THE 3IORXIXG OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, TAXUARY 11, 1906. Unt'ered at the Postoffice at Portland. Or.. ; as Second-Clnss Matter. 6DBSCUIPTIOX KATES. CT'INVAIUABLY IN ADVANCE. XI (By Mall or Express.) DAILY. SUNDAY INCLUDED. Twelve months ?'S2 Six months 4.-5 Three months -.- ' One month -o Delivered by carrier, per month - , Less time, per week .0 tSundar. one rear 2.0 tneokly. one year (issued Thursday)... 1.50 eunday and Weekly, one year 3.o0 HOW TO KE.MIT Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ; are at the sender's risk. KASTEKX BUSINESS OFFICE. Tlio S. C. Beckwith Special Agency New tork. rooms 43-50. Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, rostofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn street. Denver Hamilton & Kcndrick, 906-812 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 1214 Fifteenth street. Goldfield, Ner. Guy Marsh. Kansas City, Mo. Rtcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 S. Third. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, 307 Superior street. New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Fourteenth end Franklin streets. Ogden Goddard & Harrop; D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bro5.. 1C12 Farnam; Mageath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam: 246 South 14th. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 43 K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second street South; Miss L. Levin, 24 Church street. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 74C Market street; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter and Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pit". 1008 Market; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis; N. Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Foster & Orcar, Ferry News Stand. Washington, C Ebbltt House, Pennsyl vania avenue. " rOItTLAND, THURSDAY. JANUARY 11. BATTLING RAILROAD GIANTS. The railroad plot thickens in the Pa cific Northwest, and occasional peeps through the veil of mystery which hides the mighty forces (behind the scenes Snly serve to strengthen the belief that Oregon, Washington and Idaho are about to witness the greatest struggle lhat ever engaged the attention of railroad-builders in the West. The report from Chicago that the Harriman Inter ests were behind the North Coast road, now seeking entrance into Seattle, has some of the earmarks of authenticity. The Harriman-HM fight is on in dead aor-ncw? in1 if -n ntimhpf nf -nnlnts in the Pacific Northwest the dummies who have been put forward have been at times shunted into the background long enough for the public to get a view of the real power behind the :hrone. Mr. Harriman regard? the building of fhe North-Bank Railroad by the North trn Pacific as a direct invasion of terri tory in whioh he had reigned supreme for so long that he thought he owned It. It is thus perfectly natural that he should resent invasion of his terri tory by an immedKite move on the ter ritory of the enemy. He is fighting every inch of the advance of the Hill road to Portland by the most strenuous methods known to the science of rail roading. And yet it is easily apparent that all of the craft and cunning of his own, as well as that of his clever em ployes, will not keep the Hill road out of Portland and Portland territory. With the advent of the Northern Pa cific there will naturally be a division of the traffic which has heretofore paid tribute -to the Harriman lines. And it Is highly probable, that Mr. Harriman has serious intentions of replacing some of the traffic which he will lose in the division of territory with some that he will draw from the exclusively Hill territory on Puget Sound. Portland can no more expect Mr. Har riman to overlook the Puget Sound field than Seattle and Tacoma could expect to keep Mr. Hill out of Portland terri tory. Under the new regime both Port land and the Puget Sound ports will have the advantage of competition, and the Increasing development of the tributary country will give not only the Hill and the Harriman systems plenty of business, but will also supply an overflow sufficient to earn dividends for several'other roads than are now head ing in this direction. Mr. Harriman may strengthen his position by a line to Puget Sound, but the strongest anchor which he is puttlng.out to windward is the building of the numerous long-overdue branch lines in the territory trib utary to his main lines, and to Port land. The coming of more transcontinental lines to Portland is a matter of tremen dous importance to this city and the entire Columbia Basin. Of even greater Importance is the development of the long-neglected regions of richness now in readiness to pay tribute to this city as soon as transportation facilities are provided. Mr. Harriman is now devot ing himself to the branch-line needs with great diligence, and so long as Portland's requirements in this line of construction are met we can view with equanimity his construction of a line to Seattle. ONE PHASE OF IT. No man should foe prudent, industri ous, economical and self-denying, throughout the course of his life. For, should such be his life and character, the law w.ould penalize his efforts. In sist on taking away from his estate the best part of what he had acquired, and bestowing it on "society," for support of those who aTe too lazy to work and too worthless to accomplish . anything for themselves. This Is the inheritance tax law. The ideal citizen, then, is the indolent, worthless individual, .who never exerts himself or accumulates any property; your hand-to-mouth, beggarly aristo crat, who is much better than anybody else because throughout his life he has been lazy, dull and worthless. He Is too proud to be a drudge, and if he earns anything which is seldom he spends it at once upon excesses, and Is a. good citizen because he Is always "dead broke." The late P. W. Gillette, of Portland, made the mistake of -working- hard, of cultivating the virtues of prudence and of economical and yet decent living thereby leaving a small estate. The state now wants it, under the inheri tance tax law. It will help somewhat to support a number of those who are too indolent to support themselves. It is not to say that the inheritance lay ought to be cut out. But this is one phase- of it. The assumption on which it is based, is that efforts. to acquire i property, even In moderate degree, ought to be penalized. The best citizen, then, is the man who doesn't exert him self, does nothing in the world, and who leaves nothing behind him. THE GREEDY SLUGGARDS. Too many lots and parcels of land in Portland are still held unimproved, for increase of values. This Is an old evil; has been an evil these forty years, and more. As values of the unimproved lots and parcels of land rise, through the energy of the community, to which these dead head owners contribute nothing, their greed Increases and grows. They buiid nothing, but wait for the spirit and ac tivity of others to make them rich. The like greedy sloth or slothful greed is witnessed in other young and growing cities. ' Here the Kansas City Times says a good thing, worth repetition. A partial remedy, it says, might be obtained by a change in the method of raising taxj:s. Were the valuations placed more on the ground and less on the im provements, part of the burden as sumed by the progressive citizen who makes his land useful and enriches the sluggards round about him would be removed. Hence the Kansas City paper Justly says: "The enterprising man who is ready to develop bis property by the erection of dwellings or stores or office buildings or factories is not so common that communities can afford to penal ize his efforts by any "burden In addi tion to that imposed by monopolistic combinations." THE O REG ONIAN'S GUESTS. The Oregonian has 'undertaken to give twenty-three young women a fif teen days' outing In Yellowstone Park during the coming Summer. The paper will pay all expenses, and it will other wise provide every facility and 'conven ience for a comfortable and enjoyable journey. Selection of The Oregohian's guests will be made by readers of this paper in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. It will be a popular voting con test on conditions that will be named hereafter. The contest begins January 15, 1906, and ends May 15, 1906 abun dant time to demonstrate absolutely who are the twenty-three young ladles that stand highest In popular regard and favor in the various communities of the Northwest. The Oregonian will say no more about this undertaking at this time, beyond giving its pledge that the voting- contest and its results will be a project carried out with entire impartiality between all the contestants, and that It Is, In all respects, the most Important and at tractive contest ever undertaken by a rfewspaper in the Northwest. The Ore gonian is quite sure lhat sufficient pub lic interest will be aroused to justify all the trouble and expense It has assumed to make the project a complete success. THE COLLKfiE WIDOW. Consider the moral situation of a young man on his way to enter Bing ham College who yields to the allure ments of a woman and enters Atwater College Instead. Nothing very bad about that. Surely a man may choose his own college freely. Tes, but this young man was going to Bingham to play as an expert on -the football team, not to study. He had given his promise and the team was depending on him. His situation was much the same as that of a lawyer who has received a retainer or a soldier who has enlisted. For either the lawyer or soldier to change sides would be accounted black dishonor which the youth and beauty of the seductive DeMla whose wiles pre vailed over his fidelity would scarcely mitigate. May a football hero break his plighted faith which a soldier, a lawyer or a merchant is bound to hold sacred? The traditions of the drama permit the base-born peasant to be a liar or even a thief. The comic characters may cheat, they may be pickpockets; but the hero must be a man of honor. He may be as stupid as Mr. Ade's Billy Bolton; he may be. like that doughty halfback, a mere unintelligent, though docile, animal, but he must not break his word. He must prefer honor before life and before love. Many traditions Mr. Ade has disregarded, to the charm of his play; but in defying this one and creating a hero who breaks his word for love without remorse or even apparent sense of having violated the high code of gentlemen's ethics, the playwright has planted a canker in the heart of his rose. The source of the extraordinary charm of "The College Widow" must not be sought in the character of the hero. .Big as he is and stupidly good natured, one feels quite certain that in the railroad business he will exercise the same brutal contempt for faith and honor as he does In football not so much from malignity as from Ignorance of the difference between right and wrong. He Is typical, of course, but he is neither interesting nor pleasing. One almost regrets that Jane Wlther spoon did not fool him, for he is just the sort of man to divorce her when her beauty fades -and marry some Bprightlier woman. That the football brute without intelligence or honor who serves as hero does not spoil the play, or even mar it much, at the first glance, only shows what a very good play "The College Widow" must be upon the whole. None of the male characters singly adds much to the play, though they make an agreeable little group. Any one of them at random might be dropped without being missed a great deal. The college president Is singular ly imbecile. The tutor is purely con ventional, arid can be found better done In a hundred plays. The elder Bolton is a perfectly familiar figure on the American stage, and especially in the American novel. He is a mere shadow, and a Tather faint shadow, of the well known "Senator." The boys, are whole some enough, but without Individuality; any one of them might change places with any other and no harm done; Bub Hicks, the raw freshman, differs from the others only in his clothes and manners. When broken In, he is Just the same as the rest, only perhaps a little more so. As for the women, they are, if possible, less original than the men, though better drawn. The ath letic girl Is old in fiction; the grass widow is never omitted from Army stories, though in them she kisses sub alterns dnstead of students. Jane With erspoon. who bewltch'es the hero from honor and duty, 5s a thin echo of Cleo patra, Lady Macbeth, the sheik's daughter in "Bon Hur," and & thousand more. All tie women might have been' taken ready made from a dozen litera tures. All the characters are commonplace. Not one of them gives the least sign of wit or of any humor except what lies in animal spirits. The plot of the play is trivial, too utterly bald to account for Its charm. Jane entices Billy to break his word with Bingham and play on the Atwater team. He wins the game and she marries him. That is all, absolute ly all. Two acts, or scenes, whichever they may lie, recount the seduction. The third exhibits the game of football. The -fourth seals the hero's happiness. We must look elsewhere than in" the plot for the element of delight in "The College Widow." Nor shall we find It In the literary style. Mr. Ade knows nothing of style and despises what he knows. His books are one enormous solecism. The language of his play is slangy, thin and poor. The charm of the play, which Is un deniable and' very potent, lies partly In the youthfulness of the characters and their irresponsible conduct. Not In anything they do, but in the way they do it. Most that they do is foolish or wrong, and most of what they say is silly, but the freshness of youth covers and beautifies it all. Moreover, the il lusion of the college campus is fairly well maintained and that of the foot ball game is almost perfect. The boys and girls are real; the talk is clean, lively and amusing; the action is swift; the sexes are brought Into pleasant and healthy intimacy: the situations are natural, and, above all, the excitement of the football game Is nursed to a skillful climax. The memory of college days is. agreeably awakened; the senti ments are mildly stirred; the moral sense Is shocked just enough, perhaps, to be interesting. If this does not ac count for the charm of Mr. Ade's de lightful play, what does or can? , PROGRESS IN PANAMA. The President In his hopeful message wisely urges Congress not to reduce the salaries of the Isthmian Canal Commis sioners or their subordinates. Their employment upon the Isthmus, as he says. Is temporary. While engaged, there they must drop out of the current of professional life at home. Their places will be filled, their merits for gotten, and when they return It will be almost as strangers to build up their reputations and business relations like mere beginners. This is a substantial sacrifice made by these men for the good of their country, and it merits compensation. Besides their financial sacrifice, the officers of the commission are obliged to live under conditions more or less dangerous to health. The comforts of civilization can be at best only par tially established in such a place as Panama, where the climate, the work to be done and the habits of the people all tend to make misery perennial and health and happiness difficult. It can hardly be believed that the wish of such men as Mr. Gorman to Teduce sal aries comes from any good will to the canal or any real thought of economy. Obstructionists always to this great National enterprise, as soon as one ex cuse falls they search for another and care little about reason or justice, so long as they can find fault. With his message to Congress upon Isthmian affairs, President Roosevelt transmits a letter from Secretary Taft which explains two transactions that have been criticised a good deal, and not entirely without cause. The first Is the sale in December by the directors of the Isthmian Railroad of $628,000 worth of bonds to pay debts of the road. Remembering that the Canal Commis sion owed the railroad at- that time more than enough to pay all its debts, the transaction looks startllngly like a piece of frenzied finance. Mr. Taft rather smooths the matter over, but he made the directors buy back their bonds and has warned them not to try it again. His other explanation refers? to the notorious Markel supply contract, and is as satisfactory as the case admits. What one really hopes for Is to see fewer occasions for explanation coming to light in Isthmian affairs, and a gen eral settling down to steady, hard, hon est work. When that happens, nobody will object to generous salaries for the workers, and, with Roosevelt and Taft both pushing. It is bound to happen Boon. PROVIDING FOR EX-PRESIDENTS. The man who conceives It to be his duty to place ex-Presidents of the United States In suitable positions is never out of print for long at a time. It is true thai our list of ex-Presidents is small, comprising at present a single Individual, who seems to be perfectly able to fix his own status, financially and otherwise. It Is also true that the list never has been a formidable one, and that In the very nature of things It is not likely to become so. Hence the effort in this direction would seem to be overstrained and the columns that are from year to year written about placing ex-Presidents to be burdened with much ado about nothing. As Indubitable evidence that our one ex-President Is amply able to take care of himself without outside suggestion or Interference, we find Grover Cleve land, occupying a position that carries with It the modest salary of 512,000. Three large Insurance companies are to provide this salary, and the duties of the .position are not specially exacting. That President Roosevelt will look out for himself when the time comes, without the necessity of National worry about his future, is practically a fore gone conclusion. t Still, it must fle admitted that after a man has been President of the United States it Is difficult for him to find a position in keeping with the dig nity of his past office. He can scarcely afford to go into politics, since he would thereby degenerate into a mere politi cian a creature that he has learned by contact to detest. The fame of General Jackson suffered through his career as a politician after his retirement from the Presidential chair. The failure of General Grant as a banker after he left the White House Is $rtlll a matter of re gret. General Harrison took up the practice of law after his defeat for a second term, and In It was enjlnently successful. President Hayes returned to the simple walks of agriculture, which he was eminently fitted to adorn, at the close of his not brilliant term of service, and as an affable, modest, quiet country gentleman completed the short tenure of his years. It seems from these examples that the question of placing our ex-Presidents is a superfluous one. They have a habit of placing themselves, and may fitly, as American citizens of integrity, experience and Intelligence, be left to attend to their own placing. There would probably be no serious objection r&teed in Congress to a proposition to grant an ex-President a life salary; but this is not necessary, and would be more in accordance with the principle which declares that "to him that hath much shall be given" than with that which underlies independent, self-respecting, American manhood. The United States Court of Appeals at Cincinnati has decided that the Chi nese exclusion act of 1904 continued the former exclusion law In full force, re gardless of the" bearing which the ex piration of the treaty might have on the matter. This decision wRl add a little fuel to the flames which are al ready blazing In some parts of China. Under the treaty which expired by limi tation In 1901. China had nothing to ex .pect In the way of modification of the exclusion act. but the Orientals un doubtedly expected a more liberal con struction of the new act which became necessary with the expiration of the old one. The excuse made by the Chi nese, when protests have been made against the boycott, was that they demanded nothing but more liberal treatment of students and others enti tled to admission to this country. The general belief Is that Increased latitude In the treatment of students was de sired In order to facilitate the admission of a horde who were not students. It Is now quite clear that the existing exclu sion act will keep out the undesirable coolie class, and so long as It does the Chinese will continue the boycott- An Astoria dispatch states that, ow ing to the rough weather at the"mouth of the Nehalem River, the merchants doing business In that isolated region have not yet received the goods ordered by them for the Christmas trade. This "Nehalem country" Is one of the rich est spots In Oregon. It has vast tracts of the finest timber on earth. The soil is of marvelous richness, and agricul tural and dairy Interests in the limited degree possible by such wretched trans portation facilities have shown great results. All of this latent wealth lies dormant within less than 100 miles of Portland, and perhaps the highest trib ute to its worth Is In the fact that there are men who will devote money and time in endeavoring to do business In a region so hampered for transpor tation facilities that goods ordered for Christmas have not been received by January 10. When the building of a railroad to Tillamook and Nehalem af fords that country an opportunity to do business, the traffic turned out will be a source of wonder to the railroads which neglected it for so long. , In blg capital letters the Astorian de clares: "There is no city on the conti nent with her natural advantages that is as desperately Inert as Astoria." "It Is time," adds the Astorian, "that some thing was doing, and this paper Is going to put up a fight -for It." What Astoria Is going to have, we are told, are these things, to wit: "A railroad to the Tilla mook country via the Nehalem and the coast, a sea-wall from Tongue fo Smith's points; a modern and -model hotel; a splendid park or system of parks; a trolley line to the coast re sorts; and minor things that will come of themselves If these potent and Im portant others are supplied." Certain ly, brethren. Pitch in, and we shall rejoice with you. Now that Baron Komura has declined to commit hari-kari and the Japanese have ceased their disgraceful murmur ings for blood money, the Japanese government Is making preparations to distribute $75,000,000 among the soldiers who fought In the late war. The Mi kado Is also passing around a number of promotions for the faithful of his cabinet, and by the time the little brown men get ready to go over and take the Philippines as a "dessert" for the meal they have Just made off Rus sia, loyalty will be fully restored. ,An appropriate hint to commercial bodies of Portland, when banquets and annual meetings and New Tear's pro grammes are In the air: "Spokane citi zens have subscribed 540,000 to adver tise Spokane and Eastern Washington In the East this coming Spring." So say their papers and applaud. Yet It would seem that advertising of that city and country had been thoroughly done, not once, but often. But they keep at It. The President's refusal to allow Rep resentative Overstreet to name Ihe "Surveyor of the Port at Indianapolis" has badly discouraged that gentleman and he wants to do something about it. He might begin by finding out what are the duties of a Surveyor of the Port In a great maritime center like Indianapolis. Talking about "mergers," we are told by an esteemed contemporary that a merger of churches Is one of the great mergers wanted. Yes,' Indeed. What is the difference between liberal Juda ism and the liberal Christianity of Unitarianism? Ask Dr. Wise and Dr. Eliot. By a vigorous course of diet Secre tary Taft has reduced his weight from 31-4 pounds to 2948 pounds. Very good. But it looks to us as if there was yet something to be done. Unless this HIll-Harrlman scrap ends soon. Judge Frazer will detect little difference between holding down the woolsack and having a brand-new baby in the house. A correspondent wires the important information that there Is no law or or der in Goldfield. Mayor Lane and his Philippine Islander need not feel abso lutely alone. Mr. Rogers and his counsel want de lay. The Supreme Court of New York has taken a hand. No doubt Mr. Rog ers wants time to think up some new Jokes. Kansas is going to investigate the freight rate question. The freight rate question might as well make up its mind to be settled. The dispatches indicate that Winter cruising bids fair to become a fad among the steam yacht owners of No. 26 Wall street. Apparently the same brand of bad luck that elects a man -Mayor out West dooms him to a Police Commissioner's job In Gotham. Ex-Private Smith, of Hood River, who Is against the canteen, Is hearing from the rest of the Army, which Is for It- Do they call it a "fish-tail" burner because of tke. lies it tells the gas meter? " THE SILVER LINING. You cannot beat the right. It is good enough. I was glad when. they said unto me let us go into the house of the Ladds. a Blessed be everyone that fcareth the Ladd; that walkcth 1c his ways. Peace be within thy walls, oh Port land, and prosperity within thy pal aces. Chicanery cannot fight squareness. It hasn't the -wind. Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity. H. Lane. It Is better to be abused and misun derstood "doing- right than to lose your self respect doing wrong; One man In a hundred may be right and the rest wrong, though 99 disagree with him. "Did you make a good. Impression?" "A strong one. I should say; I hugged her." Sitting In his FIfth-avcnue home, after pocketing SO per centum interest for the day on about 530,000,300, Rus sell Sage mused In smiling- comfort, while his wife played softly on the melodion. "Every Little Bit Helps." The more snobby the neighborhood the less likelihood that the neighbors will call. No trouble now in finding such a neighborhood in Portland. Which means that the place is getting less country-townlsh, more cosmopoli tan and more Inhabitable. Lawson showed us Rogers. Rogers Is now showing- us Missouri. The task to make Rogers show us Standard Oil secrets Is a more difficult one. Will the Bclasco be a store, a lodg-Ing-houac. or a ten-twenf-thirf? The roller skating rink craze is again spreading over the land, to the immense devastation of the theatrical business. Scarcely a road company now on tour is reported as making money in the East, and the skating mania has struck the Pacific Coast Portland In cluded, although Portland is properly a New England town in Its funda mental qualities of public tempera ment. Last year tho vaudeville houses checked tne flow of public amusement money toward the first-class theaters, and this season the roller skating pas sion looms up as another pest in the eyes of high-grade theater managers all over the United States. Surely the manager and the burglar lead precari ous lives. However, what Is prettier than a girl on roller skates, gliding along with her fellow, arm in arm, hand In hand, skimming- over the, waxed boards? Nothing, except it might be the same couple skating on the ice! Wanted; in large lots: Incorruptible ministers of the gospel; statesmanlike politicians; men who hate graft so much that they will not take it them selves; high-minded lawyers; humane and intelligent physicians; modest act ors: newspaper men who respect ev erybody's rights; honest merchants; po lite salesmen and their female proto types: accommodating street-car con ductors; healthy girls who love the open air; fellows with normal .appe tites who enter life's fray with ear nest good will; mothers who love their homes; fathers who have ideals and stick to them. How many of these are there in Portland? I forgot the answer. Do not be among- those who think resolutions are valueless because somo are broken. Don't be so cautious and so suspi cious that you miss the opportunities. The truth Is a mighty dangerous thing to meddle with, and you'd better not bother about tinkering with it un less It is very, very handy. About half the world have the rocking-chair habit mentally and physical ly. That's why three-quarters of the population are unsuccessful. The Hon. Grover Cleveland continues to answer the question. "What shall we do with our ex-Presidents?" with complete success and apparent satis faction to himself and the public. It Is .stated that commanders of lin ers plying between German ports and Buenos Ayros are implicated in the white slave traffic and that hundreds of German girls are annually sold to a Buenos Ayres firm, which pays fixed commissions on all girls delivered into their hands. The girls, who are all be tween 14 and IS yoars old, are sold at auction at Buenos Ayres at prices which run from 51000 to 51200. The price is not large. I have a pock ctbook with my name on it that cost me 51500. In Norway they have a new and fan tastic kind of drunk. Norwegian papers relate that those who have sunk lowest in Chrlstianla have now discovered how to drink with their nose. The "Orebladet" describes how It is done. The drunkard fills the p'alm of his hand with "aquevit" (very strong brandy made of corn) and sniffs it up through the nose. This Js repeated sev eral times, although once is enough to render a man intoxicated. "Nosc-drlnking" has become a real vice with some individuals. The effect of It is terrible, because the whole nervous system Is paralyzed In a mo ment, and the drunkard remains almost unconscious for several minutes. After wards a sleepy fatigue Is felt, as after smoking opium. This fad, like other refined and Ingenious excitements, may. hit America later on. Good-Byc to "Joe." Boston Herald. J. C. S. Blackburn, who has represented Kentucky In the Senate for nearly a quarter of a century, has met the fate of all pitchers that go to the well too long. Politicians, generals, prize fighters, hard riders and high jumpers they all go down at last If they persist In entering the lists. It can be said of Senator Blackburn that he has well represented his State In all that Is most characteristic of it in prin ciples, codes, manners, language and ap pearance. Not many Southerners of the old type will remain In the Senate after this year, and It is a question if their successors will add as much to the pic turesqucness of that body or to the pun gency of tho debates. BAD EFFECT 0FC0MM0N SALT Its Excessive Use a Fruitful Cause of Brlght's Disease. Samuel G. Tracy. M- JD., in New York Times. Apropos of the recent death of Charles Yerkcs from Brlght's disease of the kid neys. It iKcms a fitting time to say some thing of tho danger attending the exces sive use of common table salt, especially if one has an affection of the kidney. It has been demonstrated by well-known physiologists that Only small amounts of sodlcm cnloride (common salt) are essen tial for the well being of man. Bunge claims that a person using a mixed diet only requires from 1 to 3 grams 05 to 30 grains) daily: however, mose people con sume excessive amounts, from 10 to 20 grams (150 to 300 grains). Professor Wldal found that when a patient who had ne phritis or kidney disease was given 10 grams (140 grains) of sodium chloride common salt) for several days he in creased in weight, due to dropsy produced by the salt. The amount of-nlbumen In the urine Increased, and headache, nausea and stupor developed, producing a condi tion resembling uremic poisoning. Pro fessor Wldal was able to make the dropsy appear and disappear at will by Increas ing or withdrawing the use of the salt. Recent reports from the New York Board of Health show that the mortality from kidney disease Is greatly on the In crease, hence It behooves us as Intelli gent physicians to disseminate such knowledge as will be preventive or reme dial in Brlght's disease or other diseases of the kidneys. Refraining from a too strenuous life and the avoidance of ex cesses, particularly In diet, alcoholic drinks and common salt will do much toward the prevention of diseases of tho kidney. The reason why a person who lias ne phritis should use but little common salt Is because the excessive use of it produces dropsy and retards the activity of the sweat glands by increasing the ocmotlc pressure of the blood. Two grams (30 grains) of salt are a, great plenty for the average person. Milk contains from L2 to 1.7 grams per litre (little over a quart); 100 grams of bread has an average of L3 grams: 100 grams of beef has about 1.15 grams. Wldal, who is a recognized European authority on this subject, recommends the following daily diet In kidney diseases: 400 grams (about 12 ounces) of meat: 1.000 grams (about 13-4 pounds) of potatoes; 100 grams (about 3 ounces) of sugar: SO grams (about 2 2-3 ounces) of butter (unsalted) and 2,500 cu bie centimeters (about 2 2-3 quarts) of fluids. Both Needed Trimming:. Tit Bits. An old lady of his flock once called upon Dr. Gill with a grievance. The doctor's neckbands were too long for her Ideas of ministerial humility, and, after a long harangue on the sin of pride, she intimated that she had brought a pair of scissors with her, and would be pleased if her dear pastor would permit her to cut them down to her notions of propriety. The doctor not only listened patiently, but handed over the offending white bands to be operated upon. When she had cut them to her satisfaction and returned the bibs it was the doctor's turn. "Now," said he, "you must do me a good turn also." "Yes, that I will, doctor. What can it be?" "Well, you have something about you which Is a deal too long, and which causes me no end of trouble, and I should like to see it shorter." "Indeed, dear sir, I will not hesitate. What Is it? Here are the scissors; use them as you please." "Come, then." said the sturdy divine; "good sister, put out your tongue." An Infant but Prosperous City. The Bend Bulletin has a right to some pride when It can state that, at the be ginning of the second year of the cor porate existence of Bend, the citizens can show: First Municipal government In full swing. Second Streets opened, sidewalks laid. Third A six-roomed schoolhouse. Fourth Eleven water hydrants bought and Installed. Fifth Fire-house built, and Are protec tion organized and equipment costing 51200 provided. Sixth City cemetery of 40 acres, bought, fenced, partly cleared and platted. Seventh A City Jail built and two po licemen employed and paid. And no debt left. No railroad communication within 100 miles. Most of this work done on faith. Inspection of Factories. Who would believe that there were 146 factories in Jackson. Coos, Josephine and parts of Lane and Douglas counties, run ning machinery on a scale important enough to call the attention of the State Labor Commissioner? Yet that is Com missioner Hoff's report. But. he says, in most of them he found machinery exposed so as to endanger life and limb. Owners have been notified to provide safeguards. No doubt part of this reck lessness is due to the fact of so many of these undertakings being young, and hardly finished In final details. Purify Drinking; Water. Portland gets her drinking water straight from the mountains to the city, uncontaminated. Other cities In Western Oregon Ijave been demanding purer water than they have been getting. The East ern purchasers of the water works at Eugene and Albany could not do anything better to secure reasonable popularity than to proceed at once to install modern and effective "filtering plants for both these cities on a large scale. They an nounce that contracts have already been let for the installation at Eugene. Another Bast ami West Link. A new telephone line, connecting Central Eastern Oregon with the Wil lamette Valley, over the Cascade Moun tains. Is a sign of the times. From Albany to Cascadia. a mountain Summer resort, the line exists. Thence It is to cross the mountains and reach Prlne ville in a direct'line in the coming Spring or early Summer. A forerunner, doubt less, of the railroad. Journey of the Water "Wagon. Omaha Bee. The man who drove called "All aboard!" 'Twas January first And every man there was a horde Who wished to lose his thirst Upon that good old wagon climbed And settled down to ride; Then loud, their husky voices chimed: "All ready: let er slide." Before the wheels had fairly turned One Yellow lost his grip: Another for this comrade yearned. WhlchV made his Angers slip; The next they struck a Jagged bump, A dozen lost their hats; Each, for his top piece made a jump The balance cried: "Oh, rats!" Then one by one they jostled off. It was a tearful sight, 'Till only one was left, to scoff. And he was fastened tight; But e'er another mile they sped This fellow wiggled loose: The barn for me." the driver said, "I se It la no use." The water wagon cornea and goes, It's fares stay but a while; The driver has his little woes For every passing mile; Folks wonder why the Job hai stand; Bat land him aot in haste t He wears a silver palate, and "11a sB4 ko 9ne of taste. PANAMA MISiMANAGEMENT. By Poultney Bigelow, in the Independent. The strictly engineering, or technical difficulties in the way of building the Panama Canal have vanished, if they ever existed. Today the canal Is a feas ible project, provided wo have the threo conditions money, labor and administra tion. We have money enough, and there Is plenty of labor to be had. for the ask ing. The administration that Is reflect ed in our great railways and that chal lenges the admiration of the world for economy and efficiency is on all sides of us waiting for a call from Washington. , The famous speech of .Chairman Shonts Is a strange slur upon our colored fellow cltizcns: "Unless a much greater effi ciency can be developed than can be de veloped at present, we shall have to Jook elsewhere for our labor." Does Mr. Shonts know that all the labor at the Isthmus is negro? Negroes there arc paid In silver, not gold, and their pay days arc irregular. They are returning to Jamaica from Colon by the shipload. . Along with an American merchant. Mr. Robinson, who ha3 lived in Colon sinco 1SS7. I walked about the city and found that around the central market there were pools of stagnant water. Every whiff of air blew poison into the public market. The meat on the butcher-stalls hung unprotected against flies, dust and tho plentiful body of germs which were breeding luxuriantly in the moist, hot air. "Did Mr. Taft inspect the labor quar7 ters?" I asked of Mr. Robinson. "No," answered my venerable friend, "I prayed him to let me show him tho real .state of things on the isthmus, but he declined; ho' professed to know all about it from 'official sources." "Mr. Taft spent five days down here," said an eminent engineer to me. "In that time he attended three dances and a succession of social functions. But he nad no time to look into the condi tion of the laboring man." Mr. Taft, it seems, and most of the other high officials who had run down at Government expense, made them selves ridiculous in the eyes of the res idents by exhibiting a panicky dread of disease In a place where thousands of their fellowmcn were exposing themselves freely. The natural thought in the minds of many was: "It this place Is too rotten tor such as Mr. Taft. why does not he order It immediately drained and cleaned? Ts his life so much more precious than ours that he is hauled out to sea every evening on board a Government transport while we who have also come down here for tho United States Government are con demned to sleep in a poisonous swamp?" Throughout my pestiferous excursion up and down this filthy city I could find not a single man or woman who had not suffered or was not suffering from fever of some kind; not a single one who did not want to go home, but was prevented by the want of money. At present there is not a single drainage canal made at Colon the very first need of a swampy community. The dredge which I saw stuck in the mud was also turned the wrong way; but that is a de tail, save as it indicates the presence of political or amateur engineers. ' "Specialists" came to the Isthmus with Chairman Shonts and did pretty much what the Taft party repeated later. They were met at the wharf by political deputations and a special train, with dis infectants, strong drinks and mosquito nets. Then thej- .ran across the 50 miles of railway and back. Each of the short five days was occu pied by some short, easy railway excur sion under the most elaborate precautions lest an Insect more or less should jeopor dize the success of their inexpensive out ing. October 5, the run was to the site of the Bohio dam, and such was the scare in the party that only one man ventured to the edge of the water. Next day an other railway run wa3 made to the site of the proposed Gamboa dam under sim ilar precautions. Each night they were all carefully towed out to sea beyond the range of Colon s'mells, alligators, mosquitos and other savage beasts, and .slept the sleep of those who sleep while others scratch. Mr. Taft promised officially that by De cember 1 Colon would have a splendid water supply! There is today no water supply in Colon. Mr. Taft does injustice to his countrymen by treating flippantly questions involving human life by the thousands. We are not all children or fools. We do not need reports which read like the circulars of doubtful land com panies. We have but to apply business methods to a business proposition, and then, and not till then, will the filth fly, and also the dirt at the bottom of the big ditch. But first of all we must make the politi cians fly the barnacles, the drones, the men with weak chins and flabby lips, who today are standing about the works of the Isthmus and acting as a constant source of discouragement to negroes who know the difference between a real man and the "ornery, mean white trash!" The practical man realizes that the suc cess of the canal Is bound up with the na ture of the powers which may be given to the general commanding the labor forces on the Isthmus. This proposed chief is not far off there are plenty of them within call of the White House telephone. West Point alone could furnish a dozen of them tomor row, to say nothing of the Boston Insti tute of Technology. Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft no doubt mean well when they give us the assur ance that political jobbery Is foreign to their natures. At the same time jdbbery flourlshes under their noses and they ap pear to be incapable of stopping it. Tho people at large need to appreciate this fact and to consider some change in a system which already gives ominous signs of rottenness. Nothing; in a Name? Olympla Olympian. Rather than occupy a pulpit that was not free in tho fullest sense of the word. Dr. Stephen S. Wise, the brilliant rabbi of Temple Beth Israel, Portland, has de clined a call from Temple Emanu-El. of New York. The rabbi's name appears to be no misnomer. NEWSPAPER WAIFS. Mr. Stopiatc That song always moves mi. Miss Tcrsleep If I'd known that. I'd have sung It an hour ago. Cleveland Leader. "What are your qualifications for an office boy?" "Well, sir, I can do anything from filling Inkstands to attending directors meetings." Life. The- American Tourist I suppose I speak broken French, .eh. Henri? The Waiter Not eegsactly. M'sieur. You haC a word describes. It bettaire let me sec ah, yes It Is pulverized! Puck. Passerby Is that your pork down there on the road, guvnor? Farmer' Pork! What d'ye-mean? There's a pig o mine out there. Passerby Ah. but there's a motor car Just been by. Punch. "What a fool expression It Is to say a man has been "relieved of his pocketbook." "Oh. I don't know. Ever lose a pocketbook with nothing In It but a memorandum of things your wife wanted you to bring home?" Philadelphia Ledger. "I fear I shall not be abl to attract much attention," said the new Congressman. "Don't worry." answered Senator Sorghum. 'In this era of accusations and Investiga tions It is sometimes a luxury not to ba noticed." Washington Star. "Well." said Jokely, concluding one of his best stories. "I haven't noticed you laugh ing to rfny great extent." "Aw, really, now." replied the Britisher, "why should I lawf V "Why. man alive, that was a Joke I Just told you." "Oh, come, now, I say; now could it be a Joke If It docs Bot make cn lawf r Philadelphia Prer