THE SUNDAY OREGOJNIAN, PORTLAIfD. FEBRUAEY 28, 1904. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Ore eon, as second-class matter. , REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail postage prepaid in. aivanc) Dally, with Sunday, per month 0.S5 Daily, Sunday excepted, per year 7-30 Dally, with Sunday, per year.............. 8.00 Sunday, per' year......................... 2-00 The Weekly, per year 1-M The "Weekly, 3 months 50 Dally, per -week, delivered. Sunday excepted. 15c Dally, per Keek, delivered. Sunday Included. 20c POSTAGE HATES. United States, -Canada, and Mexico 10" to H-page paper . . . Ic 10 to 30-page paper.'.... -.2c 22 to 44-page paper................. Sc Foreign rates double. Tlie Oregon! an does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return, any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. "No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (Tbo 8. C. lieckvrith Special Agency) New "Stork: Rooms 43-40, Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512, Tribune Building. KEPT OX- SAX.E. Chicaco Audltorfam Annex; Postofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Hend rick. 900-912 Seventeenth St.; Xrfrothan & Jackson, Fifteenth and Lawrence. Kansas City Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut. t Ios Anel etrB. F: Gardner, 259 South Eprlng; Olivet. & Haines, 203 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis iL J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; I. Regeishuger, 317'- First Avenue South. ' New 1'ork City I. Jgnas & Co., Astor House. . ' d' Ogdcn W. C. Alden, Postofflce Cigar Store; F. R. Godard; TV. G. Kind. 114 23th St.; a H. Myers. Omn.hu Barkalow Bros. 1612 Farnam; Mclaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam. Salt Xoke Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South St. St. lovls Worldts Fair News Co. San Francisco J. IC Cooper Co, .740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Forry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter; 1 E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; T. "W- Pitts, 100S Market; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis; N. WheaUey, S3 Stevenson. Washington, D. C. Ed Brinkman. Fourth and Pacific Ave.. N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. , YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 47 deg.; minimum, 37. Precipita tion. 0.53 Inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy to' partly cloudy, with occasional squalls of rain or sleet; south to west winds. PORTLAND, SUXD AY, 3-EBRUAKY 28, 1004. STRENGTH OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. The Rev. Dr. W. S. Rainsford, one of the ablest clergymen of the Episcopal Church In New York City in a' recent address at the annual meeting of the Toung "Women's Christian Association, with the wealthy board managers and givers all present, startled his audience by saying: "The Lord deliver me from the highly developed lady board mem ber. Xou want the worker. There ought to have been a hundred young women here. We need the girl that is willing to give up her afternoon teas, fancy dress balls and her theater parties and labor with those of her own age in the spirit of true charity and gentleness." Dr. Rainsford further said that wages do not increase, while the expenses of living grow constantly; they are 35 per cent higher for the poor now than they were ten years ago. The girl may get $7 a week, and when she returns to her iiall bedroom after a hard day's worc in the factory or the store she "begins to believe that life is a grind. "When she comes to that point she is in a danger ous situation, and then Is the time when well-to-do girls of her own age who have the true Christlike splrft can help these girls physically, mentally and spiritually. Dr. Kainsford is right, and he has put his finger upon a weak spot In Protestantism compared with the mis sionary efforts of the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church is more democratic in its missionary work. It . draws no color line. In St. Peter's, in Rome, the meanest-clad Catholic can enter its por tals and kneel at Its altar any day of the year. You will see negroes clad in the garb of a priest In Rome. Macau lay notes among the causes of th tenacity of life In the Romish Church this fact that its worship Is to this day far more democratic than that of Protestantism; the Catholic priest and missionary always gets nearer the heart of those he seeks to convert to Christ. The story of jthe devotion of the Catho lic missionaries to their Indian con verts in Canada in the seven teenth and eighteenth centuries is pathetic on both sides. The Huron In dian converts, whether they died fight ing the Iroquois or the savage Puritan soldiery, died in defense of their priest, and lie perished "with them and for them. - It was equally true of the Catholic missionaries in China, in Tonquln; it was equally true of Father Damien and his successors in the leper colony of Hawaii. It was equally true of the Catholic priest among the tribes of the Northwest. The Catholic priest and missionary stoops lower to reach and drag the lost to dry land. He is not afraid of soiling his hands when he seeks to redeem the outcast, to restore the world's wounded and beaten to health and hope. In New York City to day the spread of Romanism among the poor steadily continues be cause of the superior tact and wisdom of the missionaries of the Catholic Church. No Catholic priest or missionary ever talks about "the de serving poor." The priest at the Cath olic Church, where the poor are glad to congregate. Is no occasional visitor who makes his hearers feel that the church is a "charity"; he is no patronizing dis seminator of old garments. The Cath olic priest In the churches that the poor visit in New York lives among his peo-. pie; he is not a bit too proud to be one of them. The Catholic Church knows that organization and system are neces sary, but it knows and always has known that no mlsisonary who dodges personal contact with those to whom he seeks to preach the gospel .of human brotherhood is worth his salt The poor are not fools"; the heathen are not idiots; they are quickly alive to the differ ence betweon the man that preaches to them, that gives them old -clothes, and the man who is willing and anxious to be with them personally in their hours of dire distress and extreme tra vail. The Catholic missionary to the Indian was his -priest and also his phy sician. He suffered equal hardship with his flock; he faced death in every form in which his ' flock was compelled to face it. In sickness or in health, in sorrow or ' In mirth, in life or death, the priest was literally the good shepherd who re pulsed -the rapacious wolf and cared for the new-born lamb. The democracy of the methods of -its religious and philan thropic work has made the poor con tinue to seek the Church of Rome, and the Rev. Dr. Kainsford has impulsively confessed the weakness of the Protes tant churches in dealing with the city Doorwhen he says that the dreary want 13 the lack of workers, who have not simply old clothes and soup tickets to' give away, but human sympathy to offer to those who sorely need it. A SANE CRITIC. ' Sir Leslie Stephen, who died last week full 4 of years and honors, stood at the top of English critical writers, because of his remarkable unity of learning, sanity of Judgment, open-mindedness and humor. He was a writer without mannerisms in style or whimsicalities in thought. His" intellect was akin to" that of Thackeray, the intellect of a man who was at once a humorist and a satirist, a man of the world and yet a man of humanity, good sense and good feeling as distinguished from a pretentious prophet like Carlyle, who is always crying like a pelican in the wil derness, or from a melodramatic liter ary artist, saturated with cheap senti mental ism. Tire school of literary crit icism to which Leslie Stephen belonged is Jhat whose founder was Charles Lamb, a man whose powers as a hu morist have obscured the fact that he was a keen and subtle critic, whether he" wrote concerning Shakespeare's plays and the dramatic literature of Shakespeare's day or wrote of the mod ern stage of his own time. This Is not saying that Leslie Stephen was a double or- replica of Charles Lamb; it is only saying that he belonged to Lamb's school of criticism, the school of sim plicity of expression and sanity of thought rather than to the school of melodramatic, sentimental or sensa tional criticism. Stephen was not a partisan or a pane gyrist; neither was he an arrogant mas ter of dyspeptic invective or an unprin cipled seeker after the cheap fame that Is won by the utterance of the "sl'ash Ing article." . His father was a-famous Jurist;. he came, of legal fcjnily for at least two generations, and Leslie Ste phen carried to his critical work the mind of a learned and Just Judge. Such a man, of. course, would feel bound to be catholic in his Judgments, such a man would feel bound to- subordinate his abounding humor to his sense of literary truth and historical Justice, and to this Judicial temperament, married to a fine sense of humor, was due the pre-eminence of Leslie Stephen in the sphere of English literary criticism. On the appearance ..of his "Studies of Biographer" it was said of Leslie Ste phen in both England "and America that "knowledge and power are exemplified in all his work," To illustrate, take Stephen's conclu sion regarding Froude. He holds that there Is no foundation for the sug gestion that in his "Life and Letters of Thomns Carlyle" the jdlsclple 'secretly desired to depreciate the master. In Stephen's Judgment Froude expected that his readers would be "as ready as himself to condone Carlyle's faults of temper and to regard his "posthumous confessions as so supremely honorable as to be ample atonement for the of fense," but unfortunately his readers did not appreciate the charm, so obvi ous to Froude, of -the despotic side of Carlyle's character. Stephen concludes that -Froude was as loyal to his mas ter's memory as he had been affection ate to him in life; he simply did "hot see that the public would "not excuse the harshness of e despot whose rule Froude loved." Stephen shows the same catholic spirit in Judging Froude's historical writings. He grants that Froude made strange blunders arrd often used his au thorities in an arbitrary and desultory fashion, but after making these con cessions he says that "if I want to know something of the Elizabethan period I can nowhere else find so vivid and Interesting a narrative." In o'ther words, Stephen thinks Froude had a fine historic imagination. He gives you "if not the real persons, the Images projected by them upon the imagina tion of their partisans," and certainly helps, you to understand the ideals and prejudices'of the time. For this reason he prefers Froude to the so-called sci entific historian who forces you to wait until he has ascertained the" hard skele ton of objective fact. He thinks Froude's artistic Instincts overpowered his historic vision when he chose Henry VIII for the part of England's greatest hero of the sixteenth century: Froude's effort to prove that Henry constantly acted like a brutal despot from the loftiest political motives is described by Stephen as one of the most heroic pieces of whitewashing on record, for, as Stephen says, 'the Protestant re fused to accept such a champion, and the burly figure looked awkward in wings and a white robe." Froude. "fell dowji," too, when he tried to make .a-.herolne of Queen Eliz abeth, whp cared nothing for creeds. She would- not admit the supremacy of "The pope over the English Church, but she hated John Kncx's Calvinism. She was Just like her brutal old father; she would fight ably and bravely for her own hand, but she would not risk her throne for cither the Catholic or Prot estant cause; she played one against the. other as long as she dared, and Leslie Stephen pronounces a sound Judgment of Englandls so-called great Queen when he says: "Her greatness was an Illusl6n, due partly to the fate which forced her at last to accept the policy of her great Ministers, whose advice she had rejected for thirty years, and partly to the stupendous run of luck which saved her fromthe consequences of her blunders." The conclusion of Stephen is that Froude's style was superior to that of Macaulay; that no man' of his generation had so fine a. literary faculty; that his style was entirely free from the jrnannerismsof Carlyle, was equally vivid, .was thoroughly masculine, and yet never flat, prosaic or violent." The paper of Mr. Stephen on "Shakes peare as a Man" has already been con sidered by The Oregonian. -It Is sufficient to say here that Mr. Stephen thinks Shakespeare's plays reveal thahe was fond of field sports, was sensitive to the charms of natural scenery: that he was fond of convivial meetings; that he was clearly an intel lectual aristocrat, full of contempt for the mob; that he believed the cultivated and intelligent should rule and the com mon herd have as little direct voice as possible in ?tatc affairs. Mr. Stephen thinks he was a humorist, a scorner of pedantry, radically opposed to Puritan ism or any kind of fanaticism, a money saver and a thrifty man of business. Even as "Walter Scott held the man of action, like "Wellington, superior to the man of letters, Shakespeare thought that "to defeat the Armada was a more Important bit of work than to amuse the audiences at the Globe." Of Milton Mr. Stephen says that Satan is clearly the hero of "Paradise Lost"; that in the first book he is not only "the embodi ment of heroic endurance, but obviously deserves the- confidence of his follow ers. He expresses -his grandeur and rises to meet overpowering enemies like Teneriff e "or Atlas." Milton's unrivaled mastery over biani; Terse is attributed. by Mr. Stephen largely to his marvelous musical ear, and this exquisite ear was "at the service of a character of unique dignity, moved by Intense convictions, contemptuous of all that was mean and trivial, hard, dogmatic and unsympa thetic, but constantly under the stress of Intense and massive emotion, which finds its natural clothing in his un equaled diction." The point is well taken. Coleridge had as fine an ear as Milton, but he had not the Milton char acter of unique dignity, moved by in tense convictions; he was a dreamer. THE IDLE RICH IN COLLEGE. In a recent speech before the Harvard Club dinner in New York City Profes sor A. Lawrence Lowell referred to the fact that Harvard's characterization as the rich man's college had undoubtedly Injured it in the Middle "West. "While there are three poor men working their way through Harvard for every one whose father is a millionaire, neverthe less Professor Lowell admitted that at Cambridge there is the danger that the students who spend two or three thou sand dollars for their lavishly furnished rooms, who drive their automobiles and Tide their horses, will lower the stand ards for the under-graduate body. These gilt-edged calves of golden bulls have already split up the college into various sets and cliques. These idle rich herd by themselves In buildings where they have a swimming tank, gymnasium and breakfast room under one roof. Many of them, says Profes sor Lowell, are Indifferent and lazy. This is all true. These idle rich un doubtedly do Infect other students who are not rich with their Indolence. The. shameful spectacle has heen witnessed of recent years, formerly unknown, of college students of honorable lineage stooping to crime and their demoraliza tion was probably due to the" dally ex hibit of extravagance and luxury which' they could not obtain except by playing the part of a parasite or a thief. These Idle rich students always come from the best schools of the country, and come so well prepared that It is an easy matter for them to enter college and to keep up after a fashion with their classes. They have plenty of money to hire tutors to help them "cram" for critical examinations, and they worn' through college without really doing work. They never become sound scholars; occasionally one of them obtains a little superficial dilet tante culture which he could and prob ably would have obtained without go ing to college, but the great majority of these idle rich college youth are vic tims to the athletic craze, if they are fellows of robust constitution, and if they are not robust enough to row or kick football they- are generally robust enough ta gamble and drink to mcpm and 'to recall the "Latin quarter" of Paris by the exclusive felicity they ap pear to find in wine, women and bac chanal song. The New York Evening Post, commenting upon Professor Low ell's statement, says that "these Idle rich students are within reach of the college authorities, and can be made to work; If not, the college has itself to blame for the disturbing element" This is true, but who ever hears nowadays of a college finding any partlcularfault with the pranks of the idle rich? E. Benjamin Andrews, the head of the University of Nebraska, the other day bluntly declared that the universities are dependent largely forthelr support on the rich, and he defended the busi ness methods of John "W. Rockefeller apparently for no more logical reason than that Andrews and Rockefeller are both Baptists. The strongest protest against the acceptance of Rockefeller's money by the University of Nebraska comes from Ida M. Tarbell, who says: Money is one of the minor necessities in making honest thinkers and courageous ac tors. It Is useful In an educational insti tution only in the hands of men who pre fer to do without It rather than to dull the conscience of faculty, students and friends by compromising -with any kind of moral or intellectual subterfuge. If the acceptance of a gift from John D. Rockefeller brings with it tacit recognition of the commercial principles which he has employed with more conspicuous success than any other man in the country If It closes the mouth of any roan in Nebraska to the corrupting Influence of these principles, no greater calamity can befall the University of Nebraska than to accept hla money. Three-fourths of the newspapers and about two-thirds of the people of Ne braska agree with Miss Tarbell; but the chances are the regents of the Univer sity will accept the money and erect "a religious temple" as a monument to Uhe memory of John D. Rockefeller and his methods In business." The wrong of this proceeding would seem to be ob vious when we remember that the Uni versity of Nebraska Is supported by public taxation and has no real need of relying upon rich men and imposing the influence of such men upon the teachings of the institution. It was "W. H. H. Murray who, after describing the Rockefeller type of successful land pirate in business, said: Tou can roetallze a man so that every one of the millions of pores In his skin stand for a dollar mark. But I know of no one who gives such a metallic metamorphosis of a man any thought unless It be some de generate university that wants an endow ment. Between two such the fellowship of exchange is natural. The one gives his check and the other responds with an LL. D. Of course, universities that are ready to beg or acceptmoney of such fellows as Rockefeller arVnot going to find any fault with the alcoholic antics or versa tile rakishness or obviously Incurable Indolence of rich men's boobies who are sent to college, because the college might be cut off with a shilling in the will of the booby's father. The worst influence of the Idle rich in college Is that they are responsible to a great de gree for the abuse of athletics. Fifty years ago there were "athletics" enough in Harvard to swell the ranks of the Union Armies with her gallant sons In every state. No man who has come out of Harvard since I860 compares in brains or body with dozens of men who were graduated between 182S and 1850, when there was no abuse of athletics. The sons of Harvard before the war rowed their boats on Charles River; they made mountain excursions to Mo nadnock and the "White Hills; they vis ited the Adlrondacks; they went trout ing and fowling, but there was no abuse of athletics, no "athletic" craze. The advent of the idle rich with their money, their love of excitement, which belongs to all idle, dissipated men, has produced this vile abuse of athletics, which in its Intemperance is Just as fatal a form of dissipation to real In tellectual power or force of character as excessive conviviality. The Idle rich in every dime always drink and gam ble, always frequent racetracks and playgrounds where they can yelland bet and" bet and yell on man or beast, and here the Idle rich meet the Idle poor, who are anxious to "do up" the idle rich, and generally succeed. This 1 abuse of athletics has about run Its course in England, and sooner or later it will be surrendered to the custody sad guardjacsblp of- men who acs fit for nothing better and of whom we ex pect nothing better. The days ny not boob come agakt when an American college Will able to conduct Its work in the spirit of the founders, of the EdlnfcuVsh Review, who took for their motto "We cultivate lit erature on a little oatmeal," but it la not too much to expect that our col leges will graduate some more heroic stuff than a bullnosed creature with a big calf and a hothouse biceps. In the recent war with the Boera Mr. Kipling expressed bitter contempt for the Eng lish youth, "the nuddled oafs at the goals," who were boisterous champions in the sham battles of peace, but had no stomach' for real war when it came, and now Mr. "William "Watson, in the Fortnightly Review, says that "athlet icism has possibly served some useful ends, but the worship of muscle has gone quite far enough and It Is about time brains had its turn." Refer ring to Kipling's bitter satire, Mr. "Wat son says: I cannot think It a fact of very cheerful augury that In moments of a thrilling his toric crisis, when it might have bee a sup posed that every adult brain la the land would be touched to something of solemnity at thought of the national peril, oae could have seen the young manhood of the country trooping in its thousands to fleet the time In rapt and excited contemplation of a kicking game. A BEAD MAN SPEAKETTL It is on Interesting fact that all the great reforms In our Army organiza tion were carefully set forth and urged upon the attention of our Government by General Emory Upton, U. 8. A., in a military report made by him on his return from an official tour of observa tion of the armies of Europe and Asia. General Upton died in 183L but his re markable report remained unpublished until about a month ago H was ordered printed by Secretary of ,War Root. Upton was graduated from "West Point In 1861, ranking No. 8 In a class of 45 members. He rose rapidly to distinc tion In the Clvi "War; he command ed the assaulting column of twelve picked regiments at Spottsylvanla, May 10, 18B4. His prompt charge at the head of his brigade restored our broken lines and saved the day for Sheridan at Ope quan, September 19, 1854. He was greatly distinguished as a commander of a dlvisI6n of cavalry Jn General J. H. "Wilson's assault on Selma, Ala., In April, 1865. Upton began a3 a com mander of a battery of artillery, and he was mustered out as a Major-General of "Volunteers at the age of 26. In ar tillery, Infantry and cavalry Upton had exhibited first-class military ability. The late Professor Michie pronounced Upton the moat accomplished soldier, all things considered, that has ever been known in our service, "the equal, If not the superior, of Hoche, Desaix or Skobeloff in alL military accomplish ments and virtues." In this report, which fell fiat Jn the ears of our Gov ernment and remained pigeon-holed at the time of Upton's death, in 1881, he recommended the three-battalion for mation in cavalry and infantry regi ments; interchangeable service in staff and line as against permanent staff de partments; examination as a condition of promotion and the establishment of a general staff and the general and sys tematic extension of military educa tion. This reprt and its recommenda tions were atnhe time warmly Indorsed by General Sherman, who then com manded the American Army, but this report was not even printed, and not until Secretary Root succeeded to the "War Departimmt, long after Upton's death, were the Banity and wisdom of" his concluslonsSrecognlzed and put Into effect. Secretory koot frankly ac knowledges his Indebtedness to Upton's report, and alt the great reforms for which that flneoldier contended have been substantially secured the three battalion system, the interchangeabll ity of staff and line, examinations for promotion, the establishment of a gen eral staff and the creation of the "War College at "Washington. Upton left an unpublished manuscript at the time of his death, which has Just been published This essay is a review of our whole military history from the beginning of the. Revolutionary "War to the close of the war between the states. General Upton pleads that the United States has suffered greatly In the past because the majority of our people have mistaken military resources for mili tary strength, and his aim is to show the enormous and unnecessary sacrifice of life and treasure which has attended all our armed struggles, in the Revo lution, the "War of 1812, the Florida War, the Mexican War and. the great Rebellion. This Chinese military pol icy, under which no careful preparation for war is made until the Nation's ex istence is at stake, finds its explanation In the stupid Jealousy with which even a small standing Army has been re garded. In the persistent use of new troops. In the want of a flexible mili tary organization, in short and volun tary enlistments procured by large bounties, and In other defects Insepara ble from a militia and volunteer sys tem. General Upton points out that our stupid reliance on short-term militia men pitted against veteran troops cost us at Bladensburg In 1812-14 the loss of Washington and the destruction of our public archives. The excellence of our volunteers in the Civil "War was hot due to the fact that they were volunteers, but "to the far more decisive fact that their long term of service enabled them t& become in the highest sense regulars in drill, discipline and courage." But General Upton points out that "In the process of attaining this discipline and achieving the resultant reputation the Nation was overwhelmed with debt and nearly every family- In the land was plunged Into mourning." General Upton's book seeks to con vince the people that in every civilized country success In war depends upon the organization and application of its, military resources of men, material and 1 money. General Upton says that the defeats of Long Island and Camden in the Revolution, those of Queens town and Bladensburg in the "War of JS12. and that of Bull Run, were due to the weakness of our military system, to the employment of militia and undisciplined troops commanded by Generals and offi cers utterly ignorant of the military art; to short enlistments; to reliance upon voluntary enlistments Instead of voluntary enlistments coupled with conscription; to confusing volunteers with militia and surrendering to the states the right to commission officers of volunteers, as they do officers of the militia, and finally the failure to appreciate-military education and to distrib ute trained officers as battalion, regi mental and higher commanders in our volunteer armies. General Upton be lieves that 20,000 regular troops would In the first battle of Bull Run have routed the Insurgents and saved us the suspense and awful wastefulness of blood and treasure incident to four years of war. The methods of our military system J or rather lack of system, in our Civil "War entailed a vast and needless ex pense of life and property. General Up ton says that military resources arc one thing; military strength another. The strength, ot our Government at Bladensburg was measured by 6000 mi litia; at the first battle of Bull Run. hy 35,000 militia. "In one case the capital fell into the hands of the enemy, while In the other our existence as a Nation possibly depended upon the Irresolution and supinenesg of a band of Insurgents. At Gettysburg the wave ot rebellion was resisted by 80,000 veteran troops; had we trusted to the same number of militia, the capital would have been captured and the Government Irrepara bly destroyed." THE GARBAGE PKOBLE3. The committee of the "Woman's Club appointed to Investigate the manner In which garbage is collected and disposed of in this city pictures that the method pursued .is expensive, unsanitary and totally Inadequate to the needs of the city. In this estimate it is right. Care ful householders who desire to keep their premises clean and free from odors that attract files In Summer and are scarcely less pungent and vile in the damp atmosphere of "Winter are very often baffled in this desire by the forgetfulness of the garbage man or his inability to "gat around" until his visit is long overdue and the mass In the back yard smells to heaven. This being true. It i3 quite unnecessary to go Into detail in regard to the decaying, vilely malodorous matter that careless people permit to accumulate In their back yards, and basements until such time as they can, without special effort, hall the driver of a garbage cart or of a country vegetable wagon and Induce him, for a quarter of a dollar, more or less, according to the result of the dick ering, to take the rotten, repulsive mass away. a As to the expenslveness of the method, the most simple statement of facts makes this plain. From $6 to $18 a year is paid by each Individual house holder who Is intelligent enough to dread typhoid and other filth diseases, and prudent enough to do what he can to ward them off, for this very prim itive and wholly unsatisfactory service. Again, the practice of putting all sorts of refuse, whether from kitchen, furnace or dooryard or stable. Into an unsegregated mass, against the hoped for coming of the scavenger, Js general throughout the city. This should be stopped by municipal mandate. One receptacle for ashes, another for tin cans, broken crockery and glass, and yet another for kitchen and market refuse, should be placed in every back yard in Portland. The householder should provide these receptacles Just as he does a bin for his coal or potatoes, and the one for the kitchen garbage should be properly covered. This refuse should be collected at stated Intervals and disposed of by the city according to some plan that promises at least partjal remuneration for handling it, or if that, In the present stage of our municipal and rural development, is Im practicable, at the public expense which, in the opinion of the committee whose report Is referred to above, would not exceed $50,000 a year. The people of the "Western world are wasteful; that those of Portland lead the van of the grand army of wastrels is shown by the enormous waste of the garbage system in vogue, the end and aim of which" is to destroy utterly everything that goes under the name of garbage. This purpose is not fully car ried out, as the reeking piles of gar bage un consumed that from time to time betray their foul presence by far reaching odors attest But the purpose prevails. The views of the "Woman's Club committee may not all be of a practical nature, but they are well worthy of attention, while soma of the suggestions made are plainly practical. For example, the segregation of refuse by classifying and requiring it ,to be deposited In separate receptacles, where It is accumulated, should not "be diffi cult, certainly not Impossible. Such rules are made and enforced In other cities whynot in happy-go-lucky Port land? The enforcement of an ordinance requiring garbage retainers to be kept clean would perhaps be more difficult, since people's ideas of what constitutes cleanliness vary greatly, but It is worth while to make an effort in this direc tion. It would at least be, educational and in time might meet w'ith a degree of success. It is plain that the City Council has much to learn in this matter, which must be learned, and the knowledge ob tained vigorously applied before Port land will be even approximately a clean city. That body cannot set Itself to this task too soon, nor can It find instruct ors imore energetic, alert or earnest in the work than can be found among the intelligent, public-spirited women who have lately investigated, the garbage problem of Portland and outlined plans for Its solution. It will be easy to make Portland a "rose city"; to make It a clean city will be much more difficult. Indeed this will be impossible under the present go-as-you-please methods of collecting and disposing of its gar bage. The position of Count Cassini, Rus sian Ambassador at "Washington, Is somewhat embarrassing to him. "While our Government has proclaimed and will maintain strict neutrality In the struggle now on between Russia and Japan, the American people almost to a unit hope to see Japan win. This Is partly due to a feeling of magnanimity which arrays Itself upon the side of the weaker party, which has been harried into war by the stronger, and partly because the belief is strong that Japan Is fighting the battle of open ports for the "Western world, while Russia is con tending, among other things, for ex cluslveness, distinctly hostile In charac ter, in trade and. business. The Rus sian Ambassador has asked for suspen sion of judgment by the American peo ple upon these points, but In the very nature of things it is somewhat difficult to accede to his request. In fact, if he would be happy, he will have to content himself with the official attitude of the United States and ignore the prefer ences of private citizens in the matter. It is too late to ask people to "suspend judgment" after their minds have been fully made up. The question whether Russia ever had the right she now threatens to exercise to pass through the Dardanelles with warships has 'been recently asked. There was an ancjent rule which pro hibited ships of foreign powers from entering the straits so long as the Porte was at peace. This rule differed from the one which governed the neutrality of the Black Sea. By the terms of the latter Russia and Turkey were each limited to six steam vessels of not more than 800 tons and four steam vessels ,jf not do re thajj 2 teas, wbift both countries were prohibited from estab . lishing any naval station on the shores of the sea. In October, 1870, however, Russia abrogated this rule so far as it applied to the size and number of ves sels which she was allowed to maintain on the Black Sea. Bismarck, as a com pliment to Russia for neutrality in the Franco-Prussian War, proposed a con ference to consider the question. The body thus called adopted a treaty (March 13. 1871). the terms, ot which ac corded with Russia's desire in the mat ter, though the rule regarding the pas sage of the Dardanelles was still per mitted to stand. Many of Russia' heaviest battleships now ride at anchor in the Black Sea, ready In case of sud den stress to venture the passage of the Dardanelles, but withheld from so do ing by the menacing attitude of Eng land. She ha3 also numerous naval ar senals along the shores of this great inland ocean and doubtless considers that there, as in Manchuria, possession is the nlne.point8 In law which gives her more than the traditional fighting chance to secure the undisputed right to hold what she can take. Senator Allison's wariness of direct statements is proverbial among public men In Washington. The anecdote about a friend winning a wager of a cigar from an Iowan that the Senator would not state in sa many words that a flock, of sheep approaching had been sheared has become familiar. "They seemed to be' sheared on this side," the Senator is quoted as having said. The other day In the Senate this anecdote was duplicated after a fashion. There had been discussion about the wisdom of appropriating a lump sum anHually for keeping the sidewalks of the streets of Washington free from sncw and ice. Mr. Allison was drawn into the discus sion. "Snow has beer, falling on the streets and sidewalks of Washington for many years past," observed Mr. Al lison. "And will for many years to come," interposed Senator Spooner. "As to that," rejoined Senator Allison, "I will not prophesy." D. M. Parry, the pronounced foe of organized labor, has found that even the nonunion worm will turn If too closely pursued. Seventy-five men em ployed by the Parry Manufacturing Company at Indianapolis, thought a cut In wages from 72 cents to 57 cents per piece since October was quite as deep a gash as they could stand fand live. So when an additional cut of' 2 cents was announced a few days ago they struck Just as horrid union men have been In the habit of doing in recent years. And the men were paid oft and turned adrift in the storm, without signs of compunction on the part of the anti union employer, Ju3t as if they had been union men asking for a living wage. A Quartermaster's clerk whose con science would not permit him to spell "routing" "routeing," even at the com mand of his superior officer, has been dealt with by the War Department, and as a consequence finds himself out of a job. This is as it should be. A sol dier's first duty is obedience. He is not supposed to have any conscience when it comes to obeying orders. The point in thi3 instance was a trivial one, but the prlncli that is behind it lies at the very foundation of military disci pline. The soldier Is not In the Army to use his own Judgment or consult his own preferences, but to obey orders. And he has his compensation. If things go wrong he. is not to blame. Most people will agree that a mortu ary or memorial occasion Is not a proper time to air personal grievances. The explanation that a large number of the profession to which the aggrieved person belongs were present, before whom It was desired to have a hearing, does not excuse a breach of propriety so extraordinary as that witnessed In the Courthouse Friday afternoon. If there Is one time in which the petty contentions of life seem more utterly insignificant than any and all others lb Is In the presence of death. Judge Cle land's rebuke to the offending attorneys upon this occasion was timely. It was certainly no place for anything in the nature of personal contention. The Pekin correspondent of the Lon don Times says that while the Trans Siberian Railway proper Is wretchedly built, the so-called East China rail ways of Russia are so much better than the Siberian line that one must calcu late that for all local railway trans port, in the triangle Port Arthur-Har-bin-Vladlvostok, it should be possible Ho dispatch twelve to fifteen trains a day at an average speed of twenty miles an hour, and. that so- long as these rail ways remain Intact they should play a most Important role In enabling Russia to meet a Japanese attack or to trans fer Russian forces from one flank of the front of strategic deployment to the other. , The Trans-Siberian Railroad 5935 mlle3 In length was built by the Rus sian government at a cost of $81,326 per mile. This cost, as compared with that of several of the longest American rail roads, is favorable to the American sys tem of construction by private enter prise,, as against government ownership as in Russia. The following official table tells the story: Railroad Cost rwr tt!1 Trans-Siberian Railway tnJiZa Union Pacific xnnsn Northern Pacific ! 50237 Missouri Pacific asirvr Great Northern 40J371 Charles A. Crane, ot Chicago, who' cabled Russia saying that he gave $10. 000 to the relief fund because he be lieved "Russia's hand had been forced by treachery." has evidently more money at his command than informa tion, or he would know that Russia had more than once made war without for mal declaration; that .France has done so, and the United States has done so; that nearly every nation in Europe did' so at some time during the Napoleonic wars. The spectacle of the people of Russia, led by the Czar, Czarina and commander-in-chief of the army, prostrate at the confessional, in the hope of securing divine favor In war. is one that at this distance Is more ludicrous than solemn. A partial God, one who can be propi tiated by offerings, or swayed by prayer and adoration the traditional "God of battles" Is out of date among people who dp their own thinking. Joy. Coventry Patmore. Sweet order hath ifs drauKjjt of bliss Graced with the pearl ofuod's consent. Ten times ecstatic In that 'tis ; Considerate and Innocent. In vain disorder grasps the cup; The pleasure's not enjoyed, but spilt; And. if he stoops to lick it up. It only tastes of earth and guilt;. His sorry raptures rest destroys; To live like comets they must 'roam; On settled poles turn solid Joys. Ivt SPm-Uke pleasures shisfi at .hane. X0XE AND COMMENT. Much of a Muchne. "" t "Darned If I can find Xuchuchwaftg on the map," said Popper, as he looked up from the Daily Dingbat. "Why, John!" You're studying- the puzzle picture!" r" What May Be Expected.. "Wanted to rent Furnished house "in Port Stet'Ta Mnst bh outeW''t? dls- - Machen will discover that there!s no free delivery service in jaiL The un burst f ortH after one dfyes terday's heavy showers. "Look." said Ethel,, aged 4, "God's laughing now." After 40 minutes' brisk -cannonading at Port Arthur one Chinaman was killed. There is some discussion as to whether or not this should take the belt from the Matanzas mule perform ance. According to the London Dally Mall, "munching parties" are much 4n vogue in London as a result of the health food fad. Guests are Invited on the con dition that, each mouthful of food they take must be chewed 22 times. What a blessed relief this" fashion must be, both to unwilling talkers and still more un wll!ng listeners. Girls that want husbands should ap ply for a job on the Tillamook Herald. The editor of that paper challenges the United States to bring forward another that has boosted the marriage license market to such an extent. From the list given it appears that the Herald should display the union label one with Cupids on it on the front page. Miss Maud Jones, M:ss Dora Dpnald son and Miss Kathryn Plank have all declared for the matrimonial platform tne last very appropriately within a year. And of the male sex, the editor has been the one to marry. What girl wouldn't sling type in Tillamook? Salem's City Marshal is having soma trouble in consequence of a movement to have him enforce the city ordi nances. Other cities have had the samo difficulty. Would it v not be' well for Councilmen to affix a note to each or dinance they pass, a note that would distinctly set forth either that tha ordinance wa3 meant to be obyed or was meant to be disregarded? Cities could thus have two sets of statutes, and Councilmen could have any meas ure they brought up passed unanimous ly on the understanding that it should be placed in the noneffective clasa. This would please a very worthy class of men and would not Involve police officials and other authorities in any trouble oyer the nonenforcement of certain laws and regulations that at present furnish practically all the municipal campaign literature in the stats. "We are being assimilated to Old World ways far too rapidly." says the New Tork Evening Mail. "Here are the waiter girls, who have always re tained much of the character of ladies In this chivalrous land, throwing all that overboard and Insisting on tips, as their sisters do in London or Berlin." Then the Mail goes on to lament that the days of flirtation, flirtation that the flirter indulged in "on his responsibility as a gentleman," are over, and to sigh over the fact that the American- wait ress has, for several years, received "a bit of silver after a meal with perfect composure." How about the girls? Surely they didn't esteem flirtation, no matter how conducted on the part of the diner, as gold and tips of silver, if not mere dross. Then, too, the Ameri can waitress is always composed. Would the Mall have her exhibit more perturbation over a "bit of silver" (a dime?) than she does over spilling a plate of soup down one's neck? Tha waitress retains Just as much of "her character as a lady," and Is just as ready to flirt as ever, and she is the amount of her tips ahead. Miss Emily Schonard was employed as a detective by Franklin Union, No. 4, of Chicago. She went to various printing offices to ascertain what girls were working. In giving evidence be fore Judge Holdom, Miss Schonard tes tified as follows: They told me to go to "W. F. Hall & Co. and flndUout what girls were working there. I applied for a position, and they told ma to come back the next morning, but I never went back, for I got all the rubber I wanted. It is a proverbial saying that the court knowsothing about anything, and the court on this occasion did not belle the originator of the saw, for Judge Holdom interrupted the witness to ask what "rubber" meant in ths connection. "Well, r saw all I wanted to," ex plained the-witness. What would the poor innocent Judge do if he were taken to a dime show in Portland, where at least three out of five "comedians" get off a gag about Lot's wife turning to salt and Portland men turning to rubber? Probably Hl3 Honor would order the performers to show cause why they should not be fined for contempt of' court in refusing to furnish diagrams with their jokes. Some time ago we commented upon the sense of artistic fltness shown by a Parisian artist who hanged himself from a statue of Venus, and deplored the fact that only In France could such devotees of art be found. Now comes an American, needless to say an Ameri can girl, to show that lamentations were unnecessary and. Indeed, that re joicings would be more appropriate. This girl hanged herself with some pink ribbons. Not that we uphold, pink as an appropriate color for the suicidal noose in every instance. It would be too garish a color for Hetty Green, say. or Mrs. Fiske, to be found- dead in. But in the particular case to which we re fer, pink was the color most befitting. The girl who hanged herself had been a chambermaid at the Waldorf-Astoria, and pink ribbons have ever been associated with chambermaids. It Is possible to think of ribbons of that hue without thinking of chambermaids, but it is quite Impossible to think of chambermaids without a vision of pink ribbons. There is something so ob vious about the colqr, such an evident prettiness, that the soul of the uncul tured presumably chambermaids, save in Bo3ton, are uncultured capitulates instantly to the waving ribbons. And since an employe of the Waldorf-Astoria is doubtless neat and coquettish, what more suitable instrument of death than a festoon of pink ribbons? Ad mirable girl, seemly in death, you have lightened the hearts of those that-had feared for the artistic future ot America, WEXFORD JONES.