lO THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1910. Brvitim PORTLAND. OREGOV. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Fostofllca as Second-Class Mattar. Subscription Rate Invariably In Advance. (BT MAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year 8-99 Dally. Sunday Included, six month.... 4 25 Dally. Sunday Included, three months.. 2 25 Dally. Sunday Included, one month....- -73 Dally, without Sunday, one year ?'X; Dally, without Sunday, six months 8.25 Dally, without Sunday, three montha... 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year J-50 Sunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and weekly, one year. ....... . 8.50 CBy Carr!eT. Dally. Sunday Included, on year 8 00 Dally. Sunday Included, one month..... .75 How to Remit Send Poatofllca money order, express order or personal check oa your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofrice ad dress In full. Including- county and state. Postage Rates lO to 14 pages, 1 cent; 19 to 28 pages. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages, 3 cents; 40 to 60 pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Office. The S. C. Beck with Special Agency New York, rooms 4H 60 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 010-012 Tribune building. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, FKR. 23, 1810. THREE HUNDRED MILLIONS A YEAR Doubtless Senator Aldrich could tell, as he says he could tell, how the Government of the United States could be "run" for $300,000,000 a year less than It now costs. ,But he will not be permitted to make the ex periment. He could tell also how taxation could be reduced by a simi lar amount, but he doesn't want it re duced. His method of. taxation Is wasteful, and It provokes much of the unnecessary and excessive ex pense. But the people, or most of them, look upon the Government as an engine of waste (and profit or possible profit, to themselves), and don't want Us expenditures reduced. And since they don't want the ex penditures reduced, they don't want the revenues, by which the expendi tures must be supported, cut down. In every direction our Government is a wastrel. Its profligacy appears in all conceivable ways, and in ways that only the most ingenious imagi nation, striving for profit at the gen eral cost, could invent. Government has gone far, inconceivably far, be yond its true function. Its true function, and its only just Junction, Is preservation of the peace, protection of personal rights and the just rights of property, and enforce ment of justice be.tween the conflict ing claims of members of the com monwealth. But we have departed far from this conception. Govern ment, or use of the powers of govern ment, is now conceived as a means or method which one person or class may use to obtain advantage over others. This is not unusual in his tory though new to us. In all past times men have seized their oppor tunity to "smell their particular from the general weal." But an open con tinent and the law of migration have limited it hitherto, in our case. Yet the wave now is arrested; now it turns backward. Personal initiative is giving way to a desire of the indi vidual to live in one way or another at the general expense, or cost of the whole. It is the early stage of a state jsocialism. How far it is to go no one can tell. But Just now it makes our own government the most expensive and profligate government on the face of the earth. , In every direction the General Government now is extending its op erations. The states generally are not far behind. The general assumption Is that individuals now can do noth ing for themselves. "The law" must be invoked for everything. Legions and multitudes of officials are the consequence. Ingenuity is racked to Invent now ways to enlarge the func tions of government; and with every new board or bureau or commission, A multitude of new officials is creat ed. Most of them are of no service Hvhatever. The public health becomes an object of solicitude, as if human beings never were to die; and multi tudes of officials are employed to tabulate inevitable conditions, and to keep a record which' it seems to be supposed will arrest the general fu neral march. Then wages and prices and all the details of living must be investigated, and the quality of food, and the quantity of each and every kind of fiber in clothing, must be in spected, and the supply and kinds and cost of fuel, and investigation of the changing temperature of the seasons and reports thereon. An enormous officialdom is supported and millions are Bpent thereon. - Everything, more over, that government does- costs two or three prices. Man and women are employed in excessive numbers, whose nominal works is but a few hours a day, and it is not work at all: and, besides. It is employed most ly in theoretical and unnecessary ef fort. The assumption is that the in dividual can do nothing for himself, but the ' Government must be his guardian. Following this is the as sumption, and logical conclusion, that ' the best thing that the young- man or woman can do is to enter a service where there Is little to do, and twice as much pay as can be., had in ordi nary occupations; and now this is followed by a proposition for old-age pensions for all who work themselves into this way of easy, overpaid and irresponsible life. Then the general business of the Government is carried on without judgment or foresight. Incredible sums are wasted by ignorant and ten tative effort, by change of plans, and by failure of Bupply of funds at criti cal times. But since democracy de mands all this waste, it must pay for it. Undoubtedly the Government of the United .States could be "run" at a saving of $300,000,000 a year, with out loss of any real efficiency.. Gov ernment of states and municipalities could be conducted with saving of greater sums; but It Isn't what the people want. They desire all this fu tility and extravagance, and then they retain the right to raise a roar to heaven about the expepse of it, blam ing everybody who, however reluc tant, is enforced to carry 'out .their will. No; the three hundred millions a year will not be saved. A young man, single, with no one dependent on him, committed suicide In Portland Monday. Four years ago, when the young man was 31 years of age, his father died, leaving him 93500 in cash and several tracts of real estate. This was all dissipated, and, when the end of his available resources was reached, life seemed so cheerless that the despondent man drank carbolic acid and passed on to a.- land where inherited wealth causes no trouble. The moral that can be drawn from this tragedy Is as old as history. Throughout the -world can be found today thousands of young men whose lives have been wrecked by starting life's voyage with too heavy a cargo of this world's goods and an insufficient mental balance to admit of skilled-navigation past ever present dangers and temptations. Not all of the world's poor "boys make suc cesses of their lives, but so many of those who are given a good financial start make failures of themselves that poverty does not seem much- of a handicap to men who possess the right fiber. MORE PIBLICITY FOR OBEGOX. The importance of the announce ment by. President Hill of the Great Northern, in The Oregonian yester day, cannot be overestimated. The plan suggested by Mr. Hill for adver tising the resources of the state pre sents so many . features of unmistak able merit that i cannot fail to prove a great success. A first-class exhibit of some of Oregon's great staples, such as lumber, fruit and grain, would not fail to attract attention and excite curiosity anywhere east of the Rocky Mountains. The stories printed about the wonderful yields, and the extravagant prices paid for our fruit, and about the Immenslty of our lumber interests, even when related with strict adherence to the truth, are almost unbelievable. When the interest awakened by these stories can be enhanced by exhibits showing tbe actual products, there is every reason to expect an immediate re sponse in a flood of homeseekers thronging into this rich region. In the older settled portions of the state reached by the Southern Pa cific and the O. Jl. & N., the railroads have done much publicity work. These lines, with thehir experimental farms, demonstration trains, and gen eral policy of switching the farmers from wheat-growing to more profit able crops, have Hjrformed great service in increasing the wealth of the state. They have also spent large sums of money in advertising Oregon. The Hill lines have an even more powerful Incentive for attracting im migration in this direction. In the invasion of Central Oregon they are opening what is almost a virgin field for the homeseeker. In that vast re gion stretching away from the Co lumbia River to the California state line are not only millions of acres of fine land that can be- purchased at low prices, but there Is also a large area of vacant Government land still open for settlement by homesteaders. On this land the flocks and herds of stockmen have roamed at will since the first settlers entered the country, and little or no attempt has been made at more profitable branches of agriculture which have made the Willamette Valley and some portions 'of Eastern Oregon fa mous for the immense profits re turned by fruit-growing and diversi fied farming. At no previous time in the history of the country has there been so much interest awakened in rural life as at present when the high prices, at which everything produced on the farm Is selling, are forcing peo ple out of the cities. In the East, and even in the middle West, it is no longer possible to secure good land at low prices, and through all that region is an enormous population that Is gradually being crowded out. ' The West needs those people, and in Oregon there is plenty of room for thousands, even millions, before the state will reach its maximum of pro duction. Mr. Hill's plan for showing these people what actually can be done in Oregon can hardly fail to prove effective. In the work he will have the cordial support of all Ore gonians. With both the Hill and the Harriman. systems actively rustling up new settlers for the state, we are certain of a phenomenal increase in a very desirable class of population within the next year or two. 1VHERE IS THE WHEAT? Elsewhere The Oregonian prints a communication from Andrew S. Mosely, a prominent San Francisco grain merchant. As the subject is one which is almost certain to attract much interest early next month, when Secretary Wilson attempts to justify his overestimated crop figures, it is worth while considering a few facts having a direct bearing on the sub ject. Mr, Mosely admits that it is probable that the size of the Pacific Coast crop has been "exaggerated a bit." In the case of Oregon, Wash ington and Idaho this "bit" amounts to more than 30 per cent, the crop of the three states being at least 16, 000,000 bushels smaller than the fig ures credited to the three states by the Government. . A superficial glance at Mr. Mosely's comparative figures on primary re ceipts would indicate that this rec ord movement of wheat was merely a reflection of a record crop. Compar isons are valueless, however, unless the varying conditions of the years in which they are made are also consid ered. Primary receipts for the sea son to date are larger than those of a year ago; bUT when the relative size of the two crop's Is considered, they are proportionately not in keeping with the crop of 1909, from which they are coming. The crop of 1908 caught fce first of the dollar wheat prices, and, despite the small size of .the crop,, "the available surplus was rushed to market early. So free was this movement that in the six montha ending December 31, 1908, there were received at the principal primary markets 166,875,000 oushels of wheat. This from a crop which the Government placed at 664,602,000 bushels. This season, for the six months end ing December 31, receipts at the same primary markets were 171,306,000 bushels. In other words, the market ing has not been free enough for a crop 72,587,000 bushels greater than Its predecessor, to show an increase of more than 4,431,000 bushels In pri mary receipts for the first six months of the season. As an "example of the relative early movements of the short crop of 1908, and the much greater crop of 1909, it Is interesting to note that the primary' receipts in Septem ber, 1908. were 2,500,000 bushels greater than in September, 1909. It is also Interesting to note that the 1905 crop, which supplied the former record for large primary receipts to date, followed one of the smallest crops of recent years, just as the large ,1909 crop followed the ) abnormally small crop of 1908. Exhaustion of supplies from the short crop would quite naturally be followed by replenishment as soon as a good crop appeared. It would however, require a wide stretch of the imagination to believe that the millers of the country were hoarding 100, 000,000 bushels of wheat for fear of a shortage In May and June, especially when both May and June options are selling at 10 to 20 cents per bushel under the cash quotations. Accepting the Government figures of 737,189,000 bushels for the 1909 crop, we have an increase of 72,587, 000 bushels over its predecessor. Ex ports from the crop are 27,955,000 bushels less than for the same period' for the crop of 1908, these figures in dicating that, if the Government fig ures were accurate, there would be more than 100,000,000 bushels more wheat In the country today than there was a year ago. Yet primary receipts are but little more than 10,000,000 bushels in excess or tnose or a year ago, and the American visible sup ply is 14,000,000 bushels less than it was a year ago. We shall await with considerable interest Secretary Wil- sdh's March report, which wilil tell us what became of the 737,000,000 bushel crop Including 66,622,000 bushels which he alleges were grown in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. THE STORM. Of course, the most loyal citizen of Portland will not assert that the 22d of February this year was an ideal rose-planting day. But the un expected will happen occasionally, even in the matter of Oregon climate in February. It is safe to predict that there will be as many roses in Port land by the first week in June as the promoters of the Rose Festival know what to do with. It may said, fur thermore, that this Is not the only remarkable February in the history of Oregon. February, 1869, for ex ample, was as balmy as May; roads were dusty, early Spring flowers and peach trees were In bloom, birds were nesting and the plowman was afield In all the upland sections of the Wil lamette Valley. That was a good crop year, of course, not differing from, ordinary years in this respect. Just as, without doubt, abundant crops will succeed the present "un usual" February. These extremes are climatic inci dents merely, that arouse some com ment in passing, but do not affect In any sense the agricultural prosper ity of the state. And when this Is said it is understood to cover the gen eral prosperity of the state, since ag riculture and its contingent industries, that have their root in the soil, form the basis of all , prosperity. Let us, then, cheerfully shovel coal into the house furnace yet a little longer, knowing that all things work to gether for the ultimate good of loyal, industrious Oregonians. PATRIOTS AND TORIES. Whether the majority of the colon ists in the time of the Revolutionary War iidhered to the cause of the King or the patriots is a question upon which the lack of precise infor mation gives us liberty to speculate rather freely. Tt is not safe to draw conclusions from the relative strength of the parties after Cornwallis surrendered.- Their condition was prob ably very different two or three years earlier. Undoubtedly there was a large body of people who did not really care much whether the crown or the colonists triumphed, and they naturally passed from one side to the other as fortune directed. In the dark days of 1778 they were loyalists. After Cornwallis surrendered they were, we may suppose, ardent pa triots, i Hence the number of Tories who left the country when peace was concluded, or who were disciplined in one way and another by the vari ous state governments, gives no clew to the real strength of loyalist senti ment during the war. This sentiment must have been irrf portant even in Boston, which was certainly the most rebellious of the larger towns in the colonies. When Howe evacuated the place in 1776 some 1100 Tories went with him. During the . British occupation they had. not been especially considerate of the Nfeellngs of the patriots, and after h,is departure they believed their lives would be unsafe. Eleven hundred persons formed a notable proportion of Boston's population at that time, while in New York and Philadelphia the Tories were certain ty much more numerous. It is only in the New England colo nies and Virginia that we can say with assurance that the patriots out numbered the loyalists. In New1 York State the parties may have been pretty evenly balanced. No doubt the patriots heavily predominated in the Mohawk region and along the Hud son, but all around New York City and on Long Island almost every man was a Tory. This was also true of Northern New Jersey. The British felt so confident ' of the loyalty of these regions that they commissioned Oliver De Lancey and Cortlandt Skin ner to enlist twenty battalions among the farmers. Of course no such num ber of troops was raised, but they seem to have had little difficulty in recruiting, and harassed the scattered patriots unmercifully. The Quaker sentiment in Pennsyl vania was with the revolutionaries, but it was not very effective. Prob ably a "majority of the rest of the people was loyal to King Goerge, and this was certainly the case in the sea board regions of Georgia and the Car ollnas. The British overran ail that territory without meeting any sub stantial resistance. It was only when the mountaineers sprang to arms under Marlon and Sumpter that their troubles began. . The mountain men of the Carolinas were incomparably -the superiors of their descendants In mar tial vigor. Whether the decadence of that once noble stock has been caused by the hookworm or some thing else. It Is lamentable to con template. The battle of King's Moun tain, which broke the British prestige and opened the way for Greene's .con summate strategy, was won by the mountain men.. None, of the proper tied and pedigreed planters of the lowlands shared In its glory. Upon the whole, attentive examination of facts hardly permits one to believe that the revolutionary patriots, throughout- the colonies, outnum bered the loyalists. How did it hap pen, then, that they managed to con trol the legislatures and carry on the war? They managed to do it because they had command of an agency which in all the course of human history has never failed to sway ma jorities and decide events. The loyal ists possesssed the property, the good breeding and the education of the country, as well as a majority of the people. This probably must be con ceded. But the patriots were led by a little band of men whose intelli- L gence both as individuals - and as a group is one of the marvels of his tory. In the American Revolution, as in all other great crises of human affairs, intelligence prevailed over numbers. Franklin, Washington, the Adamses, with their compeers, con trolled the colonies during the Revo lution because they had better brains than the Tories. Fortunately their ideals were high and their motives pure, but if they had been sordidly ambitious their Intelligence., would still have enabled them to control events and gain their ends. That has always been the rule In history. In every contest, sooner or later, intelli gence wins. The brute force of the majority does not count. The master mind, intent upon Its purpose, cannot be withstood. Numbers, property, in stitutions all bend to Its will. The only hope for the human race lies in the fact that the all-powerful Intelli gence, as It evolves, becomes con stantly more moral, benevolent and pervasive. . The poor old steamer Geo. , W. Elder has been rammed again, this time in the harbor of San Pedro. As usual, the luckless vessel had several of her ribs broken and some o'f her plates sprung. For more than a third of a century this plucky old craft has been engaged in the Pacific Coast trade, hef ocean beat extending from Alaska to San Diego. Her sister ship, the City of Chester, went down in San Francisco harbor many years ago, and the Elder has suffered from the mischances of navigation, many times, but, refusing the scrap heap. she has always, after being -duly docked and patched again, put to sea. Though disabled in San Pedro Har bor by this latest mishap, we may confidently expect to see her -again in the harbor of Portland, seeking 0r serving. She Is an- old tub one that it is easy to sink, but one that has thus, far refused to yield to disaster. Long a familiar craft in our harbor, the citizens of t older .Portland will hear with regret of the old ship's final capitulation, when at last it comes, to the forces of "wear and tear." Tho San. Francisco Labor Council has adopted a resolution that none of the members will be permitted to work in a house where Asiatics are employed. The . resolution was the outcome of an attempt to boycott saloons where Orientals were em ployed, the council taking the ground that It was not fair to single ,out saloons while other business houses were permitted to employ Asiatics. The point would seem to be well taken, for according to all reports, the saloon "business," under the Mc Carthy administration, promises to be one of the leading Industries of the new San Francisco, and it is always more difficult to maintain a boycott against the necessaries of life, and those who handle them, than against the luxuries. If the moral wave con tinues to "slosh about" in ,the Bay City, we may soon hear of a boycott against the employment of Asiatics as prizefighters. For three consecutive montha Port land has held second place among the- wheat-exporting ports of the United States, New York alone mak ing a better showing than the Ore gon port. This is not the first sea son in which Portland has stood near the head of the list as a wheat ex porter, and our prestige in that di rection is almost certain to increase instead of decrease. The increasing consumption and decreasing yield of wheat east of the Rocky Mountains will most certainly cause a further decline in the shipments from the Atlantic ports. Portland, on the other hand, has not yet reached the maxi mum of her greatness as a wheat port, for the coming of the North Bank road has made tributary to this port an immense extent of new terri tory, and the opening of Central Ore gon will still further increase the area that is tributary to this port. Dr. Cook is, it is said, going to re turn to the United States. For what? It is pretty certain that no ovation or banquet, or invitation to lecture upon the North Pole as he found it, await the pseudo-discoverer's return to his native land. All that is of the past. The Union-avenue and the Twenty-eighth-street bridges are scandalous ly defective. It doesn't pay to boast overmuch." Mayor Lane boasted there would be no scandals like that of Tanner Creek sewer arising from his administration. What has become of the patriotism of the land? In the old -days Colonel Summers always led a parade of the First Regiment of the Oregon Na tional Guard on Washington's birth day. Pussy willows are prostrate and lilac buds are astonished, yet this is seasonal weather. The voice of the turtle, if he. can be heard at all, Is chiding the groundhog. The proprietor of a dance hall won the hearts of the City Council license committee with his tears. In a good cause that man's tears should accom plish wonders. Now that all the Winter tourists have arrived, Los Angeles hotels have raised prices from 25 to 35 per cent. The pleasure of: being a lounger Is costly." If the comet is making all this weather on earth, evidences are that the comet is having no easy time, either. Defeat of Nelson will .raise the chance of "the nigger." A cham pionship has its limits. For predicting the cold snap, the weather man deserves kinder treat ment hereafter. Sledding makes the George Wash ington holiday immortal with school boys and girls. 'America is Importing eggs from Europe. That is a ready excuse for some of them. George. Washington is great be cause he never planted roses on his birthday. This storm may delay the Spring time, but cannot put off Easter Sun day. Let the children' remember the birds with a handful of crumbs. A BETIHX FROM ST. HELENA. - And William Jennln'a, of Nebraska Is tbe Alan. Washington Post. In 1906 there was a return, not from Elba, but from St. Helena. The Hon. William Jennings Bryan appeared in Madison Square Garden and shifted the Issues, to the disgust of his own party and to the delight of the Republican party, and with disastrous result to the Democracy, that had set him up as an idol ten years before. It is true that Mr. Bryan explained that he didn't mean it, but that is the excuse with which God's patience has been a thou sand times abused by the fellow who fires the unloaded gun. Of course he didn't mean to do murder: neither did Bryan mean to compass Democratic de feat. Mr. Bryan was again banished to St. Helena in 1908. But he has again es caped, and appears to be reaching for the unloaded gun. This time his fad is county unit." The design seems to be to kidnap the South, as in 1908, and sail into a fourth nomination on the temperance or prohibition wave of that section. It would keep the "matchless and. the peerless before the Chautau qua another four years, and the jingling of the guineas would help the hurt that defeat brings. The other fads have served their uses.. In 1896 it was 16 to 1. In 1900 it was anti-imperialism after Bryan him self had jammed through the Senate the acquisition of the Philippines. In 1904 he was in the Democratic Na tional convention for mischief only, and that year he went on the stump for mischief only, as was apparent to any one not blind to the situation. In 1908 he bullied the party into nominating him with another basket of chips and whetstones for platform, such as guar antee of bank deposits and that even greater folly of forbidding any concern from the manufacture of more than a certain quantity of any given com modity of common use, which, aside from adding thousands of new officials to the pay roll, would have thrown business into chaos. If, ten years ago, the Democratic party had given Mr. Bryan a pension of $100,000 a year to retire from poll- tics, it would have made millions by the transaction. SCHOOL LUNCHES. ONE CENT BACH Served to Boston Half-Fed Children Who Would Resent Charity. Boston Post. A heaping portion of Indian pudding with milk and two crackers was the menu for the 1-cent lunch served at the Winthrop School, and as long as the service- proves as successful as it has in the past the lunches wil be contin ued at 10:30 each morning, so that none of the little children who come to school with appetites half satisfied need go home famished. The "high cost of living which has shaved down the breakfasts at home al most to a minimum operates to send some children to school with insuffi cient nourishment to do justice to themselves in their work. At the" Winthrop School it was de cided that any plan that seemed to in clude charity would prove a failure, as children are the quickest persons to form class barriers and look down on their playmates who may not be able to have enough food at home. Miss Emmeline p. Torey, teacher of domestic science, believes that she has solved the problem in the 1-cent lunches served each mqrnlng. If the cost of preparation and service were added it would be impossible to make the meal otherwise than charitable, so Miss Tor rey has a class of 18 girls, ranging In age from 10 to 13, prepare the dishes and serve them. - Thus the cent that the children pay covers the entire cost. The cup of pudding and crackers, to gether with the milk, which was served to each hungry pupil had enough nu triment in it to equal nearly three large Alices of bread, with butter. The quality, Miss Torey said, was well suited for the needs of the children. All the teachers in the school say that the tentative working of the plan thus far has been to provide much more wide-awake children after the lunch hour and to do away with the eager nes to have school dismissed. Prematurely Crowned. Washington Star. Mayor Gaynor's friends describe him as another Tilden. The likeness at a dis tance is not striking. Mr. Tilden, for years before he accepted office, was rec ognized as one of the strongest political intellects of the time. He was at once a leading lawyer and a leading writer. He helped to make officials, and then to guide them. He was a sort of advlser-ln-hlef to the Democratic party of New York, and a man of weight with the party elsewhere. In office Mr. Tilden worked important reforms, even in the face of some opposition in his own party. Here is where the comparison offered by the Gaynor boomers comes in. Mayor Gaynor in office is working reforms, and in opposition to the rank and file who elected him. Although the bencfciary of Tammany's activity, he is not playing Tammany's game, and this boom for President is an expression of appreciation of his refusal to do so. But his task at most is but small In comparison with Mr. Tilden's, and he has only begun it. Tot crown him at this time as another Tilden is at least premature. IVegro Common Sense. Philadelphia Ledger. The best friend of the negro race 1s not the man who prates abstractedly about prejudices and social equality, but the man who presents a construc tive plan for the industrial and social evolution of the racethat through toil and tribulation is coming "up from slavery," and in spite of lapses and dis couraging setbacks is steadily achiev ing higher standards of morality, economy and intelligence. Booker Washington at Tuskegee Institute is not satisfied merely to inculcate the theory of "virtuous energizing"; he has his thousands of students learn to do something practical, something that has a market value because it Is useful to the world at large. Ballltveer-Plnohot Continuous Show. Washington D. C.) Herald. The crowd of people attending the Ballinger-Pinchot Investigation reminds one of the crowd that attends a trial in court. The same faces are seen there every day; old men, young men, old and young ladles but the same. They re main throughout the hearings, and some of them are so interested in what is go ing on that they sleep through the meeting. Once In a while some one tires and leaves, but his or her seat is taken at once, and the continuous vaudeville Is exemplified accurately with the same actors doing star parts. ,' HuBjhea tut an Aaaet. Springfield Republican. In the staggering crisis that has sud denly come upon the Republican party of New York State because of the legis lative bribery inquiry at Albany, It Is Inevitable that the party leaders should again be turning to Governor Hughes with the appeal that he sacrifice once more his personal interests and accept another nomination. When a party is in danger of losing Its moral character, a leader whose moral character has no blemish becomes a priceless asset. Enriches the Vernacular. New York World. "Uglifier" is a useful word for which thanks are due to Harvard's ex-president. It will apply to many things that disfig ure cities besides billboards. It aptly designates civic monstrosities by com parison with which billboards are a neg ligible disfigurement. NOT VENTILATION, BIT HOMICIDE Methods of Some Kreah Air Cranks Are Primitive and Punitive. Communication in New York Times. For some curious reason we rarely fee the dominance of stringent Winter weath er without finding soon In some daily pa per the idea of some singular crank ex ploited to the effect that by letting the windows and doors open In a schoolroom, or in- a railway or trolley car, you can prevent almost every disease and Improve the health of those who are to be thereby scourged by an Arctic air bath. . The writer of this abeured advice is probably endowed with the constitution of a Vermont steer, whose resting place Is a snowbank on the north Bide of a Green Mountain haystack, which one would need to have to escape serious in jury from this door and window treat ment. At any rate, he is a type of per son who does not know that to open doors and windows in cold weather upon people who are sitting down, bringing drafts upon their heads and necks, will some day be thought as primitive (and punitive, too), as was the Indian's method of building an open fire in the middle of his tepee, with no chimney connection, but only a hole ten feet over it for the escape of Its smoke and gases. The "ventilation" thus advocated is not ventilation; it is constructive homicide. Yet we see It recklessly resorted to with pneumonia, bronchitis, and oilier ali ments as the result, shown over and over again. On our trains any passenger may open a window and compel people who are ill or feeble and who are well, also to take a sharp, damp and deadly draft for an indefinite time, or to the end of a long Journey, which is an inexcusable tyranny and offense. For that old proverb-maker was overwhelmingly right when he wrote: If a draft blow through a hole. The Lord have mercy on your soul. RAILROAD FATALITIES FEWER. Only Half the Deaths In 1809 That Were Recorded for 1007. W. E. Curtis In Chicago Record-Herald. There- has been a remarkable decrease In the number of fatalities upon the railways of the United States during the last few years, which Is probably due to the adoption of Improved rolling stock and devices for the protection of pas sengers. During the year 1907 there- were 6000 persons killed and 76,256 people In jured In railway accidents, of whom 647 of the killed and 13,597 of the injured were passengers; while during the last year the total number killed was 2791, a reduction of nearly one-half, and the number of people Injured was 63.920. a reduction of nearly 20 per cent. The number of passengers killed in 1909 was 335 and the number injured 12,116. The following table will show a com parison of the number of passengers and employes killed and injured during the last three years: KILLED. PosarK'rs. Emploves. Total. lflOT 47 4.353 5.0O0 JrtOS 41 3.3X8 3.74 1909 S3S 2.45(5 2,701 INJURED. IflfrT 13..W7 f.S.fiSO 7.2?0 190s 12.C.4.- ao,:t44 t;s,os! 1900 12,1 lu 51.804 U3.VB0 In 1907 there were 410 passengers killed and 8070 injured In train accidents, as against only 131 killed and 5S65 Injured in train accidents in 1909. The number of employes killed in train accidents in 1907 was 1011. as against only 620 in 1909. and the number of employes Injured in train accidents in 1907 was 8924, as against 4S77 In 1909. Four railways in the country claim that not one passenger was killed while traveling upon their trains during the last year. Mlgnon Nevada, Prima Donna at 20. New York Morning" Telegraph. Probably the youngest prima donna in the world has Just made a brilliant success in Florence as Rosina in "II Barbiere of Sivlglla." She is Mlgnon Nevada, a girl of 20, with glorious blond hair, expressive blue eyes and a su perb figure, who made her debut In Milan a year ago, under the guidance of her gifted mother, whom all Ameri can music lovers remember and love as Emma Nevada. This highly talented daughter of a mother who was always an artist to her dainty finger tips, has more than one accomplishment. She composes charmingly; she Is a thorough linguist, and is the author of a four act historical play, called "Fair Rosa mund." which Is to see the light of the calcium in Milan if all goes well, and later in America. Peary and the Pole Again. PORTLAND, Feb. 22. (To the Ed itor.) Would you please inform m by what authority has it been decided that Peary reached the North Pole? A SUBSCRIBER. A colored man. Mat Hansen, saw him do it. Besides, Peary said so, and Peary has had a first-rate reputation for veracity. Moreover, his records and data contained Intrinsic evidence that completely satisfied the National Geo graphic Society and various scientific men. However, if this contributor has any evidence that Peary did not reach the' Pole, we should be glad to print it. Welcome-Room In Senate Building. Washington (D. C.) Herald. Over in the Senate office bdildlng there is one room where everybody feels wel come. It is the room of Senator Dixon, of Montana. On the. door is a large placard with the words, "Mr. Joseph M. Dixon Walk in." This Is in striking con trast to the many doors placarded "Pri vate." The Senator is the recipient of congratulations from his colleagues, mem bers of tbe House, and visitors. One day recently Representative Jacob Van Vechten Olcott came bolting into the presence of Senator Dixon. "Hello, Ol cott, what will you have?" "Nothing." said the New Yorker. "I saw that sign and it made me feel so welcome that I just came in to say howdy." Don't Overlook Him. Louisville Courier-Journal. Lest we forget, a quiet, unostenta tious, self-effacing, publicity-shunning shrinkingly modest, unknown, unpho tographed, unsmiling, noise - hating, reticent, secretive lion hunter contem plates approaching these shores clan destinely and surreptitiously slipping unnoticed through the crowd at the pier, to seek the solace of solitude and indulge in pious patriotic meditation. King Edward'a "Double" Pusses On. London Tit-Bits. The "double" of King Edward. of England, is .dead. He was Richard Hunter, an extensive land-owner, and bore so exact a resemblance to His Maj esty that on the Continent it was im possible to persuade people ho was not King Edward. His supposed incognito would be respected, but he himself would not be believed. India Census for March, 1011. Washington, D. C, Dispatch. Sir H. H. Risley, secretary of the In dian Home Department. England. Intro duced 'in the Council a bill for the hold ing of a census in March. 1911. He said that 300,000.000 people in India were count ed between 7 o'clock and midnight when the last census was held, and the results were published 15 days later. Seattle Doffs) Its lint. Seattle Times. The bank clearings of Portland for the week ending Thursday night were the largest in the history of that city. While all other cities on the 'Pacific Slope made excellent gains, Portland leads the procession by a decided "lead." LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE One afternoon not long ago. in the vicinity of Druid Hill Park, in Balti- more, there might have been seen a young man industriously pushing up and down a baby carriage, intently reading a book the while. "Henry! Henry!" called a young woman from the second story of the window oppo site. Henry heard not. but continued to push the baby cartage and to read his book. In about an hour the cries for "Henry!" were repeated. "Well, what do you want?" he demanded, rather im patiently. ' "Nothing, dear." was the irritating response, "except to inform you that you've been wheeling Har riett's doll all the afternoon. I think it's time for the baby to have a turn now." Kansas City Star. Father Doolev had lust tier! tv,. imnt He looked expectant. The bride looked sheepish, and Pat . shifting rmm foot to another, looked guiltjj. At last he began. 1 don't like to be mane. Father, but I changed me clothes In a hurry, and left me wages In me other pants." Then he added In a whisper: "Take me down in the cellar. I'm a plumber, and I'll show ye how to fix the gas meter so 't won't register more than 40 per cent." Father Dooley declined the offer, but enjoys telling of it. Cleveland Leader. The train stopped at the littlo Cieor gia town and the tourist sauntered out to the observation platform. "Rather likely pickaninny you have there, uncle." remarked the traveler, good-humoredly. ".Named George Washington?" "No. sah." laughed the colored man on the baggage track. "Dat chile's name am Petro." "Potro? Why that's a queer-sounding name for a pickaninny." "Might seem a little oueeh to you, sah, but Massa Rockyfeller was down heah some time ago en gib me a quatah for totln' his grip. I named de pickaninny in his honah. sah." "But Rockefeller's first name is John." "Yeas, sah. but yo' see dls chile's full name am Petroleum, en we calls him Petro for short." San Francisco Chron icle. s Mother could not attend church one Sunday. "But what a shame that little Mabel should have to lose the day's lesson, and she such a bright child," she sadly reflected. Accordingly Mabel was sent alone. When she returned, in reply to her mother's interrogation as to the subject of the text, she replied: "Oh, yes, mother, I know; it was, Don't Be Scared; You'll Get the Quilt.' " Questioning failed to throw any light on, the matter. Some days later the mother met the pastor, who, in answer to her request for the subject of his last sermon, replied: "It was. madam, 'Fear Not; Ye Shall Have the Com forter.' " Buffalo Commercial. The late Chief Justice Chase was noted for his gallantry. While on a visit to the South, shortly after the war, he was introduced to a very beauti ful woman who prided herself upon her devotion to the "lost cause.". Anx ious that the Chief Justice should know her sentiments, she remarked, as she gave him her hand, "Mr. Chase, you see before you a rebel who hag not been reconstructed." "Madam," he replied, with a profound bow. "reconstruction in your case would be blasphemous." Congressman Longworth, discussing at a dinner at Cincinnati the project for the Governmental ownership of suitable buildings for American Embassies abroad, said: "For an Ambassador to be poor and poorly housed is no disgrace. It is, how ever. Inconvenient. It makes one feel aa Lowell felt after his return to Cam bridge from his very successful Am bassadorship to London. "One day Lowell met in Boston an English peer who had been a great friend of his abroad, and he invited the peer out to Cambridge to dinner. About this he had some misgivings, for he lived very simply, keeping only one ser vant. He even went so far as to say, as the horsecar Jangled Cambridge ward : " 'You know, Lord Blank, we are very simple people, Mrs. Lowell and I." " 'Oh,' said the Earl, T love simplic ity.' "This remark fortified and comforted Lowell. It kept up his fortitude even when Mrs. Lowell informed him, when he got home, that there was nothing for dinner but creamed fish. But his spirits must have sunk a little when at the table he essayed to help the simplicity loving peer to the only dish, and th latter said, politely: " 'If Mrs. Lowell will pardon me, I think I will omit the fish coifrse.' " Louisville Times. PAUL MOHTOX SETS AN EXAMPLE. Won't Drinlc Wine, Which Is) Oood) Trust Morality Would Be Better. New York World. The Equitable agents in New Orleans did without wine at their dinner at the request. It is said, of President Paul Morton, and the fact is creditable to the moral sense of all concerned. Such an example of abstinence had a pe culiar appropriateness at the beginning of Lent and may be expected to exer cise a wholsome Influence. Yet the president of a life-insurance company advocating temperance at a private dinner may be likened to a university professor teaching elemen tary algebra to sub-freshmen. The country has no lack of instructors in the evils of drink? On the other hand It has only too few professors of finan cial morality in high places and of the ethics of trust administration, the prin ciples of which the head of a great fiduciary society is especially .qualified to fill. Whether Insurance agents or other persons should drink wine at dinner may be left to their consciences or to the mentors whose concern such things are. Tuition In trust morality, for which there still exists a demand, would be more In keeping with a life-insurance president's special attainments. Mark Twain Blamed for Plogarlanlsm. Boston Herald. Denmark claims Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer." A Danish schoolmaster, Val detnar Thoresen, asserts that the plot of "Tom Sawyer, Detective." was lifted bodily from Blicher's tale "The Vicar of Weilby." Steen Steenersen Blicher was a Danish novelist who was born in I7S2 and died in 1848. He spent a great part of his life as a country parson in Jutland. By nature he was as much a hunter as a poet, and neglected ins clerical duties to tramp the moor in search of game. An old painting shows Blicher in a favorite attitude, gun in hand,- on the moor, three gypsies at his feet. When he came to a lonely farm for the night, he gathered the tradi tions and the stories of the ghosts of the place Into a short story. His col lected novella may be regarded as a saga of Jutish life. The story of "The Vicar of Weilby" is based on tradition and old documents. Mark Twain re plies that he doesn't read Danish and never read the book referred to or a translation thereof. Activity Among Democrat. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Among the sure signs of coming Democratic victory is the fact that no less than four men besides Bryan have been named as candidates of the party for tho JPraaidency.