the election in South Carolina, meaning, of course, that the . report I Rhnuld he filed with the telejrraoh cora- I pany as early as possible on Tuesday niht. T?nt tha correspondent cian wait for Tuesday, On Monday night he wired: "South Carolina went Demo cratic tomorrow by the usual large ma jority." There's no use trying to get a scoop on a correspondent nice tnai. Soclafism en Mud Creek. Wallowa News. The Socialists carried one precinct in this county. Mud Creek. They had five more votes "than all the precincts. They slight try their plan, down there for UMwmives ana e now. it wow, N0TE AND COMMENT. A white lie is one that possesses some color. The Baltic fleet continues in. strong spirits. This is just one Thanksgiving day out of 3. . The Royal Chinook union unanimously favors a six-day week. To say the least, the Russians in Crete appear to have been indiscreet. The New York Mall suggests that this will be a great day for "mince piety." Mrs. Lewlssohn's $23,000 sable jacket is almost expensive enough- to -go -with a lawsuit. How the other authors must envy "Simple Life" Wagner the advertising he's 'getting. Apparently the man that rocked the boat has survived to leave carbolic acid on the kitchen shelf. Even if the airships do reach the wild automoblllst stage, the sun will still be able to go into , eclipse. Chehalis has barred cows from her streets. What la becoming of the old doctrine about equal rights for all? In apportioning your sympathy between the turkey and the football player, re member that the turkey's death Is sud den. For lack of funds the McKInley me morial cannot be completed In accord ance with the original resign. The dead fade from memory, but the dollar never. Yale is a million dollars ahead on the past year and a church pew was sold In New York a few days ago for more than a thousand dollars. Hand In hand, edu cation and religion are marching for ward with giant strides- in this land of ours. General Huertas, of Panama, is but 4 feet 8. inches In height, and is known a3 the "smallest General in the world." A3 he received 525,000 for bringing overthe Colombian troops to the cause of inde pendence the worthy patriot is short only as regards Inches. " A. great light breaks upon us. There are two H. T. P's. In the world. Harry Thurs ton Peck is not the only one. In the cur rent number of Pearson's Magazine there is an article on Gabrieile Rejane, "by H. T- P- (Henry T. Parker)." This explains a whole lot of puzzling things. Leslie's Weekly says that the good old- fashioned notion of marking wedding .glft3 of silver with tho initials of the family names of the bride and the groom, coupled by the character "&," is coming into 'vogue. It Is hard to see why for with this method the silver must be re marked when the divorce comes, no mat ter which of -the two keeps it. One of the witnesses at the Nan Patter son trial, on being asked to shc-w his estimate of time by clapping his hands with a minute interval, allowed but six seconds to elapse between his signals. When the ordinary man is tied down to definite answers it is strange how wildly he will guess at times and distances, to say nothing of his utter incapacity for giving a description of even an intimate friend. The "tall robber and the short robber" furnish an 'instance of his limita tions. ' ".-- Shakespeare and the Bible should have a decided boom, if the advertising they have had lately in Portland's law courts goes for anything. Shakespeare pointed several allusions in a gambling case, and tte Blble eenillumlnating a lawyer's mind for tne benefit of the Jury In the land case. Such evidence of the place In the public mind occupied by these monu ments of literature must be very grati fying to the critics who are forever con demning the popular devotion to ephemeris. Now it la the anarchists that are viewing with alarm. At a meeting in xrB T.rV na nf .v the lack of interest in anarchist work and the small attendances at anarchist meet ings. Poor man, no wonder he was despondent, with policemen in the very room where he was. speaking. No won der he denounced this infamous spying and restraint as an infringement of his liberty. It is monstrous that a man cannot blow up princes and potentates, even verbally. If he feels that way. And besides are the bombmakers to be - ! driven to starvation? Ian Maclaren says that In Scotland misfortune Is either a judgment or a dls- nensation of Providence, as it hamjens to nnA. nellrhbor or to ona'a self. Tivrv o . ... ,,,n 1 of Columbus (Ind.) is at present suffering as the result ot a Judgment. -The woman spanked ber son with maternal vigor and in the course of the operation struck a sharpened pencil which the kid had in his hip pocket (no other pocket would I have been on tho scene of action). The point ran Into the woman's hand, and caused injuries that may necessitate am putation. Apart from being a spanking that hurt as much to give as to receive, this occurrence teaches the folly of rais ing on'es hand against a child, at any" rate, while shingles are- so cheap. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. He I had a. motive in setting- married on tha 13th. She Explain yourself. He We wilt al ways .have something to lay it to., Chicago News. Broker Ko more margin to put up? Why, when the account was opened you told me you were well on. Lamblelgb So I was, but 1 didn't know it, Town Topics. She Did you say anything to papa about your being: too young:? He yes. But he ua whea I,??c l fy y2r b"1f 1 w0Uld 8 nvliir enougb.-Cblcaso Chronicle, First Boy-I see Patoy hez brozen all home ties. Second Boy Wot do yer mean? First Boy-HIs mudder, tied hlnx up ter bedpost, so coIdn t go awlmraln . but dare he ls!- 3udge. ' "Ten" "aid the giraffe, 'Tve got a. sore throat. Can you imagine anything worse than that?" "Well," said the centipede. "I had my feet frostbitten once." Philadelphia Public Ledger. "Bridget, you must be more careful with your dusting. I declare I could' write my name upon the piano." " 'Deed, ma'am. It's yersllf has the gran eddycayshun." Town and Country. j Guttersnipe Please znuwer wants sixpence j on this 'ere fry in' pan. Pawnbroker Hallo! t ir noii i,uerwsii im, mawer's cooked Use sosetgeat. an waste the money for the beer! Punch. 'I don't think Crae will ever secseed. He's too fond of AEdto faalt." "Well, he's got & good job at it, now." "X Jo, at Sading fault?" "Tern, he's & spetter for tie Traction Company." Pblladelpkla. Pre. "Doe your coaenmas have'- aay perqieit??" asked Xr. Oldcastle. "He had one osee," re plied .her Koateea, "but tie doctor said it was brought on by be la out too tear Is tie hot sua. Hyt I don't Icboy what Vi 3 wMfa s yer. Ma. rou4 mm .Ut k4 Umb tor." bl X co Heeera-BetaM