6 PORTLAND, OREGON. - Entered St Portland. Oregon. FostofTlc Ocond-ClflM Matter. bnbacriptloa Bates Invariably in Advance. (BT MAIL.) tallr. Sunday Included; one year. .. .$8.00 Eally. Sunday include six months.... 4.25 Xal!y. Sunday includeaT three months.. 2.25 ally. Sunday included, one month -75 Daily, without Sunday, one year....... 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six raontfts 3-25 Daily, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year...................... 1.50 Bunday, one year......... 2.50 Sunday and weekly, one year. ........ 3 M (Br Carrier.) Daily, Funday included, one year 9.00 aily. Sunday Included, one month..... .75 How to Remit Send Postofllce money frder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dregs in full. Including county and state. Postage Rate 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 16 to 28 pases. 2 cents: 30 to 40 pases. 3 cents: 40 to 60 pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage douhle rate. Kastern Business Office. The S. C. Beck wlth Special Agency New York, rooms 48 6o Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. PORTLAND. MONDAY, FEp. . 1910. POSTAL - BANKS AND PARCELS POST. It Is most probable that the bill to establish postal savings banks will be come a law. President Taft includes it In the schedule of measures known as "the administration programme," and will use his best endeavor to see it through. The Republican platform of 1908 promised it, and Mr. Taft, in his speech of acceptance at Cincinnati July 28, 1908), said such bill ought to pass. "The system of postal sav ings tanks," he remarked, "has been tried successfully in so many coun tries that it cannot be regarded longer as a new and untried experiment. ''- The Democratic platform of 1908 favored postal savings banks, with an "if." That is, if guarantee of de posits by Government could not be had, then the postal savings bank system might be introduced. But the makers of the platform dreaded the consequences, because "th Republi can party has so linked the country to Wall Street that the sins or the speculators are visited upon the whole people." In his address, on accept ance of the nomination, Mr. Taft thus answered the objection: 'The bill now pending 1n Congress, which, of course, the Republican convention had in mind, provides for the investment of the money deposited in the banks in the very places in which it is gath ered, or as near thereto as may be practicable. This is the answer to the criticism contained in the Demo cratic platform that under the system the money gathered in the country will be deposited in Wall Street." It also complies with the demand of the Democratic platform that, if the pos tal savings bank system should be adopted the money ought to be "de posited in the local communities." But though the postal savings bank system is to be established by the present Congress, it is not probable that the postal package express, in creasing allowance of the weight of the package to 12 pounds, will be. The proposition is met by protests from all the smaller centers of busi ness. The rate would be the same for long distances as for short; and it Is insisted that this would hand the mail order business over to a few of the very large centers of the country, break down local trade, overburden the postal department, make de livery costly, and cause heavy de ficits and losses all round. So strongly have these arguments been pressed that the larger system of parcels post probably will have no chance of pres ent success nor of future success, unless greatly changed. CAN ASQl'lTH KEP PEACE? Politics will be taken up in Britain again by the Liberal ministry this week, so that an interested world, as iwell as the British electorate, may get some word from the Cabinet ns to how the Liberals plan to satisfy the Irish Nationalists and the Social istic Laborites and perpetuate them selves In power. For this coalition will necessitate concessions "ideals", and "trades" we call them in America which are very .likely to make trouble and another dissolution of Parliament at an early day. Concession of home rule will alien ate a considerable faction of the Lib erals, who might deprive the Liberal government of the majority of Parlia ment. But not without this conces sion can the Liberals get the necessary support of the Nationalists. The Na tionalists, in return, will be expected to support the budget, whose land tax and the liquor tax antagonized the Irish In the last Parliament and which probably cannot receive the votes of all the Irish members. "William O'Brien, who heads the Independant Irish members, thus defines his hos tility to the budget: "There is no doubt that the Irish party contemplates the blackest trea son perpetrated against Ireland since the act of Union. The Nationalists propose to assist the government in passing the budget, which will impo.se on Ireland 10,000.000 taxes per an num." Then, too, the Liberal government must cater to the Laborite party and that may deplete the coalition ma jority, by antagonizing Liberals with Socialistic measures. Premier Asquith clearly will have a difficult task preserving a working peace between the discordant factions of his support in Parliament. It will make a precarious government for As quith, for he. can have no stead fast majority. Asquith is trying to unite the factions on the common ground of hostility to the House of Lords. We are yet to see how long and how-far he can make this paramount over Irish home rule and unemployment Insurance and other socialistic issue-.. Also whether the nation will tike the Issue of the Lords as paramount over tariff reform and large navy. There has been a great deal of criss-cross voting on these questions and the elec torate has not succeeded in declaring Its wish on any one of them. At the same time, the Liberals have not WDn their expected victory over the Con servatives, while the latter are using this fact exultingly to their own credit. It is quite probable that the electorate approves the budget and also desires reform of the House of Lords, to the extent of eliminating hereditary abuses. But the British are not rad ical for political changes, as the elec tions proved and it is not believable that they wish wholly to eliminate the power of the upper house of Parlia ment in legislation. Right now interest centers in As- quith's feat of harmonizing the dis cordant factions of his coalitKm family. , CSE OF THE WATERS. Regulation of the use of the waters iri any state is much more a proper subject of treatment by state than by national authority. The Springfield (Mass.) Republican says: "If the states themselves will take up this im portant phase of the conservation question, the nightmare of a gigantic water power trust will be forever dis pelled." The State of Oregon has taken up this "important phase of conserva tion." The result Is a very elaborate act;- some' think so intricate and re strictive as to prevent or greatly check the use of streams, either for power or for irrigation. The act virtually as sumes the ownership for the state of all unappropriated waters, and regu lation, under close restriction, of all waters not w'holly- on' one's own land, or, if rising on one's lands, passing into the lands of another. The state is divided into two "water divisions, with a superintendent for each. The act creates the office of State Engineer, and a Board of Con trol, consisting of . the engineer and the two superintendents. To this board all applications for use of water must be made. By this Board rights of contestants are to be adjudged. Fees are to be paid to the state by those who use either for Irrigation or for power the waters passing their own lands. - This act has been characterized by many as extremely obstructive, and. its requirements costly, to the extent of prohibition. Experience alone can tell whether it will prove so. The act went into effect only last May. i 1 - .V GOOD SHIPS AVAILABLE. ( Perhaps the most charitable view that can be taken of the owners of the decrepit steamer Kentucky, that was shaken to pieces almost . before she was clear of the land on the Atlantic Coast, Is that they were imposed on by a buying expert whose rascality or ignorance was apparently Indorsed by the inspectors of the district from which she departed. ' The fact that Americans are shut out of the mar kets, in which first-class ships can al ways be purchased by every other na tion "on earth, does not palliate the of fense of buying an ancient tub like the Kentucky and trusting to luck to "keep her afloat with passengers aboard. The disaster, however, does call attention to the manrfer in .which our shipowners are barred from se curing good vessels except at ex orbitant prices.- N The Kentucky was purchased by a reputable steamship company, whose business had outgrown its facilities to such an extent that it was in im mediate need of a vessel, and appar ently had no time to wait until one could be. built." If a British, French, German, Norwegian, Dutch or even a Japanese firm of shipowners were con fronted with such an emergency, its field for selection would not be limited to a few ancient, wooden hulks in their own country. Instead, they would have access to the - bargain counters of every big shipyard and shipbuilding center in Europe. At every port of importance in Great Britain can be found first-class,' modern-built, steel steamships, which have been supplanted by larger vessels on the routes for which they were built. These vessels are as staunch as the day they were built, and they are sold at very low prices. Many of the yards, in fact," make a practice of touilding ships during periods of dullness and sellingthem at bargain prices to buy ers from all parts of the world ex cept the United States. The Kentucky was intended to run on a route where she would come in competition with this latter class of vessels, which are brought to the coast by the Canadian transportation lines. Old, decrepit and worthless, as she proved to be, it is not improbable that she brought a higher price than . the Canadians would be obliged to pay for a new steel ship. DIRGE OF-THINGS HOME-MADE. An "up-state" Senator of New Tork cites that farmers' wives have stopped making butter, cheese and other things (presumably soft soap and tal low candles) that formerly helped to swell, the family income. The Infer ence intended is that farmers are so opulent that their wives no longer stoop to making small sums go as .'ar as pof-sib'e. Nothing is said about "up-state" farmers having eschewed the sickle, the cradle and the flail in harvesting wheat, or hand gathering, husking and shelling corn; the hoe for cultivating and potato-digging, but ten chances to one the wastrels have done so. The inference "in. this 'latter case might just as logically be that farmers are so prosperous that they have given over these old-fashioned devices of a primitive agriculture for high-priced, labor-saving machinery, and that small savings, as represented by these old-time methods, no longer appeal to them as worth while. ' The logic in both cases is lame. Why, in a day and age of large things, should farmers and farmers' wives be censured, even by implication, for abandonment of small things, such as butter-making by means of the churn and dasher; cheese-making with the hand press; peeling, cutting and cor ing apples by hand, stringing the pieces on twine with darning needles and drying them on the kitchen walls and filling the candle-molds with wicks and melted tallow to provide light for the farmhouse? Is it not true, in the first place, that there is no market for these things? that nobody wants these farm-manufactured commodi ties? Who, for example, wants farm butter and soft soap and tallow can dles and apples cut from strings upon which they had been dried in flytime? And why should farmers' wives spend their time and energies and break their bodies in these long outgrown pro cesses of manufacture? There Is no sense in the suggestion , that they should do so nor would there be even the smallest saving in so doing. It would be a one-sided growth, indeed, that would send a troop of -men in from the field where they had been operating the great combined har vester, to eat food cooked by the open fire in the utensils of a past century. One of the clearest, strongest notes of prosperity on the farm is that which sings the dirge of things "home made," from blue jeans and tallow candles to lye soap and hominy and hand-knit socks, from hand-spun yarn, that owed its dark blue color to the malodorous dye pot In the chim ney corner. Of course, farmers" wives up state or down state, in New Tork, or elsewhere, have "stopped" making butter and cheese and soap and can dles; wearing linsey and Jean and tow linen. These, and divers and sundry other pleasant pastimes, were those in which our grandmothers grew early old and broke the strength of their children before they were born. Be ing neither serfs nor fools, why should farmers' wives of today continue in these profitless vocations? 'Are they not separated from the necessity of such pursuits by the inventive genius of two or three generations of men, and by the growth In knowledge of both men and women, covering three quarters of a century? KEW BUSINESS RECORDS. The first five days of the month of February made a most flattering ex hibit for Portland. Real estate trans fers of $1,212,679, and bank clearings of $7,200,479, broke all previous re cords for the period. Building permits of $135,635 were ahead of the same period a year ago, but, of course, seem small in comparison with the huge volume of construction work, for which contracts have been let, but for which the permits have ndt yet been issued. There is enough business In sight for the remainder of this short month to bring the totals up to re cord proportions. There Is another feature of this lousiness situation which does not attract much attention, but which - has a very powerful bearing on the growth of Portland and the territory tributary to this city. In the first five day of this short month the arrivals and departures of seagoing vessels numbered thirty-nine, with a carrying capacity of more than 75,000 tons. . This outbound fleet carried Oregon lumber to China, South Africa and Australia, wheat to Europe, flour to Honolulu and miscellaneous products to New Tork and other Eastern ports. Coastwise to San Francisco and other ports it distributed Oregon lum ber, wheat, flour, barley and ottir staples which have made the state famous. The fleet arriving brought general cargo from the Atlantic Slope, from the Far East and from Europe. It brought oil, cement, sugar and other products from California. There was no unusual congestion to cause this heavy movement In five days. If was all in the regular order of busi ness and while this fleet was arriving and departing, its predecessors and successors were heard from along nearly all of the world's great routes. On 'the second and third days of the month two cargoes of Oregon wheat entered Queenstown and another ar rived at Dublin. A big steamship, carrying another cargo, called at Cape Verde Island, for orders to port cf discharge. One big steamship, lumber laden from Portland, arrived in Japan and another in Australia. In the course of the week, Portland importers char tered a. tramp steamer and a sailing ship to load at Antwerp and New-castle-on-Tyne, while half a dozen freighters were engaged to load lum ber foreign and coastwise. WTith the clearing out of this fleet, in the first five days of February, there still re mained in port loading for China, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom six big freighters with a capacity of more than 16,000, 000 feet of lumber. The relation of this great water traffic to real estate transfers, build ing permits and bank clearings may not be always clear to, the man who never visits the. water tcpnt or the customs-house. . But the water high way over which this traffic moves to the and from the world's markets, more than to any other single factor, brings Portland its commercial pres tige. Recognition of the Importance of this traffic and of its great bear ing on all other features of our com mercial life, causes the average -Port-lander to pay a tax for river improve ments more cheerfully than any other which is levied against his property. It also accounts for the Portland ob jection to moving this city and its shipping facilities to any other point on the Columbia or Willamette Rivera THE "NO MEAT" PROPAGANDA. There Is little doubt that total ab stinence from meat, as proposed by unorganized thousands in Cleveland, Chicago, Kansas City and other towns, for a period of sixty days, would be a decided benefit to a carnivorous, rheu matic and irritable public. That the American people as individuals, and as a whole are entirely too devoted to the flesh of animals, for their own good, is a reasonably well established fact. Plainly stated, we eat too much meat. We grow gross of body, stiff in the joints, rheumatic, nervous . and ill tempered largely from what we feed upon. Meat is a standard article of diet. Doctors tell us that to this fact is due the accumulation of uric acid in the blood which the overworked kidneys are unable to take care of, and of a long train of diseases" that follow. Without, therefore, discussing the proposed boycott of meat as a retali ative or corrective measure on the basis of high prices, abstinence from meat for sixty days may produce a wonderful revival of the run-down vital forces of which there is abundstnt evidence on every hand. And since it is reasonably certain that very few people will abstain from meat for a period long enough to make a test of its wholesomeness or unwholesome ness, unless forced in some manner to do so, the boycott of the meat shops for sixty days would probably be a good thing. One thing is certain. The price of meat of all grades, even down to the once freely dispensed liver, and its accompaniment of bacon, at prices that every laboring man could afford to pay, is abnormally, unwarrantably and unreasonably high. The cattle, sheep and hog producers seem to be doing their share toward feeding the multitude. That is to say, the supply from farms and ranges is not short. But somewhere between the steer, the hog and the sheep on foot and the offerings upon the blocks of the butcher, prices are inflated until the Sunday roast, the liver and bacon fir breakfast, even the soup-bone, have attained a cost that is startling and in many families prohibitive. While the people who are agitating the boycott seem to be greatly in ear nest, and while they are not by any means all professional agitators, it ;s not likely that the scheme to bring down meat prices by this means will succeed. A vast majority of the Amer ican people must have meat or think they must have it upon their tables at least once a day. It is not conceiv able that any formidable number of them will voluntarily restrain the meat-eating proclivity as long as they can compass the price of meat ty economizing upon something else. They will simply scrimp in other lines and pay the price demanded. RESTRICTING APPLE DEMAND. Director Shepard. of the Hood River Apple-growers' Union, offered excel lent advice to the peopie interested In growing and handling the apple crop of the Pacific Northwest. The most Important point .brought out in his address was that in which he accused retailers of injuring the demand for apples by charging exorbitant prices. Mr. Shepard stated that a box of apples, for which the grower received about $2.25, reached the hands of the retailer via" the association and th-3 commission merchant at a cost of ap proximately' $3. For these apples the retailer Is then accused of exacting prices which In some cases bring a profit of 500 per cent. There is, of course, a limited number of consum ers who will pay very high prices for first-class fruit. Unfortunately for the fruit indus try, this class of buyers is not large enough to supply a demand for more than a moderate amount of. fruit. The apple is a delicious fruit, and. If !t can reach the consumer at a moder ate cost, there are immense possi bilities for widening the market. Tt is still, iowever, .far from being a necessity, especially so long as the best stock it-mains beyond the' finan cial reach of people of pocr or only moderate circumstances. With the rapidly increasing acreage of " apple orchards, this objection to present methods of marketing will be over come by Its own weight. Even the grower may be obliged to take less than $2.25 per box and the profits and general good of the industry to the country may be- enhanced by the greatly increased demand made pos sible by reasonable prices. It Is a commercial law as old as trade itself, that high prices restrict and. low prices Increase consumption. Apples are not exempt, not even Hood River apples. The "finished" East, - where rail roading as well as other branches of Industry, Is supposed (in the East) to have attained the highest degree of perfection, continues to profit by the experience and Ingenuity of the West. The Pennsylvania Railroad recently borrowed one of the mammoth com pound locomotives built by the Great Northern Railroad for its own use in the West. On the "worst division of the Pennsylvania road, the Great Northern engine performed the work of two of the big consolidated loco motives of the Eastern road, and burned only one-fifth more coal than was consumed by one of the consoli dated engines. Recalling the remark able success of Western railroad men, who have been called to high posi tions in the East, It would seem that in both, men and machines the West ern railroads are equipped much bet ter than those of the East. The gift by the Ladd estate of a sit for the Reed Institute is an ex cellent and most useful addition to a great- public benefaction. It is a beautiful and commanding site; it is ample for the purpose; it's contiguity to the city and the healthfulness of the situation contribute to make it all that could be desired. The endow ment for the Institute by one family of pioneers is materially strengthened by this gift from another. Good deeds like these hand the names and mejno ries of the benefactors on to future ages. In them there is that which defies time and cannot perish. England is stili "seeing things," -most of which have a strong Teutonic cast. The latest bogie man to stalk into "an Englishman's home" is a rumor that the crowning of the Ger man Emperor has been postponed these many years, in order that it may take place in Westminster Abbey, when William the Mighty invades the "tight little isle" with a conquering army. England is in a fair way to be suffering quite an attack of "nerves" by the time the comet swishes its way across the Summer skies. The Rev. Mr. Stuckey, the Kansas minister who alleged that he was lured away from the path of duty and decency by a 17-year-old girl of his congregation, has been sentenced to from one, to five years in the state prison. Inasmuch as the erring preacher blamed the girl for the esca-" pade. It would seem that he ought to serve the one year for the original of fenseyand an additional five years for hi3 cowardly attempt to shift the bur den of guilt to the shoulders of the victim of his rascality. Man can board a streetcar with little discomfort,- but he cannot dress or undress'-inside a nightshirt. This Is equality of the sexes until one re collects that man is the only animal that can get into and out of a pair of trousers in a Pullman berth. This Is a return to the starting point, how ever. r, Denver now has a woman judge to hear cases of women and children. This is an experiment of doubtful ad vantage. The official woman has ,not proved herself more humane than the official man. The alleged wholesale murderer at Aberdeen has been under suspicion for seven years, so it Is said, but had to kill a dog to be arrested. The man who kills a dog is a villain, anyway. The most notable -work of Frank Welch, late secretary of the State Board of Agriculture. In past years, was in convincing people that passes to the State Fair were invalid. . The treasurer of a Massachusetts savings bank is short half a million and says he is willing to bear all the blame. In a short time the judge may remark: "Three years." Chicago has just discovered the city has lost $30,000,000 in one kind of graft in the past few years. The money went to topgrafters in the city hall. If all these -disasters were caused by the comet It were time It swished into space; but the frailty of man is responsible for- them. At Oxford they now have a Shelley cult, where they study the poetry jf the greatest poet that Oxford ever expelled. An exchange of mlnirriums averts a tariff war wtih Germany. Hoch der Kaiser! DEMOCRATS ARE! TUB OBJECTORS. .- Republic Defeat Is Their Sole Purpose 1b Opposing Assembly. Pilot Rock Record. What about the assembly? Shall Re publicans be permitted ' to consult to gether for presentation of candidates for nomination in the primary? The Democrats will probably object and so wilt those alleged Republicans who Imagine that Democratic votes are es sential to the success of the Repub lican party. There are a few Republi cans, however, left who may go ahead and do whatever they think best for their own interests regardless of what the Democrats and milk-and-water Re publicans think about it. Experience has shown that the Republican party has lost more votes in this state through the efforts of Its leaders to placate the opposition than It ever gained by its half-hearted support of Democratic and Socialistic fads. The same men who gave heed to the clamor for reform legislation were at the bot tom of the disrepute into which the convention system was brought, all on account of their belief that the Re publican party was an organization pri marily designed for their special bene fit, and once It could not b controlled In their own interests that It had out 'llved its usefulness. To a certain gang in this state, and let It be said in all earnestness it does not belong to a single party, office is its chief aim In Its attempts to prevent, if possible, or ganization and management. It will be remembered that under the old system there were always . to be found delegates to conventions that did not wear collars, and the only reason there were not more of such ,in every convention was entirely due to the inactivity of voters, because the great majority of the people are honest and opposed to the trickery of politi cians. Of course, the Republicans ought to meet and present the names of their candidates for nomination In the pri mary, and if the Democrats do not want to support them, there should be no hard feelings on that account. It will not prevent others from nominat ing themselves If they see fit to do so. It is the honest opinion of this paper that through the assembly plan there will be men put to the front who would never think of seeking a nomination under the present primary law, and yet they will be among our most repre sentative men. - The objection the Democrats have to the assembly plan is that they fear It will result In the defeat . of repub lican candidates. The Democrats have always been very "Solicitous of the wel fare of the Republican party. There is good reason for their manifestation of good will toward Republicans. Every Democrat holding office in this state has been elected through support of Republican votes. MEMORY OF" A PIONEER SOLDIER. Justice .Soiucbt for "Widow of Veteran Who Fooght In Cayuse War. SALEM, Feb. 5. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian yesterday reported the death of Almoran Hill at his farm in Yam hill County, an enthusiastic pioneer of 18-13. who fought in the Cayuse War of 1847-8 and had not drawn his pay or his pension. The writer was appealed to only by William D. Gardener, of 413 Second street, N. W., Washington, D. C, for the address- of Almoran Hill, a Cayuse War soldier, to , whom both pay and pension seems to be due. From the case of Mrs. Margaret A., whose pension on back pay was allowed - and forwarded to !her through Hewitt S. Cox of Albany, Mr. Gardener became known. If the only living .son of Walter Mon teith be of the same spirit as his father and uncle Thomas, members of Captain Levi Scott's company of volunteers, who battled with the snows of Siskiyou 62 years ago in a forlorn hope to pass to California with messages of Governor Abennethy and Rev. H. H. Spaulding and were defeated, he. Walt Monteith. will rate the record more than the $790 of back pay, which was bravely earned. This is written to aid Mrs. Hill In se curing before her death what is due her at her late husband's back pe.y. JOHN MINTO. "Bob," Mr. Lincoln's Saddle-Horse. PORTLAND, Feb. 6. (To the Editor.) The 101st anniversary of Abraham Lin coln's birth, which will be celebrated soon, recalls the pathetic incident of "Old Bob." or Black Robin, as the family called him. In the funeral march to Oak Ridge Cemetery at Springfield, 111., when Mr. Lincoln was buried. May, 1865. "Bob," Mr. Lincoln's old saddle horse, then 22 years old, carrying the same saddle and saddle-bags, jus as Mr. Lincoln rode him when he practiced law in Springfield and the region round aboAt, was silently led close up behind the hearse by two aged colored men on foot. When "Bob" came along in the solemn procession, strong men turned aside and wept. C. E. CLINE. When Silence Was Not Golden. ' Kansas City Star. A Chicago 6-year-old excitedly de manded his father's attention at the din ner table when guests were present. "Robert," his father replied, "little boys should be seen and not heard. Please keep silent until you are given permis sion to speak." Robert subsided. Later his father relented. "Now, my son," he said, turning to the boy,- "you may tell me what you wished to say." "It's too late now. papa." the child answered. "There was a green worm in your salad and I wanted to tell you about it, but It's gone now." Would Make Lent XTnantmous. New York Tribune. It begins to look as if the meat strike would make this year's observance of Lent, now rapidly approaching, a record-breaker in the way of unanimity and enthusiasm. Cannon's Contemporaneous Tfaoushts. Indianapolis News. - A suspicion is beginning to grow that the Speaker is not - giving so much thought to what .he Is going to do as to what is going to be dqne to him. CURRENT SMALL CHANGE. Tom "Were you left much in your uncle's will?"' Jack "Much! I was left com pletely." Boston Transcript. Mr. ' Closecoyne (during his wife's recep tion) "She gives 'em lights; she gives 'em music: she (fives 'em food, flowers, cham pagne, and that's what she calls receiving!'' Puck. "There goes a man I could have mar ried." she said softly. " "Some men never know Just what they missed." he replied quietly, and she is still wondering what he meant. Detroit Free PrVss. "I can't make anything out of this poem of yours," complained the magazine editor. "That Isn't the point," replied the poet. "The question i" can I make anything out of It?" Philadelphia Record. "How about your cook? "When I saw you last month, you were quite dissatisfied with her." "Was 1 ?" responded the nosteva wearily. "I've been dissatisfied with Ave or six cooks since then." Louisville Courier Journal, i "1 understand you have said you might retire to nrivate life," "Yes," said Sena tor Sorghum. "It's all right for me to make that sort of a remark. But I'd hate to have any of my constituents say it." Washington Star. SEVEN DEVILS ZONE IS RICH Great Future Predicted for Idaho Copper-Producing District. It is the opinion of William Trevor, a prominent mining man and other mining experts that the Seven Devils' Mining dis tricts in Idaho Is destined to become one of the biggest copper producing districts in Idaho is destined to become one of the biggest copper-producing districts In the world and that It will soon rival the Butte district in output. "At present there are between 2,000,000 and 3.000.000 tons of ore waiting to be shipped from the Seven Devils' country as soon as transportation is secured," said Mr. Trevor yesterday. "The center of the great mining dis trict is the town of Cuprum. This town is about 15 miles from the site of the huge Ox Bow power plant which is near ing completion, and a car line will soon be built between the two points. This will afford an outlet for the vast product of the district. "The Northwest Railroad has just been completed from Huntington to Home stead, a distance of 65 miles. Over this road the ore obtained by all the mining companies in the district will be shipped, and over the same line the machinery for the power plant and all mining opera tions will be brought in. Practically all machinery will be brought from Portland by way of the O. R. & N. "The Ox Bow power plant, on the BnRke River, will cost J2.900.000 and $2. 000.000 of this sum has already been spent. The river is being dammed and three large tunnels are being constructed across the. peninsula, to carry the water. Hundreds of miners are waiting until that part of the river bed will go dry that the supposed rich mineral deposits In the bottom of the stream may be gathered. It is expected the power plant will be completed in two years and that power will be furnished In six months. The railroad tunnel just opposite the power plant is ll4 miles long. "All the ore in the district Is high grade and averages over $200 a ton. Some exceeds $300. Copper is the dominant mineral but there is also a good percent age of gold and silver. "Dividends paid by the various mines of the district have run from $2,000,000 to $11,000,000. Some of the larger concerns are the Calumet Buena Vista Mines Milling & Smelting Company, the Bunker Hill and Sullivan, the Standard Mam moth, the Empire State, Hercules, and Morning." Bl'RX'S TO START AGENCY Detective to Organize Government Sleuth Bureau Here. . William J. Burns will arrive In- Port land this week for the purpose of in stalling here the private detective sys tem which he organized for the United States. . Offices will be opened and will be placed in charge of a chief operator who will have direction of the field men who will be assigned to the Northwest. It is understood that the Burns agency will be conducted on lines similar to the Pinkerton methods. An important branch of the work which the Burns agency will undertake will be in hunting down the class of crooks who operate among the banks of the country. Chief Burns recently secured a contract with the Association of Bankers, embracing -11,000 financial institutions located in every state of the Union. He also made an extensive trip through the East and conferred with some of the most noted thief catchers of the police forces of various cities, and those engaged in private work. He has secured the services of a large number of them. A press dis patch recently announced that the chief of detectives for New York City would assume charge of the Eastern division of the agency. Until Burns shall make his announce ment It -will not be known who will be made superintendent of the local di vision. Applications have been filed by a number of Oregon men who aspire to become Identified with the new agency. Detective Burns became well-known In Oregon by . gathering evidence against land-fraud manipulators. He was the rlghthand man of Attorney Heney and was so successful In getting evidence that many of the defendants confessed. Later Detective Burns went to San Francisco and was prominent in the graft investigation there. SOCIETY IS SEEKING HOME Sellwood and Snnnyslde ITrge Claims for Site of Building. The Sellwood Board of Trade will submit a proposal for the location of the home of the Oregon Historical So ciety In that suburb. At the next meet ing the offer will take definite form. The Sunnyside Push Club also will urge that two blocks In the new park tract in Laurelhurst be set apart for the home of the society. That steps must be taken to provide a home for the society this year is the opinion of George H. Himes, the secre tary, who Is a member of the commit tee appointed to look up a site. "It would not be proper for .me to favor any particular site for the home of the Oregon Historical Society," said Mr. Himes, "except to say that we must secure a home as soon as possible. Our society has grown faster and gathered more historictl matter in the past 11 years than any .other historical'society In the United States. This I know to be a fact. In selecting a site for the home, one thing, however, ought to be kept in view, the future expansion. I am in favor of locating the home in one of the city parks on one or more acres, for then there would be space for ex pansion. The site need not be in the center of business. It is a mistake to suppose that the home of the society need be close In. In New York, where there Is the greatest natural history department almost, in the world, the buildings are eight miles from the postofflce." BACHELORS "WIDEN SCOPE Blue Mountain Club Now Plans Xa- N tional Organization. ' . DAYTON, Wash., Feb. 6. (Special.) Acting on suggestions received from bachelors living in other states, offi cers of the Blue Mountain Bachelors' Club have taken steps to insure a National organization of bachelors. A constitution, by-laws and articles for a charter are now being prepared under the direction of President Ralph Hunt. The publication of a monthly official paper is also being considered. A feature of the Brotherhood of Bachelors possibly will . be a matri monial bureau. Alleged Chinese Forger Taken. VANCOUVER, Wash., Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) Lee Ya, a China,man, wanted in North Yakima on a charge of forgery, was brought from Portland tonight and placed In the City Jail to await the ar rival of Sheriff Lancaster. This was done to offset the trouble of securing requisi tion papers. The Chinaman's attorneys were about to start habeas- corpus pro ceedings when the prisoner was hurried to Vancouver. Fall on Ice Dislocates Hip. MOSCOW, Idaho, Feb. 6. (Special.) Charles H. Thompson, a member of the City Council, fell on the Ice on a street crossing near the City Hall this after noon and his hip waa dislocated. JAPAN IS FEELING MI CH 111 It T Teople Regard Manchurian Railway Control as Spoils of War. TOKIO. Jan. 10. The proposition of the United States for the neutralization of the railroads in Manchuria came as a surprise, and the publication of -details of the note handed to the Japanese gov ernment on December 10 by the American Ambassador aroused an immediate chorus of disapproval. Count T. Hayashi. last Minister of Foreign Affairs and ex-Ambassador to Great Britain Count Okuma, formerly one of the most active of statesmen, and every one whose name carried any weight whatsoever were quoted in the news papers in strenuous objections- to giving up what they claim as the harvest of the war with Russia. "Tens of thousands of our soldiers died in Manchuria in the war with Russia." they said. "We got little out of the war except what was political. The ma terial side is represented by the South Manchurian and the Antung-Mukrisn Railways. The leased territory and Port Arthur were only recovered. These we, won 10 years before and lost again by they intrigue of certain powers when we were a weaker nation. Now the Unltosl States, hitherto always our friend, comes into combination with other powers and pro poses that we should give up the South Manchurian Railway, a paying road, and the AntUng-Mukden. the continuation of our railroads in Corea. to the control of foreigners and strangers. "The reasons assigned for this are that the principle of the "open door' and equal opportunity for all nations doing business in China must be preserved. But Japan has entered into combination with the powers of America and Europe to preserve the integrity of China and to maintain the principle of the open door and equal opportunity in concert with China and with all other nations, and to this Japan had adhered religiously. "In two ways, therefore, the United States? attacks the honor and sentiment of the people of Japan. Is it. any won der that we refuse to permit our gov ernment even to suggest that the pro posal has been received by Japan with equanimity ? "The riots that followed the making of tho treaty of Portsmouth would not be a circumstance to the trouble that would follow the relinquishment by Japan of her rights in Manchuri-i. even though she received twice tho intrinsic value." One thing may be wot down as about certain, and that is Japan is not going to give up her right In the South Man churlan Railway until those rights Shall be terminated by the lapse of the term for which Japan has control. Japan was given control of the South Manchurian Railway for 36 years from the signing o,f the Portsmouth treaty. The Autung Mukden Railway will remain in posses sion of Japan for 15 years. There are in Manchuria about 30,000 Japanese settlers, and. since they are within the zone of the railroad, where Japan has a sphere of influence, the pro posed taking over by tile powers would place the Interests of these in jeopardy. IDAHO EDITORS ORGANIZE Moscow Host to Visiting Newspaper Men, Who Talk for Once. SPOKANE. Wash., Feb. 6. (Special.) Editors of eight Idaho weekly papers meeting at Moscow last night formed the Latah County Editorial Association and were banqueted by the Moscow Commercial Club, at the University of Idaho. William M. Morgan presided as toast master and Mayor B. T. Byrnes de livered an address. The response was made by Editor George W. Hancock, of the Kendrick Gazette; "Latah Coun ty, Her. Resources and Possibilities," was discussed by Hugh Cheney, of Deary; "Latah County's Relations to the State," was treated by ex-Congrcss-man Burton L. French; W. D. liumis ton, of Potlache, spoke on the "Rela tions of the Press to the Development of Latah County;" "Life Is Just One Damn Thing and Then Another," was discussed by Editor P. L. Oreutt;" "The Relations of the Editor to the State." by F. C. McGowan, of Deary, was an outline of modern ideaa; "The Editor and Agriculture Education," by R. J. Lyman, suggested the harmonizing of agricultural with modern life; "The Railrods," was discussed by M. E. Lewis," president of the board of re gents, of the University. W. E. Lee, a graduate of the University of Idaho, spoke on "What I Know About Do mestic Science." INDIANS DELAY LAND OPENING Banished Modocs Must Receive Al lotments First. KLAMATH FALLS. Or., Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) Hiram F. White, a special Indian allotting agent, 'who has been allotting lands on the Klamath Reservation more than two years, has nearly completed his assigned work, except for the allot ments to the band of Modocs in Okla homa, who were banished to the Indian Territory after the Modoc war in 1872-73. The disabilities of these Indians were removed by an act of Congress, approved March 3, 1900. but no date is mentioned in the act for their return. This is a perplexing mission, especially if linal opening cf the Klamath Reservation must await the pleasure of this small bantl of Indians as to their return to claim their allotments. The lands allotted to them in the Modoc Reservation at the Quapam Agency, in Oklahoma, they are authorized to sell or lease, but this is necessarily a slow process. "The present Congress should by amendment fix a time limit so that tho allotments can be completed within a few months," said a citizen of Klamath. Falls today. "The great Klamath res ervation, nearly as large as the State of Delaware, and rich in resources, should be opened within a reasonable time, for it is no longer in an isolated wilderness, but in the heart of a region on th& eve of great- development." PRICES OF FARMS ADVANCING Sales at $100 an Acre Near Pullman Is Record. Within Year. SPOKANE, Wash., Feb. 6. The sale of the Fred Young farm, west of Pull man, for $100 an acre yesterday, is taken as an indication of advancing prices for farm lands. The farm has a good house, barn, electric Rights, water system and other modern improve ments. This is the second farm near Pullman t6 sell for $100 an acre, an other having sold last Summer, but of fers of $100 an acre for well-improved farms near Pullman have been made frequently of late. There is a strong demand for good farms and acreage near town. Three acres, bought a week ago for $1100, sold In a few days for $1400. COMET LIGHTS VP RANCHES People Near Glendale Have Nightly Views of Visitor. GLENDALE, Or., Feb. 6. (Special.) A. view of the comet was obtained by a party of citizens who drove to the high ground east of the city to night. The nucleus was only dimly visible through a hazy cloud low down on the Northwestern horizon, hut the tall was seen plainly reaching some distance into the sky. Ranchers in this vicinity have been watching the comet nightly for some time.