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WHY IS GREAT HISTORY GREAT? Upon one of the deepest and most fas cinating mysteries of literature, sug gestive If not conclusive light is thrown by W. G. Brown in the most Interesting paper In the November Atlantic Mr. Brown is something of a historian him self, having published studies of An drew Jackson and of the State of Ala bama, and from his further experience as a librarian and teacher he addresses With eome authority and much Insight The Problem of the American His torian." It is an essay well worth read ing, correct In Its judgments and pecu liarly satisfying In Its apprehension of the spiritual life. It exposes some faults of many writers, yet subordinates them all to the fine loyalty of the staff officer to his Generals the enthusiasm of the historian for the good work done by any and all historians. It Is a pity we do not have more of this esprit de corps In every division of the grand army of literature, and less of that civil war which resolves noetry, drama, history and biography, each Into a scene of Latin-American turmoil. Who has not at some time or other asked himself what is the secret of great history, just as we search for the key of poetical excellence or the mys tery of dramatic success? "We know that greatness has been achieved in history by men who flouted some one or other and perhaps more than one of the reputed essentials of success. A man may be a great historian and be an arrant partisan like Froude, a pre carious generallzer like Macaulay, a mere topical essayist like Niebuhr, a conversationalist like Fiske. He may have no obvious faults at all, like Park man or "Woodrow Wilson, and yet fall of real greatness. To this mystery Mr. Brown brings, as we have said, some hints but no conclusion. He reminds us that there is no accepted standard of value, no common denominator of excellence. But he makes some inter esting guesses In the way of partial ex planations. One is that the historian must be nat ural. Mr. Brown thinks so much of Flske that he ranks his simple narra tives superior to the brilliant pages of Woodrow Wilson. He seems almost to resent this enviable quality in the writ ings of Princeton's president, as he is persuaded that they obscure the sub ject by their own effulgence. One can hardly see Washington for Wilson. Our essayist gives the palm to Homer, Thu cydldes, Bunyan, because of Iheir nat uralness. The general truth here must be admitted; yet Wilson Is not so bril liant as to escape the dead level of uniformity. There is no profound im pression In all the pages of his five vol umes. History must be more than fault less. It must have distinction raised to the high power of greatness. Mr. Brown is doubtless right In ranking Parkman, along with Green, above Flske, and Flske again above Rhodes, Henry Adams and the others he does not even men tion. His praise of Flske is just and in great part based on new considerations. Wilson, he truly says, did not give him self wholly enough to his work; Flske did not comprehend the deep and dark things of life; the reasoning of Rhodes "Is not helped by his imagination and his characteristic manner Is not easy or graceful"; Adams Is "lacking in sympathy and warmth." Nowhere except in the pages of the Atlantic monthly do we remember to have seen the limitations of the United States as a theme discussed with a true appreciation of their severity. As ap plied to fiction, poetry, drama and art, those limitations will readily occur to the magazine's readers. We have no antiquity; we have no ancient tradi tions of a church or an aristocracy. He who would take America as his theme is bereft at once of the color and sen timent, the pageantry and relics, the inheritances and cathedrals, the tombs and trophies, the tragedies of Queens and royal children, the myths and mem ories of the distant past, which he who works with European materials finds ready to his hand. Mr. Brown has a consciousness of this, and he expresses It; though he seems to us to fall in the effort to convince himself that this lack Is counterbalanced by the hope of fu turity which here may take Its place. He would indeed be a genius who could utilize the gift of prophecy to atone .for the lost wealth ofclasslc memories. If Mr. Brown should ever carry this Atlantic essay upon history on Into a more comprehensive and final form, he would probably give more emphasis to the necessity that a historian gives his life work to his history, and he can hardly fall to. suggest somewhere also that the truly great history can only spring from th,e great soul. When all Is said and done, accuracy and style and the rest occupy some such place in history as they occupy in any field of literature. Some day we shall st far enough away from materialism to ap prehend that the test of Gibbon and Macaulay, exactly like the test of Mil ton and Shakespeare, Is exaltation of the spirit and not the mere furnishing of the undei-standing. Some day we shall pay our homage to the master that not so much Instructs as moves us, not so much tells us what Washington and Lincoln did as to fnspire us to think their noble thoughts and emulate their mighty deeds. The greatness of any history is the greatness of the great soul behind it, consumed In Its production and moving tremendously upon human thought and act. EDUCATION FOB SUCCESS. Under the text of "Education for Suc cess" Sir John Alexander Cockburn, formerly Premier of Australia, In a notable address tells the story of a rich man to whom some one said: "Sir, your son has a. marvelous talent for engi neering. Place him in the workshop of some great firm and I warrant you that In time the world, will hear of him." The father replied, "I wish my son to be a gentleman, not a stoker.", "He may be much worse than a stoker," rejoined the other, "he may be a loafer." Sir Alexander ad'ds that the boy was sent to an expensive public school, and later to the university", and when he grew up he did become a loafer, "a barren tree In the orchard, a stumbling-block In the path." This English thinker points out that "culture and beauty form atmospheres which cannotexlst by themselves, but are natural emanation from earnest, honest work, and girdle with ambient grace the solid orb of useful arts and knowledge." , The old-time divorce of knowledge from usefulness once permitted the world to be cumbered with idle schol ars and ignorant workers. The edu cator of today believes in practical work to counteract the school tendency to theory, and in scientific instruction to enlighten practice, to combine, sci ence and art and unite the aims of the workshopand the school. This Is the sci ence of Sir Alexander Cockburn's pro ject of the kind of education that makes for success. The pursuit of knowledge for its own sake without any relation to the world of reality made mankind for centuries Instead of advancing march-In a circle until Francis Bacon Insisted that philosophy must be judged by its fruits; that all knowledge must be referred to use and action. These views have received such general accept ance in our own day that not only util ity is no longer a degradation but the leaders of higher education in Canada and Australia long ago took leave of the Idea that a university could be held to discharge its whole duty if it kept itself jealously apart from the practical Instruction of life and from the call3 of the world's work. The chancellor of Magill University holds that the modern university should embrace within its sphere of work the higher aspects of commerce and in dustry, which will always be linked to the onward march of scientific inven tions and discovery. Both new and old universities are establishing depart ments of commerce, engineering and applied science. Birmingham Univer sity teaches the science and art of beer brewing. Cambridge teaches econom ics. Systematic training of the mind and eye has permanent place in the curriculum of every efficient school, and has been found to strengthen the pow ers of observation and quicken generally the powers of apprehension, and the workshop, the garden and the labora tory are a welcome relief from book work. Sir Alexander Cockburn believes in a sound stock of general training on which the special aptitude for any par ticular calling can be readily engrafted; he believes la training of the senses to appreclatethe beautiful and of the will to choose the right; his education in cludes the training of head, hand and heart. Given this training, the road of general education for success is clearly defined. He believes In no short-cuts to utility. He would not have the tech nical school usurp the years which should be devoted to preliminary edu cation. His thought of a successful life, however, is a well-spent, useful life, and of the educator who measures suc cess by mere money-making he says this would be an infinitely more deplor able and fatal error than the old-fashioned view of education as the mere acquisition of knowledge: ' Accretions, -whether of facts in the head or gold in the pocket, are as lichens, which in crust the bark but are not lndicatlvo of real growth. While he thinks a man is "a wildxand foolish laborer, to dream and dream and dream and never do," nevertheless this manly Englishman bids his readers never forget that there are things such as love and honor, and the soul of man, which cannot be bought with a price, and which do not die with death and which those who would fain live hap pily cannot afford to leave out of the lessons of their lives. This argument of an English educational reform of today is interesting because it is only the fruit of the plant whose seed was sown by Macaulay when in 1S26 he denounced the great English universities of Ox ford and Cambridge because among their graduates there was a glut of Greek, Latin and mathematics and a lamentable scarcity of everything else. These English universities In 1S26 and long afterwards did not find It neces sary to teach what is useful, because they could afford to pay men to learn what is useless. Macaulay, himself an honored graduate of Cambridge, said it was an every-day event for clever young men of four and flve-and-twenty, loaded with university honors, to enter into life unacquainted with the history, the literature, wlththe first principles of the laws under which they live, un acquainted with the very rudiments of moral and political science. This com plaint of the English universities was made long ago by university men, by Bacon, Milton, Dryden, Locke, and afterwards by Johnson and Gibbon. Replying to the scholar who said that ancient literature was the ark In which all the civilization of the world was preserved during the deluge of bar barism, Macaulay answered, "Wq con fess It But we do not read that Noah thought himself obliged to live in the ark after the deluge had subsided." Macaulays judgment was that in his day while In particular cases a uni versity education may have produced good effects, he "had no hesitation in saying that as to the great body of those who receive It their minds per manently suffer from it," because they have wasted a deal of time needed for the acquisition of speculative knowl edge, and they have to enter into active life without it, to plunge into the details of business and are left to pick up gen eral principles as they may. This was Macaulays indictment of his own uni versity in 1826, and his plea for the establishment of a university that would seek to be prosperous by making Itself useful Instead of bribing one man to learn what It Is of no use for him to know. Macaulay began this battle for higher educational reform more than 75 years ago, and today we see the seed sown by Macaulay at last bearing con summate fruit in England and her great colonies and in the United States. The protest against university education that does not educate is older than Bacon. It is set forth by that excellent scholar and famous humorist of France, Montaigne. THE DIET OF THE PIONEERS. Under the title "The Secret of Long Life," the London Standard endeavors to find the solution of longevity in the fact that nearly all the public men of Europe who lived to be very old were men of simple and strictly moderate fllet. The late pope lived on milk 'and eggs, with an occasional chicken, a few vegetables and a little wine; he rose at 6, did not go to bed until midnight. Cornaro, who lived, to 103, was a strict dletarlan, eating but twelve ounces of solid food and drink ing but three-quarters of a pint of light wine per diem. Sic Isaac Holden, who lived to be 91, believed n fruit and eschewed farinaceous fare; he ab stained from bread; smoked two or three cigars, took no wine, but drank a glass of hot whisky and water before going to bed. M. Chevreul, the great French chemist, was a centenarian who lived on eggs and chicken for break fast, had soup and a cutlet for dinner, with a bunch of grapes; he never used wine nor ate fish. The conclusion drawn by the Standard from the record of these old people Is that their length of days was due something to their ab stemiousness In the matter of meat and the large place held by fruit In their diet. While they were not vegetarians, they were moderate in the use of flesh and starchy foods. Now let us pass from this record of the diet of famous Europeans who lived to be very old on a very formal, fixed diet, to the record of the obscure American pioneers who reached a good old age on both the Pacific and the At lantic slopes without knowing or caring much about the laws of diet and of health, except so far as they had been formulated by the experience of the greatest number. James R. Meade, Kansas pioneer of 1859, writes the Kan sas City Journal that he believes that the.food best fitted for the human stom ich is bread and meat washed down with coffee. He is now a vigorous, active man of 66; has- all his life lived upon meat, bread and coffee; his stom ach Is always ready for business, and he makes casual mention of the fact that he has an unusually strong babe of 15 months of age. In hls pioneer days of 1S59 he and his companions drank on the average from two to three quarts a day of coffee; they never used whisky, for they cared nothing about It, but would have as soon left their rifles in camp as to start out on a hunting expedition without coffee. Coffee was a necessity In a life of severe physical hardship, while alcohdl, whose effect was followed by nervous reaction, was of no value. This testi mony is confirmed by that of Dr. Kane in his Arctic journey, and any old vet eran of the Union Army will remember that while the Confederates had plenty of whisky they were always anxious to barter it for coffee, which was scarce in their camps. These hardy soldiers had discovered that strong coffee was an Invaluable stimulant to a tired and hungry soldier. The same story is told by our Army officers. The American soldier, regular or volunteer, has done his hardest work In the field In the South during the Civil War, in the In dian wars, in the Philippines, on the marching ration of coffee, hardtack and bacon. Probably the Oregon and Wash ington pioneers who are distinguished for longevity could testify that coffee, bread and meat had been their diet in their early days of wrestling with the woods for subsistence. Longevity seems to come to some men who carefully watch their diet and formulate It as did the European cen tenarians, who were menof physiolog ical learning obtained from books, and it seems to attend other men who never watched their diet or formulated it, but ate and drank as they pleased from the cradle to the grave. General John Stark, of New Hampshire, was a hunter in his boyhood, then an Indian fighter in the "Old French War," then a gen eral officer In the American Revolution, which he survived forty years, dying at the age of 94. General Thomas Sum ter, born In Virginia, was an Indian fighter under Washington at Brad dock's defeat. He became a General in the American Revolution, which he sur vived fifty years, dying at the age of 9S. These two .old fellows probably never knew anything about the rules of diet, or exercise, or the laws of health, beyond what every illiterate hunter or herdsman or soldier obtains by experience. And there were others like them, for the records show that between 1810 and 1840 seventeen persons died In "Vermont who had passed the century mark, and the returns of the census of 1840 show 'that there were living in Vermont twenty-two persons who were upwards of 100 years of age and above 200 who were unirorHa r,t on ( out of a population of about 290,000. An old Indian chief, Cabazon, at the age of 105 Is now an applicant for aid to the Supervisors of San Bernardino County, California; and there is an old negro pauper in North Carolina who is 105 who In reply to questions concern ing his diet says that he always "drank all the whisky he could get." These old-time centenarians did not reach longevity through the absence of de structive diseases, for records show that New England was fearfully scourged with diseases. Diphtheria, influenza, dysentery, scarlatina, typhus fever, were more universal than they are today. The spotted fever (cerebro spinal meningitis) in 181Li2 was a fatal malady, and epidemic pneumonia in the Winter of 1813 carried off 6000 persons, or one death to every forty Inhabitants in Vermont Pulmonary consumption was more common and more fatal than it is today. It was not for lack of ex posure that the pioneers of the Atlantic and Pacific Coast Included In their ranks so many cases of longevity. It Vas because they were "shot proof." It is said that an absolutely healthy human stomach Is proof against even cholera germs, and these long-lived pio neers of New England and Oregon were so absolutely vigorous by native con stitution that they were "shot proof." They were doubtless exposed repeatedly to contagion. They must at times have drank polluted water and eaten at times of tainted food. They must have been exposed to contagious and Infec tious diseases, but they knew nothing of microbes nor bacteria nor the germ the ory of disease, and they lived a stirring Hfeand obtained a serene old age. The natural query is, Would not the edu- cated, distinguished dietarlans of Eu rope have lived just as long If they had known less about diet and eaten more; that is, eaten, like the ' old American pioneers, whatever they craved and as much as they wished? It is doubtful if a formulated, scientific diet ever pro longed a healthy man's life, Titian, who was no saint, lived to be 100, and Voltaire, who was an anti-Christ, lived to be 84. On the other hand, Cardinal Newman lived to be about 90. The con clusion Is that .some men like certain varieties of trees, are, wet or dry, in variably tough timber. THE PHtST INDIAN PKJEST. Up to the present year there never has been a full-blooded Indian admitted to the priesthood of the Roman Catholic church. There have been thousands of v zealous Indian converts since the first days following the discovery of Amer ica, but none has reached the priesthood until Father Negahnquet completed his four years' course In the Propaganda at Rome last June. Father Negahnquet was born in 1874, on the Pottawatomie Indians' former reservation near St Mary's, Kan. The oldest of ten chil dren, at a tender age he was taken to the Church of the Assumption at To peka for baptism. At the Government school for Indians In Indian Territory he attracted the at tention of his teachers by his unusual intelligence. At the School of the Sa cred Heart, maintained by the Catholics in Oklahoma, he came under the notice of Mother Katherlne Drexel, a member of the celebrated Philadelphia family, who, seeing his qualifications, interested her sister, Mrs. Morrell. Through their efforts he completed his studies at the Sacred Heart and was sent to Carlisle and later was transferred to .the Cath olic University at Washington to enter upon his studies for the priesthood proper. He Is now ministering among his people In Indian Territory. It is a singular fact that no Indian convert has before reached the priest hood, for Indians have been grad uated from West Point Military Acad emy, from Dartmouth College and other colleges with distinction. The famous Mohawk chief, Joseph Brandt, was a man of excellent English schol arship and a devout Christian. His theological learning and his piety at tracted attention and won respect in educated circles when he visited Eng land. The devotion of the Catholic Church to tho Indian from the first set tlement of Canada Is one of the bright est roses in Its chaplet of fame. The Jesuits lived for the welfare of their flocks, and died with them when they were massacred by the Iroquois in Can ada or by the English Puritans in Maine. The Jesuit fathers not only cared for the souls of their Indian con verts, but they were their physicians and surgeons when sick or disabled by wounds. They cared for the poor Indian woman in childbirth, and altogether the Jesuit missionary was at once hero, martyr and philanthropist. The Iroquois murdered the Jesuit fathers that fell Into their hands more because the priests had been devoted to the welfare of the Hurons, their her editary foes, than because Jthey were white men. If the record of the Catho lic church In its efforts to ameliorate the condition of the heathen nations of America, Asia and Africa has been more successful than those of any other Christian denomination, it Is because, while the Protestant missionaries have given the wretched heathen a life of duty, the (Catholic missionary has treat ed him with more affection. With the United States holding the ' sea the Colombians cannot possibly In vade Panama, The obstacles to a land march are absolutely Insuperable. There Is no valley leading from the ends of the Isthmus to the neighborhood of Panama and Colon. From the banks of the small unnavigable streams to the tops of the hills and mountains is found a dense, Impenetrable jungle, consisting of grasses, sedges, wild plan tain and trees. This Is the reason why expeditions exploring in the interests of the several canal projects have followed stream valleys from either coast and turned back defeated at water partings between the Atlantic and Pacific drain age basin. The only exceptions to this vubiqultous jungle are a few small and widely separated areas near the Pacific Coast and extending from the Gulf of Panama to Costa Rica, The various towns and villages of Panama are sit uated on these uplands near the Pa cific or scattered along both coasts or along the line of the railroad between the two chief ports. The Interior Is a jungle, without resources to feed an army and without even continuous paths as means of communication. The Isthmus has no coastal plain, like that bounding the eastern or southern coasts of the United States, along which an army can move. A well-informed cor respondent of the New York Sun writes r There aro a few stretches of beach ex posed at low tide, like that at Panama, but their continuity la interrupted by cliffs and mountains that "fall precipitously to the sea. Both coasts aro generally marked by Jagged and abrupt bluffs, against which tho sea beats; and the continuity of the rugged coastline Is frequently broken by swamp lands, malarious and impassable. A number of the streets in this city are in a condition that is fitly described as "Impassable." And this notwith standing the fact that some of them at least have been "improved" at heavy cost to the property-owners quite re cently. This Is notably true of portions of East Burnslde and East Tenth streets, which were lately graded and treated to a covering called by courtesy gravel, but which, where they are not an ex panse of mud that causes them to re semble nothing else so much as a coun try road in mid-Winter under the prim itive methods of road-building, are torn up for the purpose of laying street-car tracks. Of course there is some outlook for Improvement In the latter case, but the former Is absolutely hopeless. Other streets for lack of Im provement, notably East Twenty-eighth street between East Stark street and the Sandy road, and still others In which sewer construction Is In progress, are also fitly described as impassable. So it seems, in spite of the knowledge of what the rains will do for us in No vember in the line of making mud of the Summer's dust, and notwlthstandi ing the employment at large expense to property-owners of engineers for the purpose of overseeing and planning street and sewer work In accordance With modern methods and speedy con- structionT wo are destined to a contin uance of Impassable, streets. Upon them gangs of mud-bedaubed men labor assiduously with pick and shovel, If the particular point of attack has been "Ira proved," or with scrapers and flounder ing, wretched horses, It by reason of dilatory tactics the "Improvement" or dered in the early Summer does not get well under way before November. And so, also, teams mire every day, and many times a day. In the mire of our Impassable streets; the impassable street crossing is the rule, and streets are torn up In November for the pur pose of extending street-car service the franchise for which is fully six months old. This Is' not said In a complaining spirit What is the use of complaining? It is merely a simple statement of the condition ofnany of our streets from November to April, Inclusive, with a hint at the probable cause but without hope of remedy. The committee of the American Pub lic Health Association on car sanita tion at the recent annual session of that body in New York criticised with much severity the lack of sanitary precau tions In the railway sleeping cars. It was stated that the blankets used on sleeping cars were washed but once in six months, and in the opinion of the convention this was a menace to the health of the traveling public. Especial stress was placed upon the fact that consumptives sleeping In these blan kets for longer or shorter periods were more than likely to leave to the next occupant of the berth the seeds of the malady from-which they were vnlnly strlvlng to flee. Owing to inadequate ventilation and for other reasons that will suggest themselves to observant people, the committee held that sleeping cars, as generally managed, were po tent factors In the transmission of com municable though not actively conta gious diseases. The results of the In quiries and findings of the committee' will. It Is believed, lead to measures, compulsory if necessary, for more fre quent and effective cleaning and disin fection of berths and car bedding. This opinion is founded upon the hypothesis that railway managers and other men and corporations who control business enterprises of various kinds may be thoughtless in regard to matters af fecting the health of their patrons and employes, but they are not inhuman. This assumption being true, they are ready to correct conditions that are a menace to health when their attention Is called to the facts In the premises by men who are not Idle meddlers bift san itary scientists Instead. There has been no criticism of Mr. Williamson by Mr. Moody or his friends, still less any attack upon him, that could justify the bitterness of his let ter regarding Mr. Moody. The Ore gonlan greatly regrets that Mr. Wil liamson has made this very serious mistake. Mr. Williamson has been told that Mr. Moody's friends regard his indictment as the work of his political enemies. There seems to have been no special reference to Mr. Williamson in their statements, but Mr. Williamson assumes that he is meant because, as he says, he defeated Mr. Moody for re nomination. It is a most violent sup position that men are or should be "enemies" because one of them suc ceeds in getting a nomination over the other. Mr. Williamson's extreme ani mosity is not creditable to him. He also says; "I was in Crook -County when the grand jury convened, attend ing to my personal affairs, and when through there, went directly to The Dalles, bundled my family up and start ed for Washington, and never heard of the proceedings of the grand jury until the day after I arrived here." As a matter of fact, Mr. Williamson was In Portland on Saturday, the 24th day of October, the very day when the grand jury was considering Mr. Moody's case. If Mr. Williamson meant to convey the Impression that he had nothing to do with tho Indictment because he was not here, the alibi fails. Possibly the animosity displayed In his letter has Sjlouded his recollection. Closely following the Thanksgiving proclamation of the Governor comes the appeal from the various charitable organizations of the city for food, cloth ing and fuel to eke out the supplies necessary for the comfort and mainte nance of the Inmates and caretakers of homes that they have established. The extremes of life, infancy or early child hood and old age In destitution, appeal to the humane instincts with special force at this time, and from the abund ance of thrift these two classes gath ered In ihe institutions that are main tained for them are usually generously remembered at the Thanksgiving sea son. This Is well. The able-bodied pau per, the man rendered homeless and destitute by dissipation and the woman brought Into sore straits through way wardness must upon occasion receive the dole of. pity, but the hearty free will offerings of benevolence and sym pathy go out, and justly so, to the help less who have not yet attained to the ability to do, and the helpless, the fruits of whose endeayors have fallen from their hands. These two classes, as rep resented by the inmates of the Baby Home, the Children's Home, the home of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, the Old Ladles' Home and the Home for the Aged, will no doubt be generously and cheerfully reiriembered by our citizens, who from the abundance of a prosper ous year and Its tireless endeavor find themselves at the Thanksgiving season with enough and to spare. Rev. R. J. Campbell, who has suc ceeded Dr. Parker In the London City Temple, has avowed his belief in the final salvation of all men. Supplement ing this statement the Congregationalist says: "We are glad we live In a time when Mr. Campbell, and men like him, are welcomed into fellowship In all Christian denominations." This, says the Independent, "is a frank statement of a wide change of view as to toler ance." While the average ministerial association would probably not admit Mr. Campbell to its fellowship, the great thinking public will see in the in dorsement of these two orthodox jour nals, as well as in the succession of a Unlversallst to the pulpit of Dr. Parker in London significant Indications of the coming of the time when an angry and vengeful God will no longer find place In religious creeds and the plan of salva tion will no- longer tax the Ingenuity of the doctrinaires or puzzle the minds of the simple 'seekers after truth. Residents of Western Oregon who wish to add to their rose gardens should plant bushes or put out cuttings this month. Now is the very best time to gain a year's growth. In another col umn Frederick V. Holman, who knows, tells how to do It BAFFLING SALMON PROBLEMS. The record-breaking Increase this season in the number of chlnpok eggs taken in the salmon hatcheries of this state throws unusual emphasis upon a rather baffling problem In the llfe-hlstory of the salmon. It Is nowia generally accepted fact that salmon. Impelled by an instinct that is resistless, return after a few years from their ocean playgrounds to the river of their birth. Have they a special in stinct, denied to man, that guides them toward the pebbly, snow-fed mountain pool where they first saw the sunlight? There 13 a widespread belief among the fishermen of this Coast that the salmon do possess some incomprehensible gift of nature which enables them when spawn ing time arrives to find their way from the vast and trackless deep, over the toss ing surf, up the water course of their choice, a thousand hard-fought, tortuous miles perhaps, until the home shallows that cradled them are reached. The same rocking shadows that sheltered them in their Infancy are supposed to shelter their progeny. Tho ancestral pool with Its riffles and its shingled sands is theirs by birthright, reaching back through count less generations. David Starr Jordan, who is of all men on tho Pacific Coast best able to speak the final word of authority on fish life, ruthlessly upsets this pretty theory in the November number of the Popular Science Monthly. His observations for more than 20 years lead him to believe that salmon return to the "same river, but not to the same branch of that river, and have no special lnstlncttp guide them. It Is known that many-! the rivers of this Coast are characterized by well marked differences in the appearance of the salmon that annually resort thither. Thus of two streams flowing into tho ocean near each other, one stream, will be known for its runs of large salmon, while in the other the salmon will bo much smaller. The salmon of a small, rapid stream are more wiry than those of a neighboring large stream, which in dicates that the fish return to the same river to spawn during successive genera tions. The test has frequently been tried of marking newly hatched fish, and al most invariably they return to the parent river. If the young fry are let loose In a new stream flowing directly into the ocean, in whlch.no salmon have ever been found, the majority will return in due time, even though the stream. Is so unfit that no self-respecting salmon should be seen In It All of theso arguments are met byPresi dent Jordan, who believes that salmon have no special homing instinct, but enjoy their sea revels within such short range of their parent river generally from 20 to 40 miles from it that when the migratory passion seizes them they are drawn through familiar channels and runways to the home stream. "There la no evidence," he says, "that a salmon hatched In one branch of a river tends to return there rather than to an other." If this is true, one wishes that President Jordan would explain why the salmon which enter the White Salmon River have, from time beyond the memory of man, been of such peculiar wan and colorless aspect and so notoriously Inferior as food a peculiarity that has given the river its name. Many matters are left unexplained; thus he concedes that salmon are occasionally taken well out at sea, and that the red salmon runs of Puget Sound come from outside the Straits of Fuca. And, indeed, he admits that an ultimatum should not be pronounced till more evidence has been taken. The life of the salmon in the ocean is still a virgin mystery. Huxley explained Its rapid and wonderful growth on the theory that It spends Its time gormandiz ing on semi-solid masses of tiny crusta ceans found on the surface; that In fact, the salmon swims about in a sort of ani mal soup, whero he has merely to open his mouth and swallow what enters it It is hard to believe that so. active and fearless a fish, swift In motion, adapted in so many ways for successfully eluding Its enemies, and possessing, moreover, a well-known taste for exploration, should spend from two to four years in a stupid and supine existence around the bay of its parent river. This is the more surprising -since the salmon Is of a peculiarly in quisitive disposition, and when in fresh water will take the angler's fly appar ently out of curiosity alone, at a time when it refuses all other food. The steel head, which differs radically from our Pa cific Coast salmln, since it Is a represen tative of the genus belonging to the At lantic Ocean, Is the only salmon we have that feeds In fresh water. No doubt the larger and more robust fish would naturally seek the longer river Which can be easily recognized by its warmer waters in the bay, having stored more sun heat on its way from the dis tant snow fields. Such fish having a longer Journey before them, wouTd neces sarily start earlier in the season, and this In turn would entail quite a noticeable difference In appearance between them and the fish that enter the shorter rivers later; for salmon undergo rapid, well marked changes about the time they enter the streams. The superiority of the Chin ook (qulnnat) may be a direct result of tho great length of the rivers It fre quents, the Columbia, the Yukon, the Fraser, tho Sacramento. And probably many minor differences fn size and ap pearance may be accounted for in this way among the salmon of the various rivers. But why deny to the salmon tho well proved and marvelous instinct which birds possess, as yet beyond the grasp of man's intelligence that unerring sense of direc tion and restless passion to return to the ancestral home where they were nursed Into life, although it may entail a journey of '3000 weary miles? Thero are many points In tho life his tory of our Pacific Coast salmon that are still withheld fromus the remarkable powers of abstinence that enable it to keep an unbroken fast for months when ascending the rivers; the seemingly con scious, Intelligent and matchless co-operation with nature in her supreme effort to perpetuate the species at the price of the life of the parent; the utter surrender of tho Impulse of self-preservation at the close of the spawning season, the accept ance of death as the inevitable corollary with no thought of life except for the off spring, a self-immolation as complete ag any that has marked the history of man kind. Why our Pacific Coast genus should differ In these vital points from the salmon of the Atlantic Is one of the unsolved problems of science. GERTRUDE METCALFE. A Rainbow. William Wordsworth. My heart.leaps up vyhen I behold A rainbow In the sky; So was It when my life began. So la It now I am a man. So be It when I shall .grow old Or let me die I The Child Is father of the Man; And I could wish my days to be Bound eaca to each by natural piety. NOTE AND COMMENT. The Wedge in Boston. The City Council of Boston has passed a resolution In favor of teaching Gaelic In the schools. O tongue behoved of Emerson, O speech precise and prim. Before the Gaelic boys have dona Thy lustre will be dim. Thou'lt hear, by Infant speakers hu 'ruld, "They flr-r-red the shot-hear-r-d roun the worruld." O Boston bean, tho scholar's food. That swell'st the bursting- brain, Bewaro of man's, ingratitude. And steel thy soul to pain; Soon may thy virtues be forgot. And Irish spuds boll In thy pot O ancient fish. O sacred cod. With eggs all In a roe, Bostonlans leave their salty god, And after strangers go. Tho herring from the Irish main May waver on the State House vane. O culchaw, who unmoved hast seen The 'world around thee beat, When students dhraw the black dhudeen Where shalt thou And retreat? O culchaw, bean, O cod, O tongue. Beware, beware, before you're stung. The Blazed Trail. Ha had returned the day before to civ ilization from the Northern woods, and had celebrated his return with potations deep and strong. He was sitting under the shade of a palm stuck in a green box, when he conceived the Idea of go ing to the bar for his next drink. Very unsteadily he aroso to his feet, and with great deliberation pulled a huge clasp knife from his pocket "Whash yer gon do?" asked his companion. With a smila of infinite wisdom, the woodman made a slash at the palm. "How think I ga back here, don' blaze trail?" he said. War is something hot enough to bake crackers. Anyway, Christian Science has an ad mirable name. If -the window glass trust doesn't give you a pain, this should. College songs are likely to add a new terror to the football field. In Chicago they sing: Punch, brothers, punch with care; Punch with a cop as passenjare. Illinois Prohibitionists have wrecked a saloon only to put up a bar to their progress. Free Food is an attractive campaign cry but there would be more efficacy in Free Beert When doctors fall out as in Yakima, why, things go on much as usual with the rest of -us. Russia and Japan are still upon tho map, and know they're safe to stay thero by dodging from a scrap. The kid that crawls under the bed when chased by some one with a slipper Is able to understand Panama's position. Mommer can't got at either of them. Senor Bunau-Varllla, speaking for tho Republic of Panama, declared theso United States to be the mother of tho American nations and France to be tho mother of the Latin nations. O Rhetoric, what rubbish is shot in thy name. The government of Colombia intrepidly declares that the last drop of Colombian blood will be shed to prevent the success of Panama and that the last Colombian cent will be expended In the same cause. Well, the blood, of course, is their own affair, but tho cent is borrowed. Dr. Maker, of Aberdeen, who has a paper called tho Sun, recently sent abroad marked copies thereof spotted luminaries, as it were calling attention -to an expedition said to be contemplated by one Falconer, of Aberdeen. Now it ap pears that the story was published by Dr. Maker as a "Joke." There aro joke makers and joke-Makers. From Salt Lake comes the news that one negro was admitted Into heaven, and that the gates were closed against all of his color. Salt Lake is possibly nearer heaven than Portland is, and tho infor mation, may be authentic If so think how lonely the poor colored man must bo amongst people that don't care for rag time. How many Booths and Irvings aro doomed to a mute, inglorious life among the big spuds of Yakima, who can say? The pupils of North Yakima High School have been forbidden to take part in dra matic entertainments, however great may be their desire to melt the hearts of ad miring relatives with their portrayal of Romeo's woes or of Rosalind's doublet-and-hoslness. Tho drama may not bo pernicious in itself, but what does it teach of potato-growing? Or of dairying? Nothing at all; therefore down with tho drama. Tho "American breakfast" Is said to have passed. Of course it has, among those who no longer invade tho forests with an ax. City life does not render people capable of eating beefsteak In the morning, more beefsteak at noon and stilV more at sunset. But go Into a logging camp and see If the "American break fast" has passed. Not much. The cook dishes up his mush and potatoes and steak and hot cakes with all the profu sion that marked the breakfasts of tho early Americans, who got up with tho sun and wrought mightily with their hands. It is natural for the poet to boost his own properties, the scenery, people, and so forth- of his own land, but why should he knock those of other lands? The poetic nature 'should be large enough to admire all beautiful objlcts and to seo the Inherent qualities that make each a separate and distinct contribution to the world's happiness. It is therefore with regret that we observe Oregon's natural beauties knocked by a poetess on tho other side of the Columbia. In the last issue of the Vancouver Columbian there is a poem on Cape Hqrn, not tho Horn that is thrust into the warring seas of tho Great Southern Oceanjbut one along the river. The poetess begins: When you sail up the broad Columbia As it flows on its way to tho sea, You admire the noble beauty Of Cape' Horn, that lies on the sea. She continues: For tho" scene that meet3 your vision Aro the rock3 that rise high and proud. Gigantic and terrible In their height That you. so much smaller, aro cowed. And then comes in the knock. Oregon's proudest possessions are thrown in tho shadow of a rock: Talk of your Multnomah. Horsetail and Bridle Veil Falls Tho' Oregon's beauties are many, Washington has best of all. 'TIs an ignoble blow. WEXFORD JONES.