1 THE MORXIXG OKEGONIAX. TIiTTKSDAY, MATtCII 9. 1911. 10 rOKTLAXD. ORZGOX. i!rd t remand. Oregon. Postofflee as Saond-l'Laa! Matter. ubacnptMa Jtataa Invariably la iliue (BT MAIL PelTr. mdar rarlotled. year. .. ...I- I'ailr. Sundr Included. sis month.... aaaay InclirWd. tftrae tnoniaa.. -- F.i .. a. l... 4 .4 mnnlh . - J I-ailr. without Sunday. Ona sear.. ...... J-00 'ally, atthsat Sunday, six month..... l it Pally, a'lhnit funeay. three months... -'" Z'aily. without Sanaa. oo Bftoota..... .V W-ly. ana yar. J- Sunday. es year. ............ -r; holiday and Maly ona rear. a- IBT CARRIER) Patfy. Sandar laelodad. ana rear.,... aXee li'y. Sunday Induced, oea month.. ... -IS Un I Kcaalt st4 poelofflce maBoy arajr. axpraaa order or pareonal check a our Inral bank. stampe. com or currency era at me --vadare rtaa. Gia poetoffioa lina ta flit Including county and s:ata. Kiln it la 14 pagee. I cant-. 14 Is 2 p-aea, casta; 3d to 0 pat. S rant; 40 ta pagea. casta. foreign poetaas doiMa rata. Kaafara Baihm Offlrra Varr m Conk Itn Nw lgr. Hronaalca, buildl&s- Chi cata. Stc.- bulldirr. rOKTUXD. THOtSDAf. MARCH . Ida. hiut i mh"io ox ix srexioo? The country Is naturally eager for n explanation of the combined mili tary and naval demonstration which eur Corrrnmrnt is making in the neighborhood of Mexico. Inspired re ports from the White House "give us to understand that the purpose of the unusual movement la purely educa tional. The Administration has sud denly conceived the Idea of living the troops and ships some much-needed practice In Imitation warfare. There la not the slightest reference to the Mex ican troubles In the proceeding;. Of course, all this Is a mere diplomatic euphemism. Nobody believe It and no body Is expected to believe It. The phrase "educational maneuvers is sJmply a polite way of telling the coun try that the President does not think it best to disclose his plana Just now. What these plans may be It la left to the future to disclose. The rumor that Intervention In the Mexican troubles will soon ensue is not entirely improb able. Ktnrs from Mexico has been so meager since the outbreak of the re bellion that the public does not know the true condition of affairs there. No doubt the government of Dtax la In worse straits than haa been commonly supposed. Dlax has fallen 111 Just at the time when a strong hand is most needed on the reins of his wild steeds. Coinci dent with his Illness there may be ap parent to the discerning a general breakdown of authority In the country. Well grounded reports have long been hinting that unrest rh Mexico Is wide spread. The land laws have stirred up any amount of popular discontent. The system of peonage which everywhere prevails haa grown more and more odious as one American adventurer after another brought new ideas into the country and spread them abroad. In some sections there has been actunl slavery and the form under which It is practiced Is said to be abominable. Naturally these circumstances have had their effect upon the popular esti mate of Dlax and his government. Admirable as his policy has been In many respects, it seems likely that ha has made fatal blunders in dealing with the forces of discontent. Instead of permitting free speech to the agi tators and taking the wind out of their sails by reforming abuses, he has pur sued a consistent course of suppres sion. Politicians and editors have been Jailed, banished or shot. No open op. position to the government has been tolerated at elections. The whols country has been smothered In a net of espionage. History teaches only too clearly the results of such a sup pressive policy. It puts off the evil day but it also multiplies the power of the Inevitable reaction. Dlas Is a man great enough, one would think, to have adopted more enlightened measures in handling his agitators, but every statesman has his weak points. His Interest haa always lain more In the direction of exploit ing the resources of the land than in promoting its more human clvllixa tion. The quantity of capital which he has attracted to Mexico from the United States and other countries la almost Incredible. It has built rail roads, opened mines, established vast plantations and founded banks, but It has not appreciably promoted the happiness of the common people. They are In much the same condition s the Spaniards left them, worse per haps. On the other hand the Influx of foreign capital and Influence has Injured Dlnx In the minds of his coun trymen. The saying is common among them that Mexico has been delivered over to the foreigners to be plundered. Of course this Is nonsense, but non sense often serves as well as sense in fomenting revolutions. A good deal of Rousseau's Emlle Is absurd, but the French revolution flovted readily enough from Its alluring pages. One may venture a guess that the foreign capital Invested In Mexico is answerable for Mr. Taft'a educational maneuvers along the border. The In surrectionists have unavoidably done more or less Injury to the railroads, mines and plantations and as the troubles Increase greater perils will threaten. Some of the damage la in separable from active warfare and would afford no proper excuse for in tervention, but there may have been wanton destruction contrary to civil ized practices and still worse Is prob ably feared. In that case it is natural for England and Germany to be on the alert. Those governments do not neglect the rights of their citizens In Mexico or anywhere else. They would Intervene If the insurrection threat ened serious damage to their Interests unless the United States appeared ready to save them the trouble. Be sides that our own Investments In Mexico are heavy. It is Impossible to abandon them to the fierce passions of the Insurgents. They must be pro tected and It Is the duty of the Gov ernment to have ships and troops at hand for any emergency which may rise. We may aesume that Mr. Taft has no thought of interfering wlt-i the ac tual course of the revolution. The country does not wish to see It sup pressed by American troops. The Mexicans fancy, at any rate, that they are fighting for liberty and there was time when we did the same thing ourselves. Hence American sympathy for the rebels Is abundant and natural In some quarters. At the same time we cannot be expected to stand Idly by and see our property wantonly ruined. If soldiers and ships are need ed to defend It they will no doubt be on tts (round, promptly. But that is the full extent of any Intervention which this country is likely to make in the affairs of Mexico. THE DEMOCRATS IX lSlt- Colonel George Harvey. who dragged Woodrow Wilson from the scholastic obscurity of Princeton Into the bright white light of his present political glory, discusses brilliantly in the current North American Review the "political predestination" of the Governor of New Jersey. Professor Wilson is fortunate in having a press agent of the persuasive powers and prophetic instinct of Colonel Harvey; for haa not that Journalistic genius pointed out in advance each step in the forward march of the professor In his new career? The "politrtal pre destination" of Professor Wilson. In the terms of his authorized and In spired biographer, "guided by circumstances, conditions and history'." Is to be the Democratic nominee for President in 11J. Editor Harvey proves by appeals to history that every Republican candi date for President is opposed through the operation of fixed and inevitable political causes by Democratic can didate of strongly contrasted charac teristics. Therefore, since Taft in the Harvey opinion Is to be nominated. It la incumbent on the Democrats to find his antithesis. Who Is he? Here U the answer: Ooviouaty bat ana thame or Inquiry de mands consideration. Who ta tha real an ttihe.'s of Taft? Hry"T Tea. as In . Hot Brrao'a races have baan ran. Oaynor . Tee; but Oaynor la dlaqunllf lad by Fata. Folk? Tee; bat Folk claarly la outclaaaed. Champ Clark T Tbaorallcally. parhapa. but practically only as a pretty compliment. Dlx? The carrier of water upon both shoul dera? Ihi npholder of party feay. on tha ona hand, and tha eource of preteita to bolter on tha other? Nalther oppoeite nor BPoelte la Dls. Remain Harmon and WII n. Which, we repeat, la tha aotltheala of Taft ? Wilson U the real "antithesis be cause he Is lithe and sinewy In figure, eloquent of speech, a radical Tllden Democrat, hails from the East and South, and is Imaginative, profound and uncompromising. It may be agreed that the Wilson eulogist has here described a type fairly opposed to Taft: but he has failed to mention the one potent and final reason why Gov ernor Harmon will not be the Demo cratic nominee, and Wilson la likely to be. It is that Colonel Bryan has in the Commoner distinctly voiced his hostility to Harmon, and he Is proba bly friendly to Wilson. Logic, circumstances, conditions and history may have much to say about the naming of the next Democratic Presidential candidate; but Bryi have more to say. not bo nim as rt appears. T-nliki. Watmor'a music which is said to e better than It sounds. Mr. Gifford PInchot'a wisdom sounds bet ter than It assays. "The Republican party." he said in his Akron (O.) ad itrru "cannot live half dead and half alive. It cannot continue half reac tionary and half progressive. Mr. Plnchot borrows hia figure from Lincoln who declared that the nation m-nnld not endure half slave and hail free, and that a house divided against Itself must fall. But slavery was a great moral question, and there could be no compromise. The proDiems inn have divided the so-called progressives and the so-called reactionaries are not moral but political, not personal but economic. With slavery there was nnri rnnid J but one solution free dom. With the multiplied questions that vex and disturb our moaern me there may be a dozen solutions or policies. Mr. Plnchot would destroy me re publican party If he could not apply hi. nartlrular remedies: but not even the progressives are agreed as to the correct policies In all things. Plnchot would be a general wltnoui an army If he had his way. He would not com promise where he should compromise. But compromise is the essence of all nriiri-ai iciinn. Would Plnchot read out of the Republican party everybody who does not ana cannot agree wim him? We suppose so. Then the Re publican party will soon be not only half dead, but entirely dead. Yet we look for a better understanding and greater unity all around. WORLD'S WHEAT nCPPLY IXCREASINO. The March report of the Agricul tural Department appeared yesterday with the figures on grain In farmers' hands. The amount estimated Is 180, 000.000 bushels, compared with 173,-, 000,000 bushels last year, and a' ten year average of 141.000.000 bushels. As the effect of this report had been pretty well discounted, there were no violent changes In the market, the close being practically the same as on the previous day. The influence of the world's big crops for the past two years has been quite severely felt in the market and May wheat closed yes terday more than 21 cents per bushel undef-the closing price a year ago. with other options showing similar losses. ' If it were possible for the United States to consume the entire wheat crop at home the somewhat de pressing influences of a big stock in farmers' hands and a good . prospect for the growing crop would be less weakening on prices. For the present, however, the Unit ed States must continue to figure as an exporting country. The causes for the twenty-cent decline In wheat prices are world wide and not local. This most recent era of dollar wheat which tapered to an end at the be ginning of the new year began In May, 1S07, when the speculators, for once at least, accurately forecasted a poor world's crop. For the five years prior to 107 the world's crop averaged J. 123. 000. 000 bushels. The 1907 crop fell nearly 100.000.000 bushels short of this average and prices soared so far above the dollar mark and were so well sustained that in June, 1909, they touched 1.0 per bushel. Dol lar wheat made great changes In the world's trade. It stimulated produc tion and simultaneously restricted consumption. Including the light crop of 1907, which was responsible for the reappearance of dollar wheat, the average' world's crop for the past four years was 3. 391.000.000 bushels, that of last year breaking all records with an out-turn of S.681.000.000 bushels. Taking three-year periods the aver age for the years 1908-9-10 was S. 477. 000. 080 bushels, a gain of 183. 000.000 bushels over' the preceding three years. These figures, whlch are gathered from official sources, show quite clearly that not only have three big world's crops made up for all of the shortage caused by the light crops of the preceding years, but the amount produced over and above Immediate requirements is sufficient to enable the accumulation of substantial stocks In the market centers of the Old World as well as in this country. Big crops at moderate prices are much better for the people as a whole than small crops and high prices. If the year 1911 piles In a bumper crop on top of those which Immediately preceded it there may be a reduction In the cost of liv ing without seriously impairing the handsome profits which have been made In business for the past three years. KEATTI.ES EXPERIENCE. Seattle appears to think that the way to restore good times Is to in crease the taxes. Four or five years ago, when the prosperity and rapid growth and development of the city were the .marvel of the Western world, there was a proposal for municipal ownership of the street railways.- It was defeated by a substantial vote. Lately there has been much dissatis faction about the operation of a sub urban street railway from Seattle to Renton. Some inspired genius sug gested municipal ownership andat the election Tuesday there waa voted a bond Issue of 1800,000 for the pur chase of the railroad by the city. It may be supposed that If the prop osition had been submitted to the vot ers five years ago, when everybody had money, it would have received small consideration. But now, when condi tions are different and the taxpayer at Seattle Is struggling along under a heavy load, growing larger each year, the electorate cheerfully plies on more and more. When it is reflected that the average per capita tax in Seattle has grown 700 per cent in less than ten years, one is prone to wonder at the ready and easy manner In which Se attle Increases the load. It may possibly be worth while for other cities to study the experience of Seattle. When there Is less special ac tivity here If there ever Is less building, less street work, lees public work of various kinds, will the remedy be more bonds for bridges, more new street, an underground river tunnel, an opposition street railway system? Or what? THE BRAVE rORVAXXJS OIBIA College girls need open-air exercise as much aa their brothers. Corvallls has been a little excited over their ef forts to obtain it under favorable con ditions but the mental arltatlon of the community will subside by and by while the benefit to the young women will remain. Mrs. Grundy in Corvallls oni Athnr tnvm mnv as well make UD her mind that the period of the cling ing vine nas just, aooui vauisncu, The modern woman is fully deter mined to be self-sufficing, robust, capable human being. In struggling toward that Ideal she may lose some nf , nualitiea which have made her attractive, "but she will gain others. Nature has formed tne masculine creature with such subtle Ingenuity that he cannot help adoring women no matter under what aspect they may present themselves to his eyes. Thia vAnAotn of mn llki the frairlle and clinging type a little better than the athletic, but our sons win preier the ample biceps. Woman demands the right to earn her own living and we must permit her to acquire the mental and muscular equipment es sential for that purpose." Considered apart from mere con ventions the -gymnasium suits in which the Corvallls girls made their little flight across the campus are vastly more beautiful than hobble skirts. The neat athletic attire per mits freedom of movement while at the same time it drapes the figure with complete modesty. It is stared i aimniv because it is not often seen on the street. If women had the courage to adopt some such costume for public use and agreed to discard their fashionable gowns, whether hob ble or harem, their charms would be enhanced and their- health would be Improved. Woman owes many of the Ills from which she suffers to the sins of men. That must be confessed frankly. But she also owes many to her own gro tesque notions of what is becoming. To contract the cavities of the body within steel walls does not promote the health. Neither is it strictly hy gienic to drag a dust gathering train along the pavement and thence into the parlor. The Oregonian applauds the spunk of the Corvallls girls and hopes their cheeks will grow rosier with every sprinting trip they make in their pretty gymnasium uniforms. ( HANDICAPnXQ PORTLAXTJ. The Oriental steamship lines run ning out of Puget Sound, fostered and fed by the transcontinental railroads, are carrying wheat and flour to. the Orient at $1.60 per ton with some consignments taken as Tow as $1 per ton. The line of steamers operating out of Portland Is holding out for $3 per ton with the natural result that an immense traffic which should be handled through Portland is being di verted to Puget Sound. It requires no profound knowledge of mathematics, traffic, steamships or railroads to un derstand from this situation that wheat Is worth $1.50 per ton more at Puget Sound porta than It is at Port land. And yet every few months, the high-priced traffic officials and legal lights of the railroads which should be protecting Portland against such unnatural and unwarranted Invasions are hauled up before either the. Ore gon or the Washington Railroad Com mission to prove that there is no dif ference in the price of wheat on Puget Sound and at Portland. The Northern Pacific and the Great Northern, controlled by the Hill in terests, and the Milwaukee road, con trolled by the same group of capital ists that controls the Harriman lines, by reason of their traffic arrange ments with the steamship lines that have cut wheat and flour rates to ruinous figures, could stop this rate war in less than twenty-four hours. Their failure to do so is not only a discrimination against Portland but Is rapidly producing a situation where In the near future they may be forced to haul wheat 145 miles be yond Portland to Tacoma without get ting an additional cent for the extra haul. If the $1 to $1.50 per ton which the Puget Sound lines are now charg ing for wheat and flour to the Orient were a legitimate rate, or one which would show even an Insignificant profit for the service, Portland would have no complaint to make. We could view with a fair degree of equanimity the customary attitude of our local Oriental steamship line, clinging like a barnacle to a sunken piling while the tide of traffic sweeps by it, if there were any insurmount able disabilities which warranted such discrimination against the port. Such disabilities do not exist. The local steamship line, even with its irregu lar and unsatisfactory service, secure a larger proportion of local freight inward and outward than Is carried by any of the steamship lines that the railroads are so generously feeding with trans-continental freight and at the same time permitting to slash wheat and flour rates. The Hill lines spent $50,000,000 building a water level line down the Columbia River to Portland in order to avoid hauling the products of the Inland Empire to tidewater by way of the lofty Cas cade Mountain ranges. They are now permitting Puget Sound wheat and flour operators to demonstrate that these products are worth $1.50 per ton more on Puget Sound than In Port land. The demonstration is not legitimate, but it establishes a precedent which will rise and plague the railroads when they attempt to Justify their re fusal to route grain through Portland to Puget Sound at the same rates which are named for Portland. This city has never had a square deal in the Oriental business and the present discriminatory rate war, which could not exist without the sanction and ap proval of the transcontinental rail roads, is the worst handicapping that has yet been laid on us. A movement is on foot to exempt American vessels from canal tolls when the Panama waterway Is com pleted. As previously explained, such a concession would be nothing more nor less than a subsidy paid to the owners of American vessels. This canal toll subsidy would not in the slightest degree favorably . affect freight rates for shippers but would make it comparatively easy for a few wealthy shipowners to form a trust that would nullify much of the use fulness of the canal. Pacific Coast commercial organizations. Instead of; lending their aid to increasing the cost of getting freight through the canal, should make an immediate and unanimous demand for cheap ships. For every shipowner who will make use of the canal there will be a thousand producers who must supply the freight and pay the bills. The best interest of these producers lies in hav ing their products carried to market at the lowest possible rate consistent with good service. A ship subsidy gains nothing in attractiveness by coming before us in the form of im munity from canal tolls. The superiority of oil as a fuel for battleships has been well demonstrat ed by a number of vessels on which the experiment has been made. An effort is now being made to have all of the fighting machines of the Gov ernment provided with this handy, ec onomical and generally advantageous fuel. Quite naturally some objection will be raised on the Atlantic Coast, for the reason that fuel oil is a Pa cific Coast product and cannot be se cured on the Atlantic at such reason able prices as are paid on the Pacific Coast. The Influent that Is strong enough with the Government to force the carrying of coal for the fleet 14, 000 miles around the Horn to stations located a few miles from extensive coal mines on this Coast, will prob ably be sufficient to prevent the gen eral use of oil in the Navy, but when the inevitable demonstration of the necessity of a full Pacific squadron is made oil and not coal will be the fuel burned on the Pacific station. Public sympathy, full handed,- is coming to the relief of the wretched, destitute sufferers of the famine dis trict of China.. Among the contribu tions Is flour to the value of $210,000 shipped from Seattle by the troopship Buford, $5000 in cash cabled from this city and $31,000 in money and flour sent from New York. Before "the flour can reach them, thousands of these naked starvelings will have ceased to need help, but there are yet other thousands - who, through the contributions sent, may be able to keep base life afoot until the next stress of famine is upon them. Pity in this case is not for those who have died, but for those who continue the forlorn struggle for wretched existence which is all they know, or can ever know of life. The useless life and tragical death of the man who lives to himself alone are illustrated now and then in find ing human bonea in the smouldering ashea of a cabin that has served such a man the purpose of a shelter. A further Illustration of the fact that hoarded money is the most useless of all things, and the most sordid and unresponsive to human needs, la shown in the occasional finding among the ashes of such a poor domicile coins to the value of several hundred dol lars. Such bungling of the great prob lem of life as is made manifest In a case of this kind is softened by a single word. Except for what he did to him self, it Is usually noted that the hermit waa "harmless." using the word in a strictly negative sense. Now, of a verity, this interstate commerce law Is going too far In smashing time-honored customs. Here are two dozen cond actors and brake men on the Missouri Pacific indicted for taking cash fares at less than the published rates. No more can the pas senger on a local pass up a $2 bill and a bit of cardboard of varied hue and go hia way rejoicing. What will the poor spotter do for a living if these laws are enforced? Rome California lawyers no doubt. shed many a regretful tear when they heard that Ruer was at last Denina prison bars. It must have seemed like the destruction of a profitable invest ment. He was the most productive asset they had. Does not his imprison ment amount to an act of confisca tion? purely the Constitution will not permit such a -valuable source of reve. nue to be annihilated in this ruthless way. "j Herr Schaffenbergs experiments in growing bulbs ' at Canby will be watched with Interest. There are thriving tulip farms on Puget Sound, iut none in Oregon although the cli mate is Just what is needed. It Herr Schaffenburg succeeds In producing tulips and hyacinths which can corm pete with the fine Haarlem growth he will add notably to the beauty of Ore gon and tfte wealth too. - To learn how a good brewer touches the heart, as well as other parts of man's anatomy. Just read ' the list of gifts to Mr. Busch. Rebellious Greasers will find the American soldier a better marksman than ever were the Kentucky squirrel shooters sixty-odd' years ago. General Grant will attend the coro nation unless he has business of Im portance in Mexico. The records for laying big eggs make the goose laugh. SOCIAL HAPPEMXGS IX PLUSH. Two Weddlng-a Up-Set and a Litter of Pisa All la One Day. Lakevlew Examiner. A DEL. Or., Feb. 23. (Editor Examiner) Not seeing anything In your valuable paper about Adel we thought we would send you a few of the happenings here. We have Just pulled off one of the grand est times that ever happened in Adel, but It came near ending In a very sad affair. On the morning of the 22d Too ley Judge Morris 'was notified that there waa something doing at the home of Mr. Caldwell, and after borrowing a plug hat and donning some other pretty good borrowed clothes his Too leyness was at once rushed to the scene of action by private conveyance and at high noon, before a merry crowd of friends and relatives Joined In wed lock Mr. C. F. Caldwsll and Miss Llssle S. Cooper. After the presents, someone unbe known to me sounded the dinner bell and we all filed Into the dining-room and threw our feet under the mahog any to one of the most palatial wed ding dinners It has ever been our good fortune to partake of. But. before the Judge had time to do Justice to the turkey the phone rang and he received the following message from F. H. Oli ver at Hotel Wible: "Dear Judge: Rush to Hotel Wlble at once; couple from Plush waiting anxiously for you to make them one; say nothing, wedding private." Of course, the Judge said nothing to any one only Just the crowd, as he has made himself famous for keeping se crets, so he was at once rushed to Hotel Wlble with all the crowd fallow ing. On arriving at the scene of action he found Mr. Oliver and his companion, Mr. O. Holyhan. busily engaged In mak ing wreaths from the scattering sage brush and Juniper for the bride. After all due preparations were made the Judge at once more Mr. John Gee and Deliah M. Burns, both well-known res idents of Plush, man and wife. After the ceremony all present partook very freely of the refreshments that Mr. Gee had brought from Greater Plush with him. to the health of the happy couple. They all went their different ways to sober up and prepare themselves for the social ball to be held at the Adel Hall In the evening. But here our troubles began. Mr. Wible, of Hotel Wlble, hooked four horses onto the big coach and headed the guests for the hall. It was a very dark night and as he lost his bearings on the Morris grade, drove too high, capsizing the rig and all the passen gers Into the wire fence below; and the way they lit was not graceful. Dr. Johnston from the Dugout was sent for and soon dressed the wounds. Those crippled were: Mrs. Wlble, hurt In the back; W. S. Wlble, two teeth out and reputation sprung; Miss Myrtle Wible. crippled under the hat; Mrs. Roberts, eye blacked and face bad ly skinned; Mr. Roberts, one finger badly cut: shoulder hurt, side badly bruised. Mrs. Grlsel. head and face badly bruised; R. B. Grlsel, cheek badly affected, one wheel dished; Bert Lee, waddle over right eye, left listener knocked down and voice affected; John Gee, groom, cheek and nerve both af fected, one wheel sprung; Mrs. Gee, bride, face and head very badly cut and bruised all over; rest of party not hurt but had to change clothes. All of the party was able to proceed on to the ball after having their vari ous wounds dressed, except Mrs. Gee, who was very badly hurt and will not be able to be up for some time to come. All able to be present declared that everything was a success, even to Charles Wallls, the coarse-voiced man from Fort Bidwell, and to cap the cli max at daybreak this morning Wible'a old sow that has a reputation for up setting all the swill barrels In town. In the dead hours of night, gave birth to 11 pigs, even Jim Givens, who has not smiled since he got home from the city, smiled and said It was a big ger time than they ever had In Pump kin Center. ED. ADEL SCREAMER. WHEN PHILLIPS WAS REPORTER The Editor Said It Pained Htm to See One Labor So Hard. The Bookman. One erroneous idea, that has been held by a good many of David Graham. Phillips' readers, l that he had a rapid, fluent, and at times an over-hasty--pen. Nothing could be further from the truth. Phillips himself admitted free ly that from first to last he always found literary composition a labor a labor of love, that he could not have shirked If he would but none the less a labor. A story, which he sometlmee told at his own expense. Illustrates this. It was shortly after his gradua tion from Princeton that he sought work as a reporter, and finally by of fering his services for nothing, ob tained a chance to phow what he could do. on the leading daily in a Western city. The weather was cold and the tem perature of the office Somewhat below 60; yet hour after hour Phillips would sit at his desk with the moisture roll ing from his brow. In the anguish of trying to make literature from .such material as: "Yesterday afternoon John Jones fell off a stepladder and dislo cated his snouieier. um aay ii w the tenth of Phillips' services the presiding genius of the paper stood for some minutes watching him. "Who is that young man?" he presently asked the city ed'tor. The lajter explained. "Get rid of him!" came the curt edict. "But," expostulated the city editor, "we are getting him for nothing!" "I don't care!" rejoined the higher power, "I don't care If he Is paying for the privilege! Get rid of him at once; I can't bear to see any human be'ng work so hard!" The Censns tn Switzerland. London Standard. The census which was taken on De cember 1 last furnishes Interesting In formation on many subjects. Thus on the questions of the languages which are spoken In the republic German leads the list with 2.699.149 persons speaking It; French comes next with 796.220; Italian, with 301.323, and Romanche with 39,912. All four lan guages are "official'" and may be em ployed by the Deputies in the Swiss Parliament. On the western frontier French is gradually ousting German, while Italian is gaining over German in parts of the Canton of Valais. espe cially at Brieg. There are 665,025 strangers in the land, of whom at least 23.000, as far as can be Judged, I've In hotels the great er part of the year. In the census of 1900 the number of strangers was 383, 424. Lausanne boasts the largest sin gle family, numbering 22, Including the parents. In the village of Walchwil, Canton of Zug, with a population .of 1044, 608 villagers possess the name of Hurlimann. and as many of their Chris tion names are the same, comic opera situations frequently happen. Five women and two men have been re quested to "reconsider" their ages. Naturalization Laws PORTLAND, March 6. (To the Editor.) Please answer the following ques tions n The Oregonian: .If a child Is born to foreign parents who are not citizens of the United States, Is that child a citizen or not? If an American woman marries a man who is not a citizen of the Unit-d States, does she lose her citizenship? - A SUBSCRIBER. A child born in the united States to parents who are not citizens becomes a citizen. .Any American woman who marries a foreigner takes the nationality of her husband. CO-OPERATION TO SAVE BABIES Dairymen, Pure Food Men and Parents Should Work Together, Writer Say. PORTLAND, March 7. (To the Edi tor.) In reply to the communication in The Oregonian of last Monday, signed by an energetic "Housewife," I wish to express appreciation of all the truth it contains. The subject of clean milk and clean bottles versus clean parentage should not be a made a narrow, personal one. It Is of National Importance. There is more than one Bide to all questions, and the nurse sees the side with which the public and the good housekeeper are little familiar. I approve most heartily of the thor ough inspection of dairies, and so stat ed previously. I find that theories necessary though they may be, are at best but guides, and that experience and good Judgment must go hand in hand in making use of them. I do not believe in the wholesale condemnation of herds of cows who are In apparently good condition, because the tuberculin test has been applied and reported positive. Tests are not Infallible, and until doctors have a more sound basis for their claims of Infection of human beings by the milk of tubercular an imals, more injustice than Justice is being done by the practice of condemn ing herds. The fact remains that clean milk Is not all. Thousrh cleanliness is next i tn mrfiiiiMs it ic not e-nriltnesa. Clean milk Is cleanliness; and very desirable, clean parentage is godliness and indis pensable to healthy babyhood. If this good housewife had been a nurse for a few years, she would not need this fact demonstrated to her. BoyB need training for their future high calling of fatherhood. They need to be taught before it is too late that "sowing wild oats" is ' a crime and that the harvest Is disease and death to much which later In life they will value most. That a wild boy makes a poor father, and that the purest woman on earth cannot be an antidote for the results of his life, all this is manifested in his children. Goodness In the mother never can take the place of Industry, knowledge and the cour age necessary to the woman who would cope successfully with the many emergencies of mother life. What women do not know, does hurt them and their children and their children's children. I once had a S-months-old babe put under my care when it seemed to be about dead. It could not make an audible cry, nor could It swallow. I sat by its cot all night and fed It one drop of fluid at a time lest it strangle to death. I held my breath many times listening for the next feeble breath. I prayed for Its life with every drop I got It to retain. . The good phys'cians did what they could. They told me what to do if the baby lived through the night, and I went to bed. The baby at the end of six weeks was a normal child, so far as food was concerned. It was thriving on the very milk on which It was starving when brought to me. The milk was never sterilized, it was modified to suit the needs of that baby. The milk came from a herd of untested cows, and was cared for properly after com ing into the hospital. When the mother came to take the baby home, she asked to hold it and give It the bottle. She placed the child In her lap. allowing the little head to hang over her knee and tipped the full bottle up over the child's head to feed it. The baby spluttered and strangled, and the mother did not know enough to hold it In a comfy position and hold the bottle bo it could nurse without strangling. And 8he loved the child. The latter afterward became an Imbecile, the re sult of inherited syphilis. Had 'he baby been well born, it might have stood the feeding of the Ignorant mother, but the combination of ignor ance and disease was too much. I could modify the milk, but I could not cleanse the source of life for the baby. Another baby boy was brought to me at my home, to save if I could. He was starving to death on two quarts of milk a day. The milk could not be retained, he cried continually with hunger, became a skeleton, and devel oped a hernia that threatened his life constantly. I called a physician and we devised a bandage that, while, it required changing many times a day, reduced the hernia effectually. The physician left the feeding to me, be cause he said that it was an experi ment with delaying death. I gave the little fellow a prepared food of the strength for a new born babe, and put him on modified cows' milk as soon as he could digest It. In a few weeks I taught the mother to care for him and prepare his food. He went back to the same farm on which he had previ ously been starved, nor did he ever require an operation for hernia. He la now a large, strong boy. Improper feeding is at the root of most digestive disturbances In babies as physicians well know. Work with the dairyman, not against him, with the Food Commissioner, not against him, and remember that until a man is proved guilty (not thought guilty) he is in the eyes of the law considered to be innocent. More repu tations are talked to death than are forfeited by the acts of the person talked about, as women ought to know. Believe me, the dairyman, the pure food man and the mother need help, not annihilation. Co-operation will ac complish anything. Strife will accom plish nothing. Help to teach the boy purity, the girl the dignity of motherhood, the dairy man the gospel of cleanliness and the Food Commissioner the value of co-operation. Then expect the millen'um. One doesn't need to die to get to heaven. Portland will be it. Grand mothers, graduate nurses, great aunts, good housewives and babies will all be In it to stay. A GRADUATE NURSE. Light for a Birthday Cake, Kansas City Star. Marie Dressier Is famous for. her epi grams. An actor at the opera house was recalling one of her Justly famous bits 'of repartee. Miss Dressier was inviting her friends to a birthday party. "There'll be a birthday cake, I suppose? someone remarked. "Yes, there'll be a cake, never fear," was the reply. "And candles,. of course?" went on the alleged wit. "My friend." said Miss Dressier, "this Is to be a birth day party, not a torchlight proces sion." Tha Cry of the Orcamrr. John Boyle O'Reilly. I am tired of planning and tolling . In the crowded hive of men: Heart weary of building- and spoiling. And polling' and building attain. And I long for the dear old river Where I - dreamed my youth away For a dreamer 11-ea forever And a toller dies in a day. I km Ick of the ahowy meaning Of a life that ia half a lie. Of the faces lind with achamlng In a throng that hurries by. From the sleeplpss thought's endeavor I would go where the children play For a dreamer lives forever. And a toiler dies in a day. I feel no prlda but pity For tha burdens the rich endure. There is nothing sweet In the city But the patient lives of the poor. Oh. the little hands too skillful. And the child mind choked with weeds. The daughter's heart grows willful. And the father's heart that bleeds. No, no; from the street's rude bustla From trophiaa of mart and stage, I would fly to the wood's low rustle And the meadow's kindly page. Let me dream as of yore by the river And be loved for the dreams alway For a dreamer Uvea lorever, , And a toller dies in a day. Timely Tales of the Day D. O., Lively, general agent of the Union Stockyards at Portland, Or., is a prominent after-dinner speaker and an inveterate story teller. Some time ago, having been troubled for a time with a sore throat, he called in the family physician for treatment. The doctor came early in the day for the first call, appeared again soon after luncheon, came again late in the evening and was again on hand early the next forenoon. Mr. . Lively wondered somewhat at the doctor's unusual and apparently uncalled-for solicitude over what ap peared to be a very slight ailment, and when he put In an appearance again in the afternoon said to him: "Doc, why all this anxiety about this case? My throat is not very sore and I don't believe It Is necessary for you to neglect your other business to such an extent." "My dear Lively," replied the doctor, eyeing him severely, "you have the reputation of being a popular speaker, and I have myself heard some of your stories, and I know that If I allow this sore throat to reach a stage where you are unable to talk, they will accumu late in your system and you will inev itably die of blood poison." Despite its recent recall election and a reform Mayor and anti-gambling Chief of Police in the saddle In Seattle, there Is one little woman in Tacoma whose Spring bonnet is held up tempo rarily because Seattle is not closed as tight in high places as Seattle would have the world believe It Is. This young woman, a Newlywed, has recently learned to play bridge. She was delighted several days ago to re ceive an invitation to a bridge affair In one of the most excxlusive homes in Seattle. Several other Tacoma women were also invited, but they were all ex pert bridge players, and Mrs. Newlywed was not. Her social standing was hard ly sufficient to warrant the invitation she thought, but she made up her mind she ought to "break In" when oppor tunity presented itself, so decided to attend. With the other Tacoma women she went to Seattle and spent a delightful afternoon. There were six or eight tables, and the hostess was gracious very gracious. When Mrs. Newlywed prepared to leave she was presented with a neat little bill for $17.50. "What is that for, please?" she smil ingly asked of the hostess, thinKing it was possibly an odd sovenir. "You lost," said Mrs. Seattlelte with the air of any good "banker." It dawned on little Mrs. Newlywed. "We were not playing for money, were we?" she asked, falteringly. She was Informed In the affirmative. Little Mrs. Newlywed had $10 in her purse besides her return steamer ticket to Tacoma. The $10 had been given her by Mr. Newlywed as first payment on a new Spring hat. Tearfully she parted with It to Mrs. Seattlelte, and signed an "I. O. U." for the $7. 60 balance. "What shall I do?" Bhe asked a friend the other day. "I hate to tell and I haven't any hat to show for the money and must get $7.50 besides at once. Oh, what shall I do!" Has anyone in Portland found an Arctic fox skin, stamped with the name of Dr. Frederick Cook, the explorer? If so, Dr. Louis J. Wolf would like to hear from him. Dr. Wolf was physician of the Peary party that made the nearest approach to the North Pole before its actual dis covery. While in the Arctic regions ha collected a large number of souvenirs. Including a handsome fox belt, which he has since exhibited with great pride. Just how this skin happened to be stamped with the name of Dr. Cook, Dr. Wolf has not been able to explain to the satisfextion of his friends, but that It is so stamped there Is no doubt. Recently Dr. Wolf hung the fur on the fire escape for an airing. When he went to get it. it had been blown Into the street and was not to be seen, nor haa Dr. Wolf had any trace of it since. "What surprises me," said Dr. Wolf, "Is that this fur has not started a rumor that Dr. Cook is in town. Surely whoever found It did not tell any newspaper man of his discovery. Every time I havs picked up a newspaper since the fur was lost. I have expected to see a scarehead announcing that Dr. Cook is in Portland." Walter H. Evans, assistant United States District Attorney. Is a gentle man who can appreciate a Joke, but he thinks the practical one played on him last week a little far-fetched. Mr Evans went to his office in the Federal building last Thursday to open his mail. Among the letters was a plain, white envelope ' from an Oakland firm, which, upon opening, he found to con tain the following: "Dear Sir: You wish to be restored as nearly as possible to your former con dition of health, strength and ability to make your living as before you lost yout limb. "If you have a good amputation, en ergy, ambition, and a good artificial limb you 'can take up your work where you left it off. , . , "The president of this company lost his leg about 20 years ago. Since that time he has devoted himself to the manufac ture of artificial limbs, and has made valuable improvements, which makes it possible for the unfortunate to walk about with comfort and in a natural manner. . "If you purchase a light-weight leg with a cordless ankle you will receive perfect satisfaction, because they are the most comfortable artificial limbs procurable, cannot get out of order, squeak or rattle. They are absolutely safe and reliable, as there are no break able parts in their construction. "You have not sent for our catalogue yet. It. contains valuable intormation that wUl prove most lntereeting to you. Fill out the enclosed query blank today." Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian. March , 1861. The population of Oregon ia only be tween 52,000 and 68,000; that of California 3S4.771. We have been In the habit of estimating the population of Oregon at 60,000 and that of California at 600,000. We have disunion papers in Oregon that profess great regard for the Union and at the same time avow that their "sym pathies" are with the secessionists. On the same plan a man might sympathize with a horsethlef and claim that ho did not necessarily sustain horse-steal'ng. The editor of tha Vancouver Chronicle, Mr. L. E. V. Coon, announces hls retire ment from that journal In the Issue of the 7th of March. T,t.am Vnn ti er idvi thftr th TTrilon cannot be "patched up." He thinks the dlsunlonlsts are "fighting the battle of the Lord" and setting the Mormons free by destroying the government. Brig ham's fine theories will probably fall to the ground. There s undoubtedly a large amount of money In the hands of parties waiting Investment, but the continued agitation at the East prevents a restoration of con fidence in business matters. Sales of mer- . chandise almost nothing for the week, without any speculative demand. m We have the announcement this week that Brady will again try the 80-hours' walking feat before long. This Is what we call a clear case of felo de se. In the second degree, but "sich is life." Man never knows when he Is well off. For the bubble reputation he walks all day: all along through' the dreary watches of the night; day and night for three days and nights, and for what for grandeur.