(5 THE MORNING OREGOXIAN. MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1907. FfBSCRIPTIOX BATES. CT IXVAJtlABLY IN ADVANCE. 'd - (By Mai:.) Dally,, Funday included, ons year fS.OO Dally, Sunday Included, alx months 4 25 .Dally, Sunday Included, three month.. 2.25 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 Dally,- without Sunday, one year - Dally; without Sunday, six months 3.25 Dally., without Sunday, three months.. 115 Dally, without Eunday. one month 60 Sunday, on year -80 Weekly, on year (Issued Thnrsday)... 1-S0 Eunday and Weekly, one year lM BY CARRIEE. Dally, Sunday Included, on yea" JJ0 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 5 HOW TO REMIT Send postottlca money order, express order or personal icheck on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency r, kt th lender" risk. Give postofflce d flress m tull. Including county and alate. POSTAGE BATES. ' Entered at Portland, Orejon. Postofflc s Second-Class Hatter. 10 to U Paxes MBl 1 to 2S Pacea 2 " SO to 44 Pazes Mnt 8 to 60 Pages cnta Foreign Postage, double rates. "' UIPOKTAJy'T The postal laws ax strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid ar not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BltitNESS OFFICE. The S. C. Bectwrth Special Agency New York, rooms 43-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510512 Tribune building. KEPT OX SALE. rliiraajo .Auditorium Annex. Postofflce News ("o.. ITS Dearborn street. St. FhuI, Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton & HendrlcH. 906-912 Sftfenteenth street; Pratt. Book Store, 1214 Fifteenth street; I. Weinsteln; H. P. Han pen. f Kansas City, Mo Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaush. SO South Third; Eale News Co., corner Tenth and Eleventh; Voma News Co. Cleveland. O James Pushaw. 307 Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Ebbitt House. Penn sylvania avenue. , Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Kemble. A. P., 37:15 Lancaster ave nue: Penn News Co. New York City li Jonen Co., Antor House :;' Broadway Theater News Stand. Buffalo, Ji. V. Walter Freer. Oakland, Cal W. H. Johnson. Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley: Oakland News Stand; Hale News Co. Oxden D. L. Boyle, W. G. Kind. 114 Twenty-fifth street. Hot Springs, Ark. C. X. Weaver Co. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam; Alageath Stationery Co. Sarramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co., 4.".n K street. Salt Lake Moon Book V Stationery Co.; Ropenfeld & Hansen. Itos Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street waeons. ' Kan Diego B. E. Amos. ln Beach. Cal. B. K. Amos. Pasadena, Cal A. F. Horning. . Fort Worth, Tex. Fort Worth Star. San Francisco Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. 'Francis News Stand; L. Parent; N. Wheatley. . Ooldfleld, Nev. Louie Pollln. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Va, KrUEg A Gould. fine Beach, Va. W. A. Cosgr'ove. PORTLAND, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1807. WHY PROSPERITY REMAINS. ' Not since the returning sunshine of prosperity began dissipating the clouds of depression which hung' over Portland in the dark days of the "nine ties" has the wail of the pessimist been entirely silenced. Perhaps it is the knowledge that nothing of an earthly nature can endure forever which induces a certain class of chronic croakers) to continue in season and out of season their dire predictions of coming trouble. But in spite of all this "knocking," which Is all but irowned by the rush and roar of Indus trial activity, Portland keeps booming along at a pace which shows no sign of Blackening. Two v-ery significant items n this subject appeared In yesterday's news columns. One told of a gain for the month of February of more than 170 per cent in the value of building permits issued this year as compared with the number issued in February, 1906. The other announced the arrival in, the city of more than a thousand homeseekers who have left the East and Middle West with a view to better ing their condition. These two items show different and Interesting phases of the remarkable development now taking place in this citjr and In the surrounding territory. The tremendous increase in the volume of building is in response to a demand from the thousands of people who are pouring in to find homes and engage In business in this city and the thou sands of homeseekers who are taking advantage of the prevailing colonist rates and coming here to share in the prosperity which is so apparent on every hand. Portland and Oregon have such superior inducements to offer to the newcomers, whether they arrive with capital for investment or with la bor to sell, that under existing condi- tionS it is practically an Impossibility to ttck the growth of the city. The man coming with capital can find op portunities for investment In a. score of industries which will yield large re turns. The laborer can find plenty of employment at wages far in excess of those paid in other parts of the coun try, with no proportionate increase in the cost of living. If the skeptic has difficulty in under standing how Portland continues month after month to break all previous rec ords for building permits, bank clear ings and other financial and commer cial features, he will do well to look around the vast territory tributary to this city. In e.very town, city or ham let he will find the same evidences of rood times and the same proportionate gala in bank deposits, in new build ings and in all other branches, which infallibly point to the prosperity of the people. There has been no abnormal creation of fictitious values by "high finance" or manipulation of real estate prices. The sound, substantial basis on which this prosperity rests lies in the constant and never-ending creation of new wealth from the forest, field, farm and mines of this wonderful land. These matchless natural resources and the possibilities for wonderful de velopment in the transportation busi ness are responsible, for the present prosperity of Portland and all other Orepon cities and towns. This devel opment has been so rapid and the num ber of newcomers has been increasing to such an extent that the pessimists are sadly outnumbered, and from now on it wi'.l make but little difference whether they "knock" or "boost." High finance. is ever presenting Itself In new aspects, and some of them are startling. For example, we learn that Mr. Adams, the Seattle Assay Office thief. - ho was sent up for five years for stealing gold from the Alaska min ers, will come out of prison a rich man. No owner can be found for about $200,000 of the money which he Is sup posed to have stolen, and as a result il must be given back to Mr. Adams. This will allow him an average of about $40,000 . per year for the time he served in the penitentiary. It will also serve as a shining illustration of the unexpected terminus of some of the seemingly unending chains of red tape which make a screaming farce of many of our Government methods. SKCTION-LINE ROAD FRANCHISE. The Section-Line road is a public highway, none too wide for the people's use. and no part of it should be given up foV an electric railroad. A street car line on that road, as on the streets of Portland, might be a proper conven ience. But any company that seeks to use that highway for a railroad and asks the County Court to allow it to do so is endowed with a superabundance, of greed or gall, or both. The public should beware, and understand fully what It is doing when it signs a peti tion to the County Court asking award of a franchise to the McCorkle eleetric line to Mount Hood. There should be a clear understand ing as to what the franchise is to be used for whether for a passenger streetcar line or for a railroad. If for a railroad, the Section-Line road is no place for it, nor Is any other public highway. A line to Mount Hood, being nearly sixty miles long, would proba bly be a railroad, like the Oregon Water Power or the Oregon Electric Company's Salem lines. If not, the pub lic should know it well, and the fran chise should state the conditions clear ly, so that there shall be no dispute hereafter. The public should not be asked to provide a right of way for any railroad. The day of such doings is past. Con gress gave right of way to three rail roads In Oregon and to five 'military wagon roads, In the shape of land grants. The recipients violated flag rantly the terms of the grants and the public interest has suffered- ever since. A railroad should provide its own right of way. This principle should be established In Oregon as to all rail roads, steam and electric- The imme diate gain to near-by landowners, com ing from grant of railroad franchises on county roads, should not be allowed to sacrifice the future interest of the public. A railroad on the Section-Line road, either steam or electric, would be a nuisance, and there is no room for it on that narrow sixty-foot highway. It may be an argument, convincing to the promoters of such a railroad, that use of the public road would save them the money they should have to pay for purchase of private right of way, but that will have no weight with the peo ple. If the franchise is to be for a street car passenger line, adequate compen sation to the county sholild be re quired. It will not be enough compen sation that the recipients of the fran chise should haul road material for the county along the road where used free, and elsewhere at low rates. That would be too cheap for the car com pany. It would be enough for the pres ent, perhaps, but not for the future. And the future must 1e always looked to. Had the city authorities of Port land done this in giving away free streetcar franchises, the "city would have secured some part of the $4,000,000 for which those franchises were sold two years ago, and all that money would not have gone into the pockets of the exploiters of those franchises. And the burdens of taxation would have been considerably reduced. There should be provision also, at the end of the term of the franchise, for disposing of the car tracks. Should this not be done, they might stay in the road Indefinitely. The tracks ought then to become the property of the county. Franchises should no more be granted for exploitation and capitaliza tion by their possessors. The public has 'been victimized by this -practice in Portland, until the record of it should be a byword and a caution for the future. A PBACEFTI. INVASION. The great American tradesman has invaded England. More specifically, he has Invaded London and in quiet defi ance of the broad, self-complacent Brit ish sneer at American methods, is pre paring to set up shop on a large scale, just to the west of Eruke street on -the north side of Oxford street. Mr, Self ridge, who practically created Marshall Field's huge store in Chicago, is at the head, of this invasion. Associated with him is Mr. Waring, and the name of the firm is Selfridge & Waring. Mr. Selfridge does not go there to antagonize the British. That would be the rankest folly a folly of which a sagacious tradesman would never be guilty. He goes in a pronounced but dignified and friendly business way to build up a trade among them that they will appreciate and support. "Under no circumstances," says this politic business man, speaking to a represent ative of the Daily Telegraph, "has the thought occurred to me of teaching you anything.'- That would be impossible. I have come here because I am at tracted, as many another American has been before me, by the opportunities afforded for a large and dignified busi ness that will not interfere with exist ing English concerns, but that is in tended to introduce something new." "Something new", in British trade customs'. Is the proposition a feasi ble one? These enterprising Americans evidently think It Is, for the invasion is being planned on a colossal scale. The building under construction many time-worn structures having been re moved to .make place for it covers an area 250 by 200 feet; the front is to be decorated with graceful Corinthian pilasters; the material is to be of Port land stone and American steel through out, and to be as nearly fireproof as the Ingenuity of American and English architects can make it. Every detail for the comfort and con venience of shippers' that experience has evolved from the department store idea in. this country will be worked out in this English establishment. Its suc cess is at present problematical, but it is believed that if it is run on lines that are elastic and adaptable; if It relies upon the essential virtues of hard work, business sagacity and honesty; if it de liberately tries to please and is not boastful of the elements of change that it introduces into the old-time British methods, it will find and make for itself a profitable place in the great metropolis " The idea, has aiready taken serious hold upon Englishmen of the more pro gressive order. It is realized- that, however Mr. Selfridge may phrase bis attitude toward existing conditions in London, he will be there for business. The meaning of his coming :s quite clear. It is a definite challenge; It in volves a very deliberate competition. "It will, no doubt," says the journal above quoted, "teach us a drastic les son." The trend of this lesson is clear. The English vendor and producer is fixed in his attitude toward trade. He has never taken the tropble to change his methods of sale or -to alter his pattern of doing business to suit his customers. If they don't like what he offers them, they can go as a matter of fact have gone to Germany; not for the. best article; British pride will not admit this, but for the article they want which England would not sell them. "Not content with losing the markets of the world." says the Telegraph, "England's merchants are now to see the actual trade of London itself chal lenged before their very eyes." This, it is bitterly but truly said, is the commercial vengeance that, being long on the road, is at length to over take hidebound conventions, which re fuse to recognize that a buyer is a human being, entitled to his choice in making purchases. He wants what he himself wants, not what another thinks is most suitable for him. To this broad opportunity for the exercise of indiv'd ual judgment the great, modern Ameri can business idea caters. It is an Idea that has not had an unobstructed path In American cities, though American energy has pushed it to rapid develop ment. It has been blocked m London by the repugnance of the British .mind to change. American invasion, in the line of trade, based upon new methods, may be resisted, but it is not likely that it will be overcome. On the contrary, the effort that it embodies will almost sure ly succeed. The writing has been long upon the wall, says the Telegraph, and few who ran have read, adding: Those few have profited accordingly. But the majority, who will lose their trade be cause they will not change their old habits, will suffer; and it will serve them right. The warning was uttered to ears sealed In stertorous slumber. Now it Is the sleeper's pockets that will suffer, and the appeal may prove more Intelligible. The competition Is close at home: the gage of battle is thrown down on his front door-step. EXPOSING MORAL CORPSES. It Is recorded in classic literature that at one time, in the ascendant days of ancient Greece, an epidemic of suicide seized upon the fair women of Athens and all efforts to stay the movement for self-destruction were unavailing. For no apparent reason and with no evidence of concerted action, many women of Athens took their lives and left friends and kin to mourn over the disgraceful manner of their departure from the world. At last a remedy was devised and the mandate went forth that, thereafter, when any woman should commit suicide her dead body should be exposed nude in the public thoroughfares. This edict had the de sired effect, for the innate modesty of the women of Greece was sufficient to restrain the desire for self-destruction. This story is related because it may have some application to the contro versy that has been going on concern ing the right and duty of newspapers in publication of news of revolting crimes, such as the Thaw-Nesbit-White transactions. Protest is made that the life of Evelyn Nesbit should not be laid bare and that newspapers should be prohibited by law from printing de tails of such crimes; in other words, that when a person has committed moral suicide the corpse should' be care fully wrapped and hidden from view. If the thought of exposure of their bodies after death was sufficient to stay the destroying hand of the women of Athena, eil not the probability of exposure of self-destroyed character exert an influence upon those tempted to enter upon lives of shame? If there is one principle more vicious than "Whatever you do. don't get caught at it," it is "Whatever you do. you shall not be caught at it." And this latter rule is one that some mis guided peftple would have adopted. Far better might the edict be "Whatever you do, you shall be caught at it." In other words. "Be sure your sin will find you out " Let but the mandate go forth that when any man or woman commits moral suicide, the moral corpse shall be exposed to public gaze, and there will be a sudden decrease in the work of self-destruction. There has foeen too little rather than too much publicity of moral delinquency. MB. HIIX'S HANDICAP. James J. Hill will not replace his wrecked Dakota with another Ameri can ship, and it is reported' that he will sell the Minnesota to the Japanese. This news, wll be eagerly seized' by the subsidy grafters, and they will make the usual attempt to show that lack of a subsidy has resulted in the .Ameri can flag's being hauled down from the Hill line. It must not be forgotten, however, that Mr. Hill is on record as being opposed to ship subsidies, al though he has always been an earnest pleader for the repeal of our ancient navigation laws and for the privilege of buying ships at as low a price as his competitors could purchase them. The loss of the Dakota and the sale of the Minnesota is to be regretted, but their fate offers no text for ship-subsidy sermons. The ships were too big, unwieldy and expensive to operate, even with their Japanese crews, ever to provefinancially successful, and if. as reported, Mr. Hill will collect $2,500,000 insurance, he might well afford to give away the "Minnesota to any one who would take It and operate it in connec tion with his rail lines. Meanwhile It will perhaps Interest the 'Humphreys, Gallingers and other advocates of the subsidy graft to learn that American commerce can still find an abundance of trans-Pacific tonnage ready and willing to carry freight to our Oriental markets at rates fully a third lower than those in effect when the Dakota and Minnesota were built for the al leged purpose of "developing our Ori ental commerce." The threatened extinction of our commerce, with the disappearance of the American ship, is not the only "scare" that the subsidy-seekers trump up. There Is that other bugaboo about the - necessity of ships for transport service in time of war. We had some experience during the Spanish-Ameri can War,, and if the Government had bought all of the fine steamers then offered by the British. Germans, Nor wegians and other nations, there would have been a shortage under all flags except the American. The Americans will never have any difficulty in secur ing plenty of cheap ships if Congress will permit us' to get them the way every other enlightened-.nation on earth secures them that is, to buy in the open market. . . The California Legislature has adopt ed a constitutional amendment fixing the salary of member o- the Legisla ture at $1000 for regular sessions, with $10 per day for extra sessions. The political and industrial history of Cali fornia shows quite plainly that some of the past Legislatures contained some very "cheap" men, but it remains to be seen whether the increase in salary will improve the standing of the appli cants for the position. District Attorney Jerome is a fighter: He will leave no stone unturned to convict Harry Thaw not because he would like to have the man executed, but because Jerome himself does not want to be beaten in this bitter legal battle. He will marshal a host of alien ists against the "brain storm" theories evolved by the experts of the defense. The coming week of the great trial promises to be one of technicalities that prove nothing and of assumption pitted against assumption. If the mind of the jury is not already befogged, it Is likely to become hopelessly so by the time nine alienists called by the prosecution have spun their theories and been duly cross-questioned in re gard to them. The steam crane, by means of which tons of earth are being removed from the excavation in progress at Eleventh and Washington streets, serves the threefold purpose of moving the dirt rapidly, of relieving straining, half-exhausted horses of the task, and of causing- persons humanely disposed to rejoice in its coldblooded efficiency. Its operation Is regarded with interest both from an industrial and humane stand point, while from a financial stand point it can -hardly fail to be success ful in the present rush of excavation for buildings and of street grading. The Government has succeeded In "standing off" Germany for a few months longer, on tariff revision. It has now been more than two years since Germany served notice that there would be some - drastic retaliatory measures enacted unless this country showed more disposition to play fair in trade. The course of Germany in this matter has been eminently more gen erous and conciliatory than that of th United States, but it would not be surprising if German forbearance must be strained very near to the breaking point by this time. Another agedi woman Mrs. Mary Mc Laughlin, of Silverton has been burned to death. Casualties of this kind have been unusually frequent in this state during the past few months. They con vey a warning which those having charge of the aged in their homes may well heed. First, there i3 practically no reason why aged women should be dressed in cotton stuffs in the Winter time. A good woolen dress would most likely in each of the distressing cases recently noted have prevented death in this most shocking form. Medical science seems to have come off victorious in the encounter with diphtheria in the case of Archie Roose velt, just as it did against pneumonia in the case of Rudyard Kipling a few years ago. Under old methods of treat ment death would have certainly re sulted in both of these and In many other cases of which there is no public record. The result Is gratifying1 first, of course, because valuable lives have been saved, and- again because the tri umph over disease is a triumph of hu man Intelligence. Citizens of Oregon should form them selves into a committee of the whole to give information that is being sought by the larga numbers of home seekers who are now reaching this state by every train from the East. A little kindly interest will be greatly ap preciated by these people. They have been invited here. They are welcome. Let this last fact be made manifest by attentions such as strangers appreciate everywhere, and by careful and accu rate answers to questions that they ask. The Texas Railroad Commission is having much trouble in enforcing the law. The reciprocal demurrage clauye has caused a fearful freight congestion at terminals and junction points, and now the Southern Pacific is cutting out passenger trains which are unable to obey the law and run within thirty minute3 of their schedule time. Mr. Kuranaga, a California Japanese, has been arrested for buncoing five San Francisco banks out of $21,000. The method by which -the trick was -turned is not stated in the dispatches, but the amount is sufficiently large to indicate that some of the Japanese are not both ered by modesty. There ought to be a good market in Portland the next few weeks for the product of any clever .man who can write Original campaign mottoes. De mand for votes at the coming pri maries will steadily Increase. Governor Sheldon, of Nebraska, does not believe in rubbing it into the rail roads, yet he signed the 2-cent-fare bill because, as he says, the legislators represent the people. There are other Governors. Mr. Hill will take the insurance' on the Dakota, sell the Minnesota and; go out of the business. Mr. Hill is a prai rie railroader, and not a skipper, and has the wisdom of knowing it. Some of the developments of the in tercollegiate oratorical contest at Mc- Minnville prove that a Trill may turn out to be a swan-song or a requiem. All over the state ample funds are being subscribed for publicity purposes. There never was a time when such in vestment promised richer returns. 'It wipes away all the nastiness of divorce court records to Tead that an Oregon couple are about to celebrate their sixtieth anniversary. It knows the right time to rain in Oregon; also the rurht time to stop raining, all cranks to the contrary not withstanding. It will not be Jong before the blight put on Second street by Chinese, occu pancy forty years ago will be entirely removed. The Belllngham Herald thinks money is wasted at the mouth of the Nook sack. Lots of money is wasted at other mouths. Talk- about your Oregon progress! The peripatetic merry-go-round man has three horses abreast for this sea son. Puter still thinks that other men, of higher station than himself, who stole public land, should go to jail also. The incoming colonists will observe that Oregon can back up all it says by delivering the goods. The doctors are trying their 'best to have a hard time of it saving Archie Roosevelt. Just lend your umbrella for a day or two to the incoming colonist. The rain fell alike yesterday on the strikers and the millmen. IJust spray the trees again after this rain. SPECIFIC FOUND FOR THE GRIP A Discovery tat Medicine of Countless Value If It I 'roves Real. New York Times. Don't let the disease "run its course," but when" you feel the oncoming symp toms of influenza, consult your physi cians. A writer in the Medical Record of February 23 has announced that both a prophylactic remedy and "prac tically a specific for almost every step, stage, and variety of la grippe, when free from serious early complications," are now a part of the medical treat ment. The specific is gelslum, the tinc ture of the fresh root. The fresh plant tincture only is endowed with medici nal virtue, the ordinary fluid prepa rations of the dry root Being quite val ueless in cases of influenza. The plant is highly poisonous, and the disease re quires careful dosage, which must be reduced as the patient improves. Of course, any attempt at self-administration of this drug would be criminal folly. The important fact to the lay mind is that a specific exists, and that it luay be successfully administered by a competent physician. Immunity to patients who have pre viously suffered from repeated at tacks of influenza is given by a .like cautious 'treatment with arsenic as a prophylactic Sometimes tne dosage of this powerful agent must be sus pended at intervals, for not a few pa tients become more sensitive to Its action than to the disease; but It rare ly fails, and it conquers the miasm In more than 94 per cent of cases. Epidemic influenza, says trfe .writer In the Medical Record, Invaded the United States "in a pestilential wave from, the overflowed banks of the filthy Neva and other open sewers in Russia." That must have been a long time ago. In the days of President Jackson and his opponent. Tyler, the Infectious ca tarrh was known as "Jackson itch." and the "Tyler grip," by their respec tive partisans. The Russians call it Chinese catarrh, the Germans name it the Russian pest, the Italians refer Its origin to Germany, and in France It is known as the Italian fever and the Spanish catarrh. The name "Influen za" comes from Italy. Doubtless we shi'll be afflicted with the epidemic so long as immigrants continue to pour in from European countries, or until our public sanitation shall be perfect ed. Meanwhile it is comforting to know of the announcement in a reputa ble medical Journal that a specific has been found. LIFE IN" THE OREGON" ' COUNTRY Wall From Crook County. Prineville Review. If Mr. Roosevelt would devote only one-third of the time to the building of the Panama Canal that he has to pre venting the taking up of timber lands, he would be doing the country a real service and would earn the everlasting gratitude of somebody else than the lons e&red Glfford Pinchot. There is a limit to all things, and there certainly shouTd be to the forest reserve. She Knew Him. Walla Walla Argus. Mrs. Ella George was this week granted a divorce from her husband. G. W. George, who disappeared suddenly De cember. 1905. Mrs. George does not be lieve her husband met with foul play, but that he simply deserted her, as he had done several times previously. Juat Needed to Be Shown. Philomath Review. One day last week Mr. Ish- was at the Gove mill and saw the donkey engine work and he was so well pleased with it that he is going to buy ,one for himself. Proud of His Town. Wasco News. From the time Bill Barnett erected his old frame store building Wasco has grown every day and will continue to grow. Water-Cure System for Insanity Cincinnati Enquirer. A modern system of hydrotherapy, or the water cure system for insanity, will be installed by Director Coplln in the Philadelphia Hospital for the Insane. It Is asserted that in many cases of chronic insanity a marked improvement, and often a cure, is wrought. "Just as a Turkish bath seems to absorb from the system the poison of liquor, so the water treatment seems to absorb the elements which, di rectly or indirectly, cause insanity," says Dr. Coplin. "I have heard of cases where patients who had to be strapped hands and feet when they were first placed in the bath, were so much improved after an hour or two that their violence disap peared." Clnb Members Must Wed by Lot. Wilmington (Del.) Dispatch. Prominent men of Little Creek, near Dover, have formed a bachelors' club, with Thomas E. McDaniel as president; John Dillaha, secretary; John Argo, as sistant secretary, and William N. Davis, treasurer. It is announced that a drawing will be held within a week. The miserable fellow drawing -No. 1 must marry within a year or get out. No. 2 will have two years to do one or the other. The men failing to wed must not only get out, but must banquet the entire membership, while the fellow who obeys the mandate will receive a luxurious bed room set as the club's wedding gift. The admission fee Is $10, and the monthly dues are $1. Saves the Bank's Good Name. Kansas City Star. The new Senator from Delaware. Harry A. Richardson, was once the president of a bank which was wrecked, the teller having stolen $107,000, which was $7000 .more than the capital of the institution. After talking over the matter with his wife all night, Mrv Richardson appeared on the bank steps in the morning and told the throngs of depositors that he would guarantee their accounts with every dollar of his fortune. Inside of a year, the bank was solvent. Chancellor Day In nn Eclipse. Philadelphia Ledger. Chancellor Day Is so constituted that the presence of his foot in his mouth does not impede the flow of language. Da Boy From Rome. Catholic Standard and' Times. Today ees com' from Betaly A boy ees leeve een Rome, An' he ees atop an' speak weeth me I weesh he stay at home. He stop an' say ".Hello" to me. An we'n he etandin dere I smell da smell of Eetaly Steel steeckin' een hees hair. Dat com' weeth heem acroes da sea. An' een da clo'ea he wear. ra peopla bump heem een da street. Da noise ees scare heem. too; He ee so clumsy een da feet He don't know w'at to do, Dere ees so many theeng he meet Dat ees so strange, so new. He eheever an he ask eef here Eet ees eo always cold. Den een hees eye ees com' a tear He ees no vera old An' O! hees voice ees eotin eo queer I have no heart for eeold. He look up een da eky so gray. But O! hees eye ee3 be So far away, so far away. An w'at he see I see. Da sky eet ees no gray today At home een Eetaly. He see da glada" peopla seet Where wanna shine da eky O! while he eesa look at eet He ees begeen to cry. . Eef I no growl an swear a beet So, too, my frand. would I. O! why he atop an' speak weeth me. Dees boy dat leeve een Rome, An' com' today from Eetaly I weesh he stay at home. ARE FOREST RESERVES A BENEFIT? Defense of the Government's Policy The Honest Settler Loses Nothing, but Is Fully Protected How the Timber Baron Thrived Under Old Methods Grazing Permits The Miner. BT A FOREST RESERVE OFFICIAL, The segregation of 16,551,728 acres of land within the forest reserves in the state is naturally of vital Import to the settler, lumberman, rancher and miner. How does and will the exclusion of this great area under Federal control af fect these people and consequently the development of the state? In- every discussion of the forest reserve policy two view points must be considered, the present and the future. The statement has been made that scattered throughout Oregon, Wash ington or Idaho are thousands of hon est settlers, who, failing, to find homes to suit them in the surveed districts, have entered these lands now em braced in the forest reserve withdraw al and have hewn out homes in antici pation of the opening of the country and the recognition of their squatter rights; furthermore, the withdrawal of such an immense area at this time, it is said, will not only work a hardship on these settlers who are entitled to con sideration, but it will also retard IrnS mlgration to this state. Now as to the facts. , The right of an entryman to prove up on a squatter's right within a for est reserve has not, is not and never will be interfered with so long as he. complies with the provisions of the homestead laws. When his entry has been surveyed and the plat accepted, he has 90 days In which to file on the land and if he has lived continuously on the land for five years he may ob tain patent. If, however, he does not wish to wait for the survey of his entry he may apply to have his land immediately examined under the act of June 11, 1906. This act provides for the entry and patent of agricultural lands within forest reserves. The statement, therefore, that any hardship will be worked on the honest settler within a forest reserve is not sup ported by the facts. Since the rights of a settler already within the boundaries of a forest re serve are not interfered with, how do the withdrawn areas affect the home seeker? Since some tracts of agricul tural land were necessarily included within the reserve boundaries, the for est service has advocated and helped to bring into effect two methods by which cultivable forest reserve land can be used: One It has arranged that any till able land might be leased and culti vated at a reasonable rental charge. Two On June 11, 1906, an act was passed making it possible for the Sec retary of Agriculture to list with the Secretary of the Interior any areas within forest reserves chiefly valuable for agriculture, these areas after formal opening to be -subject to settlement and entered under the homestead laws. Thus again it is seen,' that the statement that immigration will be retarded is not borne out by the facts. This law will mean that Oregon will obtain settlers that are honest, men who intend to build and maintain permanent homes, pay taxes, support schools and construct roads. These settlers will create new communities, neighborhoods and vil lages, perhaps cities. It will mean the progressive and extensive development of Oregon and not mere exploitation. The forest service under this law will zealous ly guard the rights of bona fide settlers and will not tolerate the "Improvements" thereon by so-called patriots on their "homesteads." Such patriots nei'er have and never will be of benefit to the State of Oregon. Do such men develop a com munity, do they support the -district schools, do they work on the roads? No answer la necessary. The forest service not only welcomes the influx of settlers to develop the till able portions of the reserve, but it pro vides that they shall receive the neces sary timber for the construction of farm buildings and for fuel, absolutely free of charge, and furthermore that 10 per cent of the revenues derived annually from the sale of timber and grazing of stock shall accrue to the county from which the moneys are obtained. Then, too, inso far as the Congressional appropriations will permit, the forest service constructs telephones, roads, trails and bridges and protects the forests from fires. An impression has gained ground at Seattle that the action of the President in enlarging the forest reserves to pre vent the timber on the public domain from falling into the hands of the timber and lumber barons, has in reality given to the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company and to other rich corporations absolutely un disputed sovereignty over some of the richest and most valuable timber lands; that a power has been placed in the timber barons hands that they never dreamed of having, since the Weyer haeuser and other big timber land owning corporations either now have ownership of all the lands surrounding these re serves or will soon have them; and that the small logger owning no timber lands reaching to the reserves and without means of transportation of any kind, will be absolutely and effectually barred from bidding for the Government timber; that only the timber baron and the logging magnate can apply to purchase. In the first place, granting for sake of argument, that this assumption is true, how much better off would the small logger be without the reserves? In the past, a man took up a timber claim often with the money advanced to him and then sold out to the timber 'ON THE 3---- : r-7ut 5 iJ I. jtL.'. .. - ... . ' . .' baron, or, if he had exhausted his tim ber right, he too often did not hesitate, to file on timberland under the home stead law and swear that he had main tained a five years' residence in an im possible 2x4 shack. When he received his patent, who got the land? The timber baron. A concrete example in the State of Washington itself will show how the timber baron cannot absolutely and ef fectually bar out the small logger in his desire to purchase from the Govern ment timber within the forest reserves. The Washington West forest reserve Is cut by many streams, reached by feeders from the main lines of the Nor thern Pacific and the Great Northern. Such rivers are the Nooksack, Skagit, Sauk, Snoqualmle. etc. , These rivers have numerous tributaries within the reserves, containing millions of feet of merchantable timber. Manifestly then for physical reasons alone, it Is unrea sonable to assume that the small log ger can be barred by the corporations. Furthermore, in timber sales amount ing to more than $500. allotments may be made to several bidders to prevent monopoly. The. principal objects of the grazing regulations are: (a) The protection and the con servative use of all forest reserve land adapted for grazing. (b) The best permanent good of the livestock industry through proper care and improvement of the grazing lands. (c) The protection of the settler and the home-builder against unfair com petition In the use of the ranee. There is no need to discuss the rea sons for the regulation of grazing for the effects of the Indiscriminate usa of the range are apparent. The chief ob jection has been on account of the grazing fees charged. A fee is not only a just charge but It is absolute ly necessary to maintain an equitable use of the range in order to fix re sponsibility. When a stockman is al lowed a certain range and pays a fee for the privilege, it is to his interest to guard his range and keep it in shape. Were It otherwise, in spite of regulations, he would not be so keen to prevent over-feeding and trespass of outside stock. Development of the mineral re sources within the forest reserves is absolutely unrestricted. The mineral laws apply within the reserve exactly as they do on the outside domain. The prospector can explore and locate his claims without the slightest restric tion. Furthermore, the advantage of an accessible supply of timber for de velopment work is readily apparent. The future will well demonstrate the wisdom of the forest reserve policy. The time will come when the "inex haustible" supply of timber In Oregon will be confined to the forest reserves, if for no other reason than from the fact that land will become so aluable for agriculture, with the great Increase in population Oregon is bound to enjoy, that practically all timberland In pri vate ownership will be cleared for cul tivation. It will then be that the worth of the PresidenCs forest reserve policy will assert itself. It Is noteworthy that with all the caustic criticism of the forest reserve policy, no suggestions have been of fered other than those emanating from the Government officials themselves. The problem, with the limited appro priations available, is an important one and it cannot be expected that the ideal can be reached at once in the adminis tration of this department. Germany, about 150 years ago. was confronted with the conditions that are presented in Oregon today. However, with a forest reserve acreage of 16.000,000 (ap proximately the forest reserve acreage of Oregon), the forests in Gerrpany are today producing an average net rev enue of $2.40 per acre annually. In other wori, every acre, without re gard to quality, represents a capital of $50, paying five per cent interest, and this constantly improving. This show ing has been largely brought about'hy the application of the principle of the substantial yield, that is to say, only the wood, interest is cut (the amount which in the aggregate grows each year) while the wood capital (the young and immature trees) is left un impaired. Market conditions 150 year3 hence will produce like conditions in Oregon. That is. instead of selling the people's Inheritance of timber for $2.50 an acre straight to be slashed and burned over and rendered worthless, a net revenue of $2.50 will be received annually and this amount will be in creased from year to year. Her Ml Minn. James L. Eltlerice. Not thine the task tr frame nut laws. To lead to war a. valorouR host. To win a iitatesman's lourt applause, Thy victories he can never boast. The magic of thy tenderness Conquers where Klns can ne'er subduej The mightiest own thy power no lef-s Than weak and clinging natures do. Thin is the dignity that charm. The love that lighted Paradise, The faith that quiets all alarms. The purity that purifies. O Queen! possessor of them all. To thee the angel task i given To mile on him thou holdst in thrall. To point and guldft him unto heaven. INSIDE." -a.v f". - 'Jd'' C From the New York Press.