8 THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, SATtJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1909. , . , 1 i i PORTLAND. OREGOX. Entered t Portland. Oreson. Postoltlc u feond-Class Matter. bubsrrtotion Kate Iararlablr la Advance. (By Mall.) Daily. Sunday Included, one year 'S2 L il.y. Sunday included, six month 4--J Is;!y. Sunday included, three monihl... 2.-5 la.iy. Sunday included, one month ' t. without Sunday, one year " "0 fnv.y. without Sundar. six month 3 23 ii:y. without Sunday, three month.... 1.75 without Sunday, one month. Weekly, one year 150 funday, one year... 2 50 tuuday and weekly, on year 8-50 (By Carrier. ril!y. Sunday Included, on year 9-00 lit:.v. Sunday Included, on month "5 Xomt to Ramlt Send postoftlce money : ortler. express order or person! check on 'Jnur local hank. Stamp, coin or currency -e at the Bender's risk. Glva poFtofflce ad jUrers In full. Including county and state. I Postaee Rate 10 to !4 pag-es. 1 cent: 19 to 2S page. 2 cent; 30 to 40 p". 3 cent: 4 to 641 pace. 4 cent. Foreign postage douhle rate. F-atrrn Business Office The S. C. Beck wlrh Special Aeency New York, room 49 S Tribune building. Chicago, room 510-611 -Tribune building. PORTLAND, SATURDAY, RFPT 4, 1909. LIMITS OF PROHIBITION. "State-wide prohibition" will be at tempted in Oregon, by Initiative peti tion. The vote will be talsen next year. The Oregonian thinks it will not carry. It Is an unreasonable and extreme proposition. Local option as sures all the prohibition that is re quired. It offers opportunity even for more than is practicable; as the im possibility of preventing use of liquors in "dry" counties abundantly proves. While the liquor business must al ways be held under close .restriction, end while opportunity must be given to rural and village populations to forbid the sale, if they desire, prohibi tion should not be adopted as a state policy unless the state wishes to be or become a rural and commonplace community, like Maine, Alabama, or Kansas. But even in those states the eaie and use of liquors cannot be pre vented. It is a farce and sham. Let localities that wish to prohibit eale and use do so, or make the at tempt. But they never will enforce It. But state-wide prohibition is another thing. Still less can It be enforced; and, moreover, if attempted. It puts the state in the foolish class. The reputation of a prohibition state Is not a reputation for Judgment and sanity, but for fads and chimeras. Here is Portland, an important city. It is becoming: a large city. Other principal cities and towns of the state are growing at rapid rate. Now, while tale of liquors is not a condition on w hich the life of a city depends, yet sale of liquors, as of all other things, is an actual necessity in every im portant city. Think of the absurdity of cutting off the sale of any com modity, in an Important city! Sale and use of liquors is an im portant adjunct of social life, and of commercial or business life as well. You will not find a first-rate or high class hotel in any "dry'" tow; nor any of the higher activities of push and energy. This la not to say that liquor 'does everything or anything. It Joes signify that no active town ;s a prohibition town. Active towns don't vote prohibition. They don't live on liquor, but liquor is one of the ad juncts of active and varied life, every where. What Is called state-wide prohibi tion will be brought before the people of Oregon for a vote. We think it will be rejected, because it will not be doomed reasonable or desirable. Regu lation and restriction of sale of 1 iquors is reasonable. Prohibition is not. Be sides, It never can be enforced in any active or bustling city. Think of the insanity of attempting It in New York or Boston, In Philadelphia or Pitts burg, in Cincinnati or Cleveland, in San Francisco or Denver, in Seattle or Portland not to speak of the thou sand smaller towns! RAILROAD EARNINGS INCREASING. The return of prosperity Is quite prominently disclosed In the ' current number of the "Railway Earnings" supplement of the New York Finan cial Chronicle. The June figures cover about 200.000 miles of the principal railroad systems of the country and show an Increase in gross earnings of J24.708.80S over the gross earnings for June, 1908. Some of the gilding is taken off this showing -when it is stated that the June earnings in 1908 were $26,987,858 less than for June, 1907. By these comparisons to are, given a forcible reminder of the dras tic punishment which high finance brought down on the country in the closing weeks of 1907. From the gross earnings standpoint it is apparent that we are not yet back to our nor mal business. The silver lining of the cloud, however, appears in the net earnings figures. The policy of re trenchment which was enforced with such vigor all over the United States certainly produced wonderful results, for it transformed a loss of $4,557,091 in net earnings in June, 1908. to a gain in net earnings In June, 1909, of $14,184,380. This Is a greater Increase in net earnings than Is shown in any three of the best years which preceded It. Be fore regarding these enormous net earnings too seriously, due considera tion must be made of the) methods w hich produced them. On every road and In every department, to meet the demands of the stockholders and pre vent the use of red Ink on the ledgers, the expense accounts have been cut heavily. Quite naturally there is a limit to this extreme retrenchment. Roadbed and equipment must be kept in fairly good shape, and the system organized for the expeditious move ment of traffic. That limit has appar ently been reached, and from this time forward it will be necessary to make heavy Inroads on these net earnings in order to keep the roads and equip ment In condition for handling the rapidly swelling tide of traffic. Evidence is appearing that some of the cost of this retrenchment policy is about to be passed on to the public In the shape of a car shortage. It was Just about two years ago that James Hill made his famous speech in which he said that the country was then In actual need of $5,000,000,000 worth of new railroads and equipment, and that, unless we got them. Industrial chaos was a strong possibility. Rail roads are now building thousands of miles of new track, and are placing heavy orders for equipment. To de liver the needed supplies will, how ever, require several months, and meanwhile the victims of the system, which is responsible for the largest r.et earnings In proportion to the gross that have ever been shown by Amer ican railroads may as well prepare for the coming car shortage. With more business than "we had at a correspond ing period In 1907, we are in no bet ter condition to handle the traffic. There Is every reason for believing that the year will go out with the railroads more effectually congested with freight than at any previous time In their history. THE RETVRN OF REASON. Mr. Adolph Schmuck, of Indianapo lis, has written a letter to the New York Evening Post on the conse quences of a free-for-all direct pri mary, as developed In his city. Mr. Schmuck Is not - politician, but an ob servant private citizen, who has no personal objects In relation to politics. His conclusion Is that some form of representative action is necessary for guidance of the people In large masses. "Without some representative wheel in the system," it Is asked, "how shall many candidates be reduced to a few, so that the Issues may be defined and a popular vote be anything more than a lottery?" Mr. Schmuck proceeds to say that "the defect works evil In two ways. It either causes good candidates to keep out of the field altogether, or it endangers the chance of the election of any of them when they do enter the field." Which Is familiar, Indeed, In the history of the direct primary in Oregon. Here is the detail of the sit uation In Indianapolis: The first trouble arose In regard to the Mayoralty candidate. Each party had a candidate who waa regarded a being backed by ring Influence. It was even hint ed that those men bad bipartisan support and that there was an understanding be tween their backer.. In each case the sup posed ring candidate waa opposed by a man of medtocra ability, but regarded a being at least honest In Intention. The election was gratifying In that the ring candidate were overwhelmingly defeated, but It waa far from satisfactory In the quality of the candidates actually choen. Now, It la no mere theory to say that better candidates were shut out by the direct primary law. In the case of each party & third man. of far greater ability than the nominee, con sidered entering the race. Each vra willing to enter the race on condition that the two opposing candidates withdraw a seemingly arrogant demand, but really the only practi cal condition. This writer proposes what seems to us an unavailing remedy. He proposes that the candidates. In case none of them should receive a majority on the trial vote, should maet and cast their votes for each other, In proportion to the number each received In the elec tion, and thus gradually eliminate the superfluous or unnecessary candidates. But this would be a dangerous method, and it would be denounced as "ring government" at once. To representative government. In some form or fashion, for direction of the primary, it Is necessary to revert. Plurality rule, which the direct pri mary, operating without guide or com pass, produces or attempts,' is the ne gation "and destruction of all rational or sane political effort. Plurality rule, the rule of meager plurality, will not be submitted to. It Is not representa tive; It is regarded as a farce, and the primary, therefore, must be1 directed in some proper way by representative action. ' The direct primary, we believe, will stand. But representation of party principles and purposes, and of effec tive government through party organ ization. Is indispensable under our sys tem. We shall not be content with government by a Czar on the one hand, nor by an unorganized and irresponsi ble mob on the other. We are learning many things; or rather we are learn ing over again many old things and making them new again. Representa tives of parties and of people should be selected to -guide and direct the choice of candidates not absolutely, for the right of rther and independent action through the primary will remain; but to make selection" of candidates that will represent the policy and purposes of the parties, and to recommend them for nomination and election. It. de volves on the Republican party of Ore gon, representing the dominant politi cal element and sentiment of the stata, to do this, to take this course; and, as we read in one of the great masters historical dramas, to "help to set a head on headless Rome." PRO AND CON FOR DR. COOK. If Dr. Cook really reached the North Pole on April 21, 1908, his scientific observations will furnish pretty con vincing proof of It. Besides that,, they will enable astronomical experts to check his route day by day. He says among other things, for example, that on April 6 he determined by-the sun that he was In' latitude 86 degrees 36 minutes, and longitude 94 degrees 2 minutes. He has undoubtedly, if he cares for his reputation, preserved the calculations by which he reached this and every similar result. Scientific men will go over them all with minute diligence, and if he has made any blun ders or departed from the truth in any particular, detection Is almost certain. Almost, but not quite. It Is con ceivable that he sat down In some comfortable nook during the long Arc tic night and laid out an imaginary route to the Pole, with suitable halt ing places. For each halt he could devise false observations of the sun, if he liked, and It would not require much mathematical knowledge to make them fit exactly to the place and time. It might all be faked so skill fully as to deceive everybody on earth. We must remember, though, that trav elers in Arctic regions do not confine themselves to astronomical observa tions. They Investigate the magnetic needle, they, keep records of the tem perature. They give detailed descrip tions of their halting places. So much has to be noted and recorded that a man trying to compose a fictitious ac count would be almost certain to make some awkward slip which would be tray him. Still he might not. He might possibly compose an entire set of scientific data which would look as if they were genuine, though they were all made at his comfortable fireside in an Eskimo hut. Thus the world might be deceived for a time, but in the end the decep tion would transpire. Other explorers would be sure to try to follow the Imaginary route to the Pole which Dr. Cook had charted, and his undoing would speedily ensue. They would find that the halting-places he had so mi nutely described did not exist at all. The- observations they would make would Jar with his at every point. In evitable exposure awaits tha traveler who varies from the truth in any par ticular. How, then, can a man hope to Impose upon the world with a fabu lous account of an entire Journey?. Still Dr. Cook may have gone near to the Pole without quite reaching it. He may honestly have thought he was at the exact spot when he was not there; or he may have decided to claim the credit dishonestly. The temptation to do the latter must have been very strong If he fonnd himself only a few miles from the goal with no possibility of going farther, but he would hardly have been likely to yield to it. Grant ing that he had no moral scruples, he would have been deterred by the dread of going down through all future hls torv as a shameless liar. Even If he could not reach the Pole, it will be reached sometime, and the falsity of his description exposed. Nor Is it like lv that he made any mistake about his locality when he thought he was at the Pole. At noon on April 21. 190S, the sun was In a certain position in the sky. -which Dr. Cook could ascertain accurately with simple Instruments. This would infallibly tell where he was. unless, as we have said, he cooked up a fictitious observation of the sun to agree with a false diary of his trip. Probably the sun would be the only heavenly body he could observe, since it is in sight at the Pole continuously from March 20 to September 22, and the stars are therefore invisible. . After all, then, our ultimate reli ance for some years at least must be upon Dr. Cook's integrity. In course of time his statements can all be checked and either verified or discred ited, but it may take a decade or more. If he is a man who would descend to give a false report of his Journey and clain a glory which he does not de serve, there Is no insuperable difficulty in the way of his doing it and going unexposed for years. Much more dif ficult frauds have been perpetrated with prolonged success, the Imitation of ancient manuscripts, for example. One may even go so far as to lament that Dr. Cook had no companion with him whose Independent account might verify his own. But when all Is said, the fact remains that until some good reason is given for doubting his word, he is entitled to belief. The mere fact that the feat was difficult does - not prove that he failed to achieve it. The same argument would prove that Lap lace did not write his "Celestial Me chanics." A NEW HISTORY OF PORTLAND. Notice comes to The Oregonian of the project of a new History of the. City of Portland. It is to be under taken on a conception and scale that should do honor-to the city; and we believe it will. Every history that Is written Is what the author makes it. The materials are at command of every one; but successful use of them depends on the writer, on his Judgment and comprehension, on his skill In the arrangement and correlation and dis tribution of his materials, on his con ception of the soul of his subject and undertaking, and on rigjjt direction of the spirit of his work. The new his tory of Portland is to be written by Joseph Gaston. The promoter of the undertaking is the S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, of Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis. Work of this kind has been done by thls company for many cities. The company has published elaborate his tories of Cleveland, Chicago, Philadel phia, Columbus, Syracuse and other cities of the L'nited States. The His tory of Portland will open with the be ginnings, and the development will be carried down to the present time. It will be a. work In two volumes. Older residents of Oregon need no Introduction to the chief writer and editor of the forthcoming work.- He has been an active man among the most active in the historical develop ment of the state. He is a student of the history of Oregon and of the Northwest; he has lived in Portland forty years, and every phase of the growth of the city has passed under his personal observation He Is an observant man, possesses strong indi vidual characteristics, and Is a forcible writer. What constitutes the history of Portland, and what should go into the narrative, few know so well as he. A Journalist in his earlier life, a work ing newspaper man. Identified with active affairs through his calling and through organization and construction of the railroads of the state in the days of the beginnings, and at all times an 'interested observer of the progress of the city and state, he will know how to plan and to direct this work. It will be an earnest and sober effort, controlled by seriousness and yet In formed with enthusiasm; and use will be made of ample materials, unused nr-a frinr-e there now is a larsrer scope for a written history of Portland, and opportunity for use or tne ma terials from a newer and wider point of view. We shall expect an original work, not a compilation. It gratifies The Oregonian to be able to announce that such a work Is to be undertaken. Much old material re mains which may be used In connec tion with the new, and it should be used now, or it will be lost; and the new or newer materials should now be correlated, or collated with the old, In permanent form, so that the propor tions may be preserved. The Orego nian bespeaks for Mr. Gaston and his assistants the co-operation of the peo ple of Portland, many of whom will afford the aid of their personal knowl edge to the completeness of ,such a vrk. ' NEED OF MILK INTELLIGENCE. So much buncombe, bosh and spite of rival officials have . entered the clean-milk spasm in Portland that there is need of ordinary common sense in dealing with the dirty-dairy and diseased-cow questions. The problem Is one of clean milk rather than of pure milk. Nature af fords the pure product; unclean meth ods In dairy, transportation and household make the trouble. Milk is Nature's infant food, and when Na ture has the smallest chance she af fords it clear of evil germs, even if the cow is more or less diseased. Milk diseased in the udder is not frequent and its sale is rare. Veterinarians and phvsicians will not say that a' tuber cular cow gives tubercular milk or that bovine tuberculosis produces the human disease of the same name. They freely aver, however, that tuber cular microbes enter milk from sur rounding filth and from unclean hands and vessels. It is possible to guard milk from disease by observance of sanitary rules. That Is the practical method. Eradication of bovine tuber culosis, by wholesale sacrifice of the animals affected, is not feasible; It is impossible to prove the disease in cows in all cases with certainty, and the "test" Is opposed on the ground that it Itself spreads tuberculosis. It Is not pleasant to drink milk of sick cows, and It accords with reason to say that such milk .should be shunned. The crux of the matter Is that practically all of the dangerous content of unclean milk comes from the outside of the cow, and from barn, manure, vessels, hands, haul to con sumers which in Summer may be very deleterious to milk and unsani tary treatment of milk in households. Laws and officials can help but little. The State- of Oregon and the City of Portland support an army of office holders to guard these conditions; they have little success. The practical cor rective Is that of educational clean liness. This can be gained only by painstaking effort of its advocates and long training of producers and con sumers until both the latter shall learn that dirt In milk should be a relic of barbarism. They may think they have learned this already, but too few of them know what cleanliness or filthl ness is which is another way of say ing they do not care. Milk Is rendered dangerous to health jr unwholesome by persons who do not know the virtue of clean liness. The people of Oregon could not support officials enough to force unwilling or ignorant dairymen to ob serve sanitary rules. The sdurces of filth are more numerous and prolific for milk probably than, for any other food. An official may compel a tem porary ciean-up or a spasmodic cau tion. Yet when he goes away the dairy man Is free to pursue his favorite ways. Recurrent scares In this matter contribute little to milk intelligence. Rational efforts "will be directed to teaching and training dairymen in the ethics of clean milk, both for the sake of the public health and aleo for that of their own profit. Clean milk ought to command a higher price; without this reward a neat dairyman has little encouragement and too often has had to quit business. Several years ago Dr. Woods Hutchinson promoted a "certified milk" project; it failed, and some of his fellow-physicians, who now are howling about diseased milk (and advertising themselves fully) fought and drove him out of town. So much for medical "ethics." Portland's milk supply never was safer than now. There is still wide room for Improvement. Better condi tions will be realized as dairymen gradually learn. They will be taught by Intelligent discrimination of con sumers, demanding that filth be elim inated. Filth belongs to ignorance. Men and women in the milk business will not be driven to clean hands, clean pails, clean udders, by sporadic reforms, by officials or "crusades," but by persistent spread of milk intelli gence. ( Dr. Mack, milk inspector for the city, is reported as saying: "Tilt your milk bottle. If there is an accumula tion of sediment, beware of the milk." Good advice. But this sediment comes .from uncleanllness In milking. It Is very common. There Is hardly a farm house in the country where close In spection would not disclose a "cloud" in the bottom of the vessel. The mod ern way Is to have officials to inspect every vessel, and relieve the consumer of tha trouble or duty of looking after the purity of the milk. First of all conditions of clean milk is clean milk ing. If the consumer, the housewife, is indifferent to! the quality of milk and its cleanliness, there will be thin milk, surely, with "sediment" at the bottom. They who buy their milk should be constantly on their guard; yet they who consume the milk of their own cows get no purer milk than others. Among other things, the Park Com mission yesterday ordered a survey for a parkway from the Forestry building through Balch Creek canyon to Ma cleay Park. This Is preliminary to proceedings for condemning a right of way. An easy entrance to this park from the north Is much to be desired. As proposed, this route presents the minimum of climbing. It. will be used alike by citizens- and visitors. Macleay Park is such a show place a3 no other city on the continent can boast. Through Balch Creek canyon it may be reached by a walk of little more than half a mile from the street car. The sum which any Jury may reasonably be expected to award for right of way Is small considering the benefits. The time to secure a con venient entrance is now, not when it is too late. On his return from a trans-Atlantic visit, William Allen White said: "As between Europe and Emporia, I'm strong for Emporia." Supporting this declaration he gave this reason: " Can you Imagine a elf-repectlng Kansas farmer going around grabbing for his hat all the time to a man who ha no other distinction except that he happened to have on a white hirt? No? Neither can I. That' one of the things that makes a man proud of America the fact that there Is no peasant cLaaa here. ' And the brilliant writer might have added that the number of Americans who think inferiors should uncover in their presence is negligible. Just think of the doubters that Dr. Cook must quiet, and the laudatory speeches he must reply to, and the big dinners he must eat, and the inter views he must submit to at every new city and the pertinent and impertinent .questions he must answer wherever he goes, and the number of times he must sit for photographs. Then save your syrjipathy. This being a world hero Is no 'boy's job. Suppose we make it a misdemeanor or criminal offense to run an automo bile in . a city faster than an or dinary walk, say three miles an hour, or on country tjoads faster than an or dinary horse-trot, say siJ miles an hour. There -will be some chance of safety then. These autoists, moreover, have no more need of hurry than oth ers. . , The Oregonian expects every cur of yellow Journalism, and every yellow cur of journalism, to be barking and snarling and snapping continually at its heels. Time was when It would turn and shake one of them now and then; but it has quit. They think' it too much honor. The young Aberdeen woman who secured an absolute divorce from the son of a Michigan millionaire, with $70,000 for actual and tentative dam ages, after two years of more or less conjugal bliss, may be said to have "married well." The closing of" the career of Brad bury, the aged California millionaire, who began a year's sentence In San Quentin Thursday for perjury, calls attention to a lesson to be found in the Decalogue. It applies to rich and poor alike. ' More United States- Government land at the North Pole. Let's have a grand land lottery to stimulate set tlement. The lottery players couldn't possibly get a colder deal than they suffered at the recent drawing. A Hoosler died Thursday' and le thirty-eight children, who had four mothers..- Getting Into the news col umns Is easy for some people. There Is good news to the hungry In the announcement of 3000 more cen sus jobs to be given out. Now they have named a hat for Ex plorer Cook. Many books-were long ago named for him. We shall in time need a State Por cine Commissioner, if hog troubles continue. 1 REGULATING IDIOTIC HUNTERS. Proposition to" Prosecute Thou Who Mistake Animals for Men. PORTLAND, Sept. 3. (To the Edi tor.) The slaughter of men, mistaken for deer by Idiotic hunters, has become such a common occurrence that I ven ture to submit the following: That there be kept at the licensing office fair specimens of a man, a deer and a bear, and that no license be is sued to any applicant until he' has proved satisfactorily that he can dis tinguish the difference between them. That, having demonstrated his abil ity in that particular, a, license be granted him, with the distinct proviso (printed on the license) that should he kill, a denizen of the city in mistake for one of the Jungle, he will be prose cuted by the state on a charge of wil ful homicide. Nothing but the grossest careless ness, the 'crassest ignorance, or malice prepense could ever cause such a dis aster. Many people love the woods and pass their brief holidays in them in preference to the over-crowded seaside resorts; not from a purely ani mal delight In slaying God's beautiful and innocent creatures, but because it rests them to get near for awhile to nature's heart, after 12 months of the strenuous life of the city, and it is neither right nor fair that they should be exposed to injury from the bullets of fool hunters, half of whom do not know one, end of the gun from the other and. coujd not hit a deer if they saw one, ' but think it look3 big to carry a gun, without some effort at least being made by the state to pro tect them. I have Just returned from two weeks spent in the woods and do not hesitate to say that I met dur ing the time at least 20 so-called "hunters," artistically arrayed in leg gings and cowboy hats, and some .of them carrying both rifles ana" revol vers. 'Only one of them all had any thing to show and that was a squirrel, though several told me that they were "loaded for. bear." OLD HUNTER. ALWAYS A FAILURE AND A FARCE Therefore Washington Should Avoid the Scheme of Direct Legislation. Chehalls Bee-Nugget. The voters at large are not enough In terested in taking care of the ordinary small and petty legislation to make the Initiative and referendum a success. How many times, In city elections, and other local questions vitally affecting the pub lic In general, is it almost impossible to get out even half of the voters? We have had experiences of t s kind right here, and found that but few of the voters will cast their ballots either way. If these measures should be adopted, it would open the way for a lot of petty and insignificant laws, that even put to shame our legislators. In Oregop recently the people were called upon to vote on a bunch of laws at one shot, that would take a.nian a week or two to even read through, let alone form an intelligent opinion about them. The average voter is too busy, and somewhat unwilling, to spend the time studying these questions as he should. The better way Is to cltoose, under the direct primary, ' the best class of law-makers obtainable, and let them represent us in making the laws. The Bee-Nugget believes that the initi ative and referendum movement is a fail ure and a farce, and we do not believe) the people of Washington will give it a foothold here. The people themselves would become sick of It after a trial. Witticisms by Babes and SnckllnKS. , Delineator for September. A 8-year-old waif In a deaconesses' home offered up this prayer: "Oh, God, bless all In this home (mentioning each by name), and all the sailors in the sea, that the ships won't run over them, nd all the poor boys and girls that they may get bread and candy, and bless Alfred Warren Randall" (himself) a hesitation, then added, "the one what's got the nightgown on." Winfred. years old, was tying paper boots upon the kitten's paws when his aunt remonstrated with him for teasing the kitten, saying, "I thought you be longed to the Band of Mercy?" "Yes. auntie, I do." said Winfred, "but," he added apologetically, "my badge is on my other coat." Howard was 20 months older than the baby. He had somehow come to realize that Elwood. who was creeping, was more likely to be in .mischief when quiet. One day he called to his mother with a great deal of anxiety In his little voice, "Mamma, I hear Elwood keeping still." A school teacher In one of the lower grades once asked her room, "What is wind?" After a thoughtful pause a small hand was raised. "'Well, Robert, what is your answer?" she asked. "Why-er, wind Is air when It gets In a hurry," an swered Robert Edwin, aged 3, who unwisely fondled his small cat overmuch, appeared before his mother one day. his little face guiltily pained and a scratch upon his hand. "What has happened?" she asked. "I bent the kitty a little," he said briefly. James, aged 6, after having had his first ride on a scenic railway, described his feelings thus: "It made me feel just like I was all gone but my soul, and that was almost tickled to death." About Christmas time a little girl was told that she was naughty, and Santa Claus might not bring her a present. "Well," said she, "you need not say It so near the chimney." Rough and l.eady Philosophy. Chicago News. Even a woman who is ill likes to dress well. Not every wife can transform a house Into a home. . . One way to get ahead is to patronize a cabbage dealer. A physician heals others for the pur pose of "heeling" himself. Every man Is a soloist when it' comes to singing his own praises. All men are born free, and equal and remain so until they marry., People who think they are the whole thing are entitled to another think. It's easy to figure how you can save money, but saving it is another matter. Beware of the man who never gets angry: there's a screw loose somewhere. A thick skull enables a man to keep a lot of useful knowledge out of his head. In order to pose as a successful fisher man one must possess a good imagina tion. When some men parade around -they Imagine they attract as much attention as a circus. It's almost impossible for a man to keep In the straight and narrow path if he is driving a mule. Of course, speculating or dealing in fu tures sounds more refined than gambling, but a man will lose just as much. Some men are not very enthusiastic about going to heaven. They know they will be allowed to smoke In the other place. ' How to Kill Flies. WOODSTOCK. Or., Sept. 3. (To the Editor.) Please aid in the campaign against the house fly by giving this receipt for a fly-killer space in your columns. Here Is the receipt sug gested by Dr. Alex Hill in the Journal of the American Medical Association: But two teaspoonsful of formaldehyde into a soup dish full of water and set It where files can get at it.. It is cleanly, effective and cheap. An eight-ounce bottle can be purchased In Portland for 15 cents. This Is enough to prepare 32 plates. The bottles are marked "Poison," foul H. C. Wood, who is a high authority, says: "The im mediate violent Irritation produced by formaldehyde Is so great as to forbid either accidental or purposive poison ing by It, and we know of no case In which It has caused In the human be ing symptoms other than those of local irritation." A. T. BLACHLY, M. D. DAVENPORT PICTURES HARRIMAN. Oregon Cartoonist Thinks ig Railroad ' King Looks Better. Homer Davenport In New York Mall. On the Sunday evening previous to the sailing for Europe of E. H. Harrlman I came In from Goshen on the same train that he took from Arden, and crossing the Twenty-third street ferry I sat ten feet from him in a good light. With him were Mrs. Harriman and ' one of their daughters. He looked very, sick. His eyes were heavy and his brain was la boring with- something that produced a frown. All the way up the river he didn't speak, but stared at the floor! except for an instant when he' lifted his eyes to a baby that was fretting in its mother s lap. Once Mrs. Harriman spoke to her hus band and once the daughter spoke, but whether they demanded an answer I don't know. I only know that his ex pression was that of a man who didn't hear. His step aS he walked off the boat at Twenty-third street was heavy and he looked peevish as a sick, tired man al ways bas a right to look. Yesterday afternoon I waited with a mass of newspaper writers, photograph "efs "and artists for four hours on a pier just above the Erie station on the Jersey side. I haven't seen for years such a reunion of old-time star reporters. The "big-story" men were all there. Wall street reporters,, "rewrite" men and some who had been on the desk for years. ' Some had interrupted their vacations, a long way off. but that they were there was enough. It meant something bigger than usual was coming up the river. Going over la the new tube. I had chatted with a big Wall street man. He told me how at. last the whole business world had awakened and realized how great was Harriman. He said Harriman was by all odds the greatest brain Wall street had ever known; that he was not simply a railroad owner, but a railroad builder and operator, and that ne stood In a class by himself. He said: "Look at the whole country at this moment anxiously awaiting to hear of Harriman's health, as a mother would listen for the word of doctors re garding her only child! - "This anxiety is not shown for mere manipulators. The great concern over Mr. Harriman's health has to do with the future of railroad building, which means the building up of undeveloped country in the West. Should Mr. Harri man's health be permanently Impaired, the West will be years longer in develop ing than if he were permitted to carry out his great plans." So now I could well understand why all the "big-story" writers had been gath ered, why the private tugs of this, that and-the other big dailies were plying up and down the river. Hour after hour passed, and rumor after rumor came, some as to the steamer being disabled, others that Mr. Harriman was too ill to leave the boat. All the reports kept us from drowsi ness till finally the big Kaiser Wilhelm II came Jnto view past the Statue of Lib erty. Small tugs clustered around her like messenger boys to the aid of a big po liceman. Quickly Bhe docked and soon there came from the upper river Btraight from her pier a Southern Pacific tug with flags afloat. The captain of the tug was as dignified as though he handled the bell rope of a big ocean liner. But his dignity only held our attention for a moment. The special train with Mr. Harriman's private car Arden had been backed down, so that it waa scant 20 feet from where he would step ashore. What a condition he had to face in cameras! The tug was soon made fast. Mrs. Harriman was In view, as were her three daughters. The big writers of the dailies were craning their necks like small chil dren who were seeing their first great sight. This caused me again to realize the importance of Harriman. Then came a little stir aft on the upper deck of the tug. and" a pale, frail, little man, plainly dressed and wearing a Pan ama hat low on his head, came in sight. He stepped to the side rail amid a death like silence. As he stopped and smiled, clicks from cameras , came in profusion, like those of the hammers of rifles. I saw the eyes of the "big-story" men glistening wet. The cold press of New York gave way. The hardened reporters burst into mighty applause, the heartiest, most spontaneous I have heard In years. - Railroad officials beamed wltn wet eyes upon this frail man. who stood af fectionately smiling at the rail of the tug. He didn't seem like a business man; he seemed greater than Napoleon; he seemed like some great general or ad miral returning from battle. As the clicking of the cameras went on. be drew his wife affectionately toward his side and leaned over to the other side, so that his three daughters and a boy who had health to burn might show with him in the pictures. I believe he said: "How are you, boys?" but I am not certain. He spoke In a way that made us feel as though we were all his boys, and he looked such a good, kind father that we all beat our hands again in spontaneous applause. By this time the gangplank was up and this feeble little 'man led the way down it to the rear of his car. Mr. Harriman's step was fine and springy, but he Is a real American, and that might' have caused it. His eyes were brighter than when he went away, and he wast a little whiter. He was thinner, too. . "Ten pounds off a little man like me. boys." he said, "Is bound to make a difference." His' answers to the impertinent business questions fired at him by the reporters were In his characteristic snappy man ner. He blocked their leads if they were below the belt. He told of his plans for expansion in the far West. He reclined on a lounge while the men skilled in drawing secrets from other men plied him with questions. Some of his advisers suggested that the air was not very good in the car and that he per haps ha'd better cut the interview, but to this he objected with a wave' of one of his white hands. You could see that he liked the American method of inter viewing. After seeing Mr. Harriman the last thing before he sailed and the first on his return. I should say that he is thinner, but better; that he has lost weight and is weak from the effects of It, but that his eyes are clearer. At Arden, with the stimulus of the races this week on his track at Goshen, he ought to improve, and added flesh will catch up with the bright er eyes. Blue Mold In New York Hop Fields. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. . Central New York hopgrowers. with Quotations soaring three times as high as the prices of last year, are threatened with a blighted crop Just when the pros pects were most encouraging. Blue mold has been discovered in several acres of hops In the town of Marshall, and it Is the first that has ever been seen in the hopgrowlng section. It is one of the most serious forms of blight that hoprals-' ers have to fear, and it has been the cause of the ruination of vast hop tracts in England and Germany this year. Luxurious Traveling In China. All the luxuries of railroading have been Introduced Into China. The trains are fit ted with upholstered leathered compart ments, electric -lights and elegant lavato ries. A push-button for food or refresh ments brings immediate answer, and the usual good service of competent Chinese boys. 'Every five minutes the hot-towel coolie offers you this means of refreshing the hands and face, the towels being per fumed with eau de cologne and steaming hot. Its Effect on Healthy Ileasts the Same as Pure Water. PORTLAND. Sept. 3. (To the Edi tor.) In today's Oregonian Lora C. Lit tle Was an article stating that Injecting cows with tuberculin as a test for tuber culosis gives the cow so Injected the dis ease. If such a result has happened, the veterinary and medical world would cer tainly be made acquainted with the fact. Doctor Koch, of Germany, would have acquainted us with It. As I understand it, the tuberculin Is the toxlne of the bacilli of tuberculosis, or to take the authority of John R. Moh ler, A. M., V. M. D., chief of the Patho logical Division of the United States Bu reau of Animal Industry. "Tuberculin is the sterlized and filtered glyceria extract of cultures of tubercle bacilli. It con tains the cooked products of the growth of these bacilli, but not the bacilli them selves. Consequently, when this sub stance is injected under the skin of an animal it is absolutely unable to produce the disease, cause abortion or otherwise injure the animal. In case the injected animal is normal there is no more effect upon the system than would be expected from the Injection of sterile water. How ever, if the animal Is tubercular, a de cided rise of temperature will follow the use of tuberculin." There Is nothing in Lora C. Little's ar ticle to show that J. Pierpont Morgan's cattle were affected by the tuberculin, that might merely have been surmised. Why should we seek to destroy the pub lic confidence in the only reliable diag nosis for consumption; an awfully con tagious disease among cattle themselves? But your correspondent does not believe bovine tuberculosis Is transmitted to hu mans and from statistics taken of loca tions, I believe bovine tuberculosis will render the human Immune from con sumption. It wouldshe a great thing ac complished In the Interest of mankind if some condemned criminal would give his body for experiment on the promise of commutation of capital punishment as a recompense. I have seen it reported that where bovine tuberculosis Is highest the human is lowest and vice versa. THOMAS WITHYCOMBE. FOR BETTER LOOKING BANK BILLS. Advanced Ideas of the New Secretary of the Treasury. Dublin, N. H.. Letter to Chicago Inter Ocean. With a gigantic scheme for the reform ation of the currency, especially the pa per currency, of the entire world. Frank lin MacVeagh. Secretary of the Treasury, is busy at his beautiful New England Summer home studying the details of his plan. . When he returns to Washington In the Fall he intends to make a great effort to have the representative financiers and the statesmen of the civilized countries of the globe meet and discuss for the first time a plan for the uniform size, color and denomination of the currency. "Money goes everywhere." said Secre tary MacVeagh, as he sat at work In his palace in the hills near here. "A nation is known first by Its currency. I want America to follow the model of the French and give her best work to her paper money, that the world may know that we have artists, that we know art. that we appreciate It and that we value It. "All this Is simply one phase of the plan of a complete overhauling of our money system, which I am trying to have adopted. Regarding the change in the size of paper money, (here are many ad vantages. In the first place. It means a saving for the United States Treasury. Economy is the watchword at Washing ton, and I am determined to see that there is no waste in the department with which I have been intrusted. "I do not mean niggardliness or stingi ness; I mean useless extravagance and waste. If large bills were a necessity, we should have them of necessity. As they are not a necessity and as smaller bills are a positive advantage. I think the country should consider their adoption. "In my new scheme I recommend new designs. That is. the designs at present on our bills are, of course, too large and unwieldy for the more graceful small bills. "That means new designs. For this the country cannot do better than employ her greatest artists. "Then I want the portraits to be uni form; every note of a certain denomina tion shall have a certain portrait on It. no matter whether the note is National or bank currency. "Thus when the portrait of Cleveland, a beautiful Innovation of Mr. Cortelyou, is seen, every one will instantly know that the note Is a $10 one, nothing else. This will save constant confusion. "A certain color should also Indicate the denomination of a note. Thus green might always Indicate to a ' person un able to read that the note is a $1 note; red a $2. blue a $5, and so on, whatever the color might be." . . Well, Yes. Aberdeen (Wash.) World. Portland to not alone. (In .the matter of entertaining the President. Much the same conditions exist In Chicago. And the hue and cry against "private individ uals" Is entirely Justified. The President will travel as President, not as Mr. Taft. He will make the trip at the country's expense. He will properly be the guest of the people, therefore, and not of any Individual. Still, we don't know; Mr. Bourne is a product of the non-partisan system and as such represents "all the people." Why Isn't he the fit person to do all of Port land's public entertaining? If Oregon will play the fool and send ambitious fools to Washington, it must expect to be fooled. Mr. Taft may pass by both the state and Its chief city until they regain sense. They Understood Each Other. Washington Star. "So yob believe In telepathy?" "Yes," answered Mr. Meekton. "Though Henrietta Is miles away, I can tell ex actly -what Bhe is thinking about 'this minute." "And does she know your answer?" "She does. She Is wishing I would hurry along that hundred she wrote for, and she knows I'm worrying about where the cash is coming from." The Difference. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 30. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian of August 29 the total bank clearings of Seattle foi the week are given as $11,785,720. Should this not be $12,311,000, as It was giver out by Bradstreets? SUBSCRIBER. The Oregonlan's figures were for th week ending Saturday, Bradstreets" for the week ending Thursday. The Good Times Are Coming. Frank L. Ptanton In Atlanta Constltutlon. O the good time are comln', no matter what they say; You kin hear 'em hummln. hummin. for a hundred miles away; They're sailln' through the Summer, an' a-flghtin' through the freeze; A-rldin' down the river an' a blowln' In the breeze! Comln' . A-hummln" Like a regiment a-drummin'; Lane has got a-turnin', Buttermilk's a-churnin', So keep your lamps a-burnln' Tiir the good times come! O the good times are comln'; you kin set 'em on the run. A-tw!nklln' In the dewdrop an' a-hlnln" in the sun! A-dumpin' over the daisies, an" babblln" in the brook. An' lookin' at fellow like his sweetheart used to look! Comln' A-humm!n' Like a regiment a-drummln'; Lane has got a-turnin'. Buttermilk's a-churnln'. So keep your lamps a-burnln' Till the good times coma!