THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 11, 1909. POKTLAND. ORLtiON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflee a Ceeond-Claaa Matter. Subscription Rales Invariably In Advance. (By Mall ) Iai!r. Sunday Included, one year Ja.00 Xiaily. Sunday lnciuud. six months 425 ral!y. funday Included, three months... 23 Iai!y. Sunday Included, one month...... ."5 I'ai'.y. without Sunday, one year 6 0 Taliv. wlrhoitf Snn.iav months 3 25 Tiaiy. without Sunday, three month.... 1-15 Dally, without Sunday, one month .SO Weekly, one year 150 Sunday, one year unday and weekly, one year. ....... . 3 50 (Br Carrier.) Dally. Sunday included, one year 9.0 Zaj)y, Sunday Included, one month 75 Mow to Ramlt Send postofflee money order, express order or personal eneoK on Jour local bank Stamps, coin or currency are at the senders rt. tiive postortice aa dress In full. Including county and state. rootage Kates 10 to M pares. 1 cent; 10 to i'i i.-iges. l cents; . to 40 page, s cents; 4H to 60 pages, i cents. Foreign postage ooirrile rates. - Eastern ftulne4 Office- The S. C. Beck with Special Agency Nw York, rooms 4S P Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-513 "irituns building. rOBTLAXD. WEDNESDAY, AlU. 11. 1909. ALLOTMENT OF THE LAXDS. It is ten to one that most of those who draw prizes In the Government's land lottery, at the several places where the land is to be allotted, will sell out their land presently for what they can get. Few of them will iwork the land. For it's hard work, at times. and steady Industry the year round. Doubtless the lucky ones think they will work the land themselves, and live In rural felicity and abundance the . rest of their lives. They will be cured of this delusion. In a little time. Farm life Is not one round of pleasure. It requires attention more hours every day, to smaller details, than any other life In the world. And then at Inter vals It requires most strenuous labor. If you are looking for a life of leis ure, stay away from the farm. From the beginning life on the farm if it Is to be successful or half suc- . cessful has exacted ceaseless industry as its price. The most labored and finished literary production that ever t fell from the hand of man is the "Oeorgicon" of Vergil. It could have been written only by one who had been In closest touch with rural and agri cultural life, and could unite habits of observation and experience with ex traordinary powers of poetic descrip tion. His precepU for the agricultur ist, in the Valley of the Po, in his own time: his observations on details of husbandry, production of crops, care or flocks and herds and bees and soils. ; management of sheep and horses and kine, and the infinite attention and pa tience' and industry necessary to suc cess In the w rk make a picture as true today as It was two thousand years ago. Variations of time and place make little difference; for the detail, if one Is to be successful on the farm, is much the same now ;s then. "The father himself we omit the original and translate as we can "has decreed that the ways of culti vation (of tho soil shall be hard." It has not been different, to this day. Some helps, Indeed, are supplied by modern knowledge. But we don't know our soils better than they did In Vergil's time: nor have we more minute Instruction of experience In the treatment of thorn, or in the manage ment of crops or production of fruits, or care of sheep and lambs and pro vision of forage for Winter, or irriga tion of fields during the growing sea eon of Summer. All this is recalled merely for the purpose of showing that rural and agricultural life, in its es sential conditions. Is and ever must be essentially the same. Hence it is a sure guess that few of these people, who are rushing from the towns and cities of all parts of the United States, to participate In these land lotteries, will keep and work their lands if they get them. Most of the successful ones will sell their lands, soon or later; some even before they make trial of life on the farm, others as soon after as they can. Yet all would believe, doubtless, that they would have been highly successful as farmers, had they never made the ex periment. So It was said of the ruler of an empire, who set out on his ca reer with the approval of a whole peo ple, yet fell from power In half a year. The farmer may have a very inde pendent life, but he must accept it as it is, make the most and best of it, and assure himself that it requires, the whole year round, the most careful and patient attention to every detail. Innumerable things, from which no direct profit can be obtained or ex pected, yet which In long run may contribute something, however little, to the general result, must have his thought from day to day, and every day. So with the duties that fall on the women of the family. But we suppose the townspeople who are rushing out to get these lands intend to sell out. The method of disposition adopted by the United States is open, it seems to us, to many objections. But perhaps a better one could not be de vised. In' the long run the lands will fall into the hands of people who will work them, and make for themselves and for future generations happy homes. Jil'PTlAL FLKillT FROM THE DOCTORS. Bridal couples of the State of Wash ington may lice to Oregon. Idaho and British Columbia, from examination fees of the "medical trust." Thus the doctors, reaching beyond the cradle and the coffin to the generation not yet started, find themselves "up against" untaxed marriage in neigh boring lands. The Washington Legislature was foolish to enact the medical examina tion law. However fine In theory the law may be. it is bound to fall of Its purpose, without similar legislation in other states. The very couples that the law was framed to reach evade It, while those who submit to it are put to. needless expense and annoyance. The state gets little or no good from the law, and the benefits accrue to a small element' of the population, the doctors. The Oregon Legislature was Importuned at its latest session to en act this law, but the brutality of the measure was too plain and It was lost. A more reasonable plan would be appointment of a lot of inspectors, paid by the slate, to perform the func tion now belonging to the whole medi cal fraternity. That would make a lot. of fat office. These officers could examine married couples free at In tervals, and in this way protect progeny from disease as well as by ex amination before marriage. They could extend their valuable duties to horses, cattle and swine, and soon put their state wholly on the blue-ribbon iit They might go so far as to in quire into the compatibility of eligi bles for marriage and occasionally knock on the door of the home to see how marital affairs were getting along. As soon as an unpromising infant ap peared they in their tender . mercy could make away with it and set the mother and father sooner to bringing forth a better, ... ' " It is obvious that the present law of the State of Washington is inadequate. The state needs a more effective way to put its hand Into tne private affairs of its citizens. A SHADOW. Fresh test of survival of the spirit of old questions in our politics, of which the crisis was the Civil War. will be presented at the next session of Congress. Virginia will offer for Statuary Hall, In the National Capitol, figures in marble of Washington and Lee. Mississippi will follow with her selections, one of which will be Jef ferson Davis. Will the statues of Lee and Davis be received In the National Capitol? Will there be protest? Will the protest reawaken sectional anger, animosity and recrimination? It could be wished this might not occui ; for the effect on the country will net be happy. Virginia has many names that might take the place of that of Lee. It would be better to place beside .the statue of Washington the statue of Patrick Henry or John Marshall. A statue of Thomas Jif ferson already stands in the rotunda of the Cnpitol. Lee is yet too modern. Local and sectional feeling is not yet exhausted, as it will be in future years. Lee certainly will be a dimin ishing figure. The same must be said of Jefferson Davis. They were men of their time, in the local circumstances in which they lived. But they had a narrow horizon. They were not Na tional men. In no sense do they belong to the American Pantheon, or to the National Valhalla. It Is fit, of course, .that Virginia and Mississippi should contain their statues and build their monuments. But the National Capitol Is not the proper place for either. To place them among the makers of the Nation is not to assert the truth of history, nor to present exemplars of the patriotism that has made the Nation what it is. They were local, not National statesmen. The allegiance of each was not to the United States, but to his state. And each fought for perpetuation of the blackest blot on democratic civilization or any other. The old controversy on this subject ought to be allowed to sleep. Admit that Lee and Davis were animated by an unselfish patriotism what was the quality of that patriotism? But let us not anticipate the discussion. Time enough for the country to consider an unhappy theme when such theme is thrust upon it. It should be said that this so-called National Valhalla Is but a poor Pan theon. It contains, and will contain, but a few who ought to be there. Illi nois' has filled up its niches with Gen eral Shields and Frances E. Willard. Abraham Lincoln is not there. Ordi nary politicians, like William Allen, of Ohio, and Goebel, of Kentucky, occupy other places. It .wouldn't be a bad idea, probably, to send the whole group back to the states from wnicn tney came. A REGRETTABLE CONDITION. Still The Oreeonian holds the opin ion Dint nnlv one road will enter Mid dle Oregon through the peschutes Can yon, because one is suttlclent Dy mat route and two will be very difficult to Kitllt lftrorivpr. the two will be in each other's way in operation, and the traffic will not demand two roads. Hence The Oregonlan expects to see tho ott-i'o discontinued, after awhile. and accommodation, reached between the contestants, in one way or another. Tt Li unfortunate that a long series nf facts onrt events, following one upon another, steadily confirms the general opinion in Oregon that the Harriman system Is not so earnest to build rail- fnndfl ftnvwhere in the state as to ob struct other builders and other roads. in the state and elsewhere, l nat was the effort on the North Bank Road; It was the purpose in making essay to reach Puget Sound, and It Is the effort in the Grays Harbor project. It 1b on everybody's mind and tongue, that nothing would be doing by the Harri man people in the Deschutes Canyon now but for the efforts of the rival road there. It is ree-rettable to witness a policy which, year after year, confirms the opinion of the people of Oregon that th. two rmrts of the Harriman pur pose, as to this state, is, first, to deny nr r,'ntnnno construction On ItS OWn account, and second, to keep others out or vex them elsewhere, it is a situ ation that makes it hard even to de mand Justice for the Harriman system, before the bar of public opinion in this state. STIMULANT FOR WHEAT GAMBLING. The Government crop report, which appeared Monday, like all of Its prede cessors of recent years, caused a fine spurt of business for the wheat specu lators. All of the gamblers; from the big fellows who buy and sell' in million-bushel lots down to the "pikers" who buv a thimbleful at a "bucket shop," on a one-cent margin, welcome these monthly "first aids to the wheat gambler." The three-cent break In prices, caused by Monday s report, sent many a lamD Dieatmg inio imauuai oblivion. 7,f these reports were at all reliable they might be of some value to farmers and to the trade; but, as has frequently been demonstrated, they are monstrously inaccurate, mis in accuracy enables shrewd business men like Patten, Armour and others of their class, iwho secure accurate in formation, to profit hugely at the ex pense of those who place confidence In the trade-disturbing, wortniess re ports of Secretary Wilson. The local situation in tne i-acmc Northwest offers an excellent exam ple of the utter lack of confidence in the Government reports. Here we have a territory which with a normal yield supplies more than one-fifth of all the available surplus of wheat ex ported from the United States. In this big territory there Is not a single grain dealer of any standing or importance, not a transportation company, not a shipping agency, nor a. grainbag house, that pays the slightest at tention to the Government crop re ports for Oregon, Washington and Idaho. All of these great Interests that are depended on to handle the big crop of this territory are forced to rely on private reports for any ac curate Information regarding the crops. In the Government report ap pearing Monday the Winter wheat crop of Washington, which Is two thirds of the 'total crop of the state, is Indicated at 1. 951. 000 bushels, a figure at least 10,000,000 bushels below the most conservative estimates of the men who will be called on to provide chips and cars for moving the wheat. The inaccuracy of these reports having been repeatedly proven, there remains but one branch of usefulness for them, and that Is to supply fuel for the speculative flame. On this point the New York Sun prints the follow ing: As far as we can ree. Secretary Wilson objects to speculation, or. as he calls It. gambling." In that event, why dues he periodically issue solemn announcements about the condition of the crops of cotton, wheat, etc.. the only function of the Gov ernment being that of stimulating the very evil he Is so fond of decrvlng? It seems to us. however, that he launches his male dictions only upon those who Ignore the department figures, and by succeeding prove their gross Inaccuracy. It would be a mighty good thing If the Department of Agriculture were to go out of the business altogether, and leave to the exchanges, boards of trade and private persons generally the enterprise of collect ing data on the growing crops. We can see no reason why Mr. Wilson should make an absurd termagant of himself, scoldlne every body who doesn't accept his figures blindly, and denouncing evefy one who prollta by repudiating them. This should satisfy Secretary Wil son's Bandon friend (the only apolo gist Wilson has in the Pacific North west) that The Oregonlan Is not alone In its demand for reform in our Gov ernment crop reporting service. RECLAMATION BY IRRIGATION. The National Irrigation Congress, now in session at Spokane, is enthusi astic in advocacy of the interests rep resented by Its name. It sees in Irri gation and through the reclamation of arid lands and the added profit to be derived from the irrigation of semi arid lands the great and Indeed the paramount duty of the Government at this time. After making due allowance for the enthusiasm of the specialist in any line of endeavor, the public will be con strained to regard this view with a large measure of approbation. Irri gation in the Interest of agriculture Is one of the oldest expedients, employed in the effort to make "two blades of grass grow where but one grew be fore"; to make semi-arid plains pay full tribute In golden grain to the needs of an increasing population, and to cause the desert literally to blossom as the rose. It was long ago discov ered that it was not an increase of precipitation In the form of rain and snow that was necessary to accomplish this object, but the conservation and distribution" of this moisture at the time and place needed, that was re quired. Agriculture has no record old enough to outdate this knowledge, and In no recent record of the cultivation of the soil looking to its increased productiveness has irrigation been ig nored. There are, Inaeed, few agri cultural areas In any country the pro ductiveness of which could not be In creased and the beauty of which could not be greatly enhanced by the intelli gent, systematic conservation and dis tribution of water that otherwise runs to waste' from the lavish precipitation of certain seasons of the year. It has, It Is trite, been the boast dur ing all of the period In which the soil of considerable portions of the Wil lamette Valley has been under cultiva tion that here the rainfall was ade quate to all purposes, while the truth is that water needed to flourish the products of orchard, meadow, field and garden has run to waste in Spring freshets, and In consequence the soil of the entire valley is dry as dust during many weeks immediately preceding the annual harvest. Everyone knows how parched and dry tho ground of this section Is in August, and usually also In July; how brown and parched are the pastures; how pinched and dis couraged the gardens appear; and how dull and dusty the foliage of the or chards. It is but recently, however, that the conservation and proper dis tribution of the generous, but not too generous, rainfall of this section has been suggested and as yet the sug gestion has not to any extent worth mentioning been acted upon. But, coming back to the National Irrigation Congress, The Oregonlan may say that it is in hearty accord with the great underlying principle which it advocates that of conserving the. annual precipitation in rain and snow and its distribution where' and when It is needed for the purposes of agriculture. ThU principle cannot be worked out in disjointed, haphazard schemes; it must follow general plans and approved methods of construction through competent engineering. The day of "go-as-you-please" Is over when it comes to any question that affects large bodies of people. With the irri gation question It may be said that it never existed, since the problems that It involved could and can only be worked out to logical results through the exercise cf skill and the expendi ture of large sums of money. It is pointed out by F. H. Newell, Director of the United States Recla mation Service, that the large invest ment that has been made by private corporations in irrigation systems has ' been stimulated by the work done by the Government. The Government has been criticised because its work is slow. The answer is that all work of permanent nature, the construction of which involves engineering skill and responsible directi6n, is slow, and per haps especially so when restricted in its movement by rock-ribbed regula tions In regard to hours of labor, qual ity of material, etc. When completed, however, such work stands the test of time and service. The people west of the Mississippi generally are in sym pathy with the work of reclamation by irrigation. They feel , the need and have seen the results of irrigation, and are loud and even extravagant in their demand for more specific aid In Its promotion. In this demand the South and the Southwest join. Much will be heard upon this subject within the next few days, since irrigation experts Federal and corporate armed for the fray, have met to talk the matter over and tell each other facts as they see them. The public looks on with in terest that is fed, by the hope that the cause of reclamation by irrigation will be greatly promoted by the work of the congress. Sentiment or civic pride has for long waged unsupported war upon the bill board nuisance, pbtrusive, intrusive, unsightly, these billboards have offend ed the sensibilities of our citizens and defaced the landscape, claiming right of way at every available point in and about the city. All of this time there has been, presumably, no relief from this nuisance except such tmporary rellef as could be secured by turning the eyes from a greater to a lesser advertising monstrosity, made gaudy by the liberal use of highly-colored paint and the vivid imagination of the billboard artist. . Now, however, It has teen discovered that since 1902 the City Council, under authority of the city charter, could have abolished these billboards and thus come to the succor of a defaced landscape and a disgusted public, had it chosen to do so. or had knowledge or its power In J the premises. Clamor for the enact ment of state law or city ordinance could generally be stilled by a search of the state or municipal statutes ana the application of the knowledge gained thereby to the case in hand, by those whose duty it is to enforce the law. This Is only another illustration of the fact that it is not more law that we need, but the enforcement of such laws as we have. Lord Broughton's "Recollections of a' Long Life," just published in Eng land, is a book which the review writ ers say has many striking qualities. Lord Broughton was an intimate friend of Byron, knew Sheridan, Grattan, Canning and all the celebrities of his time. His two heroes were Byron and Napoleon, in different fields, "great 'mari of destiny." Wnen he saw Na poleon he was deeply affected: "I pos itively found my eyes moistened at the sight of the world's wonder." He was cut to the heart at the abdication of Bonaparte, and -his diary is full of sad tales about the last days of the great soldier. As a Radical member of West minster in the Commons he played a leading part in the early struggles for paliamentary reform. That Lord Broughton may be better recognized by the general reader It may be as well to say that he was Byron's famil iar friend, John Cam Hobhouse. The enterprising citizens of Coos Bay do not propose to lose any of the ad vantage already gained in the way of harbor Improvement, and the Port Commission at Marshfield has guar anteed $50,000 for the maintenance of the Government dredge Oregon, which is now at work in the harbor. There has been a marked improvement in the channel over Coos Bay bar since work was begun, and the results achieved have been of a nature that fully warrants continuation of the ef forts of the people. Railroad connec tion may be postponed for a short time, but no region having as good an entrance from the sea and so many varied resources back of it can fail to prosper and in time railroads will en ter the Coos Bay country because they can no longer afford to remain away from it. ' A mass meeting of New York an archists has been called for tonight at which Emma Goldman, Alex Berkman, the assassin who attempted to mur der Henry C. Frick, and Harry Kelly, the agitator, will speak. The occasion is celebration of the uprising in Spain, and from the list of speakers it should be sufficiently Inflammatory to please the most rabid foreigner who ever left the old country for the country's good and sought refuge in this asylum of the free. It will always be a matter of great regret to respectable Ameri cans that such' Incendiaries as "The Goldman" and her associates cannot be deported to the countries from which they came. In this country they contribute absolutely nothing but trouble, and are of the meanest class of parasites, living solely by the work of others. ' There Is every sort of human delin quency. Now there is a story of a father who, unwilling to be disturbed In his slumbers, caused his young babe to be placed at night in the attic, where in a week or two, after much wailing, the little one starved and died. This Individual seems to have sup posed that he had done his whole duty when he had caused the child to come into the world. It is an extreme case; but there's a multitude more, who, careless themselves and pursuing their foolish and worthless ways, think the world owes them and their progeny a living. Even newspapers are pub iiahori for delectation, benefit and ex cuse of this class of population; who always are exhorted In elections to vote for "the rights of the people." Ttia Hnrriman force are to with draw 600 laborers from the Deschutes Canyon as a result of the successrui efforts of the Porter Bros, in blocking fonotriictlon of the Harriman road through the canyon. Now if the Por ter Bros, or their bacKers win imme diately employ these 609 men and nian them mi construction worn on the opposition line, the public will be more fully convinced than ever that some one intends to build a railroad into Central Oregon. a -:if!ent of the city, driving out i .. 1 noa Pity Park on the Sandy road, on Sunday, observed a number of persons shooting half-grown Chinese pheasants, out there. They had shot , nnmhrc This is a legal offense. and despicable, besides. The lust to kill is among the most aimcuii oi me desires of degenerate or unregenerate nature, to brine under control. Deputies of the Game Warden could lend some help; but tney can i ue everywhere. . Of course th people of Cleveland i mi nrpfor to Day five-cent fares .v, tviov mie-ht have three-cent fares, on their streetcars. But they don't be lieve three-cent fares will pay ex penses; in other words, they don't be lieve the service can be afforded for three cents. That's the reason why they have turned that faker, Tom Johnson, down. Heat and humidity did their deadly work upon poorly-nourished, miserably-born infants in New York last Monday. Forty little bodies, twenty from the Foundling Asylum in the morgue at Bellevue dock, bore mute testimony to the inhospitable condi tions of their lot in life and their rescue therefrom by death. The cash required for a trip from the Middle West to Spokane and re turn would make the first payment on a good 40-acre farm in the Willamette Valley, whose products, if Industriously cultivated, would wipe out the balance. As a meeting place ror the National Irrigation Congress in 191, The Ore gonlan nominates the -terminus of the Deschutes railroad, or railroads, in Crook County. Oregon. Sir Thomas Lipton's press agen needs "jacking up." Not a word have wl had lately, by cable or mail, con cerning a new challenge for the cup. Just to think Harriman could have entered Eastern Oregon without trou ble f he had started before the time was over-ripe. Has anyone noticed the East Side push clubs clamoring for location of the new City Jail on that side of the river? - - Grandest winning in the land lot tery is the picture publication of the successful ones' in" the newspapers.' VISITOR'S VIEW OF BILLBOARDS. Portland tarn Well Afford to Dispense With Revenue From Them. PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (To the Editor.) As a stranger. I would not "butt into" the discussion in your .ocal columns of .the billboard nuisance except for the fact that one gentleman (whose name I do not now recall), as quoted, states that billboards are useful and necessary in masking offensive rubbish heaps which might otherwise give the city a bad name. Inferentially, I assume he fears this dis repute from visitors, strangers and pos sible settlers, and that Is my only excuse for these lines. As I read the gentleman's argument, I think he is wrong both in premise and conclusion. Indeed, his deduction is really one of the strongest arguments against the billboard nuisance and are so considered in many cities which are and have been wrestling with this problem. The plea Is suggestive of that of the per son overdosed with perfume; namely, the necessity for one strong odor to overcome another mal-odor, instead of striking at the root of the evil by applying personal cleanliness. . If the police and health authorities will see to it that no deposits of filth and rubbish are made In vacant places, there will be no need of using another nuisance to cover it up. Nor will the billboards become an invitation to the public to make privies of places which ought to be provided by the city with sanitary public toilets. It should be borne in mind that what Is an offense to the eye, or other senses, is oftlmes quite as Important a matter for regulation as an offense to the nose. When a thing becomes an offense, both to eye and nose, and becomes in ad dition a harbinger ,of unhealthf ul condi tions, it is unquestionably a nuisance that ought to be abated. The statement that the billboard is an advertising necessity is, to my mind, not well founded. As a means of general advertising. It is useful but not essential. There are other means equally efficacious. It Is not good as a special advertising medium except in isolated cases and classes of commodities. I have made quite a close study of advertising and am interested in good advertising, but I believe that the billboard is greatly over rated. Moreover, by Its general prohibi tion, all merchants and users will be on equal footing so far as the billboards are concerned. To limit spaces or localities will simply tend to increase the value of the space, placing It only within the reach of the merchant with the longest purse. As a revenue project, the city can better provide for its budget in less offensive ways. I hope no offense will be taken to these somewhat critical remarks. As a stranger, Portland has impressed me most favorably, particularly because of its ap parent cleanliness in public and open places. I hope this illusion (if such it be) may not be dispelled by any retrogressive action upon the part of the city authori ties, for it will otherwise give me pleasure to speak and write well of "The City of Roses." You may make a paltry hundred or two, and your advertising merchants may make a few dollars, by the licensing of billboards, but your city will lose thousands and hundreds of thousands in prestige. Esthetlclsm is growing rapidly in this country and the city which hopes to upbuild and add to its residential value by Inducing a population of wealth. Intelligence and refinement must look sharp to the necessities of civic sanita tion, refinement and beautiflcation. GEORGE- H. STIPP, of California. SOUTH PORTLAND PARKS. Appeal That South Portland Be Not Overlooked. PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (To the Ed itor.) You say in The Oregonlan to day tha it is your "firm opinion that the city should purchase land for two more small parks, both on the East Side." You have never yet advocated the purchase of land In South Portland for parks. One of our enterprising land owners hss offered to give the city land a mile long and 60 feet broad for the extension of the boulevard system. Give it! Not sell it to the city for 33000 or more per acre! And still our claims for a park are entirely Ignored. We have one pitiful litle plot called a park, and that, by the way, was given to the city. This section of Portland has hundreds of beautiful building spots commanding an extent of moun tain and river view found nowhere else In Oregon, and yet we are Ignored in the plans of beautifying our city as completely as If we did not exist. The property-owners of South Portland will be duly called upon to pay taxes on the bonds Issued to buy these numerous parks in the other districts. Should we not in justice share the benefits, and will not The Oregonlan, so fair and impartial to all as a rule, voice our claims for UB? SOUTH PORTLAND. How could it have been overlooked by the writer of this letter that The Oreiforilan has warmly approved the acceptance and improvement of Ter williger Boulevard for a width of one hundred feet (not sixty)? This would make a most beautiful Improvement for South Portland. Besides, there should be a small park in some suitable situa tion, below this boulevard. But what suitable situation is offered? ALFALFA IN MALHEUR COCA'TY. Dr. "Withycombe Repeats the Story of Its Successful Cultivation CORVALLIS. Or., Aug. 9. (To the Edi torsPermit me to say in reply to the comment In the Baker City Herald, which you published in, today's Oregonlan, I wish to assure Brother Kenneday that I said just exactly what I meant regarding the alfalfa at Vale. In making what may seem an extravagant statement there was no thought of flattery, but simply expression of an honest conclusion after a careful examination. It may be of interest to your readers, as well perhaps to the editor of the Ba ker City Herald, if some facts are given relating to the financial returns from al falfa production in portions of Malheur County. The farmers In the Malheur, Owyhee and Bully Creek Valleys for the past few years have given considerable attention to the production of alfalfa seed. The industry, It can be 6aid, has been phenomenally successful. For ex ample, the first crop is cut for hay, yield ing from two to three tons per acre, and the second crop is harvested for seed, which yields from ISO to as high as $85' worth of seed per acre. Thus the two crops yield an annual revenue of about $100 per acre. If there is another section of Oregon that can duplicate this I have not yet had the good fortune of finding it. It is to be sincerely hoped that more of this valuable alfalfa and fruit land will be brought under the ditch at an early date. JAMES WITHYCOMBE. The New Tariff. Chicago Tribune. The ffew law has manifest defects. It would have had more but for the force ful Interposition of the President. Be cause of its shortcomings It did not re ceive a solid Republican vote. But one of the Senators who would not vote for tt was compelled to admit that It was 'Superior to any bill framed for revenue purposes, and, as far as the schedules go, better than the Dlngley law." That does not state the case fully. The Din gley law was the high water mark of ultra protectionism. This year's legisla tion is significant in that It indicates that the tide has turned. The long bat tle between protection and free trade has ended In favor of protection. The contest of the future will be between moderate and ultra protection. , t THE MIRACLES OF' ST. ANN. But Approval of the Miracle Muat First Be Had From Rome. New Orleans Times-Democrat. . The novena preparatory to the feast of St. Ann, which is now going on in St; Ann's Church In this city, is part of a great celebration which is taking place in many Catholic churches throughout the world at this time. Veneration of the reltcs?oft. Ann is, part of the devotions of the tnine days' celebration. In the city of New York the newspapers are prlntfng an account of two miracles sup posed to have been performed through the intercession of this saint for two of her den-out clients praying at her shrine. In one case, it is said that sight was re stored to a woman who had been blind many years, and that a lame man who entered the church on crutches walked out freely without their aid. The priests in New York will investigate the reported miracles carefully before expressing an opinion. ' No strange happening, how ever, is ever regarded as a miracle in the Catholic Church until tbe church has passed upon it formally, catholic peo ple are allowed to think as they please about it, but the declaration that a mir acle has been worked must come from Rome. Father Bogaerts, pastor of ' 9t. Ann's Church, who has a shrine to St. Ann in the church which bears her name, and the only shrine to that saint In the city, has also a notable relic of the ealnt, which Is exposed for veneration during days of the novena. Father Bogaerts said that he did not claim any miracles as having taken place before this shrine, but he did know that many, many pray ers were answered. Every evening when the devotions are held prayer is offered for special blessings desired, and Father Bogaerts said the faith of the people in the goodness and power of. St. Ann is strong. Father Bogaerts says that the relic which the church possesses Is a piece of the bone of St. Ann. It was given to the Rev. Father Le France, the first pastor of the church, by Bishop Portier, the first Bishop of Mobile, in 1851, duly authenticated by him. Father Bogaerts says that the body of St. Ann was brought from Palestine to Constantinople in A. D. 701 and placed In the. church, which was built over it by Emperor Justinian. Through the" cru saders the relics were brought to. West ern Europe, where they were deeply ven erated in the churches which were so fortunate as to get them. The Church of St. Ann in Rome possesses the left hand of St. Ann. The cathedral at Bologna has part of her head. In the cathedral a novena Is held in her honor once every year, and every Tuesday there are spe cial devotions. Part of the body of St. Ann is in the church In Apt in South east France, and other parts In churches In the Rhine provinces. The church in Duren has part of her head. In Cologne three churches have three different rel ics. The right hand of St. Ann is ven erated in St. Ann's Church in Vienna, where It is exposed every year on the day of the feastr and many miracles are reported from that shrine. In many churches Father Bogaerts says there are wax facsimiles of recognized relics. ROCKEFELLER, JIL, NOT UNWORTHY He Has None of the Vices of American Millionaires Sons. Washington Herald. Cut to the quick, evidently, and thor oughly outraged at continued newspaper nagging of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., that young man's former pastor, Dr. Dowllng. of Brooklyn, has entered a spirited defense of his ertswtille associate and declares that the young man in the case is entirely worthy of any citizen's unqualified Teepect, good will and friend ship. And when one comes to think of it, it is a singular phase of American journal ism that this man should have been so constantly and continuously the target for unkind comment, sneering allusion and sarcastic reference. His Sunday school endeavors, for one thing, have been ridiculed unmercifully; he has been scoffed at as a smug hypocrite and laughed at as a "fake'' enthusiast. And yet he seems to have obtained and held fast the high regard of one of Brook lyn's most scholarly and consecrated clergymen; a gentleman no longer jointly Interested with him in church work, to be sure, but one who must have had fair and ample opportunity to study young Mr. Rockefeller exhaustively, neverthe less. Mr. Rockefeller apppears to seek a rather quiet and unostentatious sort of life. He figures in no midnight automo bile smashups; he does not frequent the Great White Way in New York. His name has never been connected with an Evelyn Thaw; he does not hang around the stage doors. He owns, nor patronizes no racetracks: he figures in no question able court proceedings. He does not give vulgar and disgusting dinners to disrep utable friends, and he is not known to be the "angel" behind any aspiring "star" in musical comedy circles. In short, Mr. Rocekeller apppears to be an eminently clean and upright young man neither startlingly brilliant nor asininely dull; neither Immaculately white nor no ticeably spotted. Why, indeed, should such a young man be the persistent butt of a lot of cheap gibes and doubtful humor? Appendicitis From Sharpening; Knives. Westminster Gazette. Sir William Bull writes to the papers to suggest that appendicitis arises from our habit of sharpening knives. "The head of every family invariably sharpens his carving knife as he stands before the joint. This means a shower of mi croscopic steel shavings on the meat." Appendicitis has increased enormously of late years. Perhaps our grandfathers always used blunt knives or dissected the joint In ways of which polite society has kept no record. Clam-Dredger No Longer. Davenport, la, Dispatch. "Unlucky Jim," a clam dredger, who bore that name because he had a wife and nine children and had never made a good "find," has discovered a $3000 pearl in a clam he opened near Lansing. W. L. Gardner, of. Leclaire, and I. E. An thony, of "Comanche, bought the pearl for $3000 cash. This is a large price paid for a fresh-water pearl. The pearl weighs 60 grains. Is flesh-colored, of fine luster and without a speck and an almost per fect sphere. Experts believe the purchas ers will realize at least $5000 for the gem In New York. The Mombasa Massacre. London Observer. (Ex-President Roosevelt, who is at pres ent shooting big game- in South Africa, ac companied by a cinematograph operator, has recently added two fine giraffes a hia bag.) O, Theodore, in days of yore Your courage I admired! What fame you won with rod and gun. What laurels you acquired! The grizzly bear, within hia lair, You bravely would pureue. And goodness knows what buffaloea And other things you slew. Ere yet, by cinematograph, I saw you slaughter a giraffe! That kindly beast (alas, decease?!) Is harmless aa a cat; It seems a shame you shouldn't aim At higher game than that! Go forth and track the eavage yak, 3o eeek the tiger's gore. Pursue the gnu, the kangaroo. The lion and the boar! Go rob the bison of her calf. But, oh! don't murder the giraffe! For if. in short, your views of sport Such massacres allow. You'd better tay at home and alay The cart horse and the cow; Or men will doubt those tales about Your sportsmanship and grit. Who read with gloom upon your tomb In blood-red letters writ: "Here Liee a fearful epitaph The Man Who -urderedi a- Giraffei' MIGHTY HARD PHILOSOPHY. ( How Much Truth In the Statements, ' . Let Each Header Judge. ' A text is set by the Washington Post for a discetirse on men and women and on their relations towards each other and towards the. world they live In. which is treated by several writers in a way that does little credit either to men or women. The Post Itself says: The devotion of the average man to the newspapers; his narrow-mtr.ded local political point of view; his Inability to improve his wife's mind un any subject outside of do mestic economy; his ignorance of theology and philosophy; his contempt of the esthet ics, have become a matter ot careful thought on the part of the women that own him, but who are forced, when the creature Is dragged Into cultivated society, to be ashamed ot him. The only remedy for this would be to. encourage the male sex that la. those ot, the sex capable of it to go in for the high- er education. Hut, then, t he question arise. Would this process not divert men's nuntta from th- business of earning a living? . . .The Louisville Courier-Journal treats fhe subject ih this way, with more se verity perhaps towards women than to wards men, viz.: The American husband is known all over the world for the liberality with which he provides for' his family. He goes to his hole-ln-the-wall In a city canyon early in the morning and grubs for money until the dew la upon the grass out In the country of which he knows little, and the lights upon the asphalt in the city of which he knows everything. He pours his earnings into his helpmeet's lap now and again, hurrying back absent-mindedly to the scene of his grubbing. His wife takes the lapful to a banker, if it Is large enough, transforms it Into a letter of credit and goes to Europe. In six cases out of seven the grubher hasn't time to follow. When she 1r at home, the American wife is prominent in the -Culture Club of Keokuk." or the Now Thought Club of New York, as the case may he The hus band Is hard at It in Keokuk or New York, because the family stat-of-mlnd Illustrates the contention of an English litterateur that everyone ' is hard up; some persons for a shilling and ome for a million pound!. There are usually larger motor cars limn the one the provider has provided, and there are always newer ones. And there are pri vate cars and steam yachts, palaces in the city and villas by the sea. These all of theseare In turn necessities to the Ameri can family. It would perhaps be unjusa to aay that Americans want the necessities more ar dently than Europeans. A lropean noble man would marry the Witch of Hndor-wlth 110.000.000. The European woman marries an Income, without worrying about the de fects of the man to whom It attaches. If she gets the chance. But the American is more willing than others to work from early morning until late evening to acquire the necessities the ever-lncreaslngly-costly necessities'. He Is, therefore, too much oc cupied with the chase tor cash to Improve his mind' otherwise than to w het the keen edge of his appetite for strenuous endeavor by figuring upon the coup of tomorrow while appearing as a background to the picture of his wife's magnificence In an opera box. There can be little learning without a little leisure. And there must be a deal of lavish providing. What is the provider to do about It? What if they please are the provlded-for going to do about It? Foresit Areas In the South. 1 From Science. The South, with 27 per cent, of the total area of the United States, contains about 42 per cent of the total forest area of the country- The forest area by states is as follows: Alabama. 20.000.000 acres; Arkansas, 34,200,000; Florida, 20. 000,000; Georgia, 22,300,000; Kentucky. 10. 000,000; Lousiana, 16.500,000; Maryland, 2.200,000' Mississippi, 17,500.000; North Car olina, 19,600,000: South Carolina. 12.000.000; Tennessee, 15.000.090; Texas, ao.000.o00: Vir ginia, 14,000.000. and West Virginia, 9.HX1. 000. The South, it will be seen, has still much of the virgin forest of the coun try. This foreJst must be used, of course. In order to meet the steadily expanding wants of this section. It must be used in such a manner, however, that the very most may be made from its annual cut, while at the same time this cut Is being replaced by a new growth. In this way its timber will remain a source of per petual wealth. The importance of forest conservation to southern Interests Is clearly understood by the people of the South. The future of the South Is more nearly bound up in the plan of forest preservation, protection of the water power streams and woodworking Indus tries, than is anything now before the people of this part of the country. Not only Is the protection of the watershed, which will some day furnish the power to run all manufacturing establish ments in the entire South, an important matter to the South, but the industries depending upon the forest products will also ba benefited by the protection thrown about the remaining timbered area. German View of Our MIHIonarles. Berlin Tageblatt. They all came to New York, Chicago or Philadelphia with one shirt and with 1 cent in the pocket of tho only other gar ment. All served as bootblacks, errand boys or even in more humble positions, and in the second week had saved enough to buy a waistcoat. After one month they appeared before their respective employ ers clad in new clothes and told them with imposing self-confidence that the organization of their business was de fective and required reorganization. A year later the boy has become a partner, In two years he has outstripped the for mer boss in wealth, and a year later he has grown smart enough to kill off the benefactor of other days. All American millionaires arise at 3 in the morning, eat and drink almost nothing, cease their work at midnight and allow only those to live whom they think are good enough to invite. . . . Every dollar king founds a university, an opera, a museum or a picture gallery. Life becomes a burden to them when there are no more com petitors in their branch worthy of de struction. Then they He down and die of ennui. Boot SInkluff a Engineer Sleeps. Philadelphia Record. While the engineer lay asleep in a cabin of the Delaware, a passenger and freight steamboat which plies between Trenton, N. J., and Philadelphia, a night watch man oft the pier where the boat was docked noticed early today that the little steamer was slowly sinking. Arousing the engineer, both men worked to save the craft from going down, but the leak which caused the boat to settle could nut rbe found and the craft was almost en tirely submerged. King Kdwurd'c Attractive Job. Washington Herald. The more we think-of it the more thoroughly we become convinced that Edward VII has the most attractive king Job in Europe. THESE ARE TRIFLKH. "How was It he came to grief?" "By be ing a joy rider." Baltimore American. Helping each other: "Let me see didn't you tell me to remind you to get something when we gjt to town?" "I believe I did." "What was It?" Judge. He Knew Mrs.: "Oh. Jack! Dolly told me the most exciting secret, and made me swear never to tell a living soul!" Mr Well, hurry up with it. I'm late to the office now. Cleveland Leader. "Do you thinkUhat man la suffering from 'exaggerated ego'?" "A man never suffers from exaggerated ego," answered the emi nent alienist. "He always appears to enjoy it." Washington Star. "I see that Jane Bleeker always takes Charlie Bralnard with her when she drives her new motor car. I thought she favored Clarence Green." "Yes. but poor Clarance Isn't any -good at pumping up tires." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Say. ma." queried little Ida Innltt, "why do women always cry at a wedding?" "The married ones cry, my dear, because they know how it is themselves, and the un married ones because they don't," replied Mrs. Innltt. Chicago Daily News. He fo you remember the night I pro posed to you? She Yes, dear. He We snt for an hour, and you never opened your mouth. She Yes, I remember, dear. He Ah, that was the happiest hour of my life. Philadelphia Inquirer.