THE MORNING OK EG ONI AN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1903. 6 PORTLAND, OREGON. ntrd at Portland. Oregon. Potoffic aa Eecond-Clafca Matter. t. ibacrlption Katea Invariably In Advance. (By Mall.) i?al!y. Sunday Included, one year ?'!)? Daily. Sunday Included, six months.... Pally. Sunday Included, tliree months. . i -J Ially. Sunday Included, one monlll ' Illy. without Sunday, one year J Daily, without Sunday, lx month". . . . I 'ally, without Sunday, three month.. i o Daily, without Sunday, one montn Weekly, one year 250 Sunday, one year Eunday and Weekly, one year a-" iHy Carrier.; Dai!y. Sunday Included, one year...... 00 Daily, Sunday Included, one month ' How o Remit Send poatofllce nin order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sendees risk. Give postoffice ad dress In full, including county and state. FoMaK Rate to to 14 pages. 1 cent; 10 to panes. -1 cents; M to 44 pases. cents. 40 to 60 pages. 4 centa Foreign postage double rates. Eastern Businem Offk-e The S. C. Beck- with .-pecial Agency iu. ;- - - 60 Tribune building. Chicago, room! olO-jii Tribune building. . pOSTUNn. FRm.VY. DEC. J5. 190. A BlACK CHAPTER. The case of Judge Milo A. Root, of the State of Washington, is pitiful. For he is both a criminal and a vic tim. His parsing marks the erection of one more sepulchre on the broad road that leads to moral death. On It should be written, for study of the wayfarer, that line of "The Paradise Lost," "Remember, and fear to trans gress." Xet it can hardly be said that bridge Root is as much sinned against s sinning. It was his business, as a judge, as a servant of the public, to resist the appearance and the first anproach of evil. He permitted him self to deal with a man whom he knew to be the agent, of the great railroad power of his state. The ex tent of the favors he received from that agent are yet unknown. They never may be wholly divulged. That agent, a man named Gordon, had been one . of the Judges of the Supreme Court of the State. A large sum of money had been placed in his hands, obviously for corrupt uses. It was to be his business to look after the "interests" of the company that employed him. for influence of courts and of legislation. Gordon "went short" on his money. The railroad company demanded from him an ac counting, and return of money still In his hands. But Gordon believed himself to be in position to resist the claim and demand. The money had been advanced to him for purposes that wonld not bear investigation, and he desired it understood and ac cepted by the company that he had used it for corrupt purposes. There fore he refused to be held to account. Pressure on him for the money in creased; and -for defense he alleged he had been dealing with Judge Root. In support of this allegation he sub mitted certain letters that had been written by Judge Root. These letters are obscure, but clearly are of com promising character. Gordon had not been prompt in meeting his prom ises to Root, and the latter com plained. He had been "exceedingly embarrassed by assurances made on promises received." The obvious meaning is that Gordon had been -tardy had not "come through." He had not kept his agreement. "Prom ises" were unfulfilled. But the rela tions between Gordon and Root had been so familiar and confidential that Root had permitted Gordon to write the opinion in a case in which Gor don's principals were a party an offense graver than all the rest. But Gordon, held for the money he had received from the company, rated for it, and pressed for return of such balance of it as might still exist, told his employers to "go to blazes." They had given him money for corrupt or improper purposes, and had no right to demand how he had spent it. One account says most of the money had been squandered in gambling: another, that part of it had been blown into a gold mine. But it suited Gordon to stand on his privilege. He had been given the money for purposes of corruption, and answered that he had so spent it. To sustain this assertion he pro duced his transactions with Judge Root. Yet Root seems to have got noth ing, or little. But he had allowed dishonor to traffic with him as a judge, and had written compromis ing letters. These he calls epistolary Indiscretions. He had, moreover, al lowed Gordon to write an opinion for him thereby betraying the most sacred of trusts. But Gordon was a gambler; and a gambler's word or honor is never to be trusted. Gordon did, indeed, get the service for his company, but played false with Root; and the company has been guilty of the "indiscretion" of wanting the money back and of trying to make Gordon return it. All parties in this transaction are criminals, but the original criminal was the railroad company, who put a large sum of money into Gordon's hands, for improper purposes. Judge Root is both a criminal and a victim, and "probably will be compelled to suffer alone; but retributive Justice ought to "send over the road" with him and with Gordon the originators of the whole black scheme, who' put up the money for corruption of the legislation and of the courts of the state. rUGET SOl"XI DRAWS NEARER. The Northern Pacific transfer boat Tacoma. which for a quarter of a cen tury has ferried trains across the Co lumbia River at Kalama, is today making her final trips in that service, and in the future Portland will en joy a direct through train service to Puget Sound. The passing of this old craft, which for so many years has played uch an important part in the transportation development of the Pacific Xorthwest. marks another epoch in the commercial life of this city and tributary territory. The ap pearance of the transfer boat Kalama original name of the Tacoma), fol lowing completion of the forty-mile stretch of railroad between Portland and Hunter's Point, shortened the time between Portland and Tacoma nearly three hours, and eliminated the exceedingly disagreeable transfer of baggage and passengers from steamboat to train at Kalama. Neither the railroad men nor their patrons at that time ever expected to see the traffic of the road grow Into such magnificent proportions that it would tax the capacity of the enor mous ferryboat to keep it moving, nor could they foresee the approaching period when the passenger traffic be tween the two states would demand something better than the interrup tion and delay in -th.a.ourneyr which. could not be eliminated so long as the ferry was in service. But the de mands of traffic in this territory have far outgrown the speed and capacity of the old ferry, and its abandonment will vastly improve transportation facilities between Portland, Puget Sound and the intervening territory. Business men "who have much trav eling to do and freight shippers will feel no sentimental regret over the retirement of the old ferry, but all over the world are tourists and pleasure-seekers by thousands and tens of thousands who have taken their first view of the mighty Columbia from the deck of the big boat as it was moving passenger trains across the river. The ride across the river was to many a welcome break in the mo notonous railroad journey, and the news that this interesting link in the route will be closed forever will be received by this class of tourists with regret. LIGHT FOR THE CITY; It is just as well to disregard the personal controversies between the Mayor and members of the Common Council over the public lighting of the city Those altercations are the product, chiefly, of the Mayor's dog matic spirit, whose ebullitions are met by contemptuous and unseemly per sonalities levelled at him, by way of retaliation. But it is not observed that they throw any light on the prob lem of lighting the city. The maggot of public ownership has found lodgment in the Mayor's mind, which is not strange; since his mind has a tendency to exalt the dogma of public ownership, as one'bf the tenets of socialistic effort. But the problem of supplying light for the city stands on very different foot ing from that of water supply, be cause of the vastly greater number of factors that enter into the operation. Water delivers itself, through gravi tation: light is delivered through a complicated mechanism, requiring at tention to an infinity of detail, espe cially costly and troublesome under public management. The Oregonian cannot believe or suppose that the City of Portland wishes to undertake at this time the installation of a public lighting sys tem. Expenditures unavoidable are already very great, and more are in sight. That light so supplied would cost the city far more than the Mayor's estimate, or any estimate that may bo furnished by projectors, is absolutely certain. Moreover, ad ministration of the system would overrun immensely all estimates, here as elsewhere. The public can do nothing as cheaply as private enter prise can. There is only one bidder at .pres ent, and all the changes are rung on the word monopoly. But in the whole matter lies one single and sim ple question of fact, which ought to be ascertainable, namely, whether the offer submitted by this company Is reasonable, as compared with the rates paid by other cities.- We be lieve they are; but if they are not, it should be easy for those who op pose the present offer to show it. In the places where public lighting is attempted the figures are usually juggled, for the purpose of making a good showing. Claims are made that analysis of the figures disproves; too much credit is given for exten sions and improvements, and not enough allowance is made for ex haustion of materials or for 'neces sary supersedure of old by new. In all caes the actual cost, through a term of years, will be found greater than the estimates; and labor em ployed by the public is always more costly and commonly less efficient than that employed under private or contract direction. Among the many and great accom plishments of Mayor Lane, it may well be doubted whether electrical engineering is one, or whether the city, if it were actually going into the business, would look to him for guidance His plans and figures would scarcely be deemed conclu sive. The only present question, it would seem, is whether the bid sub mitted by the Portland General as compared with the cost in the many other cities of the country that are lighted by contract, is reasonable or not, too high, or not GOOD FOOD AND GOOD SOCIETY. A number of preachers of. Portland, seeking the society of good things, have been enjoying luncheon lately as guests of one Ferdinand E. Reed, who. has been beholden to the liquor interests, and doubtless is still so be holden. At one luncheon, the biggest beer brewer was a guest, along" with the biggest Methodist preacher of East Portland. Now at last is the millennium at hand, that the lion and the lamb should lie down together, and that the inscrutable Mr. Reed should act the role of the prince of peace? .It would really be an outrage on decency if the innocent preachers, un trained to the snares of the satraps of Satan, should expose themselves to his tricks, or, if flattered by his wiles, should uncover the reform plans of the righteous. It ought to be worth the price of many luncheons to find out whether the cohorts of decency plan state prohibition or serious amendment of the local option law in the Legislature, or whether the min ions of hell's dark beverage dare try a new Jayne bill. For any person who wonders how the impecunious Mr. Reed can pay the luncheon bills all these matters have illumination. The best is none too good for the preachers, and it is a matter of gen eral gratification that they have been feeding on the best. Mr. Reed, lover of mankind that he Is, is accomplish ing his highest Ideals, and we trust the good society of the preachers will do as much for him as his good food does for them. SHALLOW OBJECTIONS. The news from Washington that the bill for postal savings banks seems to interpose delays when a de positor may wish to withdraw his money need not worry anybody a great deal. There are delays now in many cases, as some. unhappy depos itors know too well. The main point is that, in spite of procrastination and red tape, whoever might put money into the postal banks would be sure to get It out in the end, while under present conditions he is by no means always sure to do so. The other objection, that "the bill would make postal banks purely sav ings institutions," sounds very singu lar. That Is what they are intended to be. Nobody has ever thought of making .them anything else but sav ings banks. If the regulations make It difficult to draw out money, so much the better. It ought not to be too easy for a person to withdraw his savings. Delay encourages reflection and" reflection may inspire thrift. There .aeyer. yet Jivjea. .aa object tion made to postal savings banks which could face candid investigation an instant. TRI E AND FALSE FREEDOM." When Mr. Gompers protests to the world that the sacred right of free speech and free press Is violated, in that he and his coadjutors are re strained from uttering matter to in jure and destroy a business with which they are at variance because it does not yield to their demands, he and they are pushing the claim for free speech and free press to a limit which it is Impossible to allow. And i'hen injunction Is issued to prevent them from doing this, and nevertheless they disregard the in junction and persist in speech and publication, with intent to destroy a business that refuses to submit to their terms, they are to be taught and they must learn that the prin ciple of free speech and of free press, sacred as it is, must be used under the same limitations as any other right; so used, that is to say, as not to injure others. The right to do a lawful business is a natural right and a personal fight and a property 'right; and it is a proper business of society or govern ment to see that the right shall be protected and not aestroyea. The right of free speech and of free press are indeed sacred rights; and so is the right to carry a shot-gun. But you are not to injure or destroy your neighbor with the one or with the other. AS LITTLE CHILDREN. Of course the reader has noticed what a very different thing the Christ mas smile is from the smile of other seasons. Men are capable of smiling when they are angry. There is even such a thing as a cruel smile evoked by the sight of suffering or the thought of revenge, but it is not to be seen on Christmas. On that day of days, when we forget our envy and regret and see nothing in the future but Its brightness, who could be angry, who could cherish cruelty in his heart? On Christmas day we all become children again with noth ing to remember but the clear joy of childhood and nothing to expect from a benignant world but inno eent happiness. So we smile as chil dren do without malice, regret or fear, radiating pure kindliness and evoking It from our fellow men. For it is the wonderful nature of that flame in the heart which we call love that wherever Its rays fall they kindle new flames. Thus it spreads from morning till night on Christmas, and before the sun goes down on the Savior's birthday the whole world is ablaze and aglow with it. Love in the millionairess mansion, love in the workman's cottage; on the street, on the farm and afar on the wind-swept ocean the fires are kindled and all the blessed glory of it shines in the Christmas smile. It Is worth while to practice the Christmas smile, for it does not eome by nature to everybody. There was old Scrooge in the Christmas Carol, for example, who managed to put It on only after the most distressing lessons; but he finally achieved it and so can everybody who is willing to try hard enough. If there is any body who will not try, why the rest of us must smile all the more to make up for his obstinacy. On Christmas the world simply must be filled to overflowing with happiness, and, if here and there some can tankerous curmudgeon will not do his part, somebody else must work over time. But working overtime to gen erate happiness Is not a job to be shunned. It is the only job under the sun that pays for itself as it goes along. The workman not only sup plies everybody around him with a share of his product but, miraculous to tell, he keeps the whole of it for himself at the same time. The more Joy we give away the more we have. If we only valued it as we ought, how rich we might all become. If wealth were only measured In terms of hap piness, need there be any poor on earth? Nobody who cannot put on a genu ine Christmas smile and set his heart in tune with it ought ever to thrust his head into a Christmas home. The place is too blithe for such a wretch. Say what you will about how sacred the every-day home is and how the children liven it and the dear mother blesses it and the' father protects it, still on Christmas day it is a little more sacred than on any other day and a great deal -more jolly. The father adds to his protection an un accustomed tenderness, the children are merrier and the mother's eyes are alight with some sweet, mysterious peace. It is as if she had bent over the manger as the dawn broke and kissed the new-born babe. Beautiful mother, the Savior is ever at her side, an invisible presence, but on Christ mas we can almost see him. We can touch his hand, half incarnate again as he yearns with infinite tenderness toward his earth. We can read the everlasting surety of his loving kind ness in the light of tho mother's eyes. Home is a good place to go back to on any day of the year, but best of all on Christmas day. Then we can find again what all of us are seeking, the lost illusions of childhood, the glory and the dream which made the world a miracle of joy. For most of us the dream has vanished In what we call reality and the glory has faded to a dismal gray, but on Christ mas morning it all comes back when we awaken in the old home, in the kindly old home where memory takes the place of ambition and the heart softens in the mild air of far-off Summers. Nothing is so good for a man as to open his eyes under the rafters where he heard the rain patter when he was a boy and wish he were that same boy again. Perhaps he will be sometime. That may be what heaven is, to get back all the lost illusions and dream for ever the dreams of childhood. What have we gained that can pay for them? Let us not be too sure that we are right now and were wrong when we were children. The illusions may be the realities after all. Perhaps the barefoot boy was awake andthe hard-hearted old man is dreaming, and when the Son of God holds out his hand to him on the other side of the dark river the new life may be only a return to the one he began on earth and failed to finish. Christmas makes us all chil dren again. Though it be but for a day, still that day Is precious above all the rest of the harassed, toilsome year. "Except ye become as little children," said Jesus, "ye cannot enter the Kingdom." On Christmas day we, do become as little children and feel for a little while the. infinite wonder of his promise. The gates of the beautiful city open, swinging on their golden hinges with music sweeter than the poets ever imagined, ami we throng wii&la tvhera the angels are and the tree of life sheds its healing for the nations. If at nightfall the gates swing to and we are shut out again into the hard world of strife, still the songs we heard are not forgotten, some linger ing touch of balm from the tree by the crystal river makes our wounds less cruel, and the glimpse we had of the Savior's face softens and human izes us for another year. New Torkers will not be "broke" very long, no matter how strong they plunge on Christmas presents, for the January dividend disbursements of trust companies, railroads and other corporations in the metropolis will exceed J 210,000,000, an increase of $17,000,000 over the disbursements of January, 1908. In this .financial item an accurate comparison with that of a year ago is of value, for, unlike bank clearings, customs receipts and other trade features affected by the panic, these dividend disbursements were practically all fixed long before the panic appeared, and were in no way involved in the troupe which played havoc in other lines. It was release of an enormous sum last Jan uary that materially aided in restor ing the equilibrium of the financial situation. Much good can be accom plished with $210,000,000 if it is placed in the proper channels, and in dications are favorable for increased activity after the turn of the year. To the Eastern fruitgrowers who are unfamiliar with the wonderful productive qualities of Oregon, or chards, some of the prices paid in this state are puzzling. A thirty-five-acre orchard near Grants Pass, with an additional fifty acres of land not in fruit, sold this week for $34,000, the orchard part of the land being worth about $800 per acre. This seems a large sum until it is explained that the crop from this orchard sold in 1906 for $17,000, and that it had already made a fortune for the owner before he disposed of it to retire and enjoy the fruits 6f his labors in a land where fortunes are so easily made. The sale of this Southern Oregon ranch was not an exceptional one, as much higher prices have been paid, but never yet has the price mounted high enough to preclude a handsome annual return on the money invested. The City Council is entitled to the thanks of a grateful' public for its re fusal to take action against the rule of the streetcar company which for bids smoking on Its cars. Talk of the "hardship" inflicted upon smokers by this rule is the sheerest nonsense. Any man "who cannot, without griev ous hardship, refrain from smoking on his way to and from his place of business or employment on the streetcars is a slave whom it is the part of humanity to emancipate. If this rule irks him, he has a simple and effective remedy; he can walk at least part of the way, or until he fin ishes his pipe or cigar. With so easy and healthful a remedy at hand, it is foolish to talk of "hardship" in con nection with a rule of the streetcar company, made in the interest of a majority of its patrons. Castro, firm In the belief that a live private citizen has quite an advan tage over a dead president, sensibly says: "I shall place no difficulties in the way of the present administration of Venezuela in settling pending con troversies with foreign governments, even if this involves my own with drawal from activity in the affairs of the nation." No individual could part with something he did not pos sess with a better grace than is here exhibited. Castro will place no diffi culties in the way of the present ad ministration, because it is beyond his power to do so. A revolution always lands some faction on top, and that faction seldom fails to strengthen its position by making the land unattrac tive and unhealthy for the opposi tion. The appraiser of customs at Chi cago is complaining because foreign ers have sent in by mail more than 200 pounds of English plum pudding, necessitating an examination to de termine whether it contains diamonds or any other dutiable articles. The customs officer has experienced diffi culty in determining whether the in gredients used in the manufacture of this Christmas delicacy are subject to duty. As the English plum pudding in the materials used in its construc tion has many features of similarity to the mince pie, it is not to be won dered that the customs officer had difficulty in determining what it con tained, or, having found out, was still at sea as to the liability for duty. The return of the $2.50 gold piece to circulation will not be hailed by the public. The coin, though a little beauty, Is hard to distinguish from the 10-cent piece by the sense of touch, and in the hurry of passing out fare on crowded streetcars is likely to create both confusion and loss. Since it is to come into circulation again, however, it behooves those who handle It in exchange to be care ful a necessity abhorred by Ameri cans. In the Municipal Councils of Pitts burg there were six men whom the purchasing agent could not deal with. He reported thera to his principals as " fools"; and to emphasize their folly and infamy he gave out their names. And the men have no rem edy. Of course those detectives who in sist that they have been in the city's pay for the past two years or more are prepared to turn over to the city all they have otherwise earned mean while. A moving picture of those Pitts burg Councllmen on the way to the Penitentiary would be a handsome and appropriate supplement to that justly celebrated bribery flashlight. What did Mr. Gompers expect the court to do when he insolently, open ly and continuously defied its injunc tion? It didn't seem as great an event in Bethlehem 1908 years ago as it does in Portland today. "Why not put on Jim Crow street cars for the smokers, if their stench must ride with them? If you begin saving your Christmas money early, you won't feel the cost so hard next year. Finch is sane enough when he pleads for his neck. Same to you, Governor-elect Cos- grove, CHRISTMAS I" THE! OLDE.V DAYS Observed With Feasting and Revelry) Slow With Excessive Giving. In the child-like faith of the middle ages all things were In sympathy with the Nativity. Birds sang with clearer notes, bees In thir hives made a more melodious humming and cattle in their stalls went down upon their knees, while as a sign that gracious influen ces were abroad In all animated na ture the "bird of dawning" crowed all night long on the eve of Christmas. In the Western part of Devonshire the story that at 12 o'clock on Christmas eve, the oxen in their stalls were al ways found on their knees as in an at titude of devotion, and making "a cruel moan like Christian creatures," was unquestionably believed. Going back of this era Christmas was a time of crude revelry and ex cesses that would shame and astonish the civilization of the present day, but at this period it was a "gracious time." When we read of the simpler revels and fond, foolish beliefs of Christmas in the 15th and 16th cen turies, we might regret that we have lost in this more enlightened age this child-like faith in holy miracles, but for the fact that the spirit of Christ mas is manifest in ways more In ac cord with generosity and gracious sympathy than ever before in the world's history. As noted by Charles Dudley Warner, in an article a quarter of a century old; "we have dropped a good many rude, and some pretty customs, but we have gained a broadening spirit of almost universal charity, a feeling of new brotherhood, that is perhaps none the less real because it is held a 'good deal in check during the rest of the year." In the old time Christmas began on December 16, described in the prayer book calendar as O Sapientia, and ended January 6 with Twelfth Night. It is related of the learned Dr. Parr, that when he was asked on what day in December it was proper to begin eating mince pie, he replied: "Begin on O Sapientia, but please to say Christmas pie not mince pie mince Pie Is Puritanical." If there is any merit in eating mince pie, as this as sociation of it with the holy season seems to imply, we have a conclusive test of the piety of Tjhjrims, for they did not hesitate to eat mince pie any day in the year, when they could get it, a habit that abides with their de scendants to the present day. They even combined gastronomy and piety to such an extent that they could take hot mince pie for breakfast on a Sum mer morning with impunity. In the ISth and lfith centuries the whole season included between the riatoo o-lAK -' ci-,, wuj, given up to rude rev els in which eating and drinking were the chief elements. A great deal has come down to us in regard to the excesses of this time. Gormandizing, drunkenness and the more boisterous revelry incident to the latter state be longed to the season. During the fes tival days the tables were constantly spread; the sirloin of beef, the mince pie, the plum porridge, turkeys, geese, and plum puddings were all brought upon the board at once and every one ate his fill, and all were welcome. The men went early to church and re turned to breakfast on brawn and mustard. Brawn was a dish of great antiquity. It was made from the flesh of large boars which lived In a half wild state and when put to fatten, were strapped and belted tight around the body in order to make the flesh become dense and brawny. It came to market in rolls two feet long, by ten inches In diameter and was fit meat for the half savage revelers who washed It down with strong beer. The boar's head fantastically dressed was first served and the feast ended, if it could be said to end during the season, with peacock or pheasant pie. Briefly the requisites for a good Christmas celebration In the old days were plenty of drink, a blazing fire in the hall, brawn, pudding souse, beef, mutton and pork, shred or mince pies of the best pig, veal goose and capon; cheese, nuts, and accompanying all quaint and lively carols. m The object of this brief presentment of Christmas past Is simply to contrast ft with Christmas present. The gen erosity, the good fellowship, the good cheer of the former have been retained while with advancing civilization the crude and rude customs have dropped away, bringing us to the Christmas of the present, in chastened If some what extravagant mood. "It is not so picturesque" is the verdict of the author above quoted, as rendered a quarter of a century ago, "but ic is fuller of brotherly love and nearer to the divine intent." Pursuing his sub ject with prophetic insight, Mr. War ner added: "It is the tendency of all holidays, the Christian no less than the others, to go to excess, and the Chris mas may soon become as burdensome as it formerly was by reason of ex cessive gifts and artificial social ob servances. Progress is sometimes likened to the swinging of a pendu lum and Christmas will probably os cillate to and fro In the fervor of ics celebration throughout the ages." The burden is being felt; the giving of gifts Is being pushed beyond reason able bounds; the reaction will come within a shorter or longer period, de pendent largely upon the continuance of National prosperity or the recur rence of a period of Industrial and financial depression. But as before, all that is best In the Christmas festi val will remain and the spirit of good will will survive. To doubt this would be disloyalty to the best that is in human nature brotherly love, good will, good fellowship. C. A. C. Difficult to Live on $2,0O0,0OO. Boston Dispatch to the New York World. Letters In which Mrs. Caroline E. Johnson complained of being obliged to live on such a meager sum as the Interest from $2,000,000 were a feature of the contest of her will in the Suf folk County Court. Although Mrs. Johnson lives in New York, a large part of her estate is in Massachussetts. The will is being foueht by the daugh ter, Mrs. Josephine W. Taylor. Mrs. Johnson maintained a fashion able residence at Newport, R. I., and her letters contain satirical remarks on the society there. In one she wrote: "Belmont did the square thing' by marrying Mrs. Sloan." A letter from Mrs. Taylor, the daugh ter, answering a suggestion that she marry a rich man also is on file, in which she says: "I could do so tomorrow if I wished, but a large fortune with a 'vulgarian' does not attract me. I prefer a small Income And independence," VERSE FROM FATHER CHRISTMAS A Song. Maria Hematreet In the Outlook. The Christmas Angel sang to me (And It was Christmas morn), "If Christ dwells not within thy soul. For thee he Is not born: If thou hast not his life In thine. Then must thou Eo forlorn." A fear for my imierfectness Upon my spirit lay, "But Peace on Earth. Goodwill to Men, O Angel, I can say!" "That Is the Song of Songs," he cried. And smiling went his way. A Question. Washington (D. C.) Star. If there Isn't any Santa Claus, who is It turns your feet Toward the shop where gifts are smiling as you walk along the street? Who is it sots you thinking, though you're busy as can be. About the songs and laughter 'round the children's Christmas tree? Though you vow "this Christmas business is a nuifance, anyhow." There's an Influence at work that clears the frowning from your brow: The small tin trumpet sounds a blast that wakes your soul serene To homage for the doll who is a lady and a queen. And the once prosaic world where it has been your lot to dwell Is a realm of fascination 'neath some mystlo fairy spell! If there Isn't any Santa Claus. who Is It, day by day. That turns our thoughts to Christmas, strive to shun It as we may? Who comes at this bleak season armed with telepathic arts And by generous suggestion dominates our minds and hearts? The Month, of Good Feeling. Chicago Evening Post. The mall Is heavy nowadays; Tve heard from I'ncle Frank, Who says he'd write more often, but he's busy at his bank; And here is one from Henry Jones, who used to be my chum He mentions how,- long years ago, I broke his Christmas drum: And here's a cordial missive from my thoughtful cousin Joe, It's strange I haven't heard from them since Just a year ago. The elevator boy is mild in manner and in speech. He knows without the asking just what floor I want to reach; The office boy is blithe and clean, comes early to his work. And never seems to want to find a time that he can shirk He even offers to come down an extra hour or so Of evenings. I remember now he- did a year ago. The man who tends my furnace sifts the ashes every day; He says he'll see we burn all the coal for which we pay. The postman six blocks from my house will dig into his pack And get a letter for me. Just to save my walking back; The world is growing better, Just as it be gan to grow. If I recall correctly, something like a year ago. The cook doesn't talk of leaving, there's a twinkle In her eye; She missed her half-day oft this week to make my favored pie! And I why, I feel kinder toward all the folks and friends, I've been to see the Sunday school my little boy attends. I've got a pleasant greeting for each fellow that I know Just as I had for all of them about a year ago. - Christmas City. Baltimore Sun. Ho! for the city of Christmastime; Ho! for the beautiful dreamland place; A dancing pearl In a gleam of rhyme. Filled with the lilies of laughing face. Ho! for the Christmas city, dears. Purple palace and castles tall; A wide domain where the pine tree rears Its spangled boughs in the ftrellt hall; Flashing splendor of lane and street. Whirling spirits and dancing feet; Ho! for the Christmas city, love. With three gold stars in the dome above! I Spangled pageants in windows fair, Toyful glories In shops of shine; Rosy lassie, with golden hair, Under the lights where the trinkets twine; Dancing dreamers on feet of dew, Lightheart singers and dreams of song. Up and down where the blossoms strew The purple paths of the pulsing throng; Gossamer glitter and dust of light, Fairy town in a kingdom bright; Ho! for the Christmas city, we. With its tinsel twined in the greenwood tree! Windows glowing and markets piled With dainties tempting from far away. Fruits still sweet with the sun that smiled In Orient islands of yesterday; Rippling laughter of young, sweet life. Marvels many from stranger skies. Love's lips laid on the wounds of strife, And good-will beaming from gentle eyes; Airy amulets, beautiful blooms. Pungent spices and quaint perfumes; Ho! for the Christmas city, all. With Its purple spires and Its castles tall! Under the spell of the evenglow. Starry beauty of shop and street. Gleaming windows In airy row. Magic moving in mazes sweet; Round and round with the rippling tide, To and fro with the merry throng. Laughter holding its aching side. Music tripping in mirthful song; Trumpets blowing and little drums Beatlngthe march of the kingdom comes; Ho! for the Christmas city, sweet. With its old enchantment of little feet. Gingerbread men in an icing suit. Candy canes, and the old-time toys Elephants, engines and birds and fruit We sucked together when we were boys; Splritful, wonderful city of gleam, Magic and marvel of glow and light; Down, down, down through the gates of dream, Let us go dancing, beloved, tonight! Oranges, raisins, figs and dates. Oh, for the city that ever waits; i Ho! for the Christmas city, dear, Where the gray heart dreams of an April year! A Christmas Lullaby. Blanche E. Wade in Lippincott's. Bethlehem town Is fast asleep, (One. two sheep, and a star and a hill) There where the shepherds watch their sheep. Out in the night, the shadows creep Over the hill so high and steep. (Three, four sheep, and a hill and a star.) Over the plain comes three wise kings, (One, two camels, a star, and a hill.) Out of the east, lo each one brings Beautiful gifts and precious things. Loudly the chorus of angels sings. (Three, 'four camels, a hill, and a star.) i Down in the town is a lowly shed. (One. two cows, and a star and a hill.) There, to the Christ-child's manger bed Shepherds and three wise Kings are led. Brightly the star shines overhead. (Three, four cows, and a hill and a star.) Over the hill go one, two sheep. (One, two sheep, and a camel, and cow.) Over the hill more camels creep; There goes a Iamb with a joyous leap; Here but the baby is fast asleep! (Three, four sheep, and a hill, and a star.) Called by Spirit Summons to Twin. New York Herald. In obedience to a psychic communi cation, the first she had ever received, Miss Catherine Bruce, a student in the University of Michigan, came to New York from Ann Arbor, Mich., to find her twin sister, Mrs. Charles J. Rich, of 400 West One hundred and eigh teenth street, ill of pneumonia. Miss Bruce said that while in a sorority house in Ann Arbor, late at night, a voice which she thought was that of her twin sister had said to her: "Come to me; I need you." Mrs Rich had been ill for several days, but the physician In attendance had said that the illness was not grave. After March 4 T. R. President Dewsger Pittsburg Dispatch. The New York Evening Post unbends from its usual ponderous dignity to indulge in this bit of levity: "After March 4. he will be T. R., President tCowaaer,' SEATTLE 9FMCIPAL LIGHT PLAXT It Has 5ev Paid Kxpenses and Biovr ANks tor 9 SOO.OOO More. Seattl Sptclal to Tacoma News. Seattle Will on December 29 vote an extra bork issue of $800,000. J500.000 of which fa to be used to finish work now undeAvvay on the light plant, and $300,000 ofWhtch is to refund money that the Apartment has borrowed from the giieral fund. In spie W the fact that Seattle's light rates Ire higher than the rates charged in acoma. and Seattle owns its own povr plant, the department has never pap expenses. If tho bonds carry It is conceded it will be because the city is s far in-to the business that to quit nw would be to lose all that It has Invested. The department's complete report for this year i;fc not been made pub lic. An incompte statement that is being circulated ,y 1 city shows a paper profit forthe ten months of J13.000. It says Vnliing of tho many times greater subs that have been spent from the gtterul fund to keep the department gohg. According to 'thecontrollor's report of last year, the den'rtment sold J192. 000 worth of current of which JtiT.OOrt worth was sold to tV,. city for street lighting. The operatit expenses were S308.6S9. Interest p,l by general taxation amounted to ?3.".S7.". Other expenses paid out of tlV, jreneral fund amounted to $lii,ono. y Seattle's plant, whirh ariginally was to have cost about $1,0(0,000, has al ready cost $l,7.r)8,S45, nn if the bond Issue soon to be voted on carries, $800,000 must be added tohe amount. The average residence consumer pays 2 cents a kilowatt hour moth than the average Tacoma consumer. ) Seattle's rates are graded (own from 8Mi cents to 4 Vi cents. Tac.na rates are graded down from G ccts to 3 cents. A consumer in Tacoma who ises ?0 kilowatt hours of current in ft month pays $1.20. In Seattle ho would pay $1.70. A Tacoma consumer using 40' kilo watts would pay $2.40, and In Seattle he would pay $3.20. A Tacoma consumer using 60 hl watts would pay $3.50, and in Seattle he would pay $4. B0. In addition, patrons are obliged to put up with a wretched service. Fre quently there are no lights at all for two or three hurs at a stretch, and at other times tho current is so weak that it Is almost impossible to rend with the lamps. The much-boasted low rates of Se attle are not the rates going to the common people. They are rales made only to big consumers, and rumor says that the small consumers are paying for the loss of current furnished to the big consumers. Ono of the men In the department admitted that some sales of current to big consumers were as low ns four-tr iths of 1 cent a kilo watt hour an admitted loss to tho city and a drain on tho small consum ers. In view of these facts and figures it Is no wonder that Auditor Young, of the municipal plant, said tho other day: "The most dangerous thing a city can take hold of is an electric power plant. It is all a matter of manafrc ment. Unless all politics are cut out. unless your department is admirably systematized and organized and unless you have the proper men to head it. It can never pay." Clever I'nrrot Scares Fool pad. Mont Clair (M. J.) Correspondent Phila delphia Record. "Polly," a parrot, who has been In the family of Felix Yerdman for 20 years, is fond of ridinft with Yerdman to market at I'aterson. Yerdman was driving homo after dark and "Polly" was a-horsehark. Yerdman says that when the wagon reached a long hill about a milo from the farm a negro ran from the side of the road. Jumped over the wagon's tailboard and said: "Give me your money." The farmer struck the robber In the face, but the negro dragged him from the wagon, threw him, bent htm badly and started searching his pockets. "Polly," seeing her master's plight, shouted: "Hold him. Pop. I'm coming!" At the words the highwayman ran as if spooks were on his trail. Wrathy After Mnjtlne Strikes Him. Brooklyn (N. Y.) Dispatch. When an express train on tho Dong Island railroad struck a man, the en gineer stopped, expecting to find only pieces of a man's body. When ho reached the man, who gave his name as William O'Hara, he was asked if he was much hurt. 'Yis." replied O' Hara, "me feelin's are hotted. To think a man can't walk along in a decent, quiet, respectable way without bein' hit by an engine." l'.lk's hm1 Ne-klle Angers Steer, Pittsburg Leader. A steer made angry by a red necktie worn by Charles Keller in the lilks' parade in the streets' of Altoona. chased the elk a block until Keller found a low place In a fence over which he Jumped and escaped. IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN LINCOLN'S THREE LOVE AFFAIRS Second of T.lii M. TarlieU's noted articles dealing with the human side of the great President, illus trated with rare photographs. Few sketches are more pathetic than the death of beautiful Ann Kulledge, Lincoln's first love. MONUMENT TO THE FATHER OF "MOTHER GOOSE" Paris has so honored the might iest writer for children. How many parents know who he is, when he lived and how he came to write these immortal stories ? LIVING FOUNDERS OF FAMED COLLEGES Romantic figure of Mary (iwen dolin Caldwell, who founded the Catholic University of America; Stephen A. Douglas' unfinished work. "IN SOME WAYS 1908 WAS A PERFECTLY GOOD YEAR" Says the Hotel Clerk, and then re views in his own way what he considers the notable events in the twelvemonth. ORDER FROM YOUR NEWS DEALER TODAY!