.8 TITE MORNING OREGONIAN. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1908. I I 1 fi SUBSCRIPTION BATES. - INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year $8.00 I'ally, Sunday included, six monthl.... -4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three months.. 2.23 Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 Dally, witbout Sunday, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, alx montha. 3.25 Dally, without Sunday, three montha. . 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, one month 80 Sunday, one year -5J Weekly, one year (laeued Thursday)... 150 Sunday and weekly, one year ... -50 BY CARRLKB. Dally, Sunday Included, one year oO Dally, Sunday included, one month.!.. .75 HOW TO RE-MIT Send postottlce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Glvo postodlce ad dress in mil. Including county and state. POSTAGE BATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon. PostoOlce as second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pages 1 cent 16 to 28 Pages 2 cents SO to 44 Pages 3 cents 46 to 60 Pages cents - Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded, to .destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency New York, rooms 48-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON BALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex; Postofflce News Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. Colorado Springs, Colo. Bell, R. B. Denver Hamilton and Kendrlck. 906-913 eeventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 1314 -Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen. & Bice. Geo. Carson. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. .Ninth and Walnut; Toms Newa Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugh. 50 South Third. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, SOT Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. Ryan'a Theater Ticket Office; Penn News Co. New York City L. Jones Co.. Astor House; Broadway Theater News Stand; Ar thur Hotallng wagons; Empire Newa Stand. , Ogden D. L. Boyle; Lows Broa, 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omaha Barkalow Broa, Union Station; Mageath Stationery Co. Dee Moines, la. Mose Jacob. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento Newe Co., 430 K street; Amos News Co. Salt Lake Moon Book & Stationery Co.; ; Rosenfeld & Hansen; O. W. Jewett. P. O. ' corner. ' 'Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager ten - street wagons. Pasadena, Cal. Amos News Co. Ban Diego B. E- Amos. 1-ong Beach, Cal. B. E. Amoa San Jose, Cal. St. James Hotel Newa ' Etand. . ' Dallas, Tex. Southwestern News Agent, 844 Main street; also two street wagons. Amarillo, Tex. Tlmmons & Pope. Son Francisco Foster A Orear: Ferry ; News Etand; Hotel St Francis News Stand; tL Parent; N. .Wheatley; Falrmount Hotel (News Stand; Amos News Co.; United News ) Agents, 14 4i Eddy street; B. E. Amos, man I ager three wagons. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson, Fourteenth : a-nd Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland I News Stand; B. E. Amoa, manager nve , wagons. Goldneld, Not. Louie Follln; c B. Hunter. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. FORTT.AND. WEDNESDAY. JAN. 1. 1908. j A THOUGHT AND A' REVIEW. Tho New Year finds nearly the whole naval force of the United ; States en voyage for the Pacific. It is ;ja suggestion of the vast changes of jjthe recent time. Let lt.be observed 'jthat discovery of America and ctr ?(cumnavlgation of the earth belong to 'recent time. Our ships are now ap--proaching the track pursued by Ma . -gellan. first circumnavigator, in 1520, Just 387 years ago. It is but a short time in the history of man upon the earth; yet the ship that first marked a furrow with its1 keel round the globe changed the whole intellectual status of man, as to his relations both with ' the visible and invisible world. In every way the consequences of " this voyage were to the last degree important. It led quickly to results by which the commercial arrange ments of Europe were completely dis located. The relations of the East and West were changed; maritime en ergy was transferred from the Medi terranean Basin to the west and north of Europe. Hence the discovery of America and the circumnavigation of the globe were the first steps towards the conditions of the modern time. The front of Europe was suddenly changed; the British Islands, hitherto in a sequestered and eccentric posi tion, apparently little favored by Na ture, were all at once put in the van of a new movement that has changed the face of the world. A war fleet j j embodying the strength and power of ( ; the New World is now to pass 5 ', through the Straits of Magellan, in i ; the track of the pioneer band whose J ' voyage revealed to man the realities j and the possibilities of the world he r lives In. - The cloud which from the begin- ning of things had hung thick and , dark round the borders of civilization was suddenly lifted; the feeling of mysterious awe with which men had i j regarded the firm plain of the earth t and the encircling ocean ever since jj y the days of Homer and the oldest of J the prophets of Israel, vanished when ' geographers and astronomers taught :them that the earth was an insignifi- :cant globe, which, so far from being ' the center of the universe, was itself swqpt round in the motion of one of .'" the least of its countless systems. i Again, the notions that had hitherto j ; prevailed of man's place in nature, ' and of his relations to the supernat- ural, were rudely Bhaken by the ; knowledge that was soon gained of ' tribes in every stage of culture and living under every rariety of condi ;lftlon, who had developed apart from 5; the influences of the Eastern Heml I - sphere. New conceptions arose of the I, mind and work of God in his world. J The obstacles these new conceptions : met was a theological concept, based ' "on ecclesiastic authority, which maln j talned an intense and intolerant oppo , sltion. and which still asserts itself, ' though feebly, through utterance of synods apd councils and catechisms i and articles, but yields and must yield steaouy, ana rinauy must yieia com pletely, to the progress of science. IlKor theology and religion, that once i' dominated government and law and physical science, have not yet been 'fully reduced to their own domain. tut they are fast on the way to this submission to an authority over which they never had any right of control. To religion belongs its own empire, which is that of the personal -y and individual human soul. But in ,- 'the direction of emancipation of the human mind something has been done ". since the year 1616, when Pope Paul V. with the Congregation of the Index, e : condemned as "false and totally op Dosed to the Holy Scriptures" the work of Copernicus, "De Revolution ibus Orbium," which was intended to achieve for all time the miracle of Joshua, "Sun, stand thou still!" Every modern philosophical writer declares that the first grand discovery of modern times is the immense ex tension of the universe in space. The idea shows man where he is and to an extent what he is. And the second great discovery is the immense and perhaps limitless extension of the uni verse in time. Geographical discov ery quickly brought astronomical sci ence to a right basis. Thanks to mathematics, astronomy within the limits of our solar system is nearly an exact science. True, we cannot tell whether Mars is inhabited, but we know the place of Mars in the sys tem, as we know the place of our own planet. It is no longer necessary to bind up religion with the physics of Moses and of Paul. Ours is not an irreligious age, but it has nearly cleared itself of the theological lum ber of the former time, and almost of ecclesiastical authority in matters of politics and secular government, as well as in physical science. And to an extent In moral science, too. Yet this change has had no effect on theistic faith, except to widen and glorify it. It is with political geography that we are now immediately concerned. The Pacific Ocean Is becoming more and more the theater of new interest for mankind. Here, on the American shore of this greatest of oceans, we face new movements and new desti nies. Political geography Is among the most interesting and Important branches of historical study. What, then, is to be the political influence of the United States upon this ocean and upon the countries that border it? Commercial movement and industrial forces depend always in great degree on political Influence. With due re gard for the rights of others, we want our Just share which Is to be a large share of the sovereignty of the Pa cific. Power at sea has always been the essential basis or condition of com mercial expansion, as well as a con tributory factor to internal growth. Naval power is necessary to the main tenance of any sphere of influence, and always has been. The greatness of our own country and its place in the world will be taught even to the people of our own Eastern States by the movement of the great fleet to the Pacific. It is an addendum to the les son taught by the first circumnaviga tion of the-earth. PORTLAND'S MARITIME GROWTH. With all branches of 'our commer cial and financial system showing such remarkable gains in 1907, It is not easy to select any particular feat ure for special mention. As it was the ocean commerce, however, that made possible development of the in ternal resources of the Columbia Basin, it is, of course, entitled to pre cedence over all ither features which have since contributed to the wealth and greatness of the Oregon country. Statistics show that more than 1200 vessels of 1,700,000 tons register, and of approximately 3,500,000 tons carry ing capacity, have entered and cleared from Portland during the twelve months Just ended. While these fig ures speak eloquently of our commer cial growth, their true meaning can be best understood when it is ex plained that the average draft of the large carriers was greater than ever, and that the carrying capacity of the largest type of steamers coming here for grain has increased 100,000 bush els In the past fifteen years and about 60.000 bushels in the past five years. The 20,000-bushel carrier of a gen eration ago was too large for the river, and in those days it was not infrequently necessary to lighter a portion of the cargoes down to As toria. Fifteen years ago, about the time the Port of Portland began ac tive operations, it was necessary to lighter some of the ships carrying 100,000 bushels, but now immense carriers drawing twenty-six feet of water and carrying more than 250,000 bushels of wheat go through from Portland to Astoria without lighterage and without delay. With the increas ing size of these vessels has come a corresponding reduction in freight rates, so that all of the money that Portland has spent improving the channel, that these big freighters could reach our docks, has been di rectly to the advantage of the produc ers of the Inland Empire. The demonstration of this fact has been so plain that the project for a still deeper channel from Portland to the sea should have the support of every freight producer in the Colum bia Basin. The building of the North Bank road, which will be in opera tion this year, and the improvements on the main line of tho O. R. & N., have more than trebled the facilities for bringing freight out of the Inland Empire by a water-level route. This increased traffic must find easy and quick dispatch to the sea after it reaches tidewater, and it is the duty of the Government to lend a hand and assist in the work in which Portland has made such a surprising showing, with attendant decrease in ocean freight rates. An open river from Portland to Montana would be of but little use if the river below this city shall not be improved so that the In creasing traffic can be handled eco nomically. Completion of the Jetty will do away with the delays now sometimes experienced by the larger class of ves sels which load at Portland, and the channel above Astoria must be kept In condition to handle any vessel that can enter the river By this manner only will the producers be enabled to secure to the fullest extent the ad vantages which Nature has conferred on them in a water-level haul to tide water. If the good work which Port land has done in the past receives the assistance of all who have benefited by it, the ocean commerce of the Co lumbia five years hence will show vastly greater gains than those which were recorded in the year just closed. Trans-Atlantic passenger traffic for 190T exceeded that for 1906 by nearly a million passengers, reaching a total of 2,957,328. This remarkable traffic accounts for construction of so many new ocean flyers for the great lines that are handling it. At the very low estimate of $50 per head, this army of travelers would have paid in steam ship fares about $150.000.000 a sum sufficient to build and equip approxi mately twenty-five ships of the Lusi tania type, or about fifty magnificent floating palaces like the Amerika and the Augusta Victoria. The Ameri cans have not participated in this big business to any great extent, the prin cipal reason being the refusal of the Government to permit them to buy ships at the same rates at which they are available to the foreigners. The Hamburg-American, a German line, will spend some of Its millions In. building at a British yard the largest ship In the world. The bulk of the patronage to support the new levia than willcome from Americans, but American registry will be denied the craft and we cannot compete with it with an American-built vessel. THE STORY OF A GREAT STATE. " The marvelous story of the progress Portland and the State of Oregon have made during the year Just closed is told in detail by The Oregonian to day. The recital is one to swell the heart of the loyal Oregonian with pride and ' to inspire him with a boundless faith in the state of his birth or adoption. So great are the natural resources and industrial op portunities of this empire in the Pa cific Northwest that it is only when they are reviewed, as they are today reviewed in The Oregonian's New Year Annual, that they are brought within the perspective of the mental vision and grasped in their full sig nificance. To the people of Portland, in par ticular, is the progress made by the state and the great territory tribu tary to this city, during the year Just ended, -a cause' for pride and self congratulation, for It renews and strengthens the faith they have ever had In, the destiny of the city. Splen did as was the progress made by the city during 1907, when, as The Orego nian tells today, more than 19,000,000 was spent in building operations and every business activity excelled the record made in the record-breaking year of 1906, there is every reason to believe that the tide has not yet reached its height and that the pres ent year will set a mark still higher. The completion of the North Bank Railroad, by which James J. Hill makes Portland the terminus of both the Northern Pacific and Great North ern transcontinental lines and obtains a water-grade highway through the Cascade range to the Inland Empire and the East, was one of the great events of 1907, and marks an epoch in the railroad development of the Pa cific Northwest. During the year to come Portland will reap the first ben efits of this costly engineering achieve ment. Of less but similar Importance to the city and the state is the comple tion and opening for traffic of the Ore gon Electric Railway, connecting Portland and Salem, the first link in the, system of electric roads that will ultimately bring the metropolis of the state and the cities of the great Wil lamette Valley Into nearer commercial relationship to their mutual benefit. The story of this accomplishment of the railroad-builder The Oregonian's Annual also tells. Portland's export trade for 1907 was the greatest in the city's history. Shipments of breadstuffs and lumber foreign far exceeded those of 1906, and both in number and tonnage of individual ships the wheat fleet of 1907 broke all records, with gains leaving rival ports far behind. The story of the wheat fleet, of the lum ber Industry and. of the jobbing trade, three great factors In the upbuilding of Portland, are well told In the An nual. Of interest to all readers will be found the numerous articles telling of the wonderful progress made by the apple-growers of Oregon. The horti cultural industry of the state has never been given more adequate handling. All Oregonlans will read with satis faction, too, the special articles tell ing of the great strides dairying and the livestock industry are making in this state. Already the annual income from the dairy herds of the state is $15,000,000, and fully half as large as that derived from the forests, which now are the state's greatest source of wealth. Last, but not least among the many topics reviewed by The Oregonian to day, is mining, in which the state dur ing the year has seen flattering de velopment in face of a high labor market and Inadequate transportation facilities. Oregon is the state and Portland is the city of present opportunity, it has been epigrammatically said. The rapid growth and development both are making are due solely to natural advantages, which for years were un appreciated by the country at large, but which are now being heralded far and wide. None in the great sister hood of states faces the new year with greater confidence than Oregon. SCIENCE AND INVENTION IN 1907. No extraordinary scientific discov ery like that of radium or the Hert zian waves has signalized the year 1907. During the past twelvemonth science has developed like a powerful stream fed by manytributaries. The flow has been constant and even, with no period of surpassing Hood. Every university in the world, has contrib uted something to the steady advance ment of knowledge, while the invent or's art has flourished, though noth ing of epoch-making Importance has been produced. For one thing, the problem of pho tographing objects in their natural colors has been virtually solved, while the delicate process of transmitting pictures by telegraphy has been im proved. The , wireless t -legraph has been perfected so that messages now easily traverse the Atlantic and ships crossing to Europe scarcely lose com munication with the land throughout the voyage. Much' remains to be done before this wonderful art be comes commercially available, but the path is open. Along the same line we must not forget what has been done with the wireless telephone, which is now an accomplished fact, though not as yet applied in business. In a direction not quite so practical, perhaps, electricity has worked other marvels. The telharmonlum cannot be numbered among the inventions of 1907, but it was not known to the public before last year. This is prob ably the most wonderful musical in strument ever invented-, and the world will presently hear a great deal more about it. The subject of electricity naturally recalls Edison, but his an nual achievement this time was in an other field. It is his concrete house, built so as to be one mass of solid stone, which is attracting most atten tion just now. This invention is espe cially interesting because it promises to give us cheap dwellings even after we have wasted our forests, a favor which we do not seem to deserve. The inventive genius of the world has been applied to transportation during 1907 more than anywhere else. The internal combustion engine has been winning victory after victory. It is now used not only by farmers to do field work and by automobile makers, but it is encroaching upon the domain of the steam locomotive on the rail roads. Here the future belongs not' at all to electricity, but to gasoline and alcohol, which work cheaper and better. More interesting still Is the gyroscopic car, which promises incal culable savings of time and materiaf in transportation, together with greater safety to human life. If this invention fulfills its author's predic tions it will revolutionize transporta-' tion throughout. Science has won Its victories upon sea as well as land during 1907. The great Lusitania has appreciably less ened the time of transit across the At lantic, while her vast bulk presents a mass substantially Immovable to the waves.' In consequence, people who can afford to travel by the Lusitania escape seasickness. It is almost as stable as a country lane. In the air, too, science has gained something. The dirigible airship is now an unquestioned success, and has already been applied to the art of at tack in war. Of course the next ques tion is how to defend an army or city against It. All this, of course, makes a grat noise in the world, but it is only preliminary to the genuine con quest of the air for the purposes of peace. This has yet to come. The evil of the treating habit is lit tle understood by those who are total abstainers. To those who frequent ,clubs and bar-rooms the treating scene is familiar. A half dozen friends meet and one suggests a drink in which all join. They stand at the bar a few moments to talk, and a sec ond member of the group proposes another drink. Then each of the oth ers feels the desire to show his spirit of hospitality and no one of the crowd will take the chance of giving offense by declining to drink. Thus six glasses of liquor are consumed by each where one, at the most, would have sufficed If each had paid for his own drink. More than that, but for the treating habit It 1b likely that the first drink would not have been pro posed. There would be little drunk enness In the world if men drank only because they want the liquor and not because they are asked to join in a "social" glass. "Even as Oregon, Colorado, Idaho and Utah have enfranchised their women, so must the rest of the world follow their example," observes Col lier's Weekly. Collier's is sadly in need of enlightenment about Oregon. Not long since it made an offensive remark-about the Governor of Oregon, when it it really meant to assail' the Governor of Wyoming. Now again it probably means Wyoming, which properly belongs with Colorado, Idaho and Utah In the quartet of states where there is female suffrage. It makes no great difference, perhaps; but why will Collier's persist in dis cussing Western affairs when It knows so little about them? "There will- be a general revision of the tariff in the near future, but there will not be, nor Is there any ne cessity of, a revision of any particular schedule at this time," says Congress man Littlefleld, in arguing against the reduction of the tariff on wood pulp. Mr. Littlefleld is correct in stating that there will be a general revision of the tariff In the near future, but his qualifying remark regarding present needs discloses his ignorance of the direction from which the revision is coming. If the time has not arrived for tariff revision by the Republican party. It is getting dangerously close to the hour when the Democratic party will relieve us of the task. Four out of five big mills at Ho quiam have resumed work, and two of the mills at Astoria will begin op erations next Monday... The steady improvement in the financial situation in the East is almost certain to bring with it orders for lumber. The de mand Increases a little each year; and the supply decreases, and while recov ery in prices is not always rapid after a period of stagnation due to exces sive supplies, it will In due season place the figures back where they were before the slump began. It is wonderful how much evidence it takes to prove to the councilmanic intellect something that everybody knows is true. Of course there is a drayman's trust, and in the lapse of ages possibly the Council will find it out. But what will happen when it does? Will the pointless tale of the fuel trust and the ice trust be repeat ed, or will the Council really try to remedy the evil? The New Year is the fitting time for repentance and re form. Let us hope for the best. The keepers of the Congressional Library have asked for an appropria tion of $1,000,000 to afford accommo dations for 5,000,000 more volumes. This would make ' the National Li brary the largest in the world, as to quantity of housed literary matter. Quality is quite another thing. Nine tenths of the stuff isn't worth keeping, and will perish, whether an effort is made to keep it, or not. Foraker will be a candidate for President, not because he has any hope of being elected, but because he may thereby be able to defeat Taft. Taft is the ox before the' manger. Puzzle: Find the dog that won't let him eat the hay. All the gold that has been Imported from Europe Into the United States will be paid for right away by our ex ports of wheat, cotton and tobacco. Europe merely advanced the money, and we pay interest on It for a short time. - Cessation of the df and for gold in London is further proof that an excited state of the public mind has passed away.. The country is now on a sound metal basis. Resumption of full activity in the sawmills of Hoqulam and Astoria Is Indicative of general conditions throughout the Pacific Northwest. A multitude of savings bank de positors will put more than usual cheer into the greetings today and no little thankfulness. Beware, today of that seductive drinkN artfully concocted with sugar and eggs. Happy New Year! SILHOUETTES Br Arthur A. Grefae. BY ARTHUR A. GREENE. Good morning! How are your reso lutions? ' , Just because a woman applauds when tie band plays "Dixie" is no sign that she is a proud and haughty daughter of the Old South. You will usually And that she acquired her Southern accent in Los Angeles grillrooms. People who attempt on occasion to sing should not throw stones through the windows of voice culture studios, no matter how great the provocation. Sometimes, when I feel real peevish, I refer to the Saturday Evening Post as the "Gentlemen's Home Journal." By all means, if possible, be cursed for your faults rather than pitied for them. m m m The Sorrowful Soubrette. She was a foolish young soubrette. They said she was merely a gay coquette. And that never a thought, nor" grief, nor fret Could make such as her the part forget. Nor that trouble could ever her soul beset. But they did not know the sorrows that come WJien one has lived and still Is young; And they laughed at the merry songs, she sung And they smiled at the graces that she flung Just because of the charm of this gay co quette This delightfully sorrowful soubrette. The rose of yesterday is responsible for the florist's bill of tomorrow. The fool when he would be wise Is silent and the sage when he would be foolish talks about himself. The surest guaranty of friendship is to pretend to understand your friends sar casm. I have never been able to understand why the papers devote so much space to policemen. A New National Anthem. Sing a song of dividends; A pocketful of boodle. When will the guileless middleman Get wised up in his noodle? This is a song that suits the time . Far more than Yankee Doodle; And the burden of this runic rhyme Is boodle, boodle, boodle. No girl is altogether lovely who habitu ally talks slang. Many a newly turned leaf will be sere and yellow cy nightfall. An expectant public is eagerly awaiting the announcement that Charles Warren Fairbanks has been indorsed for the Presidency by the National association of ice-cream soda dealers. A Tribute. (To Richard Le Galllenne after re-reading his beautiful story "The Quest of the Golden Girl.") Dear Richard, one who loves a book and girl Would feel himself a very sorry churl Did not he some small tribute, bring Some poesy that poets' sing 1 Some frankincense and myrrh of praise To recompense you for the days When first, with joy his head awhlrl, He met your darling G.olden Girl. e . Politics, and the clerk of an over crowded hotel make strange bedfellows. '.' Many a man who affects" a military stride acquired it from reading the Richard Harding Davis romances. Laugh and the world will laugh at you for a silly ass. Frown and you'U be con sidered a very wise person. . The last widow of a Revolutionary soldier has Just died. Some of the mem bers of the original Florodora sextet still survive, however. e .after an 1907 was not such a bad old year for In dying it left behind much that will be cherished in the lavender scented treasure-chest of memory, e Many men are mistaken for musicians who simply haven't the price of a hair Cut. e A cold, gray dawn of remorse is neces sary" to a high noon of repentance. As human beings are now constituted, none can be very good who have not at some time been bad. When grief reaches the stage where it is able to sit up and take notice we call it "settled melancholy."" It is about this time fhat the widow commences making eyes at another victim. . PUTS BULLET IN HER NECK Ocosta Woman Prefers Death to Continued Ill-Health. ABERDEEN, Wash., Dec. 31. (Special.) With a revolver grasped in her hand the body of Mrs. William Hunter was found in her home at Ocosta by neigh bors, and a jagged hole through the neck told a mute story of death. Despondency caused by continued ill health Impelled the woman to take her life. No one was In the house at the time but the aged mother of the suicide. Mrs. Hunter went to her room and lying down upon the bed, placed the muzzle of a pistol against her neck and pulled the trigger. She had lived at Ocosta about six years and was universally known and respected. She leaves a husband and one son, a resident of Montesano. Greely Goes to California. VANCOUVER BARRACKS, Wash.. Dec. 31. (Special.) General Greely, com mander Department of the Dakotas, who has, for the past week, been visiting here, will leave tomorrow for Southern Cali fornia, where he will spend the Winter. Although no permanent commanders have been as yet assigned to either the Department of the Dakotas or the De partment of the Columbia, tnere is a general impression among the officers of the headquarters that General Edgerly, who has lately been abroad studying military tactics, will assume command of the Department of the Dakotas after the retirement of General Greely. It is also generally thought that Colonel Woodbury will remain in command of the Department of the Columbia until next Spring. Robberies Numerous In Tacoma. TACOMA, Wash.. Dec 31. (Special.)-; Four burglaries and one attempted bur glary, all evidently the work of hoboes, were reported to the police this morning. At no place did the thieves secure over $6, and in several places nothing was taken. The robberies were committed some time between 3 and 4 o'clock, while the patrolmen were changing shifts. Dixon Comes to Portland. VANCOUVER BARRACKS. Wash., Dec 3L (SDecial.) Captain Harry B. Dixon, paymaster, has been assigned to station at Portland, to succeed Colonel Thomas Goodman, who was transferred to the fnmppine islands. , j A NEW YEAR Over the threshold a gallant newcomer Steppeth with tread that is royal to see,; White as the Winter-time, rosy as Summer, Hope in his eyes, and his laugh ringeth free. Lo! in his hands there are gifts overflowing; Promises, prophecies, come in his train; O'er him the dawn in its beauty is glowing, Flee from his presence the shadows of pain. How shall we welcome him? Shall we remember One who as royally came to our door Twelve months ago when the winds of December Moaned in the treetops and raved on the shore? He, too, had largess of bounty to offer; He was as smiling, as gracious of mien; Only the beautiful sought he to proffer, Only such looks as were calm and serene. . Now he has fled ; and our hopes that have perished. Lovely ideals which never were found, Dreams that we followed and plans that we cher ished, Lie, like the Autumn leaves, dead on the ground. So wilt thou cheat us with sign and with token So wilt thou woo us to follow thee on, Till thy last sigh, through a lute that is broken, " Till thy last vision is faded and gone. Nay ! we are thankless indeed if we borrow Only the weary libretto of pain ; Find in the retrospect nothing but sorrow, Count up our year in the tones that complain. Surely we're stronger through faith and endeavor; Surely are richer in courage and love; Surely are nearer the Infinite Ever Nearer the dear ones who wait us above. Welcome, then, New Year, with stainless white pages, Though we may blot them ere long with our tears; So it has been through the long passing ages, Worn with the footprints of close-crowding years. Welcome, sweet year! may' the full-handed hours Find us like servants who wait for their Lord; Using with earnest devotion our powers, Looking for him, and obeying his word. ANONYMOUS. HOPMEN" MEET AT EUGENE Ninety Per Cent of Them Join the Association. . EUGENE, Or., Dec. 31. (Special.) Hopgrowers from Lane and Linn coun ties today met with the California com mittee, which is organizing the Pacific Coast Hopgrowers' Association, in the Eugene Commercial Club parlors. Mr. Levigne was elected chairman and Dr. W. L. Cheshire secretary. A committee on bylaws was appointed, consisting of Stephen Smeede, W. P. Cheshire, Lcnn Stephens, R. O. Brady, James Seavey and George A. Dorrls. W. E. Lovdal, an extensive hopgrower of California, opened the meeting, .out Hng the purpose of the union and Btat ing that upwards of 90 per cent of the Washington growers would join the or ganization. Attorney- A. L. Shinn of Sacramento and Senator Woodward of Santa Rosa explained the, plans of the union. Over 90 per cent of the growers pres ent signed the bylaws and seem enthu siastic over the proposition. Y. D. Hen sill was chosen to represent Oregon for the territory comprising Lane, Linn, Douglas and Josephine Counties. , Supreme Court Decisions. SALEM, Or., 'Dec. 81 (Special.) In deciding the case of George A. Cusiter vs. City of Silverton today, the Supreme Court held that when a defendant in a criminal proceeding in a Justice's Court calls for a jury trial he is en titled to trial before a jury drawn from the precinct list as provided in chap ter 5 of the Bellinger and Cotton Code. Similar action was taken In the case of J. M. Brown vs. City or Silverton, in which the same questions were In volved. . The case of A. W. Stearns, appellant, vs. H. Wallenberg et al., respondents, from Douglas County, was affirmed. Rehearing denied In the case of Mc Leod vs. Despaln. Diphtheria at Castle Rock. CASTLE" ROCK, Wash.. Dec. 31. (Spe cial.) Yesterday afternoon the family of Jacob Umiker, residing near Tuttle, this county, came to town, bring ing a very sick child with them, which was found to be dangerously ill with diphtheria Everything possible was done for the little sufferer, but he died in a few hours after reaching here. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Umiker, at wbose home the little one died, had planned to celebrate their golden wedding this even ing, but joy has been turned into mourn ing. The other members of the family are under quarantine, and it is feared that the mother is coming down with the dread malady. Pat Brand on Other's Logs. CASTLE ROCK, Wash.. Dec 81. (Special.) John L. Harris, manager of the Metcalf properties, and his boom foreman, A. E. Boyland, were ar rested yesterday afternoon, charged with putting the brand of their company on logs belonging to the Jensen Logging Company. It ap peared from the evidence that while the defendants admitted the act charged, Mr. Harris did not know the plaintiff's logs were in the boom. How ever, tho Justice saw fit to impose a small fine, and admonished them to go and sin no more. Rushing Gr&ln to Tacoma, TACOMA, Wash., Dec. 31 (Special.) Tacoma received more cars of grain during December than any other month in tho history of this port. The receipts almost . reached the 3000 mark, which means that nearly three times as much grain was hauled to tidewater here this month as during December last year. When the office of the state grain inspector closed last night, the North ern Pacific had already brought- 2682 cars of wheat, 112 cars of oats, 57 cars of barley and 11 cars of corn, making an average of 95.4 cars a day. Leg Broken In Fight. BURNS, Or., Dec. 3L (Special.) rriarence Luekey. a youne man who 1 somewhat noted around the saloons, en gaged in a fight today .with a young man named Mosier, lately from Grant County, in -the Windsor bar and came out of the melee with a broken leg, the fibula being fractured above the ankle. Luckey has been on a spree several days and was under the influence of liquor when he picked the quarrel. I GANG OF CAR THIEVES IN JAIL Detective Woods, of O. R. & Ji. Makes Important Catch. BAKER CITY, Or., -Dec 31. (Spe cial.) E. B. Woods, special detective for the O. R. & N., brought five men to this city this morning from Hunting ton, having been bound over to await action by the grand Jury for grand lar ceny. The men are alleged to be mem bers of an organized gang whose pur pose was to loot and rob cars. They would take grips, overcoats, towels and other articles from the trains while the passengers were eating at the lunch counters, and would also break Into boxcars and remove merchandise.' This thievery has been going; on for, some time and became so bad that a special officer was sent to Huntington: to eatch the guilty parties. Bride ot- Five Days Dies. WESTON, Or., Dec. 3L (Special.) The remains of Mrs. Hose Sams were interred today in Weston Cemetery. The deceased was a bride of only five days, having married Willis Sams, a young farmer,' on Christmas day. She suffered an at tack of scarlet fever last Fall, which left her in a weakened condition, and pneumonia was the immediate cause of death. She was 20 years old, the daughter of Samuel F. Phillips, a prominent pioneer farmer living on Day Creek, who claims to have been the first white child) born in Oregon. ' Attacked by Vicious Bull. CASTLE ROCK, Wash., Dec. tL (Spe cial.) While E. R. Huntington, one of the oldest residents of this region, was attending to his chores at the barn, tia passed a vicious young bull, which at tacked him' from behind, knocking htm down. Mr. Lampkin, his son-in-law, heard him groaning and came to the res cue. He found Mr. Huntington on his feet, but badly hurt, and assisted him to the house, where he since has been con fined. Owing to his advanced years. It may be some time before he will entirely recover. Swindler Fleeces Chinese. I w aiua walla, Wash., Dec. 31. (Special.) Nearly every Chinese merchant of this city has been victimized by a smooth swindler passing himself- as a traveling representative of the Empire Distillery Company, of New York. The alleged' salesman exhibited some fine samples of liquor which he offered to the Chinese at very tempting prices. One- con dition of the sale was that, at least one half of the purchase price be paid in advance. He secured about JC00, and "he, nor the liquor, has not been heard front since. Marshfleld Is Marooned. MARSHFIELD, Or.. Dec. 31. (Special.) Coos Bay was never in worse condition In the way of quick communication with the outside world than now. Telegraph and telephone wires to Portland are down and the telephone lines to the Coquille Valley are not working on account-of the floods. The railroad to the Coquille Val ley is out of commission on account of the tracks being under water. There Is yet several days' Christmas mail some where on the road in the mountains be tween' bere and Roseburg. Vain Search for Drowned Man. ALBANY, Or., Dec. 31. (Special.) Searching parties have been at work the past few days looking in vain for. the body of Arch E. Ferguson, who was drowned In the Calapooia River near this city, December 22. When Ferguson met his death the river was flooded and it was realized it ,wou!d be impossible to make a thorough search then. Now that the river is back in its customary channel some hope was entertained of finding the bedy, but thus far all efforts have been fruitless. Second Officer Killed by Fall. GARDNER, Or., Dec. 31. (Special.) James McKean, second officer of the steamer San Gabriel, was accidentally killed here the night of December 27, by falling from the dock and striking against the side or on the rail of the schooner, Louise, which was lying alongside; his! neck being broken. He was a young man of good habits and well liked by all who knew him. He was a member of1 the I. O. O. F-, of San Francisco. Ho1 will be burled by the local lodge here.