TIIE 3I0RXIXG OKEGOXIAN, MONDAY, DECE3IBER 14, 190S. 6 PORTLAND. OREGON. ntrd at Portland. Orejon. FoatoSlca a Eaconi-C!aa Matter, ibaerlptioa Katra Invariably ' Airnac. Br Mall.) !It, Sunday IrxMuded. ona year. rallv. hundar Included, at a monini.... - ' I'any. tiuntMy Included, tlirea ninntna. . -- Isaliy. tundav included, una m"Hin liiy. without Sunday. ' '"J, --' i -s i quantities, but their advantages are, of J.,!!,- Zl . course, less noticeable when we are vekiy, ona year J obliged to maintain these prices with Funday. n year - own money and find a market ex- ty Larriei. Pally. Sunday In.lud-d. ona year.... Sunday Included, ona month.. eoo .73 ii , - u.mt K,n1 rototrice money order, exprera order or peraonal check on your local bank. s:imn coin or currency re at the a-nder'a rik. Give poatofllre aa drea In full. Including- county and atate. 7 v . . u .. ... in in la oaaaa. 1 cent: 1Q , i. -l rnti: So to 44 pair. 3 centi ; 4 to 6" rmeea. a centa Fortijn poalaga ; double ratea. Faalrrn Bu.iue-a Office The 3. C. Keck . a N'ew York, room" 4H- Sv Tribune building. Chicago, rooma ilO-ili tribune buiidlng rORTLAXI.. MONDAV, I)KC. 14. FIT NAMES FOR GEOGRAPHY. The Plan to save the Oregon map ' and unmeaning names should be welcomed with g.neral op : plause. The nomenclature of this 'state's geography is full of ugly Bounds, worthless words and misplaced ; titles. In "Murderers Creek." "Squaw Creek." "Malheur," "Horsefly Lake.' " "Rakeoven." "Crooked River" and ; many others, the syllables are both undlstinctive and uncouth.. To guide the selection of new names in euphonious and signilicant chan nels, a geographic board, composed of Will G. Steel and George H. 1 limes, of . Portland. Joseph Schaefer. of Eugene, and J. B. Horner, of Corvallis. has taken up the subject. This board can render valuable service. If its func- ' tions could be extended to banishing manv of the misfit names that already mar Jhe map. they would be even more valuable. Changing of geo graphical names is always very diffi- . cult, however, and that effort would probably fail. Several years ago the ' honored name of Mclaughlin was be stowed on Mount Pitt in . Southern Oregon, and practically everybody ap- proved. Hut such is the tenacity of the old name that "Mount McLnugh- lin" has made little progress. With the growth of the country, new names are needed constantly for hitherto unmarked locations. Up, to this time they have been selected by chance or out of some trilling Incident. Every county can bear witness to this in many places. A glance at the map brings up the following: l 'amp Creek. Rattlesnake Creek, Cottonwood Creek. Pine Creek, Hutte Creek. Desolation Creek, Deep Creek, ; Hay Creek, Dry Creek. Rock Creek, ' Beaver Creek, Bear Creek, Wolf Creek. Trail Creek. Pistol River, Crooked . River. Lost River, North Fork, Mid dle Fork, South Fork. Powder River, Snake-River. Grizzly, Highland, Mun taindaJe, C'rabtree, Fairview, Mist, Fishhawk, Coyote, Muddy, Needy, Fern. , Fossil. Sulphur Springs, Soda Springs, Rock Point, Crooked Lake, Sucker Lake. Goose Lake. Diamond Peak. Bald Mountain. None of these names is distinctively characteristic of the place or object to which it Is applied. Some of them are reproduced several times through out the state and many times in other Mates. If the persons who applied them had felt a desire for good sound or 'good fit. they would have chosen words of some permanent meaning and character. Many In dian sounds have been lost that would have suited finely. -Others are still ex tant that can be well used hereafter. In Oregon history are numerous characters whose names can be ap plied In conspicuous places for new counties and .wns and streets. Among . them are: Jonathifh Carver, Ledyard, Gray, Jason Lee. Spalding, McLough - lin. Hunt, Wyeth, Kelley, Bryant, i Drake. Abernethy. Whitaker. Whlt ; man, Blanchet, Floyd. Fremont, Meek, ' Villard, Kearney, Nesmith. Foreign ) tongues can be resorted to frequently. The geographic board can supply a ', need In Oregon. Name-seekers should ' enlist its aid and profit by Its sugges ', tions. GOLD GOING ABROAD. There was a decrease of 2,300,000 bushels in American wheat exports last week' as compared with the pre ceding week. During the same period there was an increase of more than 6. 000.000 in the amount of gold shipped to Europe. This is a condi tion of trade which cannot long exist without working serious injury to our commercial and finanical interests. It is, of course, natural that there should come a falling off in wheat exports aa the season progresses, but there is nothing to indicate that the heavy de crease in shipments last week was caused by a shortage in supplies. It was due instead to the fact that the Chicago price of wheat was so far above a parity with Liverpool and London prices that it is no longer profitable to ship American wheat abroad. It is undoubtedly being held in. this country in great quantities to be delivered, when the emergency comes, to the far-sighted gentlemen who have forced prices far above the figures warranted by the demand from the consuming markets of the Old World. A similar' cause," working from a slightly different base, is- responsible for heavy exports of gold last week. Our import duty prevents the Euro peans from shipping wheat to the United States, where they could take advantage of the fanciful figures to which speculation has forced the cer eal: but we levy no duty on stock certificates, and the crafty Europeans are taking advantage of the high prices to which stocks have been forced, and are unloading on this country the remaining shares which were not frightened out of their pos session by the drastic anti-railroad movement of a year ago. The gentle men who have been so steadily and consistently, "bulling" the New York stock market are, of course, obliged to support It, for a time at least, until they can get in position to stand from under. It is accordingly necessary for them to take all of the stocks that the thrifty foreigners are disposed to send this way. It is also incumbent on them ' to pay for the stocks In good red gold, until such time as the artificial wheat prices in Chicago give way and admit of a resumption of wheat exportB on a Ecale commensurate with the stocks supposed to remain on hand. The necessity of sending gold in lieu of wheat, or any other commodities which we might have to offer, if the Tirices are right, has resulted in wip ing out nearly all of the surplus re serves held by the New York clearing-house banks, the statement for the '"ak closing Saturday showing a sur- plus reserve of but J16.S99.625, th west figure reached since January 11 908. and nearly $50,000,000 less than e high-water mark reached In June, Despite this epidemic of speculation Jn wheat and stocks, there does not seem to be much of a hardening in the money market, and rates for call monev remain abnormally low. The situation is somewhat puzzling, and one which sagacious investors will ap proach. with considerable caution High-priced wheat and high-priced stocks are fine things to have In large clusively at home. Thua far the out ward movement of gold has not reached alarming proportions, but, un less there Is a change In conditions that caused it, we may yet have trou hie from that source. There is no oc casion for alarm, but there '.i occasion for caution A CIVIL SFKVH K INCVBl S. Portland's charter committee has adopted an employment system for taxpayers to pay for which would wreck any firm or corporation, jn a legitimate business. This system en grafts on the city's payroll Incompe tent and lazy employes, who cannot be lopped off as is done by an employer In private business. It is called civil service. The committee has practically ap proved the plan of the present charter. It has put up barriers against dismis sal of Inefficient hands and continued a method which had uselessly in creased the number of stalls at the public crib and added heavily to taxa tion. The biggest public utility cor poration in Portland could not last six months under that system, and every business house in town would go to the wall under it; but taxpayers must maintain it in the city government. This civil service is at fault not so much in its manner of testing and hir ing men as In that of retaining them, The old spoils system was an extreme to which the city will not return. But this civil service scheme is an extreme in the opposite direction. There ought to be a mean between the two ex tremes. ItLA.MK FOR l'OOR DOCTORS. Summed up, the contentions of Dr, Joseph!, dean of the medical depart ment of the University of Oregon, are that his school has steadily raised its graduation standards and will continue to raise them; and that the graduates, most of them, are successful practi tioners. The opposing contentions of Dr. A. C. Panton, member of the State Board of Medical Examiners, are that the local medical school is not ade quately supplied with instructors and clinical facilities to afford its students the medical training that the needs of the public and the honesty of the pro fession and the State Board's standard require. We take it that each disputant is more or less correct in his assertions. It will not be gainsaid that too many doctors are practicing medicine, and a considerable number of them would better bo cutting cordwood or hoeing cabbage. But that this lamentable condition is due either to Dr. Josephi's school or to Dr. Panton's Board of Examiners, or that the board will suc ceed in barring out fraud doctors, are claims that can hardly be established. Persons who hold degrees from the best medical institutions of .Europe, or of the United States, doubtless are better fitted to serve the public than those who hold diplomas only from the local school that Is, If otherwise possessing the same measure of Intel-" llgence. It would be natural to ex pect the graduates of the higher insti tutions to go through a severe test of the State Board with a higher average. The local college can, however, give its students -Instruction substantial enough to put .the deserving ones through the board's examinations. But that this determines a physi cian's merit as a practitioner can hardly be believed; at best it only weeds out the most unpromising can didates. .The examinations of would be lawyers do not bar out the men who should not practice law, nor do the examinations of dentists nor veterinar ians nor plumbers accomplish this in their respective professions. It is un fortunate that this Is the fact and that the people must grope along as well as they can In picking out the worthy lawyers, dentists and physicians. It seems there must always be practition ers lacking in honesty and in freedom from vanity and from vain pretensions as In skill. These will be with us al ways, like the poor. Although the local college cannot compete with Johns Hopkins or the University of Pennsylvania or Rush Medical College, it can serve as a very useful auxiliary. There are numerous skillful physicians who have "finished" at those institutions after studying in Portland. The results have been sat isfactory and the students have been able to gain their medical, education at much less cost. There are others who have done just as well with their home training as more pretentious rivals have done with their imported vari ety. If anybody indulges the notion that an examination in .a medical col lege or In a State Board test deter mines a practitioner's fitness, he is mis taken. The best colleges turn out frauds and failures. So do the best medical boards. Therefore both Dr. Panton and Dr. Josephl have asserted a measure of truth. Both are raising the medical standards in their respective spheres. That is well. Neither, however, is eliminating the 'doctors of vain show, excessive vanity and quack pretense, although both are doing what they can in that direction. The long-suffering public is happy to behold the compe tition between the two in its behalf. WHITE. PLAGUE AND RED MEN. Three years ago, it will be remem bered, the Commissioner of Indian Af fairs, through the annual report issued from his office, declared that the number of aborigines had not been perceptibly diminished after four cen turies of white occupation of North America; that the "passing of the Indian," a favorite theme of writers of the Cooper school ever since the Revolution, is, and has all along been. a myth. This statement naturally cre ated great surprise, and though based upon tabulated data on file in the of fice of the Commissioner, many were prone to doubt its truth. Perhaps greater surprise was occa sioned by the leading statement in this year's report of Mr. Leupp; viz., that tuberculosis is now rapidly decimating the numbers of reservation Indians. This- statement Is. however, received without the shadow of a doubt. Civili zation thus far has proved, not a friend but a foe, against which Indians are less able to contend than they were, with their bows and arrows, against the powder and bullets of the whites In the days of Miles Standish. The Indians !n the first place are prone to huddle together in filth. Cleanliness has no more attractions for them than It has for the keepers of an uninspected dairy. Where for merly they lived and slept out of doors and followed the chase, they now huddle together, eschew physi cal exercise in Industrial occupations, into which the. Government has vainly striven to induct them, and "die off' as the result of disease contracted through pent-up air ttnd slothful habits. Cognizant of these facts, the anti tuberculosis crusaders have invaded the Indian country with the cry. "back to nature," as their slogan Through their efforts, "bird-cage schoolhouses," as they are known in the South, are being -introduced, to give the Indian pupils an airing that is impossible in their - unsanitary homes. Regarding these school houses Commissioner Leupp says: "Our Indian children are particu larly prone to pulmonary complaints. Ever since we have begun clothing the Indians and thereby making them physically more tender, the lungs have been the great seat of trouble; and when one child has begun to show pretty plain symptoms of tuberculosis, it is not only cruelty to that child to shut it up where if shall breathe the inclosed atmosphere, but it is a men ace to the other children with whom it is brought thus into close and un wholesome contact. It is too soon yet to predict the success or failure of this experiment, but the cost of giving it a wire echoolhouse Is too Insignificant for consideration in comparison with the great gain to be achieved if it does succeed." The Indian problem seems to be still far from solution, if indeed it is not becoming each year more complex. It has to deal with a body of red men on reservations (if the figures of the Indian Bureau of a few years ago are correct), the numerical strength of which is little or no less than was that of the bands that roamed .the forests and plains of the continent when the white man first lifted up his eyes and beheld its shores. Vanquished by force of arms; pushed on further and further by the advance guards of civil ization; restricted to reservations upon a continent that he formerly roamed at will, the North American Indian has displayed virility unequaled in the history of any conquered race of the Old World, if after four centuries of conflict he still maintains his numeri cal strength. Yet this virility, attacked from with in, is likely to yield to the force of the onset. TubercuIosisfltjds In the In dian goSd ground for development. and it rages with the fury of a pesti lence and a fatality all its own among those of his race. PROSPERITY IX THE SEWS. In building permits, real estate transfers, bank clearings and all other branches of business Portland contin ues to break records. The work is ef fected not without protest from that gradually disappearing army of knockers" who have never been able to convince themselves that Portland was not growing too fast. But there is no secret about Portland's growth, nor is there any mystery attached to reasons responsible for that growth, Portland is going ahead at a pace never before equaled, because the trib utary country is growing. The Sun day Oregonian, on account of the de mands of Its readers for a more elab orate presentation of literary, social. sporting and other news, does not make a specialty of industrial topics. However, Sunday's paper, like all the others, contains dispatches received in he regular order of news, and last Sunday there was the usual number which told of events having a direct bearing not only on the city and im mediate territory, from which the news came, but also on Portland's prosperity. The news that Marshfield had last year spent $70,000 on street improve ments and that during the coming year there would be expended $50,000 for paving, $45,000 for excavation work and plank streets and $55,000 for sewers, reflects a degree of pros perity at the Coos Bay metropolis that cannot fail to be felt to a certain ex tent in Portland, which enjoys most pleasant business relations with Marshfield. The building of a $50,000 scouring mill at Echo will give .em ployment to a large number of peo ple, and will increase the profits of the woolgrowers; and, as Echo prospers by" the new enterprise, Portland will share in that prosperity. The increase in the capitalization of the First National Bank of Hood River to $100,000 is a tribute to the growth of the premier fruit city of the .tate; and the organi zation of a new Irrigating company at White Salmon for the purpose of add ing another 2500 acres of that won derful fruit land to the already large orchard acreage all means that our friends up the river are increasing their business primarily for their own profit, but Incidentally for the benefit of Portland. The Salem dispatch telling of the addition of a number of new cars to the electric lijie to Portland of course means that the business between the two cities is increasing so rapidly that more facilities are imperatively need ed. Costly new theaters are not built in interior towns except in periods of prosperity. For that reason the news of the completion of a $25,000 theater at Colfax and a $14,000 theater at Kelso is pretty conclusive evidence that the people In those thriving com munities are enjoying a prosperity to which they are entitled by their re sources and their efforts in. develop ing them. The news items mentioned, all of which appeared in Sunday's Ore gonian. are but average samples of what may be found in the news col- mns of practically every issue of The Oregonian. While Portland announces the construction of a ten-storv busi es block, a paving contract for sev eral miles of streets and -the invest ment of millions in timber lands, an nouncements of similar importance, when the relative sizes of the cities is considered, will be found in local. ewspapers throughout the Pacific Northwest. This city has certain ad vantages of location that give it a pres tige peculiarly its own, but this pres tige is insufficient to bring with it prosperity unless the entire tributary territory is prospering in keeping with that of Portland. The Astoria Chamber of Commerce is making another effort to have the dredge Chinook placed In service on the bar, and should have the assist ance of every one interested in a good channel to the sea. The exact results that might be expected from the Jetty have always been difficult to forecast. The theory is good and the merits of the plan have been demonstrated by actual performances; but the swirling currents that sweep out of the river have not always taken exactly the course that they were expected to fol low when the jetty was under con struction. With the dredge there is no uncertainty. If the craft is put to work digging on a certain course and earning the sand to a point well be yond the bar, there is no question about good results being obtained. The dredging plan has never had a fair trial on the Columbia bar, but, so far as it was followed, 'the results were most flattering. An Aberdeen dispatch says that Mr. Harriman has temporarily abandoned his efforts to get into Aberdeen, and will endeavor to secure right of way at more reasonable prices on the op poslte side of the river. This, of course, may be only a bluff on the part of Mr. Harriman for the purpose of securing his right of way at more ad vantageous prices than now seem pos sible. It may also be a bluff on the part of the Aberdeen property-owners, who, if they really believed they were about to lose the railroad, would make some very good concessions in order to keep it on the Aberdeen side of the river. It is an excellent plan first to secure your railroad before you begin "cinching" it. This applies not only to Aberdeen, but to other localities in the Pacific Northwest, where right of way and other concessions are much more plentiful and much less valuable than railroads. The Umatilla County plan of con ducting a thirty-day war upon coyotes during January is a good one. At that time of the year farmers are not busy and can spare the time to engage in the hunt. If all understand that traps are to be set and poison put out dur ing that period, care can be taken to keep dogs out of danger. If all farm ers Join in the campaign against the common enemy, the slaughter will be great and the results will be benefi cial in no small degree. It is doubt ful whether the Legislature will again enact a scalp bounty law; so if the Eastern Oregon farmers want to be protected against the varmints they will be most certain of success if they rely upon their own efforts. The St. Helens quarrymen who have been getting out Belgian blocks for Portland streets are making a serious protest against replacing their prod uct with brick made near Seattle. This is quite natural, but if any one Is desirous of witnessing a vigorous pro test in the real sense of the term, let him frame up a little scheme by which it may be proposed to pavo a Seattle street with brick, stone or any other commodity to be supplied from Port land. The Seattle spirit has its limi tations, and they are not half as elas tic as those which encircle the Port land spirit. After Dr. Robertson was shot by a hold-up man at Salem recently, the officers, without any clew, ran down and captured his assailant within two hours. Last Thursday an ex-convict prepared a quantity of nitro-glycerin with which to blow up the Peniten tiary and the officers caught him be fore he had a chance to use the ex plosive. While no one wishes Salem trouble, it might be better for the public peace, health and safety if bank robbers would try their game up in Salem once. President Roosevelt's commission on country life has not met a warm wel come at the hands of the agricultural press. An obvious source of complaint seems to have been the class of testi mony and suggestion, or. rather, the men who offered it, although there can be nothing to say on that score the commission's Oregon hearing. Perhaps the mistake of the visitors was in not calling on the women folks for their side. Young Mr. Johnson, the dutiful son who raced home to procure the re volver with which his father commit ted murder, knowing at the time the purpose to which the weapon was to be put, has been freed by the courts and will receive no punishment for his complicity in the murder. The ver dict, so far as the younger of the pair of murderers was concerned, was probably a reward for filial obedience. The American people will think no less of Taft even if his course should prove that the letters of his name sig nify "Take advice from Teddy." There are a number of other recently emi nent men who would be in much bet ter standing before the public if either their names or their conduct indicated disposition to follow so good a leader. The "near-beer" captured by officers in Albany was apparently a little too near. The owners are evidently in the predicament of the small boy who tried to see how near he could skate to an lcehole without falling in. Tried often enough, that sort of a trick is sure to end in disaster. Marriages among the "social ele ment" in New York, Chicago, Pitts burg and other large cities are on the decline. Divorces may be expected to decline in the same ratio, while there will be no appreciable difference in the birth rate. After a bridge has been completed is a good time to find fault with con struction, but a poor time to criticise the specifications. The specifications should be made right before construc tion begins. The fear is expressed that the news papers will try Finch and condemn him without a hearing. There are a dozen murderers in the County Jail who ought to be tried by somebody. John D. Rockefeller tipped a waiter with a nickel, the other day. A man with many less millions would fear to offer less than a dime. John is rich, which makes all the difference. There are half a dozen or more patriotic citizens who wish the legis lative session were over, so that they could arouse public interest in their Gubernatorial, aspirations. Editor Hofer's campaign expenses for Salem Councilman aggregate a $.2 box of cigars. Now guess how many cigars were In Hofer's box. The members .of Congress have ap parently forgotten all of the Presi dent's message except one paragraph. Wonder If the President is going to tell something on Congress himself or get Hearst to read a few letters? Competition is bringing better rail way service, whether it produces lower rates or not LIFE IX THE3 OREGON COUNTRY., This Editor Hu CT '; Cents. Cathlamet (Wash.) Sun. Paul Nicoud caught the first smelt of the season at this point last Friday, one-half dozen, but they are worth 75 cents per pound. One-half pound for us, please. Rare. Goldendale Sentinel. Skookum Walliliee, who has a good ranch and apple orchard on the Big Klickitat, was a Goldendale visitor this week. Skookum is one of the few In dians who like to work. Go-aa-Yoii-PIenae Mail Route. Fossil Journal. A semi-occasional mail route has been given the people of Clarno pre cinct in lieu of the tri-weekly service they formerly enjoyed. Under the new system whenever the Clarno Postmas ter cancels enough stamps to justify the expense he hunts up a man and sends him to Antelope with the mai It is estimated that a round trip will be made by special carrier every three months or so. One more Kind of Color Line. Pilot Rock Record. According to a story from the Mc Kay creek school district, parents have permitted their children to absent themselves because tne teacher allowed a young man by the name of Charles Buckner to accompany her to a neigh bor's house. Mr. Buckner Is a quarter breed and belongs to a well-known and highly-respected family in this part of the county. The Buckners are thrifty, well-behaved and have the respect of all who know them. The power of prejudice is almost beyond human cal culation"and happy are they who have least of It. No Chaike for Renuy In Portland r Medforil. Medford Mail. A Medford lady who advertised for a woman to do general housework re ceived the following letter from Miss Lamson, of Portland: "Dear Madam: I have seen your ad vertisement In this week's paper. I want a place, to work in a small family where there are no young men. I am a good cook, and neat and handy and pleasant to get along with, and am only 23 years old, going on 24. Every man thinks I am extra good lookin and I have been bothered to death at nearly every place I have worked by the men running after me, and I want to get a place away from a village, where the men won't chase after me. I worked for two ladies at Portland and lost my job .because their bus bands took me out driving nights. If your husband is an old man, I can get along with, you, and you will like me, and would like to stay with you for a year." The Medford lady will not even give Miss I.arason a trial. Her husband is not old. GUN-TOTERS SHOULD BE FIXKD No Justification for Habitual Carrying of Concealed Weapons. Hoquiam Washingtonian. The time will undoubtedly come when it will be so unpopular and unlawful to carry weapons that a man caught with a Bun or an open knife in his pockeus will be considered a criminal per se with the goods on him. A man is more or lc:ss coward who habitually carries a gun. Of course there are occasions when it is gue tillable, especially when a man is com pelled to be out late at night. A law should be framed restricting the sale of firearms of all sorts, and requir ing dealers to record all such sales. These records should be placed In the hands of the police for their inspection and care. Men known to own guns should be kept in view and questioned, and if found car. rying them without permission, should be arrested and fined. The mere habitual carrying of a gim is notice to all that the man Is heeled and prepared for whatever trouble comes along may be said to be irivitinir trouble. In some places when men have differences and it is known that one or the other carries a gun, it is. considered Justifiable if hoth take a gun and shoot on sight, holding that the other fellow had a gun and had threatened to do bodilv harm. Cut it out Future of the Trust. Kansas City Journal. Nothing was developed in the testi mony of Mr. Rockefeller that was not already known, beyond the mere me chanical means by which the opera tions or uie big corporation of which he is the nominal head were carried on. Mr. Rockefeller denied none of the general indictments against him and he left the impression that he was just as good as the great mass of big busi ness men of today. The history of the Standard Oil Company has been written and rewritten. Its operations have been viewed from every conceivable angle, and comment and criticism have filled the pages of newspapers and magazines for several years. The most interesting development of the examination of Mr. Rockefeller was gaining the expression from him that the trust movement in this country had only Just begun, and that in the future there will be a practical ex tinction of individual competition. But the oil magnate sees no calamity in this-. On the other hand, he believes that the trust will prove the solution of most of bur industrial evils. He says this will result without injury to others and without special favors or nduigences.. This is Mr. Rockefeller's ast word to his critics, and it will be pondered earnestly by millions ot people. When Sheep Came to Oregon. PORTLAND, Dec. 13. (To the Editor.) In a dispatch from San Jose. Cal.. on the second page of The Oregonian of yes- terdav morning, in a notice of the death I of "Daniel McLeod, a pioneer sheep- raiser of the Pacific Coast," who died at Santa Clara, Cal., on December 7, it is stated that he brought the first sheep across the plains to Oregon in 1S51. In the interest of accuracy permit me to say that this statement is incorrect, and that the first flock of sheep brought across the plains to Oregon was in 1S44, by Joshua Shaw and his son, Alva C. R. Shaw: the second flock by a man named Fields in 1S47, driven by H. Vaughan, and the third in ISIS, number ing 300, by Joseph and Ahlo 9. Watt. GEORGE H. HIME3. Houndine Him to His Grave. Walla Walla Union. The Oregonian yesterday had a particu larly striking cartoon representing a job hunter standing at the sick-room door of Governor-elect Cosgrove at Paso Robles. The Job-hunter is made to say, "He's got to see me if the country's to be saved." It is indeed a disgraceful spectacle to see place-hunters Journeying from Wash ington to California in order to Inject their craven images through the door of a man sick unto death to worry and dis tress not only the patient but his good wifo. .' ' The people of the State of Washington have been forced to witness this disgrace ful presumption of a pack of hungry coyote job-hunters until the whole Nation has taken cognizance of the scene. Union Warriora. Brooklyn Standard-Union. If Lord Roberts wants a helper, son belongs to the union. Hob- Peach Rarity In Bleak New England. Baltimore News. Peach trees are in bud at North Wll brabam. Mas CONVENTIONS IN SEATTLE. Many Bodies Will Hold Seaaiona There In 1909. Following is a list of th conventions to be held In Seattle next year, which have already been procured-: Alumni Association of the University of Washington, June, 1909. American Association of Park Super intendents. Aucust 1-15, 1S0P American Association of Title Men, August, 1909. American Institute of Banking, Sum mer, 1PI9. American Institute of Electrical En gineers (Seattle section), June, 1909. Ancient Order of United Workmen, grand lodge of Washington, July 21-23, 1909. California Promotion Committee, June 15. 1909. Catholic Order of Foresters of State of Washinston, June, 1909. Christian Missionary Convention of Western Washington, June, 1909. Degree of Honor (Auxiliary to A. O. V. W.), July 21-23, 1909. Delta Sigma Delta, Summer, 1909. Dramatic Older of Knights of Khoras san, August, 1909. Constitutional Convention of Washing ton,. July 4, 1S09. Epwurth Leaguo convention. National, July, 1909. Fraternal Brotherhood, uniform rank, July 22-24, 1909. Grand Chapter Royal Arch Masons ot Washington, June 33-24, 19u9. Grand Commandry Knights Templar of Washington. June 16, 1909. Grand LmlRre Free and Accepted Ma sons of Washington, June 15-17, 1909. Idajio Slate Medical Association, Sum mer. 1909. ' Independent Order of Buffaloes, Sum mer, 1909. Independent Order of Oddfellows, eov erign grand lodge, National, Summer, 19 9. Knights of Pythias (crand lodga of Washington), August, 1909. National American Woman Suffrage Association, Summer, 1909. National Editorial Association, Sum mer. 1909. , National Lumber Manufacturers' Asso ciation, June. 1909. North Pacific International Lawn Ten nis Association, August, 1909. Northwest. Music Teachers' Association, Summer. 1909. Northwestern Branch J of American Mining Congress, Summer, 1909. Northwest- Electric Light and Power Association, September 8, 1909. Norwegian Saenfferfest, Summer. 1909. Order of Eastern Star (grand chapter of Washington), June 17, 1909. Oregon State Medical Society, Summer, 1309. Pacific Coast Advertising Men's Asso ciation, June 15-17, 1909. Pacific Coast Association of Fire Chiefs, about October, 1909. Pacific Coast Association . of Nursery men. July 14, 1909. raciiic Northwest Society of Engineers, July, 1909. Fhotographers' Association of the Pa cific Northwest (not decided). Pioneer Association of the State of Washington, June 8, 1909. Seattle Hebrew Benevolent Association, October 3, 1909. Seattle "Volunteer Firemen's Associa tion, June 6, 1909. Swedish-Finnish Temperance Associa tion of America, July, 1909. United Commercial Travelers (juris diction of Oregon, Washington and Brit ish Columbia), June 11-12, 1909. United Swedish Singers of the Pacific Coast. July 25-31, Washington Association for the Pre vention and Relief of Tuberculosis (not decided). Washington Bankers' Association, June, 1909. United Amateur Press Association, July, 1909. Washington Children's Home- Society, June, 19C9. Washington Forestry Association, July, 19t. Washington Society Sons of the Revo lution, February 22, !!. . . . Washington State Association of Post masters (not decided). Washington State Dental Society, June or July, 1909. Washington State Elks Reunion Asso ciation, July, 1909. Washington State Federation of Wo men's Clubs (not decided). Washington State Game and Fish Pro tective Association, October 5, 1909. Washington State Library Association (not decided). Washington State Medical Association, State Nurses' Association, State Press Association, July 25, 19H9. Washington June. 199. Washington (not decided). Young Women s Christian Association, January, 1909. A Sludy in Pumpkins. New York Tribune. 'Yankees think they know all about pumpkins because they Invented the- pumpkin pie. but to see the real thing as a commercial article you must come to the Hoosier State," writes a commer cial traveler from Indiana. He speak.' of a packing concern in Indianapolis where pumpkins are at present of great importance. They are received in large quantities there from all parts of the state for shipment to the market and for canning, and 40 carloads a day are not an extraordinary quantity. You can't quite realize what a carload of pump kins is till you reduce it to pies, and onu is struck with awe when informed that 40 carloads will make about 2.000,000," writes the drummer. "A carload, they tell me, weighs about 25 tons. Of course, that would be too much for one day's baking, so the pumpkins are canned, and each ton fills 650 cans, and three regula tion-sized pies can be made out of tho contents of one can. I saw a 40-car con signment that had been dumped into the packing concern's yard 2.000,000 Incipient pies, as it were and when a man who stood neck deep among the yellow giants said. 'Quite some pumpkins," I echoed 'Quite some.' " A $1000 .Return on 10 Cents. Utica (N. Y.) Press. John Roberts, of Watkins, Schuyler County, a well driller, recently pur chased of Angelo Dupree, a Junk dealer, an old pump for 10 cents. It was appar ently of no value, but he thought there might be some parts that he could use In ids business. When Mr. Roberts and his assistant took the pump to one of tho wells they were drilling and started breaking it up, they were greatly sur prised to see gold coins drop out of the holes the' made. They at once finished the job, and found $4000. nearly all in $20 gold pieces. To whom the pump be longed at the time the money was hid den or how Iouk it had been there is a mystery. The latest date of one of the coins is 1SS8. Mr. Roberts at once de posited his find in bank. He is willing to surrender the find to any one who can prove ownership, but no claimant has yet appeared. The Junk man will make a memorandum to examine the inside of every old pump before disposing of it at any price. Paris Women In Trousers. "Trouser dresses" are among the freak fashions reported from Paris, the new style being also labeled "Andro gyne." It Is like "a bicycle trouser skirt under a tunic of lace or satin," says the Paris correspondent of the Ladies' Pictorial. "The trouser skirt was of pretty bronze green color, the tunic of thick guipure lace, reaching to the knees, of similar bronze green hue. The up per portion was of finely tucked net, the sleeves of similar filmy material lightly veiled with black tulle. A very largc black plumed hat completed an ensemble of wliiii every woman tried bard to aret a sllmDse." THE DAIRYMEN'S CONVENTION. Review of the Late Important Sraalon at Snlem. The annual session of the Stata Dairy Association at Salem last Thursday and Friday was apparently productive of beneficial results In several respects, though it will take time tn prove the extent of the good that was dime. To begin with, the dairymen themselves hav been enlisted in the cumpaign for pure milk, and, if the sentiment of the con vention is fairly representative of dairy men generally, inspectors of dairies will have little trouble in the future. Certain it is that the authorities charged with the duty of enforcing the law will have the support of the better class of milk producers, and this will go far toward making their work effective against thofe dairymen who are wilfully careless. Tho war is on against unsanitary conditions in the daries throughout the state, and it will be aided by such legislation as iln leading spirits among the dairymen nia dnem necessary. The need for regulation of dairies !.i felt most near the large cities, where ih-i milk is brough-. to the consumer by thu producer day by day; but there also ex ists as great a need for regulation of tns dairy in the farthermost corner of tho state, where the cream is sent to a cream ery, to be mde into butter. The resident of the Cliy of Portland is no more, en titled to clean feed than is the Inhabitant Of tho smallest village. That the demand for regulation Is urgent no one could doubt after hearing or reading th sta:o ments made by Mrs. S. A. Yoakum, Dairy Inspector in Coos County, who ol 1 about separators standing in tho barns where chickens roosUd upon tliem and milk cans lying in the yard where pigs used them as hiding-places. These, of course, were rare and extremo cases, but they illustrate a spirit of carelessness which is frequently manifested in a leys shocking though not much lefs serUvis manner. Comparatively few dairymen permit such conditions to exist; a very large number fall to keep their cows clean. ft At first thought there seems to b foivo to the argument that creamery men should be held responsible If they sccept cream that is not fit for use; but further consideration will show that this will not be a satisfactory solution of tho problem of securing cleanliness. It ii reasonable to expect that a dairyman will reject cream that is plainly unfit for use, and yet, liko many other reason ablo expectations, this is not likely to be, fulfilled. In the present state ot tho dairy industry, when the product does not meet the demand, tliere is such keen competition among dairymen that, if ona will not tako a farmer's cream, he can sell it to another. As stated by one of the speakers at the convention, if on dairyman should begin rejecting ell the unsatisfactory cream, he would soon have to shut up his factory- Joint agreement among crcamerymcn is' of course prac ticable, but, as was also remarked, whenever tho creamerymen get together on an agreement as to the rejection of cream, they will also get together fir purposes which the dairymen will regrety Free competition is necessary for the uc cess of dairying. The dairymen them- selves should enforce cleanliness and en-' courage the creamerymen to stay as far apart as possible in the buying coin petition. The session of the Dairy Association should prove of soma benefit in persuad ing dairy farmers to raise more of their heirer calves and not to sell their cows to outside buyers. Every owner of dairy cows should breed to a first-class side of the dairy type. Then the heifer calves would be worth raising, and none of them should find their way to the meat block. If that policy were pursued, tho dairy herds in the- state would be in creased very rapidly and the dairy prod uct would grow In magnitude and value. Undoubtedly, the feed problem has caused many dairymen to sacrifice their heifer calves. They find ttiat they have scarce ly feed enough for their cows, and many of them are compelled to buy feed. The. calf problem therefore depends for its solution upon the feed problem. It is very probably true, as said by one of the dairymen, that the day of cheap mlllfeed in Western Oregon is past As remarked by this paper a year or two ago, the grain farms have been trans formed into orchards and dairies and hopyards, until the production of grain Is not sufficient for local needs and Im portation Is sometimes necessary. This makes bran and shorts high. Trans Pacific trade will tend to make feed scarcer and more expensive. The dairy man is therefore confronted with the ne cessity of depending upon his own fields for his feed supply. That ho can do this is proven by the experience of many dairymen who raise vetch hay, kale, corn and tho various root crops necessary to supply the cows with succulent food tho year through. Dairying will replenish the impoverished soil of the former grain fields, so that the dairyman can soon pro duce large crops of grain to supply his needs in that respect. The first problem for every dairyman, as well as every farmer, is that of producing plenty of feed, and when this has been done there will be no need to slaughter heifer calves. And yet it is hot to be assumed that the killing of possible milk-producers is always an evil. It is only for the heifer calf that promises to make a good cow that the plea is made. Undoubtedly then are hundreds of cows on Oregon farms that do not pay for their fed and care, and never will, because they are not dairy cows. Such animals cannot be sent to the block too soon. A very large number of them probably will be dis posed of in that manner If the Dairy As sociation snail make a success of Its effort to fcrm cow-testing associations, by means of which the actual milk-producing value of -ows will be determined. Only a small proportion of the dairymen real ly know .-hicli of their cows are paying and which are not. They have no accur ate means of ascertaining this impor tant fart. The members of the Asso ciation took this matter up In earnest, and, if they continue in their plans, every farmer will have an opportunity to find out which of his cows should be fattened for beef. As a consequence of the recent session of the Dairy Association several desir able results should be attained: Tho elimination of the unfit dairy row, the saving of well-bred heifer calves, li. -production of cheaper food for dairy cows, the building up of dairy herds, the cleaning of all Oregon dniri's. Will Need Careful Editing. Washington Star. Anything that Kaiser Wilhe.lm sayi hereafter will be carefully scrutinized by expert copyreaders before being put into type. Deserves First Mention. Philadelphia Record. When it comes to awards of the. Nobel prize do not let the claim of John P. aj? the friend of the brotherhood of man H a.Itorether forsrotten.