8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN. -WEDNESP Y. JULY 25, 1906. )t (Dregmttnn Entered at the Postofftce at Portland, Or, as Second-Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. 3 (By Mall or Express.) DAILY, SUNDAY INCLUDED. Twelw months , $8.00 "Is months -2S Tbree months.... 3.25 One month .75 Delivered by carrier, per year 9.00 Delivered by carrier, per month 75 Lees time, per week .20 Sunday, one year 1.50 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... 1.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year 8.30 HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on Tour local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 8. C. Beckwtth Special Agency New York, rooms 43-50, Tribune buWding. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SAXK. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postofflea. News Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. Paul. Minn. N. 8L Marie. Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton A Kendrlck. 908-911 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 121 fifteenth street; I. Welnsteln. iioldfleid. Nev. Frank Sandstrom. Kansas City, Mo. Klcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh,. 50 South Third. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, 80T Superior Street. New York City L. Jones A Co., ' Astor House. Oakland. Cal. W. H. Johnston, Four teenth and Franklin streets: N. Wheatley. Ogden D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Broa, 1012 Farnam; Mageath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam; 248 South Fourteenth. Hacratnento, Cal. Sacramento News Co, 43U K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co, 77 West Second street South; Miss L. Levin, 24 Church street. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons; Berl News Co, South Droadway. Sao lHego B. E. Amos. l'usadenu. Cal. Berl News Co. San Francisco Foster 8c Orear. Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. PORTLAND) WEDNESDAY, JULY 23. MR. RCSBKLL SAGE'S WILL. Exactly how the late Russell Sage disposed of his money by will Is not known, but the belief seems to be common among his associates on Wall street that he gave a very large sum for charities, of one sort or another. Like many men of miserly habits, he seems to have gloated during the last years of his life over the .prospect of surprising people with his benefactions when he must finally give up once for all the pleasure of manipulating hie dollars with his own hands. Had the dollars a sensibility of ther own, one could Imagine them feeling uncom monly relieved to turn from the satis faction of a millionaire's Insatiable greed to- works of charity, but the merit which a imiser can acquire by post mortem benefactions does not seem very great. StiH. a millionaire's money must go somewhere when he himself passes to his reward and between a horde of distant relations and the pub lic he shows a commendable sense of justice In choosing the latter for his heir. Most of these great fortunes have been taken from the public by one de vice or another without much return except in the sad lessons of experience, and it seems therefore no more than right to make restitution when the possessor must relax his grip for good and all. The restitution at best must be Inadequate, for the original victims from whom the separate dollars were squeezed can never be determined. Ap proximate justice only is possible, and this is best attained toy making a lump donation for some good work. In a fortune acquired by plundering the public ownership can be only permis sive. The successful acqulsltor re tains his booty through the good-na-i tured tolerance of his victims. He has no just title to it; and, if he has none, what shall we say of his relatives to the fourth and fifth degree? What shadow of an equitable claim have the nephews and grand nephews of the departed millionaire to his fortune? They have not formed habits of dependency upon him for support. If they had, one might admit ' the parasite's plea of being un able to dig and ashamed to beg. But Sage made none of his "rela tions parasites. He probably looked upon the whole gang much as old Jonas Ohuzzlewlt did. At any rate, he kept them at a safe dtotance. As the re porters put It, he was not upon good terms with them; which Is another way of saying that he knew them to be on the lookout for crunubs and pickings and preferred to keep the whole him self. None of this sorrowing band was encouraged to expect anything from Mr. Sage's benevolence during his life. They have acquired no vested rights in his kindly Intentions, for they knew very well that no such intentions existed. The equitable claim of a good wife that she has helped by her for bearance and economy to found a for tune does not exist in the case of re mote relatives who have not contrib uted in the least, 'but have stood by with envious eyes, licking greedy chops while it grew. The law which distributes among re mote relations the fortune of a man who dies Intestate is probably a mis taken piece of legislation. It is one of those blundering devices which hu manity adopts through indolence and want of thought. When we become wiser, money left without a will to dis pose of it may go to the school fund or be spent In building roads. Cer tainly there Is no good reason, and wonderfully few bad ones, for be stowing it upon distant connections of the dead man. In most cases It does them no good. It may even ruin them. It is a rare man who is the bet ter for receiving money wrlch he has not earned. If It would be bad for a la borer to become possessed suddenly of a share in the plunder of his million aire superiors, how much better is It for a greedy poor relation to fall heir to a fraction of the Sage estate? It is no kindness to any man in normal health to place him beyond the need of working for his living. The only true beneficence possible in this mat ter is to give him fairly all that his labor produces. The reproach is "com monly, but unjustly, made, that the modern worklngman wishes to get from the plutocrats something that he has not earned. The fact is that the pluto crats not only wish but actually suc ceed in accomplishing their wish to take from workingmen and everybody else a great deal that they have not earned. AH that any sane working man wishes is to enjoy the fruits of his labor. What the plutocrat wishes Is to enjoy the fruits of everybody's labor but his own. The poor relation of the dead millionaire feels the same desire and hires a band of lawyers to help him realize it He hopes to get something for noth ing. This is the sin which all the clergy denounce in the gambler. It is the crowning demerit of the social ist in the eyes of his plutocratic crit ics. But if It is a mistaken policy to distribute the estates of intestates among poor relations, it Is a much worse one to break a will for their ben efit, especially a will by which the de parted millionaire hopes to make tardy restitution of his plunder to the public When a man postpones all his good deeds until he is dead, it seems almost like sacrilege to thwart his accomplish ing them. Mr. Sage ought not to be compelled to spend eternity in regret that his fortune did not go to found a university or hospital as he Intended. This would seem to be a piece of ex quisite cruelty which the law should not encourage. But how much more cruel for him to have to look down and see a horde of relations rioting upon it whom he had hated all his life. If a man's written will is not to be re spected concerning his money, why should we be urged to respect the writ ten win of men who lived a century and a half ago concerning the princi ples of government? As a matter of fact, there is no rea son why the will of a dead man should be allowed to control the living In any particular. His part in the affairs of men is played out. He has lived his life and hie successors must live theirs. Each generation has its own problems with the right and duty to solve them according to its own lights. There is no law of God which subjects living men to corpses. On the other hand there is no equity in dividing the fortune of a departed millionaire among a flock of harpies and their lawyers. The law, as Mr. Roosevelt has suggested, should assume control of such swollen ac cumulations of wealth and use them for the public good. APPEARANCE OR REALITY f One need not conclude that the Ill ness which seems epidemic among the defendants in the land-fraud cases 19 wholly simulated. In vary ing degrees, according to the char acters of the patients, It is prob ably factitious, but it must not be for gotten that a mind diseased may react disastrously upon the 'body. Just as a mind hale and cheerful makes it vigor ous. It is a common saying that worry depletes the 'physical powers more rap idly than work. Shame and sorrow kill as quickly as fever. Kings who lost their thrones were proverbially short lived in the tales of old wars, and the heroes of tragedy die 'without delay when shorn of their greatness in the fifth act. Some say the body is but the outward semblance of the mind, shadowing vaguely both those inner realities which are of eternal duration and its passing disorders as well. Without going so far, we may admit that the physical and mental parts of man exist in won derful concord, sharing good and ill without reserve. Remorse, or a guilty conscience, soon wears down the strongest frame; but perhaps there is no passion which so quickly saps the vital forces as cowardice, nor is there any which so hardly escapes contempt. The world requires that one who has had the courage to break - the law should show equal fortitude in facing the consequences. Or, if he is falsely accused, his manhood ought not to blench in the crisis when he must as sert and defend his Innocence. A guilty man who puts on a brave front at his trial fails not to win some reluctant re spect from his brothers who have been less sorely tempted, while a criminal of capital guilt who should forget to die game would shock all the convention alities of his calling and violate a great tradition. Crime may be forgiven, but not the cowardice which weakens and sickens over the fear of punishment. Defiant sin extorts its meed of admiration even from the messengers of social revenge; honest penitence wins respect if it in clines toward restitution; but the cra ven fear which cowers and falls sick at the judgment bar is despised: by gods and men. RECORD-BREAKING FOREIGN COM MERCE. The foreign commerce of the United States for the fiscal year ending June 30 aggregated $2,970,000,000. This with out including the trade of Porto Rico and Hawaii, which was formerly in cluded as foreign trade. If added this year, it would swell the total to more than $3,000,000,000. Exports for the year exceed those of the previous record year, 1905, by $225,000,000, and imports are $109,000,000' greater than for any pre vious year. The excess of exports over Imports was $517,000,000. The showing Is a remarkable one. A better idea of its importance can perhaps be gained by the statement that the exports for the twelve months ! were $861,000,000 greater than for the same period end ing with June, 1896, and the Imports were $447,000,000 greater than for that period. These figures, taken in connec tion with those for the preceding ten years, tell a story of steady and almost uninterrupted prosperity since the de feat of the free-silver forces in 1896. The gain was slow for the first five years after 1896, but when the act of March, 1900, removed all doubt about the stability of our money standard capital was turned loose and we began a career of prosperity that has never been equaled either in this country or In any other country on earth. New wealth has been created in the United States within the past five years more rapidly than ever before. There has been an expansion In all lines of indus trial endeavor, and the natural re sources of the country have been ex ploited on a scale never before ap proached. This wonderful activity, which has produced such gratifying re sults, was induced by the feeling of se curity which followed settlement of the money standard. But this commerce, as imposing as it now appears, is, with proper encour agement, susceptible of vastly greater growth. Even now it represents only the smallest part of our Industrial and agricultural growth, for the home de mands of 80,000.000 of the most prosper ous people on earth take up the largest and an ever-increasing proportion of the products of the country. It was the great activity of our own people in providing for this home trade that pro duced the surplus which we are now marketing abroad in such seemingly large quantities. That eminent army of "standpatters" who point with pride to this great foreign trade as one of the results of intensified protection do not consider that these results have been attained in the face of a policy which has been so restrictive of trade that nothing but the enormous weight and bulk of the surplus which we had to sell enabled it to break the barriers which interfered with its progress.. We sent foreign last year $1,000,000,000 worth of agricultural products, but not a single one of the countries which paid the American farmers euch immense sums gave American products a pref erence. England and Germany were our best customers, but they bought nothing from us until they had ex hausted the available supplies of every other country on earth that had the same line of commodities to sell. The "balance of trade" in our favor in this record season was more than $500,000, 000. In other words, we sold he for eigners half a billion dollars' worth more goods' than we purchased from them. This "balance of trade" Is used as a standing argument in favor of our protective policy, but it Is not at all clear that It is a good thing for the country at large to have It. Perhaps, if we should enable our con sumers to buy in competitive markets, it would be to their advantage. Our gigantic trusts might not get such a large proportion of their earnings, but they would have more to spend else where among the smaller tradesmen and producers. This . decrease in our pet balance of trade -would necessarily be accomplished by a corresponding in crease in imports. This would mean establishment of reciprocal relations, which, of course, would promote the good feeling necessary if we would have the same standing in foreign markets as is now enjoyed -by our com petitors. We are breaking records in foreign trade while under a serious handicap in the way of a restrictive trade policy. Our customers buy from us only as a last resort, and because they are forced to do so. What we have accomplished under such adverse conditions augurs well for what may be done when we adopt a policy more equitable for our customers, who would like to sell us something in return, and more reasonable and fair for our own buyers, who dislike to be robbed by the all-powerful trusts. AN INDUSTRIAL OUTING. The hopgrowers of the state are in hopeful mood they no longer b Like the careful plowman -doubting stand(s). Lest on the threshing-floor his hopeful sheaves prove chaff. ' The vines have made a luxuriant growth; the young burrs are thickly set in generous clusters; spraying has forestalled- the efforts of the prolific hoplouse to make of the vines a favored breeding-place, and, with the. harvest but a month away, all things point to a clean and abundant yiel-d. - Withal the values are already set at figures that will enable the grower to make money for himself out of the crop and pay his . pickers fair compensation for their work. The picker is the only element In the hop industry that is as yet unreckoned with for the season. That he will prac tically make his own terms with the producer is foreshadowed; 'by the de mand for labor in every department of industry, agricultural, mechanlcaL-and constructive. With the foresight that is a feature of successful endeavor In industrial life, hopgrowers have cast a careful glance over the labor field and sought to secure such help as will be necessary for the September harvest. Some of these have been successful, others are still seeking, but with the reasonable prospect that supply will rise to meet demand when the. time comes. - Hopplcklng is the one industry, in which families engage in the WSlam ette Valley. Frultplcking is in the same line of concerted effort, but as yet the commercial orchard, requiring the work of many hands for several weeks, isl not a feature of our horti culture. The hop harvest takes the form, first of a family outing, then of a neighborhood festival, and finally of a remunerative industry in which children work with their par ents, unchallenged by the Child Labor Commission on the score of age proud to earn their Winter's clothing or the year's schoolbooks by their own ef forts. The work Is wholesome, the sea son Is short, and the pay is usually satisfactory. It is proper, however, in view of occurrences in the hopyfirds of some past years ..to warn parents against sending their boys and girls un accompanied by older persons in au thority to the faopyards. If the par ents can go, so much the better; but if not, there should be others, steady, ob servant men and women to whom par ental authority is delegated. With this precaution hoppicking time may well be anticipated as the family outing time, not less enjoyable to those who cannot afford an idle outing than is the season at the Ibeach or in the mountains - to those who can afford in a financial sense a vacation of idle enjoyment - RUSSIA'S RULERS. - It is said that the Grand Duke Mi chael, brother of the Czar and until the birth of the little Czarowltz heir to the throne, frightened the timorous Nicho las into the act that has plunged Rus sia Into revolution and threatens the throne itself. This young man Michael is a physical weakling and the favorite of his mother, the Dowager Empress, who is herself a power behind the throne. Though In her girlhood, as Princess Dagmar, of Denmark, she was as gentle and considerate of the rights of others as is her sister, Queen Alexandra of England, her sojourn for more than a generation at the most au tocratic court In the world has made her an implacable enemy of progress and filled, her with an utter contempt for the downtrodden masses of the em pire. Her daughter-in-law, the Czar ina, the just, generous, high-spirited daughter of Princess Alice of England, brought up at the democratic court of Hesse-Darmstadt, she regards with jealousy and aversion, hating her first because she did not bring an heir to the empire, and when a son was finally born doubly hating her because her own son, the sickly, pampered Michael, -was thereby relegated to the second place in the line of succession. Nominally a woman cannot rule in Russia. Actually, however, the policy of the government is dictated by this woman the Czar's mother. The influ ence of two women of opposite views upon important political matters may indeed be said to account for the Czar's vacillating policy, his wife coun selling to Justice and humanity in deal ing with his - subjects, his mother to stern repression, not only of liberty, but of its semblance. It is thus that he halts between two opinions and in his action represents trie monarch who does not know his own mind now led, now driven, but always in leash. - It may be hoped, whatever befalls the rest of the imperial family In the rain of red fire that has been Invoked, that the Czarina and her young chil dren will escape the doom that threat ens the house of Romanoff. For the rest, from the cowering Czar and his imperious mother to the Grand Dukes, useless cousins and brother of the ruler, the pity that is born of humanity is their due. Beyond this the world re gards their plight with indifference. To what desperation the gang of franchise-mongers in Portland is driven by exposure" of their grab and graft methods is evpm.nl ffifl tho - sertion of their organ that Editor Scott was xriDea" ty "jack" 'Matthews' promise to make him United States Senator, when The Oroo-nnion fnutwi their reputed honesty and allowed mem to put ineir $4,000,000 blanket franchise steal through "Jack's" City Council in Novtrnhpr toast -ni i.nn. ary, 1903. Scott was away from Port land during this MUls-Lewis-Ladd-Swl- Krt-jamjDeii-xeai graft in the Coun cil, most of the time in Europe from early In September, 1902, untH after the deal was accomplished. Lying Is such a habit With thi TlllltftrrstU -ana- that any distortion of the truth "looks good" to mem it m their own interest. But of course the He is a small matter; al most SnV lie WOllM lf InalirniflMint compared with their $4,000,000 steal train me puoiic. The British Admiralty, which has been carefully guarding all of the se crets of the great battleship Dread naught, has at last taken the public into its confidence to the extent of giv ing up a few particulars of this great est of fighting machines. Aside from an equipment of ten 12-inch. guns, per haps the most remarkable feature of this great ship is her speed of twenty seven knots and a bunker capacity which will admit of her steaming 3500 miles at a speed of 18 knots per hour. The Dreadnaugbt will have twenty seven 12-pound guns to be used against torpedo-boats. The cost of this invinci ble floating fortress, including guns, is $9,000,000. There is a possibility that these particulars are now made public for the moral effect they will have. The Dreadnaught would only require a few minutes in which to wipe out of existence the entire navy of some of the minor powers which occasionally make wry faces and spit fire at John Bull The talents of the forger are -diversified, and there is a greater variety of gold bricks now on the market than ever before. Yesterday's news dis patches told of a number of laboring men in New York being victimized by purchasing forged certificates of ad mission to a labor union, and- another modern financier as endeavoring to sell forged Union Pacific certificates of stock. Mr. Harriman is not mentioned as the innocent purchaser of this bogus stock, but it was not very long ago that he paid between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000 for a limited amount of inaccessible property in Seattle which any one else could have bought for one-third the amount paid. Perhaps the forger of Union Pacific stock had heard of the railroad king's experience with the Se attle sharpers. v If any Willamette Valley farmer will take a glance around his ranch he will see scores of nooks and corners near fences and buildings where grass has grown tall and become ripe and unfit for feed because he kept no sheep to eat it down. The dry grass is not merely waste, it is also a menace to his property, for, In case of fire, it affords a means of conveying the destroying element, from one part of the -farm to another. In Western Oregon, where sheep may be kept on Fall wheat and on clover fields in the Spring, with benefit to these crops, every farmer should have a small flock of these al ways profitable animals. ' The British steaimshlp- Beckenham, wMich. is under charter to-load lumber at Portlands is escaping dirydock ex penses by going on the sands near As toria at high tide and having her hull cleaned and painted. The facilities are perhaps not equal to those of the dry dock, but the expense is lighter, and, in an emergency like the tpresent, when the drydock is otherwise employed, it is quite a convenience for steamers to make use of the natural drydock be tween tides. As the Puget Sound har bors are not favored with any safe places for vessels to take the sands, they must either wait for the drydock or proceed with foul hulls. Another Astoria fisherman made his last drift Just outside the river Mon day. It was more than a generation ago that Astoria's eons of the sea be gan tempting fate by venturing too far out in their quest for salmon, and Old Neptune has never abandoned his de mands for toll. Some seasons the vic tims are few in number and again they are many, but never a season comes and goes without some fatalities among the fishermen. The blue Pacific is a beautiful ocean, and it croons soft lul labies to those who view It in its tender moods, but ever and anon It claims new victims who undervalue its dangers. The steamship Richmond, carrying 3,000,000 feet of lumber and drawing twenty-two feet of water,' left Portland at 4 o'clock yesterday morning and at 3:30 yesterday afternoon crossed out of the river en route for China. This trip from Portland to the sea was made in about one-half the time required by a steamer in making the trip from Tacoma to sea. In compiling facts cencerning the productiveness of the Oregon country Tom Richardson should make note of the seventeenth child born to a woman at the age of 50 in Pocatello and triplets to a younger woman in Clackamas County. . - Whatever comes out f the terrible Russian affair, and whoever wins in the end, it seems certain that the out look is exceedingly black for the Jews. If they could leave Russia, they would. But how can they? Seattle Is Justly proud of the fact that at last it has pulled oft a prizefight in which "a Teal champion was principal." It Is useless longer to deny Seattle's claims to greatness. Why do women always choose smokers' seats on street-cars?" asks a complaining - correspondent. - They don't. Why should smokers have seats? One sign that the worst of the Sum mer's -heat is past was posted yester day; the price of straw hats was re duced 50 per cent. The Bix-bit companies have been overrated. Some of them will pay only four bits, or as much as they can afford." Mr. Sage's distant relatives are rap idly forgetting the distance always maintained by Mn Sage during his life time. To Democratic party managers east, west, north and south: Keep your eye on Hearst; he's loaded. The Czar cannot fool any of the peo ple all the time, nor all of the people some of the time. WHITE SCOURGE! IX FRANCE, Dreadful Ravaaes of Consumption Csnae Many Deaths. . Washington, July 13. A report received at the Department of Commerce and La bor from Consular Clerk Augustus E. In gram, stationed at Paris, contains the statement that 150,000 persons die each year in France from tuberculosis. This represents 39 deaths out of every 10,000 Inhabitants. This appalling death roll, it is reported by Mr. Ingram, has led to a critical ex amination of French vital statistics, and many interesting facts have been brought out, showing the basis on which these statistics have been established. Definite Information was received from only 713 cities and towns, having a popu lation of more than 5000 inhabitants, mak ing a total of 12,000,000 inhabitants, among whom the mortality . from tuberculosis amounted to 42,000 a year. This has served as a calculation for the rest of the country, and to it is added the deaths from chronic bronchitis (approximately 50.000), making in this way a total of 150, 000 deaths from tuberculosis. Professor Albert Robin has established from the statistics of 1901, 1902 and 1903 that tuberculosis increases in an almost regular proportion to the density of popu lation. In Paris, for example, the per centage of deaths from tuberculosis is 45.2; in cities of 100,000 to 492,000 popula tion, 84.4 per cent: in cities of 20,000 to 80,000 inhabitants, 30.8 per cent; in cities of 5000 to 10,000, 23.4 per cent, and in cities of 1000 to 5000, 20.4 per cent. The question of the effect of certain oc cupations on this disease haB been care fully investigated In France. It was found that those trades that bring persons Into contact with dust are especially danger ous. Inquiries among policemen, postal employes and laundry-workers revealed a disastrous condition of affairs.. Among- 257 workmen carefully kept un der observation, consisting of carpenters, joiners, floor layers and packers, all liv ing under practically the e;ame conditions, the mortality from tuberculosis amounted to more than 30 per cent. Laundry-workers, however, were found to be the most seriously affected. In some neighborhoods the mortality among laundry-workers from tuberculosis reached the total of 75 per cent. So deadly is the handling of - indiscriminate soiled linen that young women succumb after an av erage of 15 years, while men last from 12 to 23 years. The Paris bakers a few years ago formed an organization for the improve ment of the unsanitary conditions under which they have to work. It is asserted authoritatively that, despite the govern ment Inspection of bakeries and the mod ern hygienic apparatus, 240,000 out of 400, 000 bakers in France suffer from tuber culosis. The campaign against tuberculosis in France has assumed such national im portance that the Academy of Medicine at Paris has, during the past three months, been discussing the necessity for the com pulsory declaration of cases of tubercu losis by the doctors In attendance, but this has met with a storm of opposition, it being contended that thereby the large army of consumptives would be deprived of means of support, since no one would then knowingly employ them. It has been suggested that school chil dren suffering from this disease should carry a booklet reporting the progress of their physical condition, so that the teach ers could separate the unhealthy from the healthy. Paper handkerchiefs have also been proposed for distribution, but their use, French physicians declare, would be undesirable, if not dangerous, unless the handkerchiefs were systematically col lected and destroyed. The Minister of Education has recently issued an order that inasmuch as the permanent commis sion for protection against tuberculosis had learned that recent Investigations had shown that in certain countries 60 to SO per cent of the cattle were affected with tuberculosis, all milk consumed In board ing schools should be pasteurized, boiled or sterilized. LIFE IN THE OREGON COUJfTRY. Fnn With the Feline. East Oregonlan. Owing to the hot weather the Rader bob cats have been taken from their pen In the furniture store window and are now enjoying an outing. Mr. Ra der has prepared a place for them in his yard and the young wild cats are now doing well. Not long ago a tame cat belonging to the family of J. W. Maloney came over to visit with the bob cats and was placed in the pen .with them. However, the rough meth ods of the bob cats did not appeal to the Maloney cat and he proceeded to climb the ceiling. Thinking a game was on the three bob cats took after the tame one and according to eye witnesses one. of the swiftest cat races In history was enacted before the civ ilized cat was' rescued by J. .Maloney, Jr. Ellensburs'a Aborlsrlnal Centenarian. Capital. Old Nancy, has been going about the streets alone lately, with only her three dogs to keep her company. She carries no string with which to lead behind old Toby. She was asked a day or two ago where her old husband was and said: "Kopa illihe; hyas sick; bye and bye memaloos; halo nanich; halo turn turn; ahnkutte skookum; halo alca skookum; bye and bye memaloos." All of which means that old Toby is at home; he is very sick; bye and -bye he die; he cannot see, can't think; long ago he was skoo kum (good), but he no good now; he die soon. One Oregon Man's Success. Joseph Herald. Peter Beaudan, the multi-thousand sheepman, has closed his shearing plant. Seventy thousand sheep were fleeced at these pens this season, 20,000 of which were his. In 1879 Beaudan was engaged in hauling cariboo poles down from the mountains to. his pres ent home; you may see a great big pile of poles lying rlfear his dwelling today. Then his stock in trade was cariboo poles thousands of them. Now It is Merino sheep tens of thousands of them. His success comes from stick ability. Fell With Dynamite. Weston Leader. J. C Carlile was in rather an awk ward predicament a few days ago while blasting a road on the Umatilla River below J. F- Thompson's place. He slipped and fell with his arms full of dynamite, and preferring not to drop the stuff he did not try to recover his balance and sprawled for about six feet. "Jumbo" is now in town nursing a broken rib, but feels thank ful that he wasn't blown into kingdom come. Profitable Crop. Roseburg News. D. E. Wilson completed his gather ing of his crop of "Telephone" peas and he certainly found that there was "good money" In raising this product. From 71 rods of land he raised peas for which he received $110 in cash, be sides he left a good wagon load on the vines, as the price got too low for him to bother farther with them. Peek-s-Boos Barred From Commnnloa. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Dispatch. Father Jordan, of St. Mary's Parish, Pitts ton, has followed the lead of Father Lynott. of Kingston, and will decline to allow women wearing peek-a-boo waists to come to the communion railing. He has notified women worshipers that he considers waists with short sleeves, low necks or open-work In front immodest, and that it is Improper for women to wear them to communion. He expressed the wish ' that they would refrain from -shearing such waists at any time. UP-TO-DATE FIFTY-FOUR FORTY. Involves Fight Over Land Frauds Un der Section 3440 of Revised Statutes. Bend Bulletin. In the days when Oregon was occupied jointly by the Americans and the Brit ish much was heard of tne phrase, "Fifty-four forty or fight." the meaning being that the American boundary should go up to the parallel ot m aegrees w min utes or there would b war. In these militant days we hear much of another flftv-four forty and it means a real fight in every case not witn tne British, but with home-grown greed, in trenched in slimy politics. This fifty-four forty Is section 5440 of the Revised Stat utes of the United States, under which most of the land-fraud indictments are brought. It is a conspiracy statute. It provides that if two or more persons conspire "to commit any offense against the United States or defraud the United States tn any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of said parties do any act to effect the object of conspiracy." all shall be liable to a penalty of "not less than $1000 and not more than $10,000, and to Imprisonment not more than two years." The fencing of public domain, procuring and "expediting" unlawful land entries and other offences fall under this Btatute in Oregon, because of the peculiar polit ical condition that - prevailed here for a long time. In which there was "safety In numbers" and the many links made a chain of great strength and smoothness. But the "numbers" that made fraud' a "safe" business In Oregon failed to find security when there was no response from Washington. The Washington Govern ment is more disposed to enforce the fifty-four forty of this day than it was the far-off cry of a past generation, and the dreams of many "Influential" citizens are thereby muchly disturbed. ' POOR SEXTET OF TROUBLE. Every Show Girl After Notoriety Claims to Have Been in It. New York. Corr. St. Joseph News-Press. Florence Evelyn Nesbit Thaw is now being mentioned as a member of the now world-famous original "Florodora" sex tet. The statement that she was one of the six Is an error. "If there had been six times six girls In the original 'Florodora' sextet,' said John C. Fisher, the producer of "Floro dora," today, "the number would not be half large enough to account for the girls whom press agents and newspaper men have declared were members of the orig inal six. Every show girl who attained notoriety, enviable or otherwise, is brand ed a member of the "original "Florodora" sextet.' "Nan Patterson was one of these, yet she never saw the original six. Mabelle Gilman ditto. And so on a score of others. As a matter of fact, the six girls were Marie Wilson, Margaret Walker, Vaughn Texsmith, Marjorie Relyea, Ag nes Wayburn and Daisy Green. Most of them married well, and they are now out of the - profession. Not a one of them ever did anything to cause unenviable no toriety. "As for Evelyn Nesbit, I remember her very well. She was one of the most graceful and beautiful girls on the stage, and secured her position in the 'Floro dora' company through the friendship of Stanford White and George W. Lederer, the manager of the show at that time. She was kept out of the sextet, however, by her diminutive size." Mrs. . ThaTra Serious Poses Are Beat. Philadelphia Record. A professional model of this city who has not yet succeeded in marrying a mil lionaire says of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, whom she knew here during her days of posing, that it was the girl's ideal beauty more than any ability which made her so much in demand as a model. "She could get all the serious expressions," says this authority, "sueh as sadness, appeal, medl-. tation and the like, without trouble, but when It came to trying for gayety she was a failure, and her smile, unless a very slight one, was apt to look silly. All the artists and photographers knew this, and that is why you see more serious than smilinsr pictures of her. She could smile and be gay In real life, but her at tempts before the camera were never sat isfactory." A Penny for Each Chnrchgroer. Kansas City Times. Rev. H. A. King's plans of offering in ducements to children to stay after Sun day school for the preaching service was given Its first trial yesterday morning. It succeeded, too. Nearly 300 of the young sters of his congregation at the Oakley Methodist Episcopal Church responded to his plea. He had advertised he would give each young worshiper a bright, new penny. jnd he kept his word. In addi tion, he preached a sermon with "A Penny" for his text. The pastor has an nounced that one Sunday each month he will preach a sermon to children and each one who attends will receive a gift. Next time the souvenir will be a copy of a cele brated picture. Soothing- Syrup for an "Infant" Trust. Washington (D. C.) Post. The cry that the steel trust is putting up over the armor-plate awards lends color to Its claim of being an "Infant" Industry. Love Song- of the Future, " Puck. Tell me, darling, ere with rapture We shall sink In love's eclipse. Ere with joy a kiss I canture. Have yon sterilised your lips? Tell me. darling fairest creature Etver born the sales beneath Ib your hair a natural feature? Are they yours those gleaming teeth? Tell me, tell me, charming lassie. When you're angry, and your eye Stares at me with stare that's glassy. Pray, what does that signify? ' Is your stomach In condition? Have yon pains around your back? Does your heart fulfill its mission? Is your liver out of whack? Tell me, O bewitching creature. Whom I love In fiercest way. TeU me, ere I call the preacher- i-arnns, are your lungs O. K. T LEAVE THEM AT HOME TRANS-ATLANTIC TRAVEL. Tourist as Distinguished From Immi grant aad Emigrant. New York Times. - Below Is an interesting little table giv ing the figures of passenger traffic of the ocean liners for the past seven years, di vided between saloon passengers and sec ond cabin, and including those going out and those coming in. This table prac tically covers all of what may be called strictly tourist travel, as distinguished from Immigration and emigration. It may be remarked also that the accommoda tions now afforded for the second-cabin passengers are so nearly equal to those enjoyed ten years ago by the saloon pas sengers that there Is little substantial difference in the classes that use the two. Between them they embrace nearly all who travel for pleasure or for business from one shore of the Atlantic to the other: TRANS-ATLANTIC PASSENGERS. Second Cabin. 40.000 02,000 1889 Saloon. Out 5S.OOO In 65.000 1900 Out 66,000 In 68,000 1901 Out 81.000. In 84,000 1902 Out an, ooo in ou.ooo 1903 put eyooo In 67.000 1004 Out ns.ono "In 68,000 1908 Out 7.ooo In 77,000 52.000 70,000 43.000 64.000 4t!.onn 7,000 53.000 93,000 87.000 93.000 60.000 107.000 The first thing to be noted in the dis closures of the table is that the number of Incoming saloon passengers increased in seven years by about 40 per cent and the number of Incoming second-class pas sengers considerably more than doubled; the increase in the two classes combined was nearly 70 per cent. Probably this fairly represents the growth of the habit of travel among our people. As the in crease in population has been in that time less than 10 per cent, the change is re markable. THE RICHEST BABY INJURED. Common Broken Arm for Exquisite John Nicholas Brown. Newport, R. I., Dispatch. Despite the fact that he is the richest and most carefully cared for child in the world. John Nicholas Brown was injured. No sterilized firecracker burned him; no gold-mounted Roman candle went off too soon. The child; in a most commonplace manner, fell and broke his arm. The accident was not generally known until yesterday, when he was allowed to go out of the house for the first time since the accident. He went riding in his pony cart. With him was one nurse and a coachman. The child's left arm was in splints. John Nicholas Brown is, strictly speak ing, the richest child in he world because he already has more than $12,000,000 in his own name. Other children, the heirs of the Rockefellers and Vanderbllts, for in stance, will have more money than he when they get their Inheritances, but John Nicholas Brown has Ms money in his own name. In 1900, when John Brown, Jr., was 2 years old, his father died. The senior John Brown's wealth came from John Carter, the East India merchant. The baby Brown inherited $6,000,000. Later an uncle. Harold Brown, died and left the baby $4,000,000. And the most is being made of John Nicholas Brown, Jr. He was a frail child, but he has been cared for so carefully that he is robust now. His food is looked after with the utmost care. Squabs raised on his special farm, steaks from his spe cial stall-fed cattle, eggs marked with his initials from his milk-fed chickens, vege tables from his own hothouses, fruit and berries from his own trees and bushes, and carefully tested cereals compose his diet. The cooking is done in sterilized dishes. Would Teach Graft In Schools. Louisville (Ky.) Dispatch. Graft as a course in the schools of the country was advocated by ex-Governor Bradley in an address before the teachers of Jefferson County. He wanted the sub ject taught in the schools, so that the rising generation will know what It is and how to avoid it. Denouncing graft as a deadly curse of the United States, he said It was necessary that something be done to check it, and he believed the public schools to be the best place. ' Rich Indian Cattle-Ralsera. Deadwood Cor. Duluth Herald. The Indians are becoming extensive cattle-raisers, and the Government Is buying a large amount of beef from them. At the close of the fiscal year just ended the Government will have purchased from the Indians for that year about 1,000.000 pounds of beef, and will have bought from contractors another 1,000,000 pounds. Love Meets Its Locksmith. -Washington (D. C.) Post. An Indiana locksmith shot a girl who jilted him. It Is getting dangerous, ap parently, for love to indulge in Its old time sport of laughing at locksmiths. Indebted. Puck. O Summer bards, right dolefully Ys chant your "Grace la by the Sea"; Ye alng of "Mabel's Coat of Brown," Of "Dearest Margaret's Bathing Gown," When "Ethel Drives Off From the Tee." A myriad of genus she Take oft our Summer bats to ys Blaves of the tired, horrid town, O Summer bards! Madge, Elsie, Gwendolyn, Marie, Blanche. Amy all of us agree To grant to you the laurel crown For that ye give us our renown. All that we do and are do we Owe Summer bards. Fresh Dally Doses. Philadelphia North American. The cable ticker clicks Every day Another interview from ' William J. From, the Pittsburg Dispatch.