OBEGONIAy, FRIDAY, 3IARCH 2,. 1906, ranxt, or. th HrrMnm tthfr I TIITT CTT.rCn Entered at the rostofflce at Portland, Or., as Second-Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. ET INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. C3' (By Mall or Express.) DAILY, SUNDAY INCLUDED. Twel months ?22 Six mouths t'ti Three months Zt One month Delivered by carrier, per year - v.oa Delivered by carrier, per month - -jy Xcs time, per 'week. -t Sunday, one year ------- f.M Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... 1.80 Eunday and Weekly, one year o.SO now TO REMIT Send postolflce- money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency New York, rooms 43-80, Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 610-512 Tribune building. KEIT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. Postolflce News Co., 178 Dearborn street. St. Taul, Minn. N. St. Marie Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton & Kendrlck. 300-S12 Seventeenth street; Fratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street; I. "Welnsteln. Ooldflrld, Ner. Guy Marsh. Kanas City. Mo. Rlcksecker Clgw Co., Ninth and "Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, SO S. Third. Cleveland, O. James Pus haw. 307 Superior street. New York City I. Jonea & Co., Astor HoUfe. Oakland, Cal. "VT. H. Johnston, Fourteenth and Franklin streets. Ogdea D. L. Boy I. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 F&rnam: Mageath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam; 240 South 14th. Sacramento, CaL Sacramento News Co., 439 X street. , Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 "West Second street South; Miss L. Levin. 24 Church street. Lo Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven treet wagons; Berl News Co., 326 H South Broadway. San Diego B. E. Amen. Santa Barbara, Cal. B. E. Amos. rM'drna, Cal. Bcrl News Co. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 746 Market street: Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Suiter and Hotel St. Francis News Stand; I E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand: Frank Scott. tO Ellis; N. "Whcatley Movable News Stand, corner Mat Vet and Kearney streets; Foster & Orenr. Ferry News Stand. Washington, D. C Ebbitt House, Pennsyl vania avenue. PORTION!). FRIDAY. MARCH 2. U06. MOULD LIKE TO SELL OUT. The srns company, through its prcsi drwt, says it is willing to sell to the- ctty. Of course it would sen to me 4ty. If it could turn a transaction sim ilar to that of lost Spring, when tho ame franchise-mongers sold out the Portland Consolidated Hallway. But the gas company will not fcll to Xhc city not now for the city will not buy. Whether the City of Portland "w III onter Into the production of light, no one can -say now. It is a very largo question, and demands much consider ation. The city could not stop with pas. It would be obliged to undertake electric lighting, also. And then prob ably the service of electric power. And then no doubt the street railways. All these public-service industries may be undertaken by the city. Many citizens have no doubt they will be. But care ful Inquiry and preparation will first be necessary. "Without doubt the gas company, see ing the trend of opinion nnd of events, and foreseeing results, would like to sell out. upon Its own valuation, to the city. But the property never will be taken over by tho city at any value comparable with that which the com pany may set upon it. The simple fact is that this properly, or large part of it. has been created by money collected through high charges for gas from the people of Portland, during the past llfty years and a great deal more money besides, which has been spent by tho beneficiaries of the franchise in luxurious living all uaken from the gas consumers of Portland. Should Portland desire to go into the gas business It will follow the precedent it established when it undertook the problem of water supply. The repre sentatlves of tho city went to repre eentatives of the water company with an offer of a specific sum. deemed all the property was worth, adding for the information of those whom it might concern that if the offer were not ac cepted by the company the city would at once proceed to create water works. de novo, for itself. The offer of the city was accepted. Should the city de cide to go into the gas business, it will proceed in the same or similar way. There will be no graft, and the city will not pay franchise-grabbers anything for right of resumption of its own fran chise. WHALE AND PLUTO C RAT. A philosophic observer of men and things has remarked that our trust magnates, railroad potentates and gas dukes swim about 1n the ocean of American life like whales. Pursuing his ingenious idea, he goes on to say that as the whale swlmB with its capa cious mouth wide open to engulf what ever small fish come In its way, so the plutocrat swallows down lesser men by the score or hundred, often making a financial dinner off a whole shoal of wriggling victims. He points out also that the whale has its cavernous mouth lined with baleen, whereby it strains its multitudinous prey from the water and entangles them beyond the hope of escape; and to this beneficent device he sees a wonderful resemblance in the network of injunctions, rules of evi dence and dilatory pleas in which the plutocrat enmeshes his victims and leaves them to pickle, as it were, -until he Is ready to dine. Had our philosopher pushed his thought a little farther, however, he would have discerned a notable differ ence between the estate of the whale nd that of the plutocrat. The differ encc arises from their diverse relations to the shark. In the briny deep the shark is the enemy of the whale, while in our ocean of economic life the shark has entered the service of the adipose cetacean. In the guise of the corpora tion, lawyer the man-eater loyally de votes himself to his master's appetite. As Aladdin's genie was the slave of the lamp, so the corporation lawyer may be called the slave of the paunch since & whale 1s reaify, apart from hfs fishing net of aleen, little more than a paunch in a thick cushion of blubber. Perhaps it is in this respect -that the oceanic monster most closely resembles the plutocrat whom the Roman poet described as "paunch et praeterea nihil," but they are also strikingly alike in the -way they act when they are caught. When the whale feels the harpoon in his vitals ho falls into "flurry." as sailors call It. He thrashes the water intofoam -with his enormous tail, hurls his huge -weight of blubber above the waves and spouts streams of gory foam high into the air. Thus also Is it with the plutocrat, when he is made ast to an investigating committee's whaleboat, Throw the har poon of a pertinent question into any one of these huge and ungainly mon sters, disporting themselves in their ocean of franchise bounty and special privilege, and forthwith he will tem pest the sea with his rage, spout Niag aras of bloody brine through his spira cles and smash the committee-room to 6pllntera with his flukes and tail. Sometimes the whale In his flurry tears loose- from the harpoon; some times he sinks the whaleboat and swims away free, to resume his career as a wholesale fisherman. But this does not often happen. For the roost part the harpoon holds, the boats escape and the ad'enture ends with the cetacean's de mise. Just now the American people are making a voyage after plutocratic whales. How will it end? Will the leviathans smash the boats and drown the sailors, or,wlll the ship of state come home to port with nil hands safe nnd tho blubber stowed in the hold? Prophecy is gratuitous folly, but it may guide those who wish to bet on the event, to remember that the oceanic whale is practically an extinct species of mammal. BEGAN TO VIM FY. In his statement Wednesday night. Mr. Adams, of the gas company,- said: "'Along about last May, when they (The Oregonlan) began to vilify Will Ladd, I made up any mind that, so far as the gas company is concerned, they would get no more from us." -What Mr. Ad ams meant by the phrase "they would get no more from us," he may know. The Oregonlan doesn't care It is the first part of his remark, quoted above, that we now pay attention to. "About last May The Oregonlan be gan to vilify Will Ladd." The results of a certain great franchise abuse came out at that time, through the sale of the Portland Consolidated Railway Company. The Oregonlan criticised the transaction. This caused renewal of the outbursts of Mr. Ladd's newspaper upon The Oregonlan. For two years and more Mr. L.add, through his news paper, had been making most venomous attacks upon -The Oregonlan. its editor and -owners. It was a steady stream of vilification. But The Oregonlan took no notice of It. However, when it was continued with increasing venom, after the sale of the street railway franchise. The Oregonlan though with great reluctance con cluded to give Mr. JLadd a drench of his own medicine. It resolved to let Mr. Ladd and those about him know that it could say something, too. The Oregonlan did not begin the vilifi cation, nor did the vilification begin last May. It began fully two years earlier, and by Mr. Iadd himself, through his newspaper, and it was con tinued by and through bis newspaper till The Oregonlan concluded that for bearance on its part was no longer re quired. But it scorned to attack or re tort on Mr. Ivadd's hired men. It dealt with Mr. Ladd himself. EXPENSIVE DISCRIMINATION.. iPortland bidders can hardly be ex pected to make much on an effort to secure the big grain and forage con tract which the Government is bout to award for the Philippine service In order to get on even terms with the Se attle bidders they must make allowance for the local rate front Portland to Se attle on all freight shipped from this city to fill' the order called for. There Is tributary to Porlland more grain. hay and lumber than Is tributary to Puget Sound, and it can be secured to better advantage at this port but the officials who have cltarge- of the pur chasing and routing of Government freight in the Pacific Northwest persist ently Ignore the opportunity to save vast sums of money on these contracts When the millionaire owners of the Boston Towboat Company lobbied through Congress a bill compelling the shipment of Government freight on American vessels, they failed to secure a. withdrawal from the ocean of the Government transports. These craft, if they wore 'not In the hands of fossil ized devotees of red tape, could handle the Government freight fully as eco nomically as it could be handled by uny other American steamer but the oppor tunity for them to do so Is not forth coming. Forage and stores will not be received at Portland because there is no vessel here to recolvo them, and there will be no vessel at Portland because for age and stores wjll not be received here. Portland scoms to have practl cally given up hope of breaking through this "heads-I-win-lalls-you lose" system; but it is not at all clear that an opening may not be forced from another direction. When the Bos ton Towboat Company's powerful lobby departed from Washington after forc ing through the bill which gave them a monopoly of Government freight ship ments from North Pacific ports to the Philippines, freight rates shot up from J4 per' ton the rate at which a vessel was then loading at Portland for Ma nila to $5.50 per-ton for the first en gagement made with the Boston Tow boat Company under the new law. Since that time the Government has been paying from J1.50 to J-2 per ton more for all the freight it has shipped to Manila than was exacted of commer clal shippers. By this nefarious system not only does the Government suffer a loss through the increased freight rate, but the exclusion of Portland from compe tltlon greatly enhances the cost of sup plies. This excessive freight and ex cesslve purchase price on a cargo of hay and oats,, such as was formerly sent from Portland not Infrequently, will amount to more than $10,000. Ap parentis impressed rlth the great wealth of the Government, the Pacific Coast employes of the Quartermaster's Department make no serious effort to stop ibis wholesale graft and dlscrlm Inatlon. On the Atlantic seaboard the case is different The men In charge of the Quartermaster's Department seem Imbued with the belief that Uncle Sam should buy his supplies and tho freight space for shipping them at as low a rate as is granted any other shlp per who pays cash on demand. Acting on this belief, they have Jg' nored the law passed in the Interest of the Boston Towboat Company end are still shipping vast quantities of supplies from New York to the Philippines on foreign Tessele, for the most excellent reason that those vessels quote a lower rate "than can be secured from the Americans. Andrew Weir & Co., Brit. lh. fcibifpinw, hA s&rrled. large .quail titles of Government freight from Portland to Manila before the embargo was laid against us, are still carrying Government freight from New York to Manila on the identical vessels which formerly carried. It from Portland. Here is an opportunity for the Chamber of Commerce, Senator Fulton and others J-who have the Interest "of the port at heart to demand fair play. "What we would like to know is why the Pacific Coast is discriminated against In this matter. On the low freight rate which the foreign steamers make by way of the Suez, there is bound to be a diver sion of business, which, if It 'followed its natural channel, would flow to the Pacific If the law is inoperative on. the Atlantic Coast, it should also be Inop erative on the Pacific Perhaps if some of the employes of the Quartermaster's Department, who purchased entire car goes of rotten oats and have repeatedly discriminated against Portland, were transplanted and their places taken by 4hc business men who seem to be in charge at New York, there would be no further fattening of the Boston million aires' wallets at the expense of the Gov ernment and Portland bidders -would have an opportunity to do business on business principles. REPEAL OK TIMBER AND.KTONE ACT. Yesterday's dispatches recorded the refusal of the public lands committee of the House to allow the bill prepared In acocrdance with the recommendation of the Public Lands Commission for the repeal of the timber and stone act to have a show for its life in the House. By repetition of last year's tactics the bill has been killed for this session also. This will be glad news to many a man who has his eye on a quarter section. that he can buy from the Nation for 500 and then sell to . syndicate for 51000; also to those speculators who, by ihfs means. ha'c a chance to round off their ownership and pick up some leav ings from their last gatherlng-In. It will administer yet another snub to the forestry officials, who have been trying to establish a wise and rational forestry system, of which the founda tion should be the ownership by the Nation of the land on which the Umber grows, the sale of the timber, as it ripens, at something like Its real value, and the chance to reforest the lands. And the Reclamation Service will see another proof that Its teaching, on the function of timber lands in conservation of water supplies, has fallen on deaf ears. So the weary work has to begin again. The deciding Impulse In the Wyoming Congressman's mind seems to be that because in his own suite there is no timber land worth preserv ing, therefore no other state shwll have a chance to have Its forests protected. OUR MILITARY ARM. The United States Is essentially a peaceful Nation. It has not during all the years of Its existence, until recent ly, maintained more than a nucleus of ;ut army. Yet within the period of Its National life It has expended upon its war establishment, including .the pay ment of pensions, the enormous sum of $3,500,000,000. Tills fact Is shown in a tabulated statement included in an in tcresting and instructive article by Mr. F. L. Huidekoper, In the current num ber of the North American Review. Mr. Huidekoper, In discoursing upon our military methods and history, agrees with the opinions of General Emery Uptpn and other writers who are accepted as nuthorlties upon the abject. He contends that our system is wrong and thnt the price we have paid and which we shall continue to pay If that system is not changed, is reckoned in billions of dollars and hun drcds of thousands of lives, much of this vital expenditure being needless. Our military system, in his view. Is based" upon a general misconception. In support of this view he says: Animated by the deeply rooted Anglo-Saxon repugnance- to a large standing- army nnd anything which unack f miHtarinn In the ritchtest drcrrf. w as a. peP cling with smtenlsfelng tenacity ta the ridiculous fallacy that a citizen with x muyke Is fully equal. If not superior, to the tralmrd uAHtr. both In courage and efficiency. R Is the purpose of Mr.x Huidekoper In this article to show what it has cost the Nation to cling to this idea. Whether it will or will not be convlnc lug to the army of readers that It has found, it well repays ierusal. It Is, moreover. Just now particularly timely in view of the recent submission by Secretary Taft of ten important meas ures for the improvement of our mili tary establishment. One of the costliest mistakes of the old system has been in placing raw re emits under the command of civilian officers (too often merely sons of their fathers), who were little or not at all familiar with their work or their duties. The new system seeks to obviate this mistake by making the National Guard a training school for mon who will in some measure be qualified to answer a call for officers In an emergency like that which confronted the Nation at the outbreak of the Civil and later of the Spanish War. But the regular ser vice Itself needs a housecleanlng, as shown by the number of minor officers who went from the political to the mil itary camp without earning their shoul der-straps. A careful, Intelligent and Just system of promotion Is necessary If the efil ciency of the Army is to be maintained at a high standard. This is the puzzle which military authorities have set themselves to solve, and It Is sC perplex Ing -one. Promotion only by seniority is a mistake that has been too often demonstrated; promotion by selection is largely open to that personal and polit ical favoritism which has been apparent in recent years. It Is recalled that this system recently made General Adna R. Chaffee an officer on the staff of Leon ard Wood; that It makes brigadiers of the line out of doctors, as In the case of Wood; out of commissary officers, s In the cases of Bliss and Weston; out of ordnance officers, as in the case of Cro sier, and out of captains of cavalry, as in the cases of Bell and Mills, while trained soldiers of forty years only at lain that rank as In the recent case of Butler Price by .depriving the Army of their services. AH experience proves that an efficient army depends upon efficient officers. It Is urged, therefore, that in the im provement of our military establish ment promotion must depend not upon seniority or personal favor, but upon efficiency. The new Taft bill proposes "promotion by elimination" as the proper way by which the difficulty may be surmounted in this case. This would compel the officer next in line of pro motion to pass a rigid examination In order to determine his fitness for a higher rank. If he falls he is to leave the service without Increase In rank or pay and the next man inthe order of . seniority, ateps up. lor. f ranalnatioa, yyt cancles are filled at the bottom either from West Point or from civil life This system offers prospect of promo tion to all, without unfairness to any. By it the Incapable nnd Inefficient are eliminated" and inferior soldiers are not Jumped over the heads of better men. Secretary Taft. In letters accompany ing the proposals recently submitted. refers to the present system of promo tion as "bad how, but certain to become Intolerable unless a cure is applied.' Mr. Huidckopers article Is opportune, since it cannot fail to call further at tention to conditions to which the Sec retary' of War refers. Of course, our foreign trade lan guishes for want of ships in which to send our wares abroad. Every subsldy shrieker who gets over the boundary line immediately sends back a doleful report of the lack of American ships and attendant. loss of trade. In the midst of this chorus from the begging brigade it is refreshing to note an hon est statement of conditions as they ac tually exist. Edward C. O'Brien, United States Minister to Uruguay, sends the department a detailed list of ail steam ship lines running to the River Plata. Of the British lines ten run from Eu ropean ports and nine from the United States. This majority of one Is more than offeet by threerof tho lines from New York having a weekly service and three a fortnightly service, while only one of the lines from European ports has a. weekly service. The next time that the Hon. John Barrett goes to South America It Is to-be hoped that he will communicate with Mr. O'Brien and thus avoid the necessity of sending back word that it Is necessary for him to travel to Europe in order to reach South America from the United States. Real estate transfers In this city for the month of February reached o. total of 52.069,150.67, an average of more than $100,000 for every business day of the month. These gratifying figures were scored without including the true valu ation of more than 23 per cent of the property which changed hands. Nearly all of the heavy buying that was done by the railroads, appears In the trans fers at the nominal figure of $1. From a statistical standpoint this method of hiding the truth Is even more mislead ing than the prevailing system of tak ing out building permits at from one- twentieth to one-tenth the value of the building involved. All of our slow coach efforts to keep our light under a bushel are unavailing, however, and the new blood that is surging In Is making Its presence felt. Among these new arrivals are people who actually be lieve that it Is creditable to the city to have a $10,000 permit taken out for a $10,000 building. Dr. Andrew D. White made an ad dress to Cornell students recently. In which he said that "the number of homicides in the United States, that arc punished by lynching, exceeds the num ber punished by due process of law." It Is probably true. More than proba bly; because Dr. White is noted for ac curacy of statement, and he must have made the necessary inquiry. It proves two things. First, that there are too few executions by due process of law; second, that in consequence there arc too many lynching?. The reign of grace among1 the insur ance companies is about over. Stuyve int Fish has' been turned out of the Mutwil Life's investigating committee because he wanted to Investigate, and it is said that Standard Oil will punish him further for his audacity by forcing him out of the presidency of the Illi nois Central. IX this keeps on, Mrs Fish may become the wife of the Pres ident of the United States in spite of herself. Tho Hart. Oregonlan uranln an, Kajnern Ore- Rrti roan for Eastern Oregon. It unt Eajt cm Oregon ropl? to stand, firmly for such a candidate. If Portland will not voluntarily yield a dr.-rrrO and Jot har of the honors. then let Eawt Oregon "take the bit In her teeth" ami forcibly take rc3Jea of he: own. Pendleton East Oregonlan. Yet the East Oregonlan, as a good Democratic newspaper must and should and will support Hon. John M. Gcarln, of Portland. The notion that foreign Immigration promotes crime gets a setback from Massachusetts statistics. In the last ten years the population of that state has increased 20 per cent, mostly from immigrants, while the number of prison Inmates has decreased. The Springfield Republican attributes the advance in morality to the public schools. Should Taft become President of the United States, he would be the first Yale graduate to attain that distinc tion. Yale alumni cannot lack political glory as long as Chauncey Depew sur vives, but It would be soothing to their pride to see one of their number In the Presidential chair especially one who would fill It as well as Taft. The orthodox Russian Church has a pleasant future In store for Tolstoi. His eternal abode Is .to be a white-hot iron pot with a tight lid, where he is to fry to the -songs of rejoicing devils. As for Pobledonostseff and the Czar, their harps and wings are all prepared. Such is orthodoxy. To swell its figures of the cost of gas production, the Portland Gas Company figures "depreciation" of plant at about $50,000 per year, or U.45 cents per thou sand feet xt gas produced. Perhaps that Is the explanation of poor gas the plant depreciates sorApidly. In Portland and throughout Oregon we shall have rather strenuous times, till we shall have brought the franchise operators and the franchise mongers under control. But they will be brought under control. Colorado is making an organized ef for to attract immigrants. Its most at tractive move would be to bring Its civil war to a close. Immigrants as a general thing prefer to locate in peace ful communities. The more pertinent question now arises. Would the New York Legisla ture be willing to entertain a bill for the kllllng'off of the morally Incurable? A sum In the rule of three: If Mc Curdy's $150,000 salary was fourteen flfteenths steal, how much of Paul Mor ton's $1M,0W salary is honest? Be patient -when the gas burns livid red and green and smells like a broken sewer. President Adams may be using the main for a speaking tube. There Is a crying' need for a more open game In the" prlzering, too, appar ently, : w THE SILVER LINING.- By A. jr. Ballarrf. Vers De Soclete. I little thought, as in I passed. Bowing to her among the rest. That I should leave the room at last With an arrow In my breast. Little did I understand She never from my mind would go. And when I touched her soft, whits hand I wondered why I trembled so. But when I looked Into her face. And when I listened to her songs, I pondered. "I have run my race And here Is where my heart belongs"! Never hedge. Stay with your convic tions. Philosophy is tho mind trying to find out Its own little game. Definitions. (Tips on the Race of Life.) KISS something a woman gives with pleasure) and a man reluctantly. It is better to purchase them in the open mar ket. They arc cheaper that way. One given with pleasure" sometimes coals hun dreds of dollars In the end. ROOM A space bounded by four wall a celling and a floor that have neither cars nor tongue. JOKE A word used to denote the hard- est klad of labor next to prison labor. GIRL A possession really possessed by the other fellow. EYES Daggers ted skillfully by fe males la all civilized countries. HAND A convenient appendage to a woman which, when held firmly, is equiv alent to holding her entire self on your lap. It generally remains quiet, has a gentle disposition and will stand without hitching. But sometimes It scratches. CAT Generic term (almost obsolete) for certain kinds of human beings who wear skirts. PETTICOAT A garment that prevents the nothlng-undcrneath effect. STOCKING A curiously shaped keg mado of soft material and worn by pchoolmarms to keep the feet warm and other purposes. It may be mado attrac tive when Intended to be seen. SHOE The modern sandal used to de form the human foot. TAILOR A perpetual creditor. SWEETHEART The prettiest word In the English language. It usually repre sents tho only really sincere feeling of affection of which anyone is capable. Thore Is no doubt that this city Is go ing to bo liberally supplied with banks. The best part of It Is that the people have plenty of money to put In them. The surest help to a woman's pain Is the magic phrase, "Let's have cham pagne." T know that my deceiver llveth. God said "Let there be light"; and Adams Immediately produced it. Adams charged too much at the. very beginning, so they compromised on using the sun for general purposes, the garden of Eden inclusive. The Adams family have been monkey Ing with lllumlnants at high rates ever since. a Of all sad words e'er" written by man The saddest are these. "He also ran." The most acceptable person In the world Is the woman who admires you. Every man down In his soul knows that ho Is no good; but he Is always tickled beyond measure when a fine woman begins to believe In him and praise him. ThonRlit for the Day. A little money, less or more. Records the days as they pass by. Day and months and years galore; Why do we worry, you and I? A llttlo money, more or less. That Is all that can be said. Let's cultivate God's tenderness; The sun will shine when wa are dead. Ecclesiastical Billingsgate. Baltimore Herald. That the art of heated and incandescent Invective Is not confined to politician?. dray-drivers and longshoremen 13 shown by the following extracts from a Phila delphia clergyman's published tribute to a fellow ecclesiastic: "Yodferoua and pwlmUHe cur." "A desperata pamphleteer." "Unlike the gentleness and humility of tha dumb asa," Th! Inflated pmrllHt." "ETen when the Lord appears the cond time. It would be Jnst lite, this small animal to rear up and baric at the sound of the trumpetr. as It to say: 1 will not at low It,'" Slf -centered. Inane, mechanical. Illiter ate and. mad ranxellit.' Has been smitten with the stupidity of a Judicial blindness." "A mongrel Catvlnlst." This calumlnator." "Stands self-convicted either of Intellec tual Imbecility or of serious moral depravity, or possibly both." "A notable exhibit of obtustlcated cere b ration. "His chronic habits of malignant innuendo and mlareprsstntatlon remind one of th no torious I ago." Here we have a master of the art of making loud and unseemly noises. In the dead city of Philadelphia he Is lost. Were he In Mississippi the grateful and admir Insr ncoulaco would make him Governor. Were he In South Carolina he would be come a Senator of the United States. Hero Worship and ilaps. St. neholas- Hero worship, too, has had a hand in the making of maps. We have postofflces bearing the name of every President down to and Including Mr. Roosevelt. Only two of his predecessors are lacking In the list of counties. Naturally, the favorite In the naming of towns and counties Is Washington, and he Is the only President for whom a state has been named. But others than Presidents enjoy these hon ors. Successful soldiers, sailors, states men, editors, authors. Inventors, the heroes of ancient history and mythology, and even popular actors and athletes share a like distinction. Our list of post offices is a long one, and contains names from almost every language, living and dead, and chosen on almost every con ceivable principle or Impulse. Two coun ties In Kansas present a curious associa tion of Ideas: Greeley County has for Its capital a town called Tribune, and Ulysses Is the county seat of Grant. New sta tions were to b named along a Western railway some years ago. and they were named after the members of a profes sional baseball team that happened Just then to win the championship. What Wo Are Coming To. Baiter City Herald. When Baker City gets pavad streets our millionaires will be rtdjng in auto mobiles and our millionaire daughters will be eloping In automobiles and our millionaires' dogs will be biting our poor, unworthy legs to beat the band. T&ja'i.,wkat w are cpjxln to,. NEW YORK'S GAS WAR. Eight Per Cent on Capital Actually Employed Is a Fair Return. New York Press. ALBANY. Feb. 25.-Governor Higglns wants an S0-cent gas bill passed by the Legislature. There was no mistaking the meaning of Governor HIgglns tonight when he said It was the duty of the Leg islature to pass an SO-ccnt gas bill for New York City without delay. The Governor expressed the opinion that the announcement of S-cent gas for Man hattan made today by the State Commis sion would. If put into force, stand the test of the courts. He was sure the Leg islature could specifically delegate Its pow ers to the commission, but he feared liti gation would follow and keep the users of gas from obtaining relief. Now that tho commission had declared for an. SO-cent rate, the Governor was sure the Legisla ture could find no good reason for oppos ing confirmation of 'the State Board's work. The Governor was asked If the de cision of the Gas Commission was expect ed by him. "They brought to me." he replied, "the detailed figures on which their decision Is based. I therefor knew In a general way of their conclusions. I tblnfc that am 8 per cent retarn to the? earn company 01 the amount of Its capital actually em ployed la It bunlaess la a fair return. The reduction in price should Increase the consumption, and with the economies to be brought about to the Consolidated Gas Company by the establishment of the plant at Astoria, there should be an In crease In the ratio of profit to the com pany from Its sales." "Do you regard the order as confisca tion?" he was asked. "I do not." The State Commission of Gas and Elec tricity In fixing the price at 80 cents today saia tnat "on the evidence it is question able whether the v.onsolIdatcd Gas Com pany has franchises of any considerable value. The commission believes that these franchises, granted by the people without compensation, should not be capitalized against the public, thereby compelling the public to pay a profit upon the value of the favor granted by it. The seeming injustice of requiring a corporation to pay taxes upon a franchise and at the same time refusing to allow the capitalization of that franchise Is sophistical, not real. The franchise tax Is paid by tho corpora tion, but charged against the public as an expense of operation, and In reality is therefore paid by the consumer, not by tne company." The commission find that tho Consoli dated Company Ib earning at least S per cent on Its watered stock. In the findings against the Consolidated Gas Company mere is trie promise that a reduction will soon bo ordered in Brooklyn and The Bronx. The members deny that they were forced to act because of the bill bv Senator Stevens legislating them out of office. In the present condition of the Legislature, with virtualh- no leadership it is impossible to say whether Governor HIgglns will have his way on an SO-ccnt bill. The Maligned Newspaper Reporter. Everybody's Magazine. A. common charge brought against newspaper reporters Is that they are heartless, that they revel In laying be fore the world the closely guarded se crets of Individuals. It constantly "nap- pens that a reporter must do unpleas ant things because others have been guilty of those violations of custom, law or convention that make news. Tho op- proonum tnat belongs to the real of fender Is not infrequently heaped upon the Innocent reportor. There Is no work a reporter detests so much as that inrolv Ing a social scandal, and there Is no story that a large percentage of readers will devour more eagerly. There isn't a good reporter living who has not been guilty of that blackesjt, least-forglvabte or. all journalistic crimes, 'throwing down his newspaper, to protect a helpless per son Innocently Involved In a legitimate news story that Is a matter of public record. On the whole, the news-gatherers are a tender-hearted folk and generous, and that which-often passes for cynicism Is an Intense hatred and contempt for shams. If they appear suspicious It is because long experience has taught them that they must constantly guard against deception. There Is no walk of life a good reporter is not compelled, sooner or later, to Invade, and his position is the trying one of being compelled either to gain the confidence of or outwit those he meets there. . The First Artificial Tire. St. Nicholas. In the course of time a man somewhere In the world hit upon a plan of kindling a fire without having any fire to begin with; that Is to say, ho hit upon a plan of producing a fire by artificial means. He knew that by rubbing his hands to gether vers hard and very fast he could make them very warm. Then he asked himself the question: Can a fire be kin died by rubbing two pieces of wood to gether, if they are rubbed hard enough? He placed upon tho ground a piece of perfectly dry wood and rubbed this with the end of a stick until a groove was made. In the groovo a fine dust of wood a kind of sawdust was made by the rubbing. He went on rubbing hard and fast, and behold, the dust in tho groove began to glow! He placed some dry grass upon the embers and blew upon them with his breath, and the grass burst into a flame. Here for the first time a man kindled a fire for htmaelf. He had in vented the match, the greatest Invention, perhaps, in teh history of the world. The Reasonable Interpretation. Arlington Record. If the Republicans have a majority in the Legislature and vote for their nom Inee as the law contemplates there will be no contest over the Senatorshlp in the Legislature. If the Democrats or any other party elects a majority of tho Legislators. thfcy are presumed to elect the man for Senator who received the plurality of the votes for Senator of the party they rep reeent. No other reasonable construction can be put on the law. Pictures in tho Smoike. Pack. No sentimental poet I, to wring; the heart Trtth ivoa Or call up sad allcnions to the I .and, of Long Ago. I leave such work to Riley. Tt him Induce tear With poem of the yesterday and Joys of Otne. liar 1 Tst -what afflatus hi In me comes aurrlnsr from afar. "Wtit time 1 -puff the azure clouds from out a big- clear. Tho Muse of Optimistic Thlnry I Joyfully In voke And conjure tip the pictures the pictures In tha smoke. So sn-etheartit of the Might Have Been are la - thos dreams of mine; No Gwendolyn or Margaret, no Kate or Caro line; Xo "dear old- Home," no promises that ehlld lshlr I rowed. Come In that vap'roua picture In that blue' tobacco cloud. Nay! Nay! I dream of luxurle that I am going to get ' By aavlng up the coupons o a. certain cigar ette. . O ye that acoff at sentiment and deem ro mance a Joke. Came gaze with me at pictures at pictures In the smoke. An aulomoMie ! I save four million tags of that; Fer seven hundred thousand baada or thl a famished sat: JL irtor yacht for smoking thirty thousand toe of daptt; A toothbnsih for Inhaling fumes of twsnty rallea of rope; "A -woman's but a. woasan" but a good cigar la mora Than Just a smoke, dear Rudyara. If you strike the proper store. Tvn got tobacco heart, a lung is gone, and I am broke. But I have looked at pictures at pictures In OREGON IS 0N THE MAP. Wall Street Summary. Prom Manitoba comes an announcement that .there are at present m the Canadian Northwest not less than 200,000 Americans, or about one-third of its entire population. This Is the section to which reference ha3 been made as the "wheat belt," and whdie tracts arc now exclusively settled by res idents of the United States. In 1SS6 only 0 homesteads were allotted to Americans: In 1S97, 1000 were apportioned; In 1S33. 2$.- 000; In 1900, 33.000. and last year, more than 50.000 took up their habitation under the Dominion government. This year SO.000 Americans are expected. i This tide of emigration from the United States is a matter of vital interest, be cause It tends to depopulate our own agri cultural sections, and. moreover, the . transfer to Canada of much wealth and farming experience. The majority oftour citizens who cross the border are skilled in farminsr pursuits, and are said to bring with them, on an average, 5100O each man. If this be correct, we have lost by this movement money running far Into the millions. The cause of this exodus Is attributed to the speculator. In 1900 It was noticed that the homesteads in our various Western States were practically exhausted, and that the tracts in Minnesota and the Da kotas, which had formerly been sold to farmers by the Northern Pacific, had. likewise, come to an end. To supply the new fields for American conquest, specu lators came to Canada. looked over the ground, purchased millions of acres for a mere song, and are now living In clover on the profits of their enterprise. This, while highly beneficial to Canada. Is an irreparable Injury to the United States, particularly to the railroads. Here tofore emigrant traffic has been worth about $1,000,000 a year to the railroads, and on the authority of President James J. Hill, of the Great Northern, every new family settling along its line Is worth ?100 a year In freight profits. On this basi3 the diversion of 30.000 inhabitants, averag ing five to a family, means the loss to the railroads of Jl.COO.OOO annually, and the consequent gain of that sum by the Cana dian railroads. And as this movement is likely to continue, a still greater loss may have to be encountered as time passes. That this tide cannot be turned Dixie- ward is a condition to be greatly deplored: and more particularly in view of the re cent conference at Chattanooga, when ways and means were discussed bv the Governors and representatives of 13 South ern States to induce emigration South ward. The opportunities for agricultural and industrial development of a most di versified character below the old line of Mason and Dixon are equal. If not supe rior, to those of Canada or our own Northwest, and this would hav.e been more generally understood If the channels of publicity had been earlier invoked. As It Is, much valiant scrviec is now bcins: done by the press of the South, and as. it Is true, one of its prominent exponents preaches that "the development of the South is the enrichment of the Nation.' before it be too late we should take steps to save to our own country its citizens, with thcir experience and wealth, by a counter transfer movement Southward. What the Country Needs. Ashland Tidings. Prospective settlers from tho East and Middle West are pouring into Ore gon by the'hundreds and thousands, en couraged by the existing- favorable railroad transportation rates. South ern Oregon is getting- a share of them and many are finding their way to Rogue River Valley. It Is gratifying to note that many of them arc people of considerablo means, and come pre pared to buy an orchard or farm or to Improve unimproved lands which re purchase. This is encouraging. The Rogue River Valley towns dj not need so much people to en gage In mercantile and similar busi ness enterprise to compete in a field already well crowded, nor people with out at least small means and a will to work but producers arc needed to fill up and. develop the surrounding- coun try; people who will produce something of use to themselves and tholr neigh bors at home or abroad, farmers, fruit growers, stockgrowers. dairymen, poul trygrowcrs. More development of our mines and water powers and general wealth of natural resources Is called for. Most towns could, spare a news paper or a store and not suffer, but all need additions to their payrolls. His First Bribe. J McAlister (Indian Territory) News. ' Tho editor of this paper begs to ac knowledge receipt for the first bribe of his editorial career. Somo days ago w mado inquiries of one of our society young ladles concerning a news item anil elicited the following reply: "Yes, it's true, but ple-e-e-ease don't print it in the paper. If you leave It out. I'll give you a nikel's worth of peanuts." We are not passionately fond of pea nuts, but gallantry Is our long suit. Thar "please" would have separated us from our overdraft at the bank without a single regret. So we omitted the story. It wasn't anything very startling, any way. v This morning a Scnegambian gentleman, preceded by about six Inches of pleasant smtle. wafted into the editorial sanctum with a package -under his arm about the size of a week's washing. Peanuts! The whole family will be kept busy for a week eating up the out ward and visible manifestations of our venality. "v7e begin to appreciate the joys of being a boodler. Keep It to Themselves. ' Olympla Olympian. Portland Is deep in a fight- for cheap er artificial gas, which Is accompanied by the usual amount of discussion as to the actual cost of manufacture. The actual cost of gas. by the way. is a matter about which the gas men are not In the habit of speaking publicly. It Is Information that they much- pre fer to keep to themselves. An Echoed Honr. W. D. N. In Chlcaco Tribune. Laflt night, when I was dozing, half awake and half asleep. And the silence all about me was so myatlcaliy deep. Then 1 sought tho path to slumber as o old I ueed to seek "With my hand upon the pillow, flattened -underneath my 'cheek; And the strangest fancies hurried to" my dimly drowsy mind; I was let across the borders of the land I've left behind. It was night the hush of twilight and I heard the low refrain Of the singing of the crickets In the meadow by the lane: And the owl called in the thicket, and th whlppoorwlll gave cry To its hollow, mournful measure, and the- trees began to sigh: And my eyes came halfway open and again upon the wall "Was the flicker of the ahadowa from the candl in the hall. And the walU changed In the magic to the walls I used to know, with the olden pictures on them, and the cell ing bending law; And the breeze came through the window, trailing jasmine odors on "With the spice of honeysuckles, as it did in the days agone; And th sky was as a curtain flecked with gem or golden light And I lisped, "Now 1 lay me." as I used to to the night. Then I thought not of the morrow, with the carta that It might brine. Nor of the sorrow that awaited with- its goads that sear and sting: For T knew naught of tomorrow nor of somber sorrow, then And I drifted Into dreamland as a careless boy again.' And I do not understand It, and I do not want to know Piw It was that 1 was giyea thJ one hour of ioax. ai . - w. L . n