0 PORTLAND. OREOON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postoffice Eecond-Cia-'S Matter. BubaciipUou Rate Invariably In Advance. By Mail.) rillv. Sunday Included, one j ri:"y. Sunday Included. six montns.... T'aKv. sun.lav Included three monlh... Iai:y. Pundav Included. on rnontn I'ai:y. without Suadnv. one X . I. ally, without fund.ir. li months. J Hallv. without i-undiv three months. ... 1 I-ailv. without funiiy. one month Vekly. one year 2 Pundiv, one year Eunday and weeklv. one year " (By Carrier ) rai'r. Sunday Included, one yr.. rily. Sunday Included, one rnontn How to Bemlt-Sehd ro.toRtce money or.l-r expre.. order or rr. nal cheek on your bank. Stump. , com ' urreno ire at the sender's rls. rtie pojicffue d drei la full. Including county and .late po,ts- Kate 10 to 14 uS. 1 f",; ,B to "s pK-s. cents. S to 4 I '. rent.. J?i ,oP.? pa.'.. 4 coma, ror.a po.ta.te double r:tte. il.w-.lem Bu.loe. frie Th S . . w.h Spe-lal Jlaen.-yN.-w rk. room 4,; f.l Trihuno building. Chicago, room. -W-Jl-Tnbur.e bulldtnic. POKTUND, MOXDAY. OCTOBER 15. 19- HENET'S FIGHT IS SAN FRAXCI&CO. Ioubt is expressed by many in San Francisco whether Heney will be elect ed Amid the welter of affairs in that citv it U difficult to keep the public mind fixed on the one fact that neither the law nor the good name of the city has vet been vindicated by the punish ment of the chief offenders against its civic honor. Obstacles insurmountable have been thrown in the way of the prosecution. The offenders are so many and so powerful that they have been able thus far to obstruct and render nugatory the most strenuous efforts to bring them to justice. Centers of influence of every description have striven to protect the malefactors. Enormous turns of money have been expended to foil the prosecution, and politics, par ties and partisanship have invoked and employed to the utmost for the same end and object. Furthermore, the proceeding has been so hindered, and so much time has elapsed, that great numbers of the people express themselves as ut terly weary of it all. This feeling Is fostered in all possible ways by the ac cused. Not only a multitude of poli ticians, but leading officials of the labor unions were deep in the cor ruption, and the effort to prosecute has received additional checks from the efforts of partisan factions to obtain from the situation advantages over each other. A very general expression in San Francisco is the exclamation: "We're tired of it all." Besides their influence in business, which is very great, the accused have unlimited command of money and they are using it without stint. It Is now the very crisis of their struggle; and if they can defeat Heney they believe they will be molested no further. Heney is not discouraged; but the man who ought to have a walk-over realizes that he has an uphill fight. There is a strange combination against him of many of the solid business interests of the city and of the vast purchasable element in the lower strata of social life and politics: Most of the news papers of the city either oppose Heney or affect indifference to the contest he is making. Many citizens pr .'ess to be offended by the treatment which the guilty supervisors have received; but there was no tway to get at the facta without promise of Immunity to them. NEW RAILROAD KING. The body of the late K. H. Harriman ."lies a-moldering in the grave," but his policy of linking up railroads and thus reaching for absolute domination of the transportation business of the United States. Hie the soul of old John Brown, "goes marching on." Harri man not only blazed the way, but he cleared the trail into a plain, broad highway over which the successors of the mighty power he laid down could travel with greater ease toward the goal that was just beyond his grasp when he was called hence. The con servative element of our population. who had for some time viewed vitn misgivings the steady additions to the far-flung railroad empire which Mr. Harriman was making, were almost in clined to view his death as providen tial, the assumption being that, as the world had produced but one industrial giant of this type, there would hardly be an immediate successor. Significant changes now taking place In the ownership of American railroads make It almost a certainty that the process of linking and welding together line after line of road will continue, possibly on a more colossal scale than ever. The heavy decline in Harriman securities since the death of that past master in me art oi consouuauun nuu domination would indicate that the system which bears his name might In time lose the enormous prestige which he gave it. But in industry and .finance, as in war and politics, it is a case of "the King is dead, long live the King." It may be too early yet to de termine who will continue that highly spectacular and profitable work best .known as "Harrlmanizing" the rail roads of the country, but as a possible successor to the Harriman throne the .figure of Edwin Hawley looms large on the railroad horizon. Since Mr. Harriman's death Mr. Hawley has secured control of the Mis souri, Kansas & Texas Railway. Mr. Hawley is also said to control practi cally the Chicago, Cincinnati & Louis ville. These roads, with his Chesa peake & Ohio, Chicago & Alton, and Toledo, St. Louis & Western, and large .-interests In smaller connecting lines, give Mr. Hawley transportation domi nation over a big territory between the Atlantic seaboard and Chicago and St. through the Southwest into Mexico over his Kansas City, Mexico & Orient line. The Gould roads, which were not thoroughly welded into the Harri man chain before the death of the master, are said to be working toward the protection of the Hill properties, with the Western Pacific possibly forming a final link by which the Chi cago, Burlington & Quincy will reach California. The mar-ting of the control of these vast transportation lines into the hands of a few men, or groups of men, undoubtedly tends to greater efficiency of service and greater economy of operation, but it is also fraught with possibilities for trou ble. Harriman could see nothing ob jectionable In his desire to control all of the railroads of the United States, and at the progress he was making an other ten years might have brought about the end he sought. But this domination of the entire system of in ternal communication by one man rep resenting numberless millions, of capi tal should be subject to stringent reg ulation by the Government. Human nature is much the same among all people, and too much power in the hands of the railway kings mrght interfere with the rights and Interests of the public. Mr. Hawley has made an excellent start on a pol icy which, unhampered, might lead him to heights greater than those reached by Mr. Harriman. The limit to which this consolidation of inter ests may proceed with safety is a problem of Increasing gravity. A PROHIBITION ARGUMENT. The Oregon Mist (St. Helens) says that the amount of money expended for liquors In Columbia County is two hundred thousand dollars a year, and for roads and bridges eighty thousand dollars. The figures may be nearly corrett; and eo may the Mist's observa tions about the usefulness of roads and bridges, and the uselessness and evils of alcoholic drink. But the inferen tial conclusion that the money spent for liquors would, if not so spent, be put into roads and bridges in the county is not warranted at all. Doubtless most of the liquors Bold in Columbia County are consumed by men who work about the logging camps and sawmills; since these are the chief Industries of the county. Few of these men are taxpayers; few of them have any permanent residence. The county wouldn't get the two hun drel thousand dollars they squanUer in drink; nor would it be easy to persuade the men to pay to the taxgatherer, for roads and bridges, the money they pay Into the liquor shops. Perhaps Columbia County may vote prohibition. The electors within her borders will decide. It would be bet ter, doubtless, if they would . build roads and bridges with the money they pay for liquor; but they won't do it. Nor would the county, by enactment of prohibition, stop the consumption of liquors within its borders. It would, however, lose the liquor tax a consid erable sum, paid in an indirect way by men who seldom pay any tax other than that charged upon the sale and consumption of liquors and tobacco. WANTED. A DIPLOMAT. The position of Minister to China is one of the most important foreign posts at the disposal of the Adminis tration. To this is due the great dif ficulty experienced by the President in securing a representative possessing in fair degree the necessary qualifica tions. In the old days, when foreign consulates or ambassadors were regarded as merely convenient pigeon holes into which politicians were thrust, either as a reward for political services or to get them out cf the way, there would be no such delay and difficulty as are now in evidence in selecting a successor to Mr. Crane. It ha3 always been an easy matter to find J5000 men for $10,000 jobs, and so on down the line a system that was us ually followed until a few years ago. What 'was really needed was $10,000 men for positions which paid a salary of half that amount. The kind of American Minister whom this country should send to China and for whom President Taft is undoubtedly seeking, can command a much higher salary in this country than he can secure from the Govern ment for a foreign post, and for this reason the field of eligible candidates is shortened to the few who have only Incidental regard for the financial emoluments and are willing to take the position through patriotic motives or for the honor attached. The man who can properly represent the interests of the United States in the awakening Orient must be not only a diplomat of high degree, . but he must also be a high-class business man, well posted on international law. China, whether her integrity be maintained or whether she becomes the football of fate and is kicked to pieces by the jealous powers who are watching her with hajwk-like gaze, is a great commercial prize in which the United States has the same right of exploitation as the rest of the world. The avidity with which Germany, France, England, Japan and Russia have grabbed portions of the territory whenever the opportunity offered, or could be made, has revealed to us the necessity of being well represented on the ground, and it would be extreme folly to send over a Minister who would fall short of measuring up to the high standard set by the powers with whom our commercial and po litical Interests might come In conflict. From a business standpoint, and by reason of his wealth, Mr. Crane was well fitted for the post. The reckless manner in which he publicly discussed matters that should have been kept secret, however, revealed his utter lack of diplomacy and clearly Indicated possibilities of serious trouble lit the event of a crisis In Chinese affairs while he was holding the position. WHERE REFORM IS DESIRABLE. The movement looking to the check of extravagance and absurdity in the dress of saleswomen In department stores in Chicago is in the line of com mon sense, good taste and good mor als. The rules prescribed in the in terest of this reform are in some in stances more drastic than is necessary to secure the end sought, but in the main their tendency is in the right direction. That Is to say, they seek to provide wholesome restraint In the line of extravagance in dress an error which has led to the ruin of myriads of thoughtless young girls that will enable these workers to live within their means, dress as becomes the vo cation of a modest working girl, main tain their self-respect, and compel the respect of the public. . Who has not felt a pang of regret, or been conscious of a feeling of dis gust, at the exaggerated styles rep resenting the latest fad In hairdress ing assumed by working women in their capacity of serving the public as wage-earners? The towering, bobbing screen of hair drawn over huge cush ions, from beneath which the eyes of the wearer peep like those of a rat under a haymow, confronts the Intend ing purchaser as she seats herself at the stocking counter, for example, and the clerk comes forward to take her order. Turning to the shelf for the desired article, a "Psyche knot" pro truding a foot or more in the rcr of her head, propped up by a shelf of shell, is displayed, the entire effect of which Is at first startling, then ludl crous, then, taking all the circum stances into consideration, pitiful or disgusting according to the viewpoint of the observer. One almost forgets, while confronted by this truly wonderful structure built on top and at the back of the head upon a superstructure of refuse of various kinds, to notice the diaphanous T1TE MOBXIXG OREGOXIAN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1909. waist through which a suggestion of elaborate underwear is shown; the col lar constructed seemingly for a sup port for the ears, the sleeves skin tight, that reach the middle of the hand, and the ring or rings set with precious stones, or their Imitation, on the hands that place the asked-for hosiery upon the counter. Such costuming as this, with its glaring unsuitability, has cheapened the vocation of the shopgirl, though a very worthy and useful vocation in it self. And not the vocation of the shopgirl alone has suffered from this cause. That of the stenographer, the telephone worker, the sewing woman, the milliner, the marker in the laun dry, the cash-taker in the butcher's or grocer's stall every vocation in which through the conditions imposed by our present economic and Industrial sys tem women have become wage-earners has suffered as well. Reform in this particular is not only desirable it is necessary, if women are to become factors of recognized capability and desirability in the busi ness and industrial world, since noth ing else offers such an affront to com mon sense. Is so suggestive of unvoiced possibilities In morals, and so handi caps a woman worker for efficient eoeiHoo n- does the srlaring unsuitabil ity and palpable extravagance which she displa. ; in dress. EVADING jrcSTICE. What reason had the Great Northern Railroad to protect its late Spokane at torney, M. J. Gordon, from the proper consequences of his embezzlement or many thousand dollars from that gen erous corporation? The Spokane grand Jury has been wrestling witn me prop- lem for many weeks and has aDout given up in despair, though It has in dicted Gordon: but it practically ad mits that it has no real proofs. The efforts of the grand Jury to get at the facts and bring Gordon to justice mane a long and very interesting story, set forth in detail in a report submitted at Spokane last week. Subpenas were issued for various officials of the Great Northern from James J. Hill down; but every one whose testimony by any chance might have proved valuable or pertinent managed to evade service. Officials who lived out of the state re mained away from Spokane; officials who lived at Spokane iert tne coun try. Onlv Gordon had the nerve to re main. It can only be surmised that the truth if told, would have been baa for the Great Northern. Why? Be- ranso no douht Gordon had been en gaged in many discreditable transac tions on behalf of the railroad cora nanv. and the company could not af ford to have them transpire. One such affair involved a memDer of the State Supreme Court, Judge Root. Through Gordon, the Great Northern general solicitor, W. R. Begg, had got Judge' Root to render a favor able oDinion in the so-called Harris case. The grand jury finds: Tfc- Tiir. nAnt wan (maimed to write the opinion of the court on the rehearing. . q h- Mt, a ti nnfnlnn on the rehear ing which wai never filed, and mailed a copy of the earoe to Gordon; that this opinion did not meet with Gordon", ap- nrnval and ha drafted an onlnlon birn- elf. which he mailed to W. R. Bess, gen eral solicitor ror the company at bi. jraui, requesting Begg to wire if the opinion vu antt,rnrtnrv! that Seer O. K'd Gordon'. opinion by telegraph, and that thereafter thl. opinion drafted by uoraon w by Judge Root a. the opinion of the court. That the opinion filed wa. Identical with the opinion prepared by Gordon, except that two or three additional citation, were aAAaA That th other ludges of the Su preme Court had no knowledge of Gordon'. AnnrtHntial discussions of the case with Judge Root and had no knowledge that the opinion tiled by Judge Koot naa Deen orau- ed by Gordon; that the opinion prepares by Gordon and O. K'd. by Begg laid down - -..ia -in. reaneot to the liability of com mon carrier, different from the rule an nounced by the court in Its nr.t opinion n li . T-I a rrin rn RA. and that thl. latter rul ing wa. much mora favorable to the carrier. There was a conspiracy between o n i rinrdnn nnd Root to buy. or .l.i f an v - - procured a very important decision toy the Supreme -Court. Justice was ae bauched at its fountain-head; a Su preme Judge was corrupted to serve the purposes, then and thereafter., of a litigant who had occasion to appear frenuentlv before the court. This, in the opinion of The Oregonian, is very nearly the most scandalous episode m the entire history of Washington. The parties to the transaction ought to De punished if possible. The Spokane au thorities should never rest until they hav found some way to get into their jurisdiction General Solicitor Begg, the main instrument in the criminal enon to make the Supreme Court of Wash ington a mere appanage of his em ployer. THE FARMER OF THE FUTURE. a c.KotantliLl increase in attendance at state agricultural colleges through- .-J .."M out the country is reported. iu the New .York State Agricultural School is fully BO per cent in advance of last year. In that 6tate the Increase came alike from city and country. This fact is held to indicate a desire on the part of city youth to expand their efforts in Industrial lines and an appreciation on the part of country youth of the need of scientific knowl edge as applied to farming operations. It further indicates a turn in the tide of migration from country to city, so long deplored, and ultimately the res toration of many old worked-out or abandoned farms in the older sections of the country. The cry. '"back to the soil," wlU mnt resnonse as long as the re turns of agriculture described by Whit- tier as "Not competence ana yet not want," prevail. These were the con ditions that caused farmers' boys to leave the farm for the city. Only a decided change for the better will tempt them to return to the soil. Such a change is promised by the instruction furnished through agricultural colle ges under the head of scientific farm ing, the details of which are many, but' simple and readily mastered. Such knowledge is the basis of a prosperity which means serenity- In times of fi nancial stress, living untroubled upon the fat of the land in trmes of indus trial depression and laying up a mod est competency in times when demand is active and supply comes forward full-handed to meet it. The farmer who knows his land as t'ao horseman "knows his horse, the fisherman his boat and the mechanic his tools. Is the farmer of the future. With his land unincumbered and with an Intelligent working knowledr) of its possibilities; with a comfortable house, a wife who Is a helpmeet and children being brought up in ways of Industry and thrift; with the daily mail deposited at his gate, the trolley cars pushing out In his direction; the telephone in his house and well-bred stock in his pastures, he is in a po sition to enjoy life, even, through, pan ics and periods of Industrial depres sion. The life is not an Ideal one. Much of the labor attendant upon it is hard, much of it -i disagreeable, but if science and labor go hand in hand the returns of agriculture are sure, and those who pursue it will enjoy the fruits of their labors as they go along, have a home in their old age to which the children will return on festal days with genuine pleasure and from which no appeal for "help" in a financial sense will ever be made. The farmer of the past worked hard, but seldom "got ahead"; his wife was a hopeless drudge and his children were restless, discontented and soon went their way. The farmer of the future must work also, but his head will direct his hands. Four steamships and one sailing ves sel, with an aggregate carrying capa city of more than 25,000 tons, arrived In port yesterday to load wheat, flour and general cargo at Portland. Four other steamers and one sailing vessel, carrying nearly 5,000,000 feet of lum ber and 6000 tons of grain and gen eral cargo, sailed yesterday. The outward-bound fleet carried freight to the Orient, Europe and California. The inhound vessels brought freight from Europe, New York, Australia and the Orient. Aside from one overdue liner Included in the fleet, there was noth ing unusual in the day's movements at the river entrance, as not infre quently a much greater tonnage moves In and out during the twenty-four hours. People of Portland, however, as well as some of our critics in other ports who offer objections to Port land's keeping open a channel to the sea, will note by the occasional men tion of these facts that we are doing business with tire world and that it is increasing In volume. Before we be gan this work of channel-building, 2000-ton vessels were monsters. Now only passing comment is made of the 7000-ton carrier. By a decision rendered in a local court Saturday it is made obligatory on the part of a timber-land locator actu ally to locate his client on timber land. Failing to do this, he must return the location fee to the man who paid It. This seems to be a fair ruling in the matter, but, if It is rigidly enforced, a number of sleek-appearing operators who have amassed wealth at the ex pense of the credulous timber-land seekers will be obliged to seek other employment. The fake timber locators In the Pacific Northwest have claimed more victims than the lock trick or the shell game. July 31, 1858, a steamboat wa3 launched below the falls at Oregon City. It was called the Carrie Ladd, for the wife of William S. Ladd. The incident affords a reminiscence of con ditions that existed then, when the movement of business in the Oregon country was Just making a beginning. Probably some of our old river men, yet remaining, could tell how long the boat ran on our rivers and when it was broken up. Jacob Kamm doubt less would remember, and so would George Pease. A writer in The Outlook, on the Se attle Exposition, says: "It is nowhere truer than in Washington that the increase of wealth In The Last North west' has come more from a looting of Nature than from the productive work of men." Nor is it anywhere truer than in Oregon. It was much the same, too, in the older states ; and ob serve further how the looting of Na ture is still going on in the states where coal and minerals most abound. .With the passing of Summer infant mortality decreases. Officials say It is due to the improvement they have caused in the quality of the milk. Very doubtful. But why didn't they attend to it sooner? Any assertion that there is now better milk is a confession of their own former indifference and neglect and responsibility for more or less of the avoidable infant mortality. Senator Tillman declines to lunch with the President unless some one else pays the bill. There are all kinds of Senators. Some Senators would be willing to match coins or shake the dice with the President, for example, to see who should pay. Tillman hasn't learned in his long service how to be a true Senatorial "sport." The Independent (New York) says that whether Cook reached the Pole it doesn't know; but if he is an honest man he makes a fearful mistake in not taking the world Into his confidence in stead of telling It to wait months for what ought to be done in a day. The trouble at Eugene seems not to be over the fact that a professor appears to he teaching doctrinal relig ion to his classes, but that he happens not to be teaching a certain brand of doctrinal religion. Heresy, say the preachers. Heresy to what? We are told that criminal vaga bonds who are sent to the rockpile are "hapless men," prope objects of pity, "held as slaves," contrary to law and justice. The opinion is merely an echo of that of the vicious vags themselves. The latest expert opinion,' from some one over in Bellingham who has been all over Alaska, is that Cook did not climb Mount McKinley, because "it can't be done." That is a mighty good reason, If true. If yon have business with the Mult nomah County Judge and you find the door locked and the Judge gone away on his private business, don't worry. The Judge's salary goes on, just the same. Portlanders who wish to see the fine apples that' they can't buy in this city and that make Oregon's fame abroad can view them at the Hood River and the Albany fairs this week. What preposterous folly to assert that It is unlawful and wrong for men to consult together and agree on candi dates whom they may support for office! . When ministers or others pry Into heresy they start inquiries and stud ies that are bound to shake up some pet creeds and dogmas. ' A Pole in South Bend., Wash., was fined $100 for attempting suicide. But he can go to Jail and make it more ex pensive for taxpayers than to bury him. , -Imprisonment of bankwreckers will protect depositors far better than any kind of bank guarantee. Even If Dr. Cook should turn out faker, ha would still be a world-beater. 4 LIFB IN THES OREGON COUNTRY Taking; Honey From the Bee. Bingen Observer. Leman Bobbins and F. T. Carter re cently cut down a bee tree near Husum securing one hundred and Ility pounos of fine honey. This is not a very rare occurrence In this section. One Oregon Town. Weston Leader. Without throwing any bouquets at it self, Weston goes quietly ahead, ships its produce and gets the money, its principal shipments being wheat, hay, brick and potatoes. Monday's shipments aggregated fourteen cars, six of hay, six of wheat and two of brick. f Chance for Every 3Ian. Madras Pioneer. Central Oregon is today the largest and most promising of Uncle Sam's do mains not already pre-empted by the homesteader, and the man who wishes to acquire a farm, a home, and an in dependence would better turn his atten tion to this jewel in the rough. Got to Escape Now to Get Away. Baker City Herald. Doesn't it seem that convicts escape from the Oregon Penitentiary with un due frequency? So long as Chamberlain was Governor there was little desire to escape, for all convicts felt sure of a pardon, but row it is up V the warden and his organization to keep a closed bouse. Untold Chapter In the Jodge'i Life. Corvallls Gazette-Tlmea. Judge McFadden will have 20,000 pounds of dried prunes this year. The Judge raised a phenomenal wheat and oats crop on his Junction City farm and now shows up with a tremendous lot of prunes. And he got his start In life by helping an Oregonian escape from a Cal ifornia Jail! When Judge McFadden's memoirs are public the public is going to have some interesting reading.- Mr. BrUt's Only Hope. Newburg Graphic. N. E. Britt' desires to clear up some land, and as he has been unable to em ploy white labor to do it he went to Portland last week to interview a firm that furnishes Chinese laborers, but he was unable to secure any help there. Ho says he don't know of anything else to do than to await a change in the admin istration at Washington. Such a turn in affairs has been known to bring out plenty of help for such Jobs. No Wildcat Banking Wanted. Eugene Register. After a lapse- of time it is apparent that the directors of the defunct Oregon Trust & Savings bank of Portland, are to be brought to trial. For Oregan's good an example should be made of that sort of banking, so that in the future it will stand as a warning to those who would attempt to foist a similar wild cat scheme upon an unsuspecting public. Oregon's credit and business reputation Is normally good, and It should be kept that way. Ye Editor Becomes Indignant. Dallas Itemizer. Last week a man came into this office and wanted us to jack a brother editor up because he had said something about the aforesaid man which he did not like. That kind of business makes us hot this continual trying to get an edi tor to pull your chestnuts out of the fire or say something about someone else that you are afraid to say yourself. We are not doing that kind of business. We have troubles enough of our own, with out assuming other people's there are worries enough In a print shop to drive a man to drink. If you do not like what the other fellow says go to him about it. Do not come to us. If you do not like what we say, go to him, too. Willamette and Other Meridians. PORTLAND, Oct. 23. (To the Editor.) When was the Willamette meridian es tablished, and by what rule was It lo cated where it is? Where is the exact corner of the meridian and base line? How far north and south does the Wil lamette meridian extend? What are the names of the adjoining meridians, and how many meridian districts are there In the United States? The Willamette meridian was estab lished bv order of the Surveyor-General in 13G1. The first contract for survey was let to James F Freeman on May 28. The line was established on 122 degrees, 44 minutes and 20 seconds, longitude west from Greenwich. The Jine extends through Oregon and Washington. The base line has been established on longitude 45:31 north. The corner can readily be located on the map by these directions. In the United States there are 31 merid ians. Humboldt meridian has been estab lished in California, 128:08 west; Mount Diablo. 121:54:48 west; San Bernardino, 116:56:15 west, and Boise meridian, 116: 24:15 west. Bachelors Beaten and Taxed. London Telegraph. The Sobranje of Bulgaria has passed a law imposing a tax of about 3 a year on all unmarried men who are 30 years old and older. At Tirnovo, the ancient capital. It has been a custom for many years to humiliate unmar ried men. On the first Monday in Lent all marriageable men who had not selected life partners in the carnival season were beaten on sight with in flated pigs' bladders. The bachelors always dreaded the day, while the girls looked forward to it with pleasure. Since the tax act has been passed the bachelors of Tirnovo have entered a formal protest against the continuance of the practice. They say they will gladly pay the tax, but want the chas tisement declared unlawful. Solicitude! Washington Evening Star. "Charley, dear." said young Mrs. Tor kins, "you must stop worrying about household details." "What's, the trouble hot?' , "You were talking In your sleep again last night. Every once in a while you would use some expletive ana Bay, unn me soma more chips.' You really must get youd mind off the wood pile." Thought He Should Remind Her. Dondon Tit-Bits. On a recent Sunday the clergyman of a parish church in Kent was reading the notices for the week, and concluded by saying: "There will be christening next Sunday at 10:30." He then slowly walked to the pulpit. Suddenly, turn ing toward the congregation, he re marked in severe tones: "Remember, Mrs. Tomlinson, I said 10:30." Canada's Five Grand Old Ken. Boston Transcript. Lord Stratnccna Is 89, Sir Charles Tirp per 88. Sir Mackenzie Bowell, 86, and Sir R. W. Scott and Sir Sanford Flaming 84 and 83 respectively. Can any other country show so many Catos among its active statesmen? True It Ia True Indeed. Grants Pass Observer. Jonathan Bourne, Jr., announced In Portland a few days ago, that at the close of his present Senatorial term, he would again be a candidate for the of fice. That, of course, was expected. It is easy to be a candidate for office in Oregon. jersey Cwa With a Butter Record. Kansas City Star. Only 1? Jersey cows in the world's history have produced more than 700 pounds of butter in one year. Five of these were bred and developed by th Missouri College of Agriculture, SIDI3 COULD READ AT TWO. Scientific Forcing Procesa Has Re markable Results. . Boston Special to New York Times. Some details of the achievements of William James Sldls,' the 11-year-old prod igy who has just entered Harvard with the highest honors are published here to day, and go to show that the youth who Is gravely declared to be the most learned undergraduate that has ever entered the Cambridge Institution, is a wonderfully successful result of a scientific forcing experiment, and as such furnishes one o the most interesting mental phenomena in history. His precocity is the fruit of a parental theory of mind growth put into practice from the very beginning of his life. Young Sidis is the son of Dr. Boris Sidls, a Boston psychologist, who years before the boy's birth had developed very advanced ideas on the subject of child training. On the basis that as soon as a child begins to grow its brain begins to grow also, and that the brain is less and lese sensitive to training as age increases. Dr. Sidis haJplanned and developed an elaborate sytstem of training. This sys tem he applied to his son. The child's training was begun with a set of alphabetical blocks when he was a little over a year old. When his young son, sitting on the nursery floor, said "ba, ba," Dr. Sidis took two of these blocks, denoting A and B, respectively, held them before his eyes, and showed him first, the "B" block and then the "A" block. e e Later Dr. Sidis reversed this order and showed him the other sound that was rep resented by these two letters. In a little while, on being shown, first, the "A" block and then the "B" block, the child would say "Ab." Thuw, not yet 2 years old, he learned to talk, read and spell all at one?. Before he was PA years old precocious William James would sit on the floor in the midst of his blocks and spell out va rious words. This was his way of playing. This child was next taught to count. Then, because he wanted the child to know something about the idea of time. Dr. Sldls gave him some calendars, ex plaining to him the meaning of them. For weeks he played with these. One day he startled his parents by announcing that he was able to tell on what day of the week any given date would fall. It was first thought that in his play with the calendars he had mem orized some of the dates. Upon investi gation, however, it waa found that he had worked out all by himself a method of counting enabling him mentally to cal culate any date demanded of him. When William James (or "Jimmy") was 3 years old he could use a type writer, and at 4 he was an expert oper ator. He was also much Interested in fairy stories, learned them by heart, and was soon studying elocution and learning how to recite them to the best, advantage By the time he was 5 years old he was not only able to read, write and speak English and to use a typewriter, but he was an expert accountant, had begun to study French and Latin, and had wriiten a text-book on anatomy and another on English grammar, presumably for his own use. Entering a grammar school when 6 years old, he moved up several grades in six months, and entered Brookline High School at 8 years. In six weeks there he had completed the mathematical eourse and begun writing a book on astronomy. Then he plunged into the study of Ger man. French, Latin and Russian. On leaving school he began the study of mathematics in real earnest. Integral and infinitesimal calculus became his hob bies. and in addition he invented a sys tem of logarithms based on the number 12, instead of 10. This was inspected by several well-known mathematicians and pronounced perfect in every detail. Much has already been made of the story of the three years spent in endea voring to secure admission to Harvard, Sidis' age being an obstacle which the university authorities could not see their way clear to override till this year. THE COUNTRY PRESS. Here Is a Vigorous Champion of Its Integrity. Junction City Times. The word has gone out that any paper that advocates the .election of Mr. Bourne, or the principles of the pri mary law, or Statement No. 1, the Ini tiative and referendum, will be accused of having been purchased by Mr. Bourne. This is the rankest rot. This word has been passed out with an intimidatlve attachment and may silence some weak kneed newspaper, but not very many of them. We will support what men and mea sures we please. We fought all the Isms mentioned above when the news papers of the state were dumb as oys ters, for fear that they might not be In accord with the people." We are still in the ring, not to fight the laws of our state, but to enforce them. The primary law and all Its il legitimate relations were foisted upon the people because of the cowardly and unmanly stand of the Republican party. Now let them take their medicine. We favored a county convention when the party of this county last assembled because we were outvoted. We are go ing to stand by that convention. It is our belief, however, that the primary election should again be held, as the best way to bring about the re peal of an obnoxious law Is to enforce It, and for that reason we say, lay on McDuff. We will publish matter for Mr. Bourne or any other candidate at our regular commercial rates and don't give a whoop who objects to it. This paper is owned by Its editor and no faction has any strings on It. Chicago Women to Censor Play. North American. Chicago is to have a theatrical cen sorship more effective and powerful than that wielded by Anthony Comstock in New York. Hereafter, if the efforts of the Evanston Drama Club are crowned with success, any play which fails to meet the moral standard set by Cook County club women will be summarily tabooed by persons who give principal support to the city's best playhouses. The Evanston organization purposes forming a dramatic league, composed of the members of every woman's club in Cook County. It Is believed that the membership of the body will be so large and representative that managers will not dare to overlook official pro tests which will be entered against any production that the league decides is unfit. For Encrland, In Fear- of War. John Ersldne in The Century. They tell us England's up in arms. She hears the jealous foe. Laughing at the vague alarms. That draT her proud name low. She's quaking sore with fright, they say. Her day of strength's gone by; O English blood that warms my heart Tell them back, they lie. For every British man at home. Abroad are twenty-seven; But who shall count the English hearts Under God's wide heaven? O, eyes that have not seen, behold What host around her stand; The chariots and the horsemen wait To guard our native land. O, lonely looks the little isle But not to those who see; There's half a world would fight for her Who taught taemi to be free. TAKKANI SELLS WOMEN'S SOULS. Accused of Swinging Elections With Repeaters and White Slaves. Following is an extract from the srtlcl. In McClure'. Magazine for November on tne whlte .lave trade that has made a great commotion In New York, and Is used a. the basis of attack on Tammany in the present New York municipal campaign. The article is by George Klbhe Turner, and i. entitled "The Daughter, of the Poor." About 25 years ago the third great flush of immigration, consisting of Austrlans, 1- -sslans and Hungarians, began to come Into New York. Among these immigrants were a' large number of criminals, who soon found that they could develop an extremely profitable business In the sale of women In rew York. The Police Department and the police courts, before which all the criminal cases of the city were first brought, were absolutely In the hands of Tammany Hall, which, in its turn. was controlled by slum politicians. A great body of minor workers among this class of politicians obtained their living In tenement-house saloons or gambling-houses, and their control of the DOllce and police courts auowea them to disregard all provisions of the law against their business. The new exploiter of the tenement-house popu lation saw that this plan was good, and organized a local Tammany Hall asso ciation to apply it to the business of procuring and selling girls. The organization which they formed was known In the Lexow Investigation as the Essex Market Court gang, but named itself the Max Hochstlm Asso ciation. Among various officers of this organization was Martin Engel. the Tammany Hall leader of the Eighth Assembly District in the late '90s; and with him a group of Tammany Hall, politicians In control of this district and the Third Assembly District along the Bowery, just to the east. This district, as it was when Martin Engol was leader, opened the eyes of the minor politician of the slums to the tremendous financial field that a new line of enterprise, the business of procuring and the traffic in women, of fered him. The red-light district, op erated very largely by active members of the local Tammany organization, gave to Individual men interested in its development in many cases $20,000 and $30,001) a year. Very few of the leading workers in the tenement saloons or gambling enterprises had been able at that time to make half of that from the population around them. The supplies of girls for use in the enterprises of the political procurers did not at first come entirely from the families of their constituents. The earlier immigration contained a great preponderance of men, ond compara tively few young girls. The men in the business made trips Into the industrial towns of New England and Pennsyl vania, where they obtained supplies from the large number of poorly paid young mill girls, one especially ingeni ous New Yorker being credited with gaining their acquaintance in the garb of a priest. see A group of members of the Independ ent Benevolent Association came into that city in the early lOOO's, and soon after the New York red-light district had been broken up they obtained con trol of practically the entire business of Newark. They secured as supplies the ignorant Immigrant girls taken from the East Side of New York, and they brought with them from New York, or educated in Newark, their own staff of cadets who not only worked vigorously as "repeaters" in local elec tions, but returned to form some of the most vigorous voters In the lower Tammany Hall districts of New York. But in 1907 the attempt of one mem ber .of the Benevolent Association to defraud another out of his business by the aid of local political forces led to a disruption in the body of men who were so well established In Newark. An expose followed this disagreement, which broke up, for the time at least, the local business, with its importa tions of New York women, and tem porarily stopped the return supply of illegal voters to New York. The testi mony of the time showed that these men had worked Industriously in the interests of the Tammany leaders In the downtown tenement districts of New York, from which the supply of Newark girls was largely obtained. In Newark the chief of police killed him self subsequently to the exposure. A detailed statement of the spread of activities of the New York dealer and Tammany cadet through the United States since the exodus from New York after 1901 would serve as a catalogue of the municipal scandals of the past half dozen years, and would include the majority of the large cities of the country. It Is, of course, the belief fostered by the great ignorance and indiffer ence of the more influential classes as to the conditions of the alien poor in a city like New York that tho cadet died out largely with the red light. On the contrary, he has largely multiplied as every close observer of the condi tions of the East Side knows. The whole country has been opened up for the supplies of New York procurers since the red-light days; the develop ment of the lonely woman of the street and tenement has increased the field for these young cadets greatly; and not only the lower but now the upper East Side of New York City is full of them. The women they live upon, and her daily necessity of political protec tion, brings them into public life, and makes them the most accessible of po litical workers. They have a hostage to fortune always on the street. For a third of a century, at least, the young slum politician In Tammany has danced and picnicked his way Into po litical power. The chief figures in New York slum politics followed this meth od. And thus arose the "grand civic ball" of the Bowery district of which, perhaps, since its completion, the pres ent Tammany Hall building In Four teenth street has been the center. But the recent political gangs that have formed the chief strength of the slum districts of Tammany Hall have had a much closer connection with dance halls than any political bodies before them, because their membership is so largely composed of cadets. Practical ly all the big gangs that have figured in slum politics in recent years started about cheap dance-halls. These gangs of political cadets nat urally gravitate toward Tammany Hall for their larger affairs, when they are strong enough, to do so. In this way Tammany Hall itself, among the many "touch" dance-halls in the city, has come to be the leading headquarters for disreputable dances. It Is this clas3 of dances that plays a most prominent part in finally procuring the American bred girl for the cadet. Votes from disorderly places may easily determine the result In a close city election, for false votes by the thousand are cast from these resorts. A Marvel, Born Without Hands, Baltimore News. Born without hands. Miss Allene Shea, of Louisville, Ky., has accomplished the task of becoming the best penman ever graduated from the high school, the fastest operator of a typewriter ever to receive a diploma in the city and finishes the course wita an average of 9S.37 She is also an expert bookkeeper, the Tirr-si-dent of her class and the editor of her school paper, the Cynosure. Miss Shea has won three medals for efficiency in academic studies. She has won prizes in penmanship and typewriting, in which her teachers declare her almost perfect She 1s also a shorthand writer of won derful accuracy and speed.