12 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1910. PORTLAND, OREGON". Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postoffice as Second-Class Uatur. iubscrlption Kates Invariably In Advance. (BY MAIL..) Dally, Sunday included, one year ?9 !-)aily. Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 ually. Sunday Included, three months.. 2.26 Dally. Sunday Included, one month Dally, without Sunday, one year '".- any. wunoui runua, fii x niuinna " ' )aily, without Sunday, three months... l-'" ail- wllhniir Knndnv one month .60 VVeekly, one year Sunday, one year 2.W unday and weekly, one year o.ou IBy Carrier.! )nllv Cunrlav Included, one VPHT 9.00 llally. Sunday Included, one month 75 How to Remit Send Postoffice money rder. express order or personal check on our local bank. Stamps, coin or currency re at the sender's risk. Give postoffice ad- Iress In full. Including county and state. Postage Kates to to 14 pages, i cent; to o 28 pages. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages. 3 cents; 40 to 00 pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Kastern Business orrice. The s. c. BeoK wlth Special Agency New York, rooms 4S- o Tribune building, Chicago, rooms oiu-aii rrlbuno building. PORTLAND. TUESDAY, JAN. 25, 1910. CAC8ES OF HIGH COST 'OF LIVING. Repeatedly, In speaking of the a uses of high prices. The Oregonian has mentioned the almost universal lise of the telephone for sending In or- lers, and of the expensive equipment or delivery that the modern system equires. Even persons, who are 'down town" and going directly home, vill not carry so much as a loaf of read or a pair of gloves, but the ealer must send them. Use of the lephone for orders brings into the ouse a multitude of things which are aslly called for but would ' not be ought if seen, examined, considered nd compared; and the telephone self is another charge. The automo- ile has introduced another line or xtravagances, expanding constantly. ouse furnishings make another list. ith continually Increasing expense. )ecoration, that must be frequently hanged or retouched makes no small ddltlons to the yearly bills. Outings, easide and mountain trips; travel. ow very general, almost universal; ocial expenses of all possible descrlp lons, formerly unknown; better and ore expensive dress, and food in rger variety; the growing habit of ting at restaurants and hiring rooms. 11 tend to increase the cost of living. These things are not to be censured r deplored, but are entirely proper hen they can be afforded. But to lve in these ways and then complain increased cost Is not a mark of onsiderate wisdom. The system makes so much wash- g that there is another bill, and the ashing is so extensive that it cannot e done at home. Your "house help" ill not stay if required to wash and ron the family's table and bed linen, nd underwear. The house must h odern, and It ought to be; but the as. electric and fuel bills, ana nx- res of all sorts, to be kept in repair ost money; and though it is com- lalned that rents are high, few are tiling to build houses for rent. Great- st part of the increased cost of living due to changes in the mode of llv- g. It is right, however, that people hould desire all the "comforts" they an get. But when they "double up he style of living" the larger cost ill follow, inimitably. Flour and eans, butter and potatoes have often een as high heretofore, or higher, nd people' didn't complain. Nothing etter has been said about the causes the higher cost of living at the resent time than a statement carried our telegraphic report yesterday, mlng from E. P. Ripley, president of he Santa Fe Railroad. We reprint art of It: General Increase of wages and the rapid rease of money in circulation are among e causes of high prices, but extravagance the paramount cause. Most housewives. hose husbands earn good wages, will pay lliree or four times as much for foods done In fancy pucltages as they will for the me foods without the frills. And they 111 not go to the store or to the market they can have a telephone. The telephone Ids to the cost of living for thousands of mllies. and so does the 10 per cent which e grocer has to add to his prices to cover e cost of delivery. This coincides with what has often een said by The Oregonian. The cts are obvious. The times have hanged; habits and customs have hanged; people are "living in higher tyle" than in the days when John farshall. Chief Justice of the Supreme ourt of the United States, took his asket on his arm every morning, left at the grocer's as he passed on Is way to his chambers, and 'in tha fternoon on his return home, bought hat was wanted, took up his basket. opped at the butcher's shop on th3 ay, called for his chops or beefsteak. rrylng the materials for his dinner ome with him. The butcher and the rocer could sell cheaper then. RECORD BUILDING YEAR. Portland building permits for the rst three weeks of January were eater than for the entire month of anuary, 1909, and for the full month ill probably be more than -twice as rge as for the same month last lear. While this is a very satisfactory howing, it falls far short of reflect- g trfs remarkable activity In prep- ration for the current season, for ortland architects already have on and for 1910 completion more than 12,000,000 worth of buildings, or early double the amount that was In ght a year ago. With this for a arter. It is not unreasonable to ex- ect fully J20.000.000 worth of build- g this year. What it means for ortland to exceed the record-break- g year of 1909 can be best under- ood by a reference to the 1909 sta rtles for the entire country. Out of a total of 163 cities reported y the New York Financial Chronicle, it twelve were credited with a larger ilume of building than Portland. Of lese twelve, four had but a small argin over Portland, which was edited with permits amounting to l3.366.5S0. Kansas City, with more ian double the population of Port- nd, was credited with $13,368,733; ashington, D. C, wjth $13,720,593; etroit. $14,301,450, and Boston, with population nearlng the million mark. id but $14,078,646. The building rmlts issued in the Oregon metropo- k were greater than those of Minne- olis, Los Angeles, Cleveland, Milwau e, Denver. St. Paul or Buffalo, iltimore, with a population of more an 500,000 ten years ago, was beaten the extent of more than $5,000,000 id the Portland permits were greater an those of Cincinnati and New Or- ans combined, although the popula- in of these two cities Is five times as eat as that of Portland. The most satisfactory feature of this cord building movement in Portland that it is in no degree forced. In sidences and apartment-houses !t ems an impossibility for builders to keep up with the demand, and every structure is tenanted before the paint is dry. In the business district all of the new buildings have from'50 to 75 per cent of their space engaged be fore they are completed, and speedily fill up as soon as they are ready for tenants. One prominent building nat yet under roof had more than 50 per cent of its space rented before the ex cavation was finished, and another had 60 per cent of the office space and all of the ground flor rented before the framework was up. Among all the signs pointing to the most prosperous year that Portland has ever known, none are more inter esting or valuable than the" figures on building operations actually under way and projected. PREPARING FOR- THE CENSUS. Seattle is making an effort to drag the City of Georgetown into the Se attle fold before the census-taker ap pears. Georgetown seems to be hang ing back, and the Seattle Times, in an effort to show the recalcitrant neighbor the error of fts ways, pre sents a long list of reasons why Georgetown is missing a golden oppor tunity. The Times is charmiijgly frank in stating that the reason for the movement "is because Seattle desires Georgetown, already located within Its own territory, to be a part and parcel of this great city, and be counted among her people on the day Uncle Sam begins to takevthe United States census, that has caused so much interest to be developed at the present time." With a desire to emphasize the im portance of the matter, the Times calls attention to the methods of San Francisco and Los Angeles, and then makes the somewhat surprising state ment that: ; While Portland, years before, had taken In almost every village within ten miles of the center of that city, she has now reached out for New St. Johns a burg extending to the Columbia River and before Uncle Sam begins to count the people of Portland, that city will embrace SO per cent of the entire population of Multnomah County. The location of "New St. Johns" is not exactly clear in the minds of Port land people, and thus far this alleged "burg extending to the Columbia River" has not been apprehended by the City of Portland. We plead guilty to the charge that "before Un cle Sam begins to count" the City of Portland will include 80 per cent of the entire population of Multnomah County. This proportion has existed for a long time, and has been accom plished without taking in """almost every village within ten miles of the center of the city." If Seattle has the populatiaon that the Times and the Se attle Chamber of Commerce are claiming, it is almost certain that the city includes upwards of 99 per cent of the population of King County, and, even under a legitimate count, it is probable that more than 80 per cent of the residents of King County live in Seattle. In reviewing numerically its reasons why Georgetown should come in, and alphabetically the list of disadvan tages which would follow her refusal, the Times, under clause B, states that unless Georgetown comes in before the census is taken, "the desire on the part of the City of Seattle to have Georga town a part of this city will have been destroyed, and then every man who has been interested In this undertak ing will feel that he does not care what may happen to a burg which is so blind to Its own interests." FOR SCHOOL BETTERMENT. Superintendent Cooper, of the Se attle public schools, prior to a city teachers' institute held recently, sent out blanks to the teachers in the high schools asking that they be filled out and returned to his office immediately as a means of knowing how these teachers, . numbering .150, stood upon each of .the following questions, viz: Debating and oratory; musical organi zation; gymnasium practice; minstrel and other shows; and secret societies i. e., school fraternities and sorori ties. Out of 125 teachers who filled and returned the blanks 68 condemned the show business as applied to school entertainments, "because of its bad in fluence upon work and character," and 109 denounced secret societies for the same reason. Debating and oratory were recommended by 93; musical or ganization (glee clubs) by 81, and gymnasium practice by 78. These replies are significant, espe cially those that show disapproval of "frats" and minstrel shews, "because of their bad influence upon work. and character." No argument Is neces sary to prove the truth of this esti mate. Kvery teacher knows that the "play," whether a minstrel show, a farce, a comedy or an attempt at trag edy, must in preparation and drill take a large part of the time and thought of those who engage In it for the bet ter part of a month. Costumes for the different parts and scenes are in themselves a study. They are, more over, a not inconsiderable tax upon the resources of parents. Since the public school system does not yet include training for the stage, and since the schools are a sufficient drain upon the public 'without taxing It farther for tickets to amateur shows, they may well be dispensed with. The chief objection to them is, however, expressed in their "bad Influence upon work and character." Frivolity un supervised meetings between boys and girls of susceptible age, in the even ings for drill, the distractions of get ting up costumes, learning to pose and to smirk and' to sham these are counts in the indictment upon which this verdict is based. The evils of secret societies in the public schools have been often pointed out. Their tendency is to introduce into that most democratic of all ln stitutions in a republic, class distinc tions, snobbishness, heartburnings, petty politics and overweening self Im portance. The public school authori ties of Seattle have grappled openlv and earnestly with this question with the sincere purpose of freeing I schools of this barnacle upon scholar ship, this untoward social influence among students. Another question which the teach ing force in the Seattle schools dis cussed earnestly at the late meeting, is that of school trips or team trips In connection with athletic activities. With three dissenting voices against 112, the teachers declared for limiting the trips of the athletic teams to state lines, long-distance trips for student contesting teams, for manifold and obvious reasons being deemed harm ful. A modification of the coaching system and a more general encourage ment of students to take part in ath letics were urged as necessary to keep this' branch of activity from pernicious domination. It will, occur to many persons and most teachers that an' institute that deals persistently and broadly with matters looking specifically to the bet terment of our local schools would be much more helpful to the teaching body than is an Institute with a pro gramme rendered by leading educa tors from other sections of the coun try through lectures upon questions 3f general application. Such questions are presented and fully discussed from time to time in the leading educa tional journals to vhleh many teach ers subscribe, and which are accessible to all through our improved system of library, distribution. That which is, required for the betterment of the local schools Is fairly outlined in the foregoing summary. School officials and teachers should know their home ground. The general scheme of public school education is pretty well under stood; the courses of study in the dif ferent cities arevery similar. Text books,, though not always wisely se lected, are uniform throughout ' the state. The question of school better ment does not, so far as local teach ers are concerned, depend upon these things, but upon the detail that must be worked out In connection with the schools of every city according to specific? conditions. . CHILDREN AND DIVORCES. The children of divorced parents furnish more than 2 6 per cent of the cases which come before the Juvenile Court at Seattle. Judge Frater, who presides over the court, gives outthese figures. He thinks they indicate a de plorable state of domestic morality, and we agree with him. Since liquor accounts directly for only 18 per cent of his cases. Judge Frater draws the further conclusion that the divorce evil is a more fruitful cause, of misery than drink. This conclusion appeals somewhat hasty. One can scarcely concur in it without further investigation. The truth of the matter is that Judge Frater's fondness for exactitude has betrayed him into an error. The cases of juvenile crime and misery which he attributes boldly to "the di vorce evil" ought to be attributed to the cause which lies behind the di vorce. A goodly -proportion of the divorces which excite Judge Frater's abhor rence are the consequence of drinking habits followed by one of the spouses, or both. Hence, to reach anything like correct figures, we must ascertain the exact number of cases which come from these families and add them to the 18 per cent which he mentions, As a usual thing, the divorce of par ents add little to the hardships-of the children's lot. In many instances they are a great deal better off for it. For example, when the mother of a family obtains a divorce from a drunken hus band, she betters her own condition, and that of the children in every way. Judge Frater 'bases something of a philippic against divorce itself upon the pretty shaky statistics he has coU lected from his docket. His remarks are far from conclusive. Many of our wisest jurists would not think of call ing freedom of divorce "an evil," as Judge Frater does. On the contrary, they deem it the only practicable rem edy for many evils. Reform in this particular, as in many others, must be preceded by a reformation of char acter in the people concerned. Sup pressive measures may gratify super stitious prejudices, but they will ac complish nothing else. Still Judge Frater Is unquestionably right in ar guing that the law ought to take bet ter care of the children of divorced parents.. Some hold that it ought to take better care pf all children. ACTOMOBILING FOR OFFICE. 'Philosophers have not yet specu lated much upon the political signifi cance Trf the automobile, but they will pretty soon. Events will drive them to it. The agile motor car is destined to play a distinguished part in future elections, because it affords an oppor tunity to combine canvassing and "en joyment in a way heretofore impossi ble. A man who likes to motor may pervade an entire state in a few months, conduct heart-to-heart talks with the farmers by the roadside and have the time of his life while he is doing it. Tom Johnson, the collapsed single-taxer, of Cleveland, was perhaps the first politician to think of this em ployment for the automobile but his practice left much to be desired. Tom Johnson only used his red au tomobile to flit across the country from one spellbinder's meeting to another. He made a "whirlwind" campaign with it, which was an error. The rural vote Is opposed on principle to whirlwinds, or cyclones. It prefers a gentle zephyr which cheers but does not blow the house down. Tom John son should have lingered by the way side to discuss prices with the man hauling a load of potatoes to town. He should have dallied in the fence cor ner to chat with the hired man and lighten his heavy task of slashing briers. His tour should have been leisurely, reposeful, democratic and that is just the kind of a tour Mayor Dahlmann, of Omaha, is planning. De siring to run for Governor, he proposes to spend five months in his automobile preparing an apperceptive nidus for himself In the-voters' minds. His ma chine is a red one, like Toni Johnson's, but, unlike the latter, he seems to understand thoroughly the fine art t f steering it into the executive mansion. THE CANALS ON MARS. The controversy among astronomers over the so-called . canals .on the planet Mars dates back to 1877. In that year the distinguished Italian ob server, Schiaparelli, t.iscerned certain streaks on Mars which seemed to him to form a reticulated system. It looked so artificial that he hazarded a conjecture that It had been construct ed by intelligent designers and used possibly for irrigation. This suppo sition chimed very well with the known fact that Mars is but illy pro vided with water. 'The seas appear to e gathered around the poles, while the equatorial regious are naturally desert. Schiaparelli thought the canals might have bn constructed to carry water from the polar seas to the vast arid regions of the Martian tropics. Had hte hypothesis stood the test of closer observation; we should have to admire the engineering genius of the Mar tians. All earthly irrigation projects are lillputian compared with theirs. But Schiaparelli's hypothesis has not fared particularly well as tele scopes have become more powerful. The instruments at the Lick and Yerkes observatories seem to resolve the "canals" Into disconnected blotches of some sort scattered over the planet's surface. The long, straight lines which Schiaparelli imagined he saw are an optical illusion. He was perfectly honest In reporting his observations. but with the feeble instruments he used he could not detect a mass of details which is perfectly obvious to the observers' at Lick and . Lake Geneva. The big French telescope at Meudon has lately given the final blow to the canal myth. The more clearly as tronomers see the Martian surface the less semblance they detect tq any system of canals. Professor Lowell, of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology still believes in the myth, ac cording to reports, but he is almost alone in- his faith. With the canais vanishes the only spark of evidence we ever had for the opinion that Mars is inhabited. Of course the "beef trust" Is enti tled to justice, and there is probably ground for its complaint that it has suffered from an exaggerated idea of its profits. . For example, a widely spread news story has it that the "earnings'" -of Swift & Co. in 190-9 were $250,000,000; Armour Packing Com pany, $240,000,000: Nelson Morris Packing Company, $110,000,000; and so on. Of course, "gross earnings" were meant. The following from a recent news item in The Oregonian will give a more nearly correct idea of what one packing'firm Swift & Co. has been doing: At the Annual meeting of stockholders of Swift & Co.. held In Chicago, the report submitted showed gross business for the fiscal year ended September .'10 last of $250, tlOO.OOO, an increase of tlO.OilO.lmo over the previous year. While it is stated that the profits derived from the company's gross business were -only about 3 per cent, the net results were satisfactory, being equiva lent to 13.(16 per cent on the $00,000,000 common stock. After paying 7 per cent on the preferred and 7 per cent on the $0. 000.000 common, and allowing liberally for maintenance, there was left $4,000,000 to be added to surplus account, as compared with $2,800,000 In the previous year. The sur plus, as given In the balance sheet, now stands at $22,000,000. The margin of profits for the packer, it would seem, is not so great. after all. Perhaps he is not altogether happy himself over the high prices of meat. Flour declined 20 cents a barrel In the local market yesterday and eggs are down about 10 cents per dozen, and in the Chicago market there was a heavy slump in provision prices. This is a fair beginning, for one day, but it will require continuation of this kind of a market well into the Spring time before the consumers will begin to notice the difference In the grocers' bills. In the Chicago market yester day wheat, corn and oats all suffered heavy declines and closed at the low point of the day. . Present high prices in farm products were brought about slowly and gradually, and the inevi table decline will come in the same manner. If the 1910 crops turn out 'as well as now seems probable, there is good reason for expecting lower prices next Fall. The change will not be welcomed by the wheat barons, but it will be highly beneficial to the con sumers. The Supreme Court of Illinois has decided that the owner of property in that state cannot be compelled to remove the snow from the sidewalks in front of his property. The side walks, it declares, and the snow there on, are the property of the city, and the owner of the land bordered by the sidewalk is under no obligation in the premises. Therefore, any effort by the city government to make the property owner act is unconstitutional. Proba bly the same decision would be ren dered in Oregon if the municipal ordi nance were resisted. Yet it may be hoped nobody will take such course, but that every one will clear off the snow when it falls. There is poor pubHc spirit in a totVn whose citizens will not do it. Governor Hughes, of New York, an nounces that with the expiration of his present term he will quit office and politics. He will not again be a can didate for Governor, and calculation for the Presidency has not entered his mind. He says he has served the people of New York the best he knows how, and having done his share, must retire. He intimates that he must resume the practice of the law in order to make provision for his family. The salary of the Governor of New York Is $10, 000; and all authorities agree that the. necessary expenses of the position are twice that amount. Four years ago many Republicans proposed an assembly or convention, to "suggest" candidates, or to "invite" men to become candidates; but they were bluffed out of it by Democrats, who then proceeded to hold an as sembly themselves; and this assembly named a ticket straight through, which was put Into the primary for nomination, and was nominated straight through. f These gentlemen now hold that Republicans will vio late the law and subvert the primary system if they do so wicked a thing. V The Walla Walla County Poultry Association has just closed its tenth annual show in that city. .These poultry-raisers are practical people. Wit ness the following resolutions as passed by the association: We recommend that the workingmen of. the United States raise poultry, thereby in creasing the meat supply of the country, which ia less than the demand. We further recommend that the lovers of .pure-bred poultry use poultry and eggs more, abstaining from other meats. Persons who don't wish to produce food cheaply In the country, yet stay in the city and complain about high prices, Can easily fix the responsibil ity. The comet is conveniently near now, to take the blame. Oregon Democrats held an assem bly to nominate their last state ticket, but now think the primary law forbids Republicans doing the same. There's queer consistency. Pugilist Johnson says sobriety is the touchstone of success. That's sub stantially what every champion has said, but it didn't make anyVdifference. The Liberals can organize the gov ernment with the help of the Irish and there is no doubt that the Irish can show them. how. The British didn't heed the brainy statesmen in America, who told them the right way to vote. The British are a stupid lot. Kext it will be necessary, in order to fight high prices effectually, to put the ban on the pelts of food animals, that is, on shoes. A Myrtle Point man dropped dead while building a fire. In explanation it may be said he was a widower. The new Mayor of Indianapolis was an auctioneer. Of course he was the best bidder. CANNON, NECESSARY SCAPEGOAT This Country Is) Always Looking; for Some One to Punish. New York Evening Post. If democracies must have their pop ular heroes and idols, they find it nec essary also to have their National vil lains and scapegoats. During the past few months the American people have been angrily looking around for a vic tim, and appear now to have found him in the person of Speaker Cannon. He is today- that indispensable man in our public life the one who "must go." Without some such official, upon whom public suspicion and indignation can be centered, and with whose departure we fondly-lmagine all our iNsNvIU depart, we cannot really get on. Without, a scapegoat, our "insinuations" will not work. Hence Mr. Cannon may feel a certain sort of melancholy distinction in being singled out as the autlfor o all our woes, who must now be matle a sacrifice for his country's good. The Washington view Is now positive that Cannon is a beaten man. His- Illi nois district may cling to him, but the House and the party have determined to throw him over. The Irrevocable decree has gone forth, and Mr. Cannon knows himself the scapegoat elect. That he and his friends should com plain bitterly of the Injustice done him is but natural, and there Is something Co be said for their protests. The Speak er is not a sinner above all who dwell in Washington. He Is not the only man who has been caught in the coils of log-rolling, bribery and corruption, which we call protection to American industries. If exact distributive justice were ever done in this world, It would Indeed be hecessary to send many an other into political exile along with Cannon-That is admitted, as It is also that the Speaker's removal will remove neither, our troubles nor our lamenta. tions about them. A victim cannot last much longer In this country than can a hero. It is probably safe to say that Presi dent Taft regrets today that he did not push home the attack on Cannon which he half-heartedly began about a year ago, only to do his best to thwart the Administration's efforts to secure a de cent measure of tariff revision. How ever, Mr. Cannon will not be Speaker of the next House. : e is said to re mark with a chuckle that no Republi can will be. "Were the men," says the Tribune's correspondent, "who regard the loss' of the House by the Republi cans probable to speak out openly, it would create consternation In the Re publican ranks." Ed. Howr'l Philosophy, Atchison Globe. If you annoy anyone unnecessarily, you are mean. That is the long and short of It. A man can find plenty of ways to waste time without devoting It to his complexion. It is pretty safe to distrust the man who claims to be working overtime as a peacemaker. No woman was ever fortunate enOfPJPli to get a switch that matched her hair all over her head. After you hear a' few mysteries ex plained, 'it is hard to understand why there is so much curiosity. Instead of efforts being made to re form the fools and educate them, every thing possible is done to encourage them. In the West an automobile story is always started on every man who makes more than $100 a month. We heard a woman say the other day: "I have my faults, but I am as good as any woman who chews gum on the streets." If It were not for the great econ omies to be practiced "next month," how would the women ever manage to save? We have noticed that most of the Good Samaritans who look for quail that are starving to death seek them with guns. How patient a girl is with the tem per of any young man, and how im patient she is with the ill temper of her father. "N . On every typewriter there Is a bell which rings and gives warning when you are approaching the end of the line. What a pity there is not a bell to give men warning in a thousand other particulars. i Maine's Fntlle Prohibition. Lowell Courier-Citizen. Prohibition in Maine has always been a farce in the opinion of those who viewed without prejudice It and its enforcement. There have been plenty of facts to support this view and more are coming out as the new regulations for interstate commerce go into effect. It is shown that there are 1100 internal revenue liquor tax re ceipts which are not licenses dis tributed through the state. A big liquor trade has been done on the C. O. D. basis, with which the new regula tions lnterefere. Biddeford, with 18,000 people, has been receiving a carload of rum a day. largely on that basis, and Bangor's business in the same line must be something immense. That Is true in proportion all over the lot, and will be under any possible system of regulation. Those engaged in the Illicit traffic or who buy in other states for their own use. will simply have to send cash with the order. The collect on delivery feature no longer goes. Maine would be a more law-abiding state under a good local option law than under Ineffective constitutional prohibition. Blaine Failed In Accuracy. J. F. Rhodes in "Historical Kssays." Blaine's "Twenty Years of Congress." a work which, properly weighed, is not without historical value, is only to be read with great care on account of his hasty and inaccurate generalizations. There are evidences of good, honest la bor In those two volumes, much of which must have been done by himself. There is an aim at truth and impar tiality, but many of his general state ments w;il seem, to anyone who has gone over the original material, to rest on a slight basis. If Blaine had felt the necessity of giving authorities in a foot note for every statement about' which there might have been a ques tion, he certainly would have written an entirely different sort of a book. When a Note Is Outlawed. CENTRALIA. Wash.. Jan. 22. (To the Editor.) How long after a note is given is it outlawed in the State of Oregon? I J. D. Six years. The same period applies to the last payment on a note, either toward the principal or Interest. Ac ceptancy of Interest renews the legal life of the note six years. s 1 Eitreme of Shortness. Cleveland Leader. "What makes you so grouchy?" "Financial matters." "Are you short this week?" "Short? Say, I'm bo. short that when my corns hurt I think I've got a head ache:" A Keen Look Ahead. Boston Herald. Hank Stubbs Ooin' to raise that calf o' your'n, or put it Into veal? Btge Miller Ain't decidVd till I know whether them Cleveland folks are goin to give up eatin' meat or not. STEALING XEW YORK'S THUNDER Loud Wall Against Purloining a Great Political Spectacle. New York World. ' -We are unalterably opposed to this Wild West scheme for a Roosevelt tri umphal march across- the continent from San Francisco. What has San Francisco to do with the return of the Little Father, and what has the return of the Little Father to do with San Francisco? That circus belongs to New York. It was here that the Hon. Bwana Tumbo first saw the light of day. Most of the Malefactors of Great Wealth live here. This is the original habitat of the Crimes of Cunning. A majority of the most dis tinguished members of the Ananias Club reside within a radius of 500 miles from this town, and we -doubt if one of them can be found west of the Mississippi River. Loeb lives here too the man who was to blame for everything. The great est zoological garden in the world is up in the Bronx, and the floats that were used In the Hudson-Fulton celebration will add eclat to the triumphal proces sion of the Faunal Naturalist. Starting at San Francisco would be an anti-climax. Whoever heard of a suc cessful show that opened on the Pacific Coast and worked its way east? All of them have to get a Broadway reputation before they tour the provinces, and we protest against this miserable conspiracy to "frost" the Return from Elba. Maybe the suggestion that Champ Clark talks about came from Western commercial bodies, and maybe it 'didn't. It looks to us as if Balllnger or some other wretched reactionary was the responsible person and that it was framed with malice afore thought. The Colonel will land in New York. Tim will ba at the pier to greet him, and so will, Herbert. The Governor would be there too, only : pressing duties of state will detain him at Albany; but this disap pointment will soon be forgotten and the town will give itsalf up to a delirium of delight. Chicago took the World's Fair away from New York, but San Francisco will not be allowed to steal the Greatest Show on Earth. MR. DOOLEY ON COST OF LIVING. Kor the Workingman, It Has Always Been the Same as Now. F. P. Dunne. "'An' so it goes. I complain iv th' rent me landlord asts me, an' some times I accede, as Hogan says, to his request. Me landlord complains iv th way th' plumber overcharges him. Th' plumber says he can't do any betther thin make a livln' on account iv th' rapacity iv th' plumbers' union. Th' most prominent, distinguished an' wealthy member iv th' plumbers' union borrid two dollars from me yesterdah because he cudden't pay his bills out lv th" vast hoards that he'd wrenched from his bos f'r mendin' waste pipes. " 'An' the sthrange thing about it is that it's always been thrue in my rec ollection an' I can remimber almost as far back as to think av mesilf hollerln' 'mort' to ye whin we were buildin' th' pyramids. Ye'll say the cost iv livln" was niver higher f'r ye an' ye ar're right. Ye say it niver was so high an' ye're wrong. It's always been the same f'r ye an' th' likes iv ye. I niver knew th day whin ye weren't about th same number iv jumi-s behind in th' price iv eggs. Whin ye're not wurrukin' egys Is down. That's all there Is to it. Ye're to blame, me boy, because a colledge profissor in Harvard can't afford to buy himself a new hat. Ye've paused th' boost in prices. Whin ye had less wuprk ye ate less an' wore out fewer clothes. Whin ye got a steady job ye raided th' grocery store, th' price iv pork chops took a sudden leap an' whin th' profissor at Harvard wlnt down to th," foreman an' got his pay check that had been ample while ye were unemployed he found har'ly enough In it to pay up. th' butcher's bills. Whin 10,000.000 iv th' likes iv ye gets 25 cints a day more pay there's just that much added to what it costs iverybody to live.' " 'But what am I goin' to do about it?', said Mr. Hennessy. " 'Some pollytlckaj economists are in favor iv ye're not eatin'.' said Mr. Dooley. T wud say stop wurrkin' if it gives ye such an appetite." " United States to Blame. Charleston News' and Courier. A lawyer of Pau. France, has sent to the Treasury Department at Washing ton a Confederate bond for $500 and a Confederate note for $100 for redemp tion. He accepted these securities in -good faith in the settlement of an es tate, and was afterward advised that they "were valueless because of the time that had elapsed since their issue." He has written to the Treasury ex pressing his astonishment that the United States Government should re pudiate any of its obligations, and he is entjrely right. There can be no question that but for the United States Government the bond and note would have been perfectly good, and as this Government is responsible for the con ditions which have made the bond and note held by the French lawyer un marketable, in the forum of National honesty it ought to be responsible even at this late day for the acts of its agents. Farmers Combine to Destroy Rots. Chicago Journal. Texas has its jackrabbit hunts. Mountain states make organized war on the predatory coyote. Indiana is to have an equally useful sporting rivalry" in a state campaign on the rat. The farmers of Warrick county have taken counsel together and discover that the rat pest destroys hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of mar ketable produce each year. There fore they have decided to exterminate rats and eliminate the loss. The example set by Warrick county. Indiana, should be followed by every county in the United States, especially In thickly populated districts. Tea and Coffee for Theater Patrons. New York Despatch. An innovation is to be made in the Plaza Music Hall. Tea and coffee will be served afternoons and evenings in the remainder of the season to patrons of the theater. Two important fea tures are attached to the service that makes this miniature restaurant un like any other. There will be no charge for refreshments, and tips to the waiters will be strictly prohibited. The waiters are English girls who arrived in the St. -Louis from Liver pool. None to lt-pilte Him. Denver Republican. Lieutenant Shackleton says the pen guin is one of the most intelligent members of the bird family. And the nature fakers in . this country are too cowed and discouraged to dispute him. Xew Official Club. Rochester Herald. Maybe Mr. Taft won't have much use for an Ananias club, but it looks as though he would find plenty of filling for a down-and-out club before he gets through. Watered Science. (The Martian canal myth has been dis posed of. J From the London Chronicle. Wrinkle, wrinkle, little bars On the comic faoa of Mars, j God of Glee and not of War. Which we used to take him for. , Just as Butler did descant On the lunar elephant. We today detect the hoax And ' applaud the Martian Jokes. Sweet revenge and swift is ours. Since the watch n Martian towers. To a gaping audience tells , How the earth is full of Wells. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE A friend of James Whitcomb Riley tells of an occasion when the humorist, who usually dislikes social functions, was Induced to attend a "literary" din ner in Indianapolis given in honor of one of the novelists who live there. Mr. Riley had been told to take in to dinner a sister of the host, an excellent woman, but not literary. The conversation touching upon the beauties of Chaucer, about whom a cer tain set of the city was then cultivat ing a fad, a spirited discussion ensued, during which the bewildered sister caught from time to time only the name "Chaucer." At last she -whispered to Riley: "Who Is this Mr. Chaucer they're talking so much about? I he very popular In society?" "Madam," solemnly responded Riley, "that man did something that forever shuts him out of society." Mercy!" exclaimed the worthy woman, "what was It?" "He died several hundred years ago," said Riley. Kansas City Times. Richard Le Gallienne, the poet, was entertaining a group of magazine edi tors at luncheon in New York. To a compliment upon his fame Mr. Le Gallienne said lightly: "But what is poetical fame in this age of prose? Only yesterday a school boy, came and asked me for my auto graph. ' I assented willingly, and to day at breakfast time the boy pre sented himself. " 'Will you give me your autograph, sir?" he said. ' 'But.' said I. 'I gave you my auto graph yesterday.' " "I swapped that and a dollar," he answered, 'for the autograph of Jim Jeffries." " Washington Star. "He reminds me of Smith and his bad $3 bill." said Senator La Follette. in speaking of a corrupt politician who had come to grief. "imlth went to New York for the Hudson-Fulton celebra tion. He had In his pocket a bad $. note. One night after a banquet he handed a cab driver this bad note by mistake. The driver handed htm his change a $1 bill and whipped up his horse. Suddenly Smith realized what he had done." "'Hey, there! Stop!' he shouted after the man. 'That bill's bad!' "'It's good enough for you! shouted back the driver without stopping. "And Smith, examining his change under a street light, found it, too, was bad." Everybody's Magazine. Mrs. Pankhurst at a farewell lunch eon in New York said of a certain suffragette: "Her "clumsy methods do more harm than good. She is like some of the rich and romantic girls who became hospital nurses in war time. "In" a Cape Town hospital after luncheon one day an earl's daughter hastened down the aisles of beds toward her favorite soldier, only to find him. asleep, with this scrawl pinned on the counterpane: 'Dere Lady Maude too ill to be nursed today most respectfully T. Adkins." " Washington Star. m m In a Western Kentucky town Ben Watson had saved the life of Myra Underhill. Miss Underbill had been overturned in a creek with a swift cur rent, and the act of young Watson was a very heroic one. He had barely strength to pull himself and the young woman to shallow water. The news soon spread and Ben Watson was hailed as the real, live hero of the vil lage. Aunt Tabby Wilson, the oldest woman In the village, mother of the little colony, was loud in praise of the heroism of the young man and at once declared that Ben and Myra must get married. "Ben saved Myra's life," she said, "and now they must marry and be happy ever afterward. Just as they do in the storybooks." But Ben de murred. The arrangement did not suit him. "Why not marry Myry, Ben?" said the old lady. "She is yours, and we must have a wedding." She's a nice girl, all right," replied Ben, "but I don't think we oughter marry. Seems to me," he went on, "I have done enough for Myry." Cost of Food Prkage. Manchester Union. In the widespread discussion of the increased cost of living some attention is being paid to the great change which has come about in the manner of sup plying most of the necessaries In com mon use. Comparatively few people nowadays ever buy or even see a whole salt codtish. as In the old days. Such salt fish as is used in the family comes from the grocery store or market, bone less and in packages which have added materially to the cost. Dried beef and bacon In the same way. instead of be ing sliced at the market in quantities to suit purchasers. Crackers, biscuits, raisin's, oatmeal and so on and on. through all the long list, are bought in packages rather than in bulk by a large proportion of consumers, and at an increase in the cost, because the form is slightly more convenient. In fact, it is obvious that the cost of the package, showy labels and other acces sories, is the result of a decided prefer ence on the part of1 the consumer, but it makes a material increase in the course of a year in the living expenses of the average family. A Church Hulldlnc In Two States. Baltimore News. As the audience portion of the Oc toraro Methodist church at Fremont, Pd., is in Maryland and the pulpit in Pennsylvania, the Mason and Dixon line passing directly through the building, and the marriage lsrensQ hav ing been secured In the latter state. It was necessary that the pulpit bo utilized for the ceremony at the wed ding of William Kerthly and Miss Clara St. Clair. A Keen Look Ahead. Boston Herald. Hank Stubbs Goin' to raise that calf o' yourn, or put it into veal? Bige Miller Ain't decided till I know whether them Cleveland folks are goin' to give up eatin' meat or not. CI KKEXT WIT AXI) HUMOR. A person who is very set In his way has to stumble over himself to get anywhere. . Puck. Mrs. Newlvwed "Don't you like girl babies. Mr. Oldbach?" Oldbach "Er yes very much, indeed, after they are grown up.-' Philadelphia Record. "What Impressed you most, the pyramids of Egypt or the pagodas of -China?" "Oh, I don't know. They both made goodjback grouncis for photographs of our party." Louisville Courier-Journal. Householder (to street musicians) "No; I sha'n't give you anything. You play nil out of tune." Cornet (confidentially) "Well. I'll tell you 'ow- it Is, sir. There's some of 'em 'as a grudge against others, and does It o'purpose." Puck. Emperor "I do not care to hear your proposition, sir. Everything that is sub mitted must first be put through the prime minister." Subject "Nothing would please me -better. I wanted to show- you the new bayonet which 1 have Invented for array use." Judga. "Many works of the highest literary ex cellence went begging among the publishers!" said the reminiscent person. "Yes." an swered the man who doesn't care for best sellers. "But the publishers appear to have learned the'.r lesson. Nowadays they seem willing to put almost anything into print." Washington Star. "I say. me good man." queried Algernon "Perceval Montmorency as he entered the drug emporium, "have- you aw a good hair wenewah that I could aw use on me moustache, donchcr know?" "Yes." replied the druggist, "but we have something still better for your purpose. It is called -Blank's Hair Originator.' " Chicago XJally News.