lO TITE MORNING- OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, MARCn 15, 1910. PORTLAND. OREOOX. Kntered at Portland, Oregon. Fostofflce as Second-Class Matter. Subscription Kate Invariably in Advance. (BT MAIL.) Iallyv Punday Included, one year. ... .$8.00 rally, Sunday included, six months... laily, Sunday Included, three montla.. Dally, Sunday Included, one month.... -J Dally, without Bunday. one year..-.. J-'JJ Daily, -without Sunday. Bix month...- 8.-5 Dally, without Sunday, three month l.i5 Dally, without Sunday, one muntlw . - Weekly, one year .............. Sunday, one year. .......... in,. Butday and weekly.- one y eiir. . - B.otl tBy Carrier.) Dairy. Sunday Included, one year. -2? Daily, Sunday Included, one month.... -75 How to Kerolt Send Fostofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk- Give postofflce ad dress in full. Including county and state. Postage Rates lO to 14 pages, 1 cent; lo to 28 paves. 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages. 3 cents; 40 to 60 paces, 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Kastern Business Office The S. C. Beck wit h Special Agency New York, rooms 48 Bi Tribune building. Chicago, rooms BlO-012 Tribune building. PORTLAND, TTBSDAI, MARCH 15, 19 UK TELIJNl TALES TO ROOSEVELT. A lot of persons have been waiting for Roosevelt to emerge from the Jungle, so that they may tattle tales to him about the- President he put in charge I his policies. Newspaper writers have been detailed ,to tell Roosevelt that Taft has not adhered to those policies and to extract from him some statement of displeasure about the present Administration. But Roosevelt -will make no author ized statement of the kind. Why should he accept any man's word be fore Taft's? Nor will he. The two men are bound together by strongest ties of personal and political friend ship. Taft undoubtedly has endeav ored to pursue as closely as possible the policies of his predecessor. It Is inevitable that disputes should arise as to means, methods and ends, with numerous persons who imagine themselves unjustly slighted, as Pin chot and Garfield do, in management of the conservation scheme; or who think the "square deal" violated by the corporation tax; or who consider themselves outraged by the new tariff schedules (no tariff ever was devised that did not outrage some body of cit izens) ; or who are not now the wise counsellors that Imagined they used to sway Roosevelt or actually did Influ ence him; or who are aggrieved that Taft does not smite their enemies as Roosevelt did; or who for diverse rea sons of personal opinion or prejudice find themselves arrayed as "insur gents" and "progressives." None of these busybodies will get between Taft and, Roosevelt and pry them apart. Yet we may expect to read "special cables" in the insurgent press of Roosevelt's displeasure. The correspondents will do their best to satisfy the expectations of the man agers who sent them. But, after all this muckraking has been done, Roosevelt will come forth with a big stick announcement shattering the false-built hopes of Taft's foes. For Roosevelt has been In closer political harmony with Taft than with any other man. The two have been as nearly mated as it were possible for two political leaders to be. It is un thinkable that Roosevelt in Africa or Italy would accept the word or good faith of any talebearer above that of Taft. There Is no end of varied opinion about Roosevelt's policies. This is be cause it is difficult to give them fixed or definite expression. "Square deal between rich and poor, strong and weak," Is capable of vast range of meanings, and even when Roosevelt was President he did not have a peace ful or easy time in defining it or car rying it out. The tariff makes infi nite dispute, airways did and always will. Conservation, which Plnchot in sists has but one meaning and that the one he gives It, is seen to be a sub ject of wide range of plan and policy. Great many persons think their own Ideas on these and other matters are nearer Roosevelt's than Taft's are. But in due time they will be disillu sioned. Then Roosevelt will turn out to be a great disappointment and failure. Just as he was thought to be by a considerable body of persons dur ing the seven years of his Presidency. "Wait till Teddy gets home; he'll fix you." is the cry of an army of sore heads, most of whom were Just as sqre under the rule of Roosevelt. But Taft will be the gladdest man in America to greet the ex-President home. Demo cratic politicians and newspapers who used to howl Just as loudly at Roose velt as they now do at Taft, but who through some regeneration are now Roosevelt admirers, are destined to feel their faith slowly ebbing in a short time. A rUSQCIETDfO THOCOHT. One of the few important newspa pers of the country which sees a men ace rather than a blessing In Mr. Rockefeller's colossal gift "to pro mote human welfare," is the Spring field (Mass.) Republican. The con centration of wealth In the hands of never-dying corporations goes on at a pace in our times which reminds the Republican of the current which set toward the British monasteries in the age preceding the Reformation. It is reminded of various countries where land and capital have been so largely amassed by holders in mortmain, or corporations of one sort and another, that the public welfare was threat ened and revolutions arose on account of it. In many cases the corporations were despoiled of the property which they had been accumulating for ages. England, France, Italy, Mexico and still other countries furnish examples of this process, and if something of the same sort is going on in the United States, it is worth while to ponder over the probable conse quences. Mr. Carnegie's huge dona tions to educational institutions and public libraries looked marvelous, un til this last Rockefeller foundation was proposed. Now they are accounted trifles, No doubt some other billion aire will seek to outdo Mr. Rockefeller tttore a great while. Whether that happens or not. the amount of capital which Is being locked up In these foundations and others of a religious or educational character Is portentous. Wealth flows all the more rapidly In this direction from the fact that most of the char itable and religious corporations are free from taxes. The Republican, does not suggest that wealthy men should cease to devote their money to such purposes, "in pios usos," to quote the barbarism which became odious in England, but it thinks the corpora tions to which it is entrusted should have limited charters, say for 60 years. At the end of -that period, the, trust should be terminated and the money distributed. The lesson of history is, that ultimately the money will be dis tributed in any case. That has been almost the uniform fate of such foun dations, and it is better that the end should come voluntarily and in ac cord with the donor's purpose than through -politics and civil commotions. The public will not permanently toler ate the locking up in dead hands of any large proportion of the Rational resources. Millionaires may as well reckon with this fact now as to wait and let the consequences of ignoring It fall upon their successors. In the long run, it is not certain that these enormous foundations will be really beneficial. They are apt to grow sluggish with time and seek to Istay the progress of mankind by the weight of their inertia. The Spring field Republican is disturbed by the dominating influence which the Car negie trust has already assumed over our colleges. The power to give or withhold pensions to professors is proving exceedingly formidable for other purposes also. If so much can be done to control and direct with $10,000,000, what might not . Mr. Rockefeller's $300,000,000 accom plish? . The whole subject may be nothing but a mare's nest, but on the other hand It may deserve the serious attention of Congress. STRIFE IX LOVELY EUGENE. We know not Just why the lovely city of Eugene has been selected by unkind fate as a battleground be tween the righteous orthodox and the unrighteous reprobate. Its unwarlike hills, topped with heaven-growing trees and arched over with a benign cerulean dome, form a picture of native peace , and the gurgle of Sam Simpson's Beautiful Willamette is a veritable . phonograph of nature's happy song. But there is bitter strife among the brethren. An evangelist preacher has declared a Unitarian church a sink of iniquity worse than a den of the devil's firewater. A free-thinking professor who has asserted the liberal faith and declared independence from theolog ical formulas has been scored most thoroughly by defenders of righteous standpatlsm. The Y. M. C. A. has been fenced off from the straying brethren, as fit only for the evangel ical orthodox. The dissenting ones declare themselves most opportunely free of theological authority in Scrip ture creed and salvation. And there is a lot more strife which these peace loving columns care not to dwell on. Surely this warfare has been going on long enough. Jesus himself fell before it, striving against orthodox formulas and asserting the supremacy over them of right living, the golden rule and brotherly love. It is painful to see this old clash renewed In the Upper Willamette city that nestles among Its dream-picture hills. Good men should not shut up the kingdom of heaven against each other, nor for get that "with what measure ye rtiete, it shall be measured to you again." Therefore we trust there will be no more Jarring sounds from the learned city of the State University and the Carnegie Library. WHICH APPLES ARE REST TO PLASIJ Apple growers in the Willamette Valley should pay careful attention to Millard O. Lownsdale's remarks on the Spltzenberg variety. As he explains in his communication printed in The Oregonian today, this excellent apple, which is produced in perfection with no great difficulty at Hood River, does not seem to be well adapted to Valley conditions. Something in the atmosphere or the soil renders it sin gularly susceptible to the attacks of anthracnose, and a high-grade prod uct can only be obtained at the ex pense of much time and pains. That the Spltzenberg apple can be grown in the Willamette Valley nobody ques tions, but is it sensible to seek to do so when there are other varieties which can be produced with less trou ble and at a much greater profit? Almost every person who has planted Spltzenberg trees ,in the Willamette Valley and along the lower Columbia has had precisely the experience with them which Mr. Lownsdale describes. The trees are of feeble habit, at least for some years, and. they re quire unremitting attention to ward off disease. If this part of the country, like Hood River, were comparatively free from disease-breeding old orchards, perhaps it would be worth while to plant SpitzenbergB. One might hope to see them reach bearing age without an exorbitant expenditure of money and labor upon them, but as condi tions are, with every second farm har boring a slum of Infection, the task is one which a wise grower will hesitate long before he undertakes. In some very fertile spots on the Columbia bottoms, if they are not too low, the Spltzenberg thrives excellently and seems to be resistant to disease, but these places are exceptional. On the other hand, the Jonathan, which Mr. Lownsdale curiously omits to mention among the desirable varieties for this section, makes a thrifty growth almost everywhere In this part of the state and requires no extraordinary care. The trees must be cultivated and sprayed, of course, but. they need not be coddled. Nature assists the orch ardist Instead of opposing him. The same may be said of the Rome Beau ty, which produces a fruit of great attractiveness and fine flavor with comparatively little attention. In the region near , the Columbia, at least, the Rome Beauty has a marked ten dency to come into bearing early, which with many growers would be a strong argument for planting that variety. Certainly Mr. Lownsdale Is right in urging orchardlsts to heed the les sons of experience when they plant their trees and not rush blindly ahead es If they could defy nature and make conditions to suit themselves. While the apple is a hardy fruit, still it is wonderfully susceptible to the Influ ence of its environment, and deterior ates or improves beyond all exnecta- tion tn districts which are only a short distance apart. What other men have proved by their mistakes is part of the working capital of the prudent Horticulturist. He does not expecfto acquire all knowledge by his own in vestigatlon, but is glad to stand on the shoulders of his predecessors. The Hood River and Wenatchee growers nave won their -enviable success bv first discovering what varieties they could produce best and then making tnose tneir specialty. Hood River is not beguiled into planting the Wine sap nor does Wenatchee seek to pro duce the Spitzenberg. Each locality has solved the problem of a desirable vdiieiy in jl3 own way, ana having found the solution it abides by it. Be fore the Willamette region attains to the highest success in apple-growing, it must travel the same road. Those varieties which will do the best here must be discovered by experiment, and when they have been found they must be. planted, no matter whether they are popular at Hood River or not. We must "dree our own weird," to borrow a favorite phrase from Laura Jean Libbey. There is an unfortunate prejudice against the Ben Davis apple, which Mr. Lownsdale very properly men tions among the desirable varieties for the Willamette Valley. It is not a dessert apple certainly, but it is one of the best for long keeping, and the market never refuses it in the Spring at good prices. Better still. It is resistant- to most diseases and thrives in all sorts of localities. Probably the neglect of the Ben Davis Is to be at tributed to a "sentiment or fancy," as Mr. Lownsdale puts it, and grow ers should not let such a whimsy, in terfere with their substantial inter est. After all, fruit is grown to sell, and the astute orchardist plants the. varieties which his market demands. What our correspondent has to say about the Tellow Newtown is curious and important. If it really refuses to develop a root system and pines for some years after planting, a large number of growers is doomed to serious disappointment and loss. Fur ther Information upon this subject is needed by the public. It is possible that some neglect of culture Is the true cause, for this unfortunate habit of the tree, and experiment may teach orchardlsts how to remedy it. There are large areas in Oregon where the soil is badly in need of potash. Per haps it is upon these tracts that the Tellow Newtown refuses to thrive. In that case, the trouble is easily remedied. THE FAILMEK AN1 THE MOO. The work of slaughtering at one of the plants at Stockdale began yester day morning. Stockdale Is the cor porate name of the stockyards and. packing-house region of Portland. It will be some time before the plant is ready to work to capacity, which means, among other things, a thou sand hogs a day. This refers to but one plant, and it is not the largest. It will be some time also before the supply of hogs is up to capacity. Therein lies a danger. Prices are rul ing high this Spring, and the tempta tion is great to fatten everything and rush it to market. There is small likelihood of a. low figure for hogs on this Coast for a few years. In the Middle West hograisers and farmers generally have found 7 5 -cent corn too expensive for feeding, and have turned off a large part of their breeding stock, so the Pacific Northwest breeder need not fear competition. Every female pig should be saved this Spring, if she comes of a family noted for fecundity,' and by that is meant .families, of ten, and twelve. Only in that way can the demand from .the -Portland packers be satis fied. There is not enough breeding stock now in this region, and at best it will be more than a year before results are visible. But the demand will be there at that time, and more insistent than ever. A beginning must be made at once. Probably there will never come a time when there will be enough surplus hog product to cheapen it. There is great consump tion in time of peace, and in wartime the army of the civilized, nation that has the most cured meat in its sub sistence department is most likely to be victorious. Let the Oregon farmer raise twice as many hogs this year. PROSPEROUS IK NN" SYLVAN I A ROAD. Railroad earnings on the roads op erating through the greatest Indus trial districts in the United States hardly.' reflect the reports of quiet business which have been heard from time to time during the past six months. One of the most notable showings of the year was that of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, where an increase of $17,267,000 in the gross revenue brought the total up to $153,664,527, while the operat ing expenses, including taxes for the year, showed an increase of but $10, 502,167. The net income for the year amounted to $35,159,087, an increase of $6,951,427, and cash dividends of $19,173,742 were paid. All qf the subsidiary lines of the Pennsylvania made a similar satisfactory showing, some of them far exceeding that of the parent concern. Not all of these earnings were re flected In the size of the dividends, for the Pennsylvania always main tains a huge war chest, which can be drawn on when necessary. A writer in the American Investor, in com menting on the extraordinary earn ings of the Pennsylvania, estimates the amount available for extra divi dends in J.910 at nearly $100,000,000. Of this amount nearly one-third, in the shape of a 33 1-3 per cent stock dividend by a holding oorporation, the Pennsylvania Company, has al ready been disbursed, and there- has also been- distributed a 70 per cent dividend In cash stock, and a 25 per cent dividend in cash of the Delaware Railroad Company, a 250-rnile feeder of the Pennsylvania system. This remarkable showing has been made without any advantages or profits accruing from the $100,000, 000 investment which the company has been making in - entering New Tork City. That work Is now prac tically completed, and four of the tunnels will be in operation in April and the remaining two in July. It is expected that the reduced cost of op eration by the new method of getting in and out of the New York terminals will increase the net earnings of the system more than $500,000 per month, or approximately $6,000,000 per year. The annual statement of the Pennsyl-: vanla offers ample proof that the rail roads are not suffering greatly from . the regulation agitation or from lack of business. KIT.T.F.D BT ITS FRIEJfDS. The Oregonian la not surprised to learn, through its Washington. D. C, dispatches, that that nine-lived cat of evil omen, the ship subsidy bill, is again to give up the ghost. The rea son given for the latest defeat of the measure, according to Washington dispatches, is that "The Merchant Marine League, which is In all practi cal matters a well-organized lobby, undertook to coerce members of the House who opposed the ship subsidy bill. It" went further and threatened to prevent the renomination or re election of such members, and it was clearly to be inferred that the league or its representatives proposed to spend money to acconrplish that end, Had the ship subsidy bill been a meas ure in which the whole country was interested, and for which there was a clamorous demand, it is hardly possi ble that such lobbying and publicity work as have been put forth by the Merchant Marine League, of Cleve land, O. (several hundred miles from salt water), could have forced it through to success. This well-organized lobby not only flooded the country with its " wild sophistries and mis-statements regard ing the actual status of the merchant marine problem, but in its official or gan, "The American Flag" (let us blush for the base use made of that name), scurrilous attacks have been made on those who opposed the "graft." These attacks have ranged from semi-polite criticism of the mo tives and purposes of the opponents of the bill to most bitter charges against their integrity. Representa tive Steenesson, of Minnesota, for in stance, was branded by "The Ameri can Flag" as "dishonest, and an en emy to his country and his country's best interests." He was also accused of having "deliberately and malicious ly lied," although his only offense was in exposing some of the fallacies of the arguments sent broadcast by the ship subsidy lobby. It is a very weak cause that seems to call for a cam paign of misrepresentation such as the Merchant Marine League has been conducting for the past year. The Oregonian speaks advisedly on this matter, as It has been favored with a full share of personal letters form the league officials and with printed matter regarding the topic. These letters, for the most part, have been sneerlngly sarcastic or openly insulting, and the printed literature all bears the earmarks of some mighty "interests" that are behind this demand for a subsidy. It costs a large sum of money to carry on such an elaborate publicity campaign as that of the Merchant Marine League, and as there Is no concerted demand from any part of the country, or from either political party and the people refuse to enthuse over the graft it is small wonder that a suspicion strong enough to kill the bill, has appeared against it. A New Tork Judge has decided that "three times a year is not too often for a gentleman to get drunk." That depends. No man has the right to impose the disgrace of a drunken spree upon his family even once a year. If he lives to himself alone, shuts himself up while he has what he considers a "good time" and does not squander money that belongs of right to his dependents, the sin of making a hog of himself is not so great as it Is in ordinary circum stances. At best, however, the right to get drunk is a doubtful one even when exercised by "a gentleman." The thrifty nature of the French people Is proverbial, but it would seem that thrift and caution do not always go together. Here we have a story from Paris of a government of ficial embezzling $2,000,000, all of which he lost In speculations on the Bourse. . It requires a man of con siderable ability to steal $2,000,000 in this country, but the French em bezzler was so skillful in his work that It was more than a year after he was suspected before the government suc ceeded in getting proof sufficient to warrant an arrest. If Secretary Balllnger had had the rare Judgment to raise the salary of Chief Reclamation Engineer Davis, that functionary's recollection of the various conversations between him and the Secretary would doubtless have been more in accord with the latter's. Secretary Balllnger would not do anything for the aspiring en gineers and employes in the Reclama tion Service, and the whole "bunch" is down on him. It is easy to under stand. Much Is said now and again about the profit in raising ginseng. The chief market for this product is found in China. If the crop yields such large returns to the producer, the question naturally arises, why the Chi nese in this country, who are the most painstaking and patient of gardeners, and shrewd withal, do not become gin seng planters.- In the village of Buckingham, in Canada, there is said to be an animal composed of horse, cow and deer. In that country during Winter a barrel of cider freezes almost solid, the very center being a pint of liquid that is the quintessence of all things abnor mal. s Deduction is easy. The people may vote down the Broadway bridge "next time," we are told by foes of the new viaduct. They may also vote down all the bridges, but they doubtless won't. They need air the bridges they can get, and are not going to vote down any just at present. One hundred and fifty lawyers have been engaged to defend the anthracite coal trust. If this aggfegaton of legal talent does not own the combine by thef time the arguments are all in, it will be a case of neglected opportu nity. Mr. Rockefeller should send, his" per sonal foolkiller after the clergyman who gave out his daily prayer. Pray ers, like connubial confidences, are not meant for the public ear and eye. If Aviator Hamilton had got , that ducking in Portland, the people here who paid at the gate might have felt that they were getting more of their money's worth. If the name of Mount McKinley were - changed to Roosevelt, the new title would forever mark the "world's highest monument to the short and ugly word. It is almost pitiful to note the amount of logic being wasted in the attempt to convince a meat-hungry public that the "cheap cuts are the best." It is surprising that nobody demands the proofs of Matt Henson, the colored man who discovered the North Pole the same time Peary did. A Los Angelan has been found with two extra ribs. Suppose Adam had been built that way! The bad thing about dry weather Is that it always brings dust to complain about. The Joy ride involves the top crust es well as the lining of the dish. HEEDLESS rLANTISfG OP APPLES I Let Wenatchee Grow Winesaps and - Hood River Spitzenberg-,. Advice. LA FAYETTE. Or.. March 14. (To j the Editor.) From every section of the Willamette Valley come reports of ex traordinary plantings of apples this season. We, who for several years have been doing a missionary work that sug gested that this re-awakening of inter est in apple culture in our "home of the big red apple," are of course intensely gratified at the consummation of our hopes. But we are also concerned' in the ultimate outcome of all these plant ings. Much needless work is certainly- be ing done, and more is contemplated. In order that the efforts to re-establish this great industry in our valley may not go wrong at this critical moment I wish, for the 20th time, to issue a warning about the ill-advised methods of planting that are being employed very generally by prospective growers. To the speculative planter I have noth-. lag to say. I cannot understand why planters will Ignore well established precedents ana stubbornly attempt to force the natural conditions of the country, sim ply to gratify a sentiment or fancy. The' majority of plantings are reported to be of Spitzenbergs and Yellow NewtoWns. In more than one locality, but notably In the vicinity of Newberg, large num bers of Winesaps are being set for the purpose (we are told wisely and with a convincing nod of the head) of potfen ating both Spitzenbergs and Newtowns, as well as for their high value In New York markets. In the first place, neither Hood River nor the Willamette Valley can com pete with Wenatchee in raising Wine saps. In the Willamette Valley, it might be said, that in a commercial sense we cannot raise them at alL In the next place, while we can grow a fine Spltzen berg, yet the tree does not come into bearing early in our Valey and is more susceptible to the attack of apple canker or anthracnose than any other variety. In our "old apple orchards" we have so many more sources of con tagion than does Hood River that it will always be easier for her growers to keep -their Spitzenbergs clean. Then why not let Wenatchee have her Wine saps, and Hood River her Spitzenbergs, and let us concentrate our energies on varieties .that are resistant to the at tacks of canker that we can grow more easily and more profitably than can either of those sections? We can grow a finer and a higher flavored Yellow Newtown than any other lo cality in the world but, tq do this, we must go about the matter in exactly the right manner. The experience of two generations has demonstrated the fact that in the Willamette Valley the Yellow Newtown will not, while young, make root in orchard formation and with orchard culture if planted on its nursery stock. The tree lacks the initial power of pro ducing enough foliage to develop a sturdy root system. If top-grafted on an PBtablished root system. It will grow rapidly and become a sturdy and early bearing tree. But, if planted on its nursery root it will pass many years in a spindling, decrepit fashion and will never be the lusty, vigorous tree that is developed by top-grafting. The ma jority of Yellow Newtowns that are be ing planted this season in our Valley will never come to a profitable ma turity. ' The man who hugs himself and chuckles, "well, I'll show 'em," no mat ter with what care he may coddle his Newtowns, will, in the end, say: "I wish I had paid attention to the experience of two generations of growers- before me." When one attempts to override and absolutely force the natural con ditions of a country, he is flirting des perately with the fickle . goddess of chance. The solution of the preblem then lies in planting some vigorous, rapid-growing variety, and after four or five years In orchard formation to top-graft with Yellow Newtowns. In three years the Yellow Newtown grafts will commence to bear, which is much earlier than they can possibly be brought to fruit production in this Valley by any method of culture on their nursery root. It will be noticed that I have spoken exclusively of conditions in the Wil lamette Valley, and that I assert there are varieties we can grow better and more profitably than any other sections, and without the close attention that is necessary in the case of Spitzenbergs. While we can grow Spitzenbergs In rare perfection, we can produce more profit ably either Rome Beauty, Ben Davis, Gano, Grimes' Golden or Yellow New town. Our experience has' tld us long ago to let Winesaps alone, and as for setting them as pollenators it is to laugh. . The man who fusses with pol lenators nowadays' is learning the "Kensington stitch" of orcharding, or perhaps I should say the "tatting" a very nice lady-like occupation. M. O. LOWNSDALE, Commissioner First District, State Board of Horticulture. HOUSE OF COMMONS AND CONGRESS British Lawmaking: Body Democratic, AVlth Trades Well Represented. New York World. The oft . and - much - debated ques tion as to. whether the British House of Commons is more representative than the American House of Representa tives, is answered by the following npn rh a rf thfi new Commons, taken for private reasons by Lewis Appleton, of Old Queen street, Westminster, ana furnished by him for publication. It has been compared with the official records and found correct: Bankers and financiers 13 Lawyers Brewers, distillers and wine merchants 1A Pullders. architects and surveyors 8 Civil and mlntnK encineers 11 Coal mine owners and dealers. ........ 7 Commercial travelers . . 1 diplomatists and government orriciaxs. a Directors of public service corporations 12 Real estate, accountants and auctioneers 7 Farmers 13 Land owners 61 Iron founders and merchants........,.. 13 Manufacturers and spinners .... &1 Doctors 9 Storekeepers 53 Clergymen i"V S Automobile makers. and dealers........ Newspaper owners and Journalists. 88 Peers' sons and. brothers 45 Art dealers 1 Pilots . Printers, booksellers and authors....... 8 Professors, schoolmasters and tutors.... 14 Hallway and naval contractors 3 Secretaries (stenographers) lo hlp owners and builders 12 Stockbrokers ......................... - Military officers Naval officers - By the foregoing census it appears the House of .Commons is like the American Congress, a popular place for lawyers.- The English legislative body, though, is strongly representative of a number of trades and professions not markedly present In the Lower House in Washington, notably storekeepers, farmers, teachers, military and gov ernment officials, doctors, literary men and clergymen. Peers' sons and brothers, too, are In a class by them selves. Inasmuch as there are few men of leisure in Congress who could be compared with them. Two Religious Workers Honored. Indianapolis News. Two distinguished religious workers In Great Britain have been honored by knighthood, F. F. Belsey, the leader of the Sunday School movement In Great Britain, and Dr.' W. Robertson Nicdll. the editor of the British Weekly. An TJnterrlfied Democrat Speaks. New Bern (N. C.) Sun. We don't care a d n whether we are even noticed by the Republican press or not. We are Southern Demo crats to the core, and God forbid that we may ever have to swap our prin ciples for a Job- PRESIDENT TAFT IS HIS OWN MAN Letter to Lnclna B. Swift Raps Hys teria In Public, Political Life. David S. Barry's Washington, D. C. Cor respondence in the Providence Journal. That the President has the courage to hew to this determination regardless of cost Is shown in the contents of the let ter which he wrote to Lucius B. Swift of Indianapolis, and the general purport of which has found its way into the news papers, although Mr. Taft did not intend that it should be made public. He has since written to Mr. Swift expressing his regret that somebody with whom he talked about the letter saw fit to talk to reporters about it, but expressing not the slightest annoyance because of any embarrassment it might cause him. The text of the letter will probably be pub lished soon or late, and then it will be seen that, in writing it the President was but repeating what he said in dif ferent forms and at different times and what he will say again and again if occasion" arises. In general the letter is an expression of the President's belief that we are liv ing in a time of hypocrisy and hysteria resulting In a misjudgment of public men and public measures, indorsement of the tariff law and of the Republican leaders, including Senator Aldrich and Speaker Cannon, who, the President says, are helping him to enact reformatory legislation; criticism of Senators Cum mins, La Follette, Bristow and Clapp, who, he thinks, are opposing it; expres sion of the fear that Indiana may go Democratic if the Republican leaders of that state do not rally to the support of Mr. Beveridge, who, it Is alleged, is being fought by the liquor interests and who, although he Is not entirely to be depended upon, Mr. Taft thinks, because of the ticklish political situation involv ing the question of his own re-election, is disposed to support the President and his policies. In expressing the opinion that Senator Aldrich, who, the President says, is for higher protection than he is, has been misunderstood and ma ligned by the public, Mr. Taft says that he is not. able to "run with the hare and rkle with" the hounds"; It Is not in his nature, and, believing that Senator Aldrich is earnest and sincere in support of . the Administration policies of legislation-, the President feels bound to say so on every proper occasion. jVs to Mr. Cannon, the situation is much the same, although the President is not so warm In praise of him as not being a man of such conspicuous ability as confessedly the President believes Senator Aldrich to be. Right or wrong, therefore. President Taft again announces his purpose to stand by what he has said with regard to Aldrich and Cannon and the insur gents, and while he regrets that the newspapers aro not Inclined to see things through his spectacles, Jie does not In tend to change his attitude so long as his conscience assures him that ha- 1- right. SEVERAL OLD IRISH PROVERBS. Many Present-Day Sayinars First Saw Light In the Emerald Isle. Catholic Standard. The ancient kings and brehons of the Milesian Irish were men of great In telligence and wisdom, and the sayings of "Allamh foehla," Fethil the Wise, Moran and Cormac McArt were so many terse lessons of human wisdom, but it may be information to the ma jority of the Irish public of the present day to state that many of our proverbs in present use are merely paraphrases of the old Milesian sayings'. Annexed we give a list of genuine Irish proverbs, principally translated, and literally, from Hardman's "Irish Minstrelsy," which show the similarity between them and modern English proverbs: A blind man is no -judge of colors. When the cat is out the mice will dance. Even a fool has luck. Fierceness is often hidden under beauty. There Is often anger in a laugh. A good dress often hides a deceiver. Fame is more lasting than life. A foolish word Is folly. Mild to the meek. Cat after kind. Hope consoles the persecuted. The satisfied forget the hungry. Long sleep renders a child inert. Hurry without waste. Drunkenness is the brother of rob bery. Hope is the physician of each misery. It Is difficult to tame the proud. Idleness is the desire of a fool. Look before you leap. The end of a feast is better than the beginning of a quarrel. A wren In the hand is better than a crane out of it. He who is out, his supper cools. The memory of an old child is long. Everything Is revealed by time. A cat can look at" a king. Learning is the desire of the wise. Character is better than wealth. Without treasure, without friends. A hungry man is angry. No man is wise at all times. Every dear article is woman's desire. Wisdom exceeds strength. Wine Is sweet; to pay for It bitter. Sleep Is the image, of death. Enough is a feast. Death- is the physician of the poor. Not every flatterer ij a friend. Mr. Garfield Dorises Whit Honse. Washington, D. C, Cor. Brooklyn Eagle James R. Garfield has been in Wash ington, D. C for a couple of weeks, but during all that period he has not found time to call at the White House. Mr. Garfield is the house guest of Gif ford Plnchot. He is aiding the latter in the preparation of his case before the Congressional investigating committee, and later on may take the stand him self. - Mr. Garfield worked hard to elect Mr. Taft as President. He made campaign speeches throughout the country. He spoke in Brooklyn and pleased a large auuience by a recital of what Mr. Roosevelt had accomplished and how the good work would be continued un der Mr. Taft. Mr. Garfield had an Idea that he might be kept as Secretary of the. Interior in the Taft administration. Mr. Roosevelt had said something to the effect that the election of Mr. Taft would mean the continuation of "the same policies, the same officeholders and everything." Mr. Balllnger was chosen to take Mr. Garfield's place. Now Mr. Garfield is sitting up late at night with Mr. Plnchot, aiding in the campaign to put down Mr. Balllnger. Good Americans, All of Them. Llppincott's. Charles Koskiatowsky, of the Con gressional committee on Immigration rapped that body to order. "We will now hear those who desire to speak on the new bill for the restriction of Immigration," he announced. Whereupon Messrs. Amazuma, Hip Lung. O'Laughlln, MacDonald, D'Eau vre, Schwartzenfest, SpagaronI, Kumar, Ghosh and Navarrez made eloquent talks in favor , of putting up the Im migration bars, so as to preserve the purity of the great American race. Mr. John Jones spoke in favor of opening the doors to all, but he was roundly hissed as being un-American. The bill was favorably reported. Income of flOOO For Popular Student. New York Dispatch. The most popular student in the senior class of Columbia Is hereafter to receive the income of $1000. which constitutes the Charles M. Rolker Me morial Fund, established by Mrs. L. M. Rolker. A faculty committee has drawn up rules for the awarding of the prize annually. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE A haughty citizen strolled into the Su preme Court at Washington, D. C, when an argument was being heard, and took a seat in the inclosure reserved for law yers. After he had been there a few minutes an attendant came over and asked him: "Are you a member of the bar?" The haughty person wasn't; but he took out his card with a flourish and handed it over. . The attendant received the card grave ly, carried it to the clerk, who glanced at it, and gave some instructions. A moment later the haujrhty citizen was touched on the shoulder and asked to retire. ' "Why?" he asked. "I sent up my card. It usually gives me a seat in any court In the land." -'Certainly," said the attendant; "but please retire." The haughty citizen did retire. When he got out in the corridor he fumed and fussed a bit. ",Sir," admonished the aged negro at the door, who has been there for many years, "think it over. Don't do no per- ' slflagin' 'bout that co't. If you should git in contempt of them you ain't got no body to appeal to but God." Washington (D. C.) Star. D. Ogden Mills had a good many stories of the old bonanza days in California. This was his whisky story: A tender foot entered a saloon and ordered whis ky. Whisky in those days and in thoee parts was a very weird drink. Queer ef fects were sure to follow it. The tender foot knew he must expect something out of the common, but for all that, he was taken aback when the bartender handed him a small whisk broom along with the bottle and glass. Tenderfoot-like, he didn't care to ex pose his Ignorance by asking what the whisk broom was for, so he Just stood there and fidgeted. He didn't drink. He waited in the hope that somebody would come In and show him what was what. Well, in a few minutes a big chap in a red shirt entered. He, too, ordered whis ky, and he, too, got a broom. The tenderfoot watched him closely. He poured himself a generous drink, tossed it off, and, taking up his whisk broom, went over In a corner and carefully cleaned a space about seven feet by three. There he lay down and had a fit. Ex change. a "Pomeroy Burton, formerly of New York," said a magazine editor, "Is cov ering himself with glory in London. He is showing the old Times and Post what real, live, hustling Yankee Journalism is. Pomeroy's latest feat was to trot out In his own person and interview a royal Duchess from Spain. "The Duchess had declared she would see no reporter, but Pomeroy bribed the elevator boy at Clarldge's, and one night, on her return from supper, it was Pome roy in the elevator boy's livery who ran her up to her apartment. With his smooth-shaven, alert face, he passed for an elevator boy easily. "Pomeroy only ran tho Duchess half way up. He stopped between the fourth and fifth floors and said: " 'Madam, I represent Lord NorthcIIffe and all his millions of readers, and you shan't budge & step till you've granted me an interview." - "The Duches submitted. Like all for eigners, she was very nervous in an ele vator. Eut after the interview was end ed, she said Indignantly to Pomeroy: " 'What a low, mean advantage you have taken of a helpless woman! And I thought, forsooth, the English were so chivalrous!' "Pomeroy, as he placed in his brass buttoned coat his pencil and copy paper, answered with a smile: " 'But, madam, I am not English." " Chicago Inter Ocean. Richard Harding Davis recently re marked that Londoners are Indifferent about their tobacco. "They are." he said. indjfferent and blase like an omnibus conductor I saw in Oxford street- You know the London omnibus? It is a double-decker. If you sit on top you must go up and down by a very steep stair. "Well, this blase conductor pulled up his bus at Regent Circus, and the women bound for Peter Robinson's eagerly got out- But One fat woman who had been sitting on top .came down the steep and winding stair very slowly. Her skirt flapped around her ankles, and at every step she stopped and thrust it care fully down. Tho conductor watted with a bored expression, his hand on the bell rope, but he lost patience when the fat lady stopped for the fifth or sixth time to thrust down her billowing skirt, and he burst out angrily: " 'Now, then, lydy. "urry, cahn't you? Figgers ain't no treat to me.' " Indian apolis News. Two Wives For the Khedive. Cairo (Egypt) Dispatch. There are heartburnings in the domestic circles of high dignitaries in Egypt Just now. The Khedive has hitherto been a strict monogamist, fol lowing the Western ideas in which he was so largely trained, but In religion he always has been an orthodox Mo hammedan, and he suddenly has an nounced his intention of taking ad vantage of the Moslem law, which al lows a man In his position four wives, to the extent' of taking a second wife Into his harem. The woman is an Austrian countes-s, who has been a member of his court for several years, and her recent con version to the Mohammedan faith has been followed closely by the announce ment of her forthcoming marriage to the Khedive, under the name of Zu bedia yen Hanem. It is not o much the Intrusion of the foreign element into the royal harem that disturbs the other women of the court as the fear of the precedent the Khedive has established. Hitherto all the court dignitaries have followed the Khedive's lead and contented themselves with a single wife, and each of these is now dreading an of ficial rival In her husband's affections. Tobias! Martha Washing-ton Letter. Springfield (- lass) Republican. Martha Washington's letter to the speaker of the National House In De cember, 1799, tw'o weeks after General Washington's death, was written. It may be suspected, by Tobias Lear. The style is of that Johnsonian ponderosity and scrupulous felicity which was taught at Harvard College in the eigh teenth century and Tobias was grad uated at Harvard before he became General Washington's private secre tary. Consider this sentence: And as his best services and most anxious wishes were always devoted to the welfare and happiness of the conntry, to know that they were truly appreciated and gracefully remembered affords me no inconsiderable consola tion. It Is dollars against cents that "no Inconsiderable consolation" came from the pen of Tobias Lear. He served the Washington family as secretary and tutor to the children from 17S to 1799, Inclusive, and -was present at Washington's deathbed. Picture Postals as Early aa 1777. Baltimore News. A long-forgotten book, entitled "Al manac de la petite Poste de 1777," has Just been discovered, showing that even this early the picture postcard flourished, in France at least. The Almanac reports as follows: "Deman ison, the printer, has introduced pic torial cards containing: room for short announcements or letters. These pret ty cards are sent through the post like letters at a cheaper rate, and are all the vogue."