OME SUNDAY OBEGONIAN, PORTLAND, AUGUST 14, .1904. again. Only In Ireland Is matched the J not visible, the one to the otner, almost Ifre iS&fr VMtt VFTT green of this verdure: and here the hint of the miraculous and supernat- II JD Vl JLll U I W VVV harp might wake songs of love and pa- uraL j&f ' triotism. But we have not reached the Only sixty years have gone by, excellence within mir cn.rB.c!tv riecause since-the first successful experiment in Entered at the jPostoffie At Portions, or, I ... . v..-- T v, tAior-winhlnir whlln the first successful as secona-ciass mattter. - ttu cto 4. i;i A-finntlc on hi a -ecru finished bv Cvn& -- . ...HW 1 UUitCU fcJ WWW UiU lilOL 'UCUi DCLUCU4 - - - kisvabed subsckis-xiu; . a e, va w -cM0irt Tniv 97 iRfifi. On the 24th of By mall ( postage prepaid la advance; , ' , -icm e-,.i Ttc Mn-rsa r-iM o n,k sn ss i 11 au me iiew xnKionu we Know, wiuu i iMji uouiuci .t-.mw - Daily, with Sunday excepted, per year 7.50 its hard conditions making stern and sitting in the United States Supreme Ifr' vntn sunaar- per rear oq faithful men, in whose eyes ease was a Court at the National Capital, teie- The Weekly, per yearl'II". i-0 crime. graphed to his assitant, Alfred Vail, at The Weekly, a months Baltimore, a Quotation from Numbers "S&eS" .TCCK! a6Ur.?rr..!:: 15c B : T TO1W xxiil:23. Three-score years later, more Dally, per -week, delivered. Sunday In- - J reverentially, may the world repeat wuaea what was heralded as a Byronic re- wltll Morse: "What hath God wrought!" postage KA'i-M. vlval has laded out into an unaertaK- trnlted States. Canada and llexlco jng m explanation of why Byron failed. 16 to" 30-paio pipr"..r.I-"---"".2o The interest that two sumptuous and 22 to 44-page- paper!-l- ....3o rival editions of his works was expected Foreign rates, double. to arouse has been hardly noticeable. The Oresonian does not buy poems or And though strenuous effort has been etories from individuals, ana cannoi unuer- , . gather consideration about wfthou? ToTtSsuldbo Byron's name, the inevitable outcome inclosed for this tmroose. of every such enterprise has heen the EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. I disneartenmg inquiry into causes ior (The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency) declining interest, nowever nigmj .me New Tork; rooms 43-50. Tribune Building, panegyrist or critic has eulogized the Chicago: Booms 510-512 Triburie-Bulldlng. poet or the man. KEPT ON SALE. Some of these opinions are interest Atlantic City, N. J-Taylor & Bailey, Hartley Coleridge, the edl Slews aeaiers. z -ueeui. x--e. . i fri n. Tjr-rj.av tlon ,.nH nrl- Chlcago Auditorium annex; yostomce - T , I Vi ,7 xw rv 17R Dearborn street. aressea me xioyiu aacieiy ut leiuiuio Denver JuUus Black, Hamilton & Jiena- on tne poet. Jie COntenaea mat to ob rick, S00-912 Seventeenth street. an Englishman and to bo unfamiliar Kansaa City, Mo-Blcksecker cigar -o, ltn Deauty of Byron's Ulnth anQ WamUC . I Totwt mnn laotra rt fha qtmnPW and T. arnlM Tl V OaWtaer. 259. BOUth I k" ' " w " w w TTrrv Orftnkin. I.the alien the fruition of a great inherl jOnneapolIs M. J. Kavanaugh, so souin tance. ur. ixarnetz, wno spoite iw tnu Third; I Begelsburger, 217 First Avenue same subject," probably typIQea tne Bouth. 12nirlL;h attitude toward Byron, when Kcw Xoric aty Jones w., . . nflmirPfl the noet. but iuLU,D I At A . Vim Ulr srmimanf was n t t- i.i -o . ictin Vftr-nnrnt I tyint wnui shtnun rAnniren more or tneir .uzzuumr otuuuuw Jji wo- . '.o-"""''" v McIauEhlln Bros 210 South 14th; Megeath rioets than was expected abroad Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam. thought, revelation of truth, and spirit Bolt IMalt Lake NowB Co.. 77 West moral consolatIoru St louls World's Fair News Co., Josepn uiu uiJa.1.Sc:iucu i - coneiand. Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th st.; Puritanic and provincial grounas, nas Geo. I. Ackermnnn. newsboy. Eighth and passed into deserved oblivion; for If not Olive sts. la Doet in the sense that Milton and San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co.. 746 iiar- c!V,oVoc.T,, - -Rvrnn vena at least Bet. near .Palace ioiei: rosier cs wii, - - j t- cfonfl. nmaith Bros.. 230 Sut- tne mosj magnmcent versiner ouisma ter; It B. Leo, Palace Hotel News aiana; i tne very xugnest raius. ajater uiuusut T. w. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott, 80 inclines to find his limitations along JEllls; N. Wheatley, S3 Stevenson; Hotel inster saner lines. Thus. J. M. FrancU aew fatano. Tt,-.viny wt-ltino- rnm Tmdnn tn the Washington, D. O ETbbltt House fcews I " ' Murray edition has done nothing to ex testerdays weather Maximum tem- tend the number of Byron's readers in perature, 83 deg.; minimum. 59. Precipitation, Q.reat Britain. Byron, he says, prac noae- tically remains a foreigner for the Eng TODAY'S -WEATHEK-B-air; not so -w, , ---it- rnhpn he nrncees to teU , Aluua- , why. He argues that the principal ob- xxT.ww.aicn cm-nAv aTrnTTKT 14. 1901. Jectlon to Byron in the mind of the av erage isriton lies ur ma ua-nus"B" characteristics, both as a man and a WHEEE NATUBE IS LAVISH. noeL cumuiative effect of the- un it is a very important thing the Ma- savory character of his antecedents, hl3 camas propose to mane systematic own escapades, and the subject-matter provision for showing Mount Hood to o much of his verse has been greatly to visitors to the Lewis and Clark Fair, nreiudice the British reader against The scenic wonders of Oregon consti- -Rvron. The facts taken together seem tute a resource which must not be neg- to indicate a touch of corruptness- lected next vear. for they are as mar- I Anna nnt cVinclr the reafler. velous as any display of man's ingenu- doe3 not attract him, and BTon seems ity the Fair will have to show, ana QUite unabie to outlive it they will interest many to whom expo- Society is very thoroughly persuaded eitlons have hecome a familiar story. or its duty to humiliate and chastise "We must find ways, If possible, to sys- rh man or woman of irregular life. tematize some arrangement for bring- ona illustration of this Is seen In the lng many things beside Mount Hood to cruel persecutIon visited upon lllegitl the attention of our Eastern visitors; mate children. It Is manifestly unjust. for here is the Ideal pleasure-ground for no faUit can attach to the child, but for the Summer vacations of dwellers we can easily see where we should soon in the heated East land if Illegitimate children were as We are apt to forget, sometimes, how kindly treated as those born In lawful lavish Nature has been In this beautl- -wedlock. Another illustration Is the f ul . region, and perhaps do not urge reelect of Byron. To appreciate him. sightseeing as we snouia upon visitors anrues Mr. Bulloch, one must have a of a day. No one should come to Ore- reai Eense of artistic detachment. In gon, for however short a stay, with- other words, Byron is too bizarre for out taking the steamer ride up the Co- his countrymen. They seem entirely lumbla River, with its magnificent unable to separate his personal char- panorama of palisades and flood, water- j acter from his poetic and philosophic fall and verdure-covered mountains, outlook. So in the land of his birth the wooded Islands and snow-capped peaks Byron "boom Is burst" 'T should In the distance. No one should visit fancy it was quite different In Amer- Portland, even for a day, without look- iCa." concludes Mr. Bulloch, "which has. lng once upon the prospect which a larger international spirit in its re- stretches out before the eye from any ceDtion of any art product than ' is of the hills west of town; without gain- shared by the little island in the North ing the bluffs at Oregon City and look- sea. lng down on the falls and the winding Byron will he read as long as the lan- xlver and valley. Yet, while these views miaee endures; and In other lands than are Inspiring almost beyond surpass- nis 0-nrn his vogue shows little if any ing, it Is not possible for "the casual and diminution,- especially with romantic hurried tourist to get the best out of natures. But he is not the expression nature in this wonderful region. He at any nolnt of the genius of his race can only hold its cHarms at arm's ne Is rather the poet of Rome and length, as It were, and loses the zest Greece, of Venice and Constantinople; and freshness which may be acquired 0f the Sunny South and the languid more near to Nature's heart Probably East. Nothing could be farther from the great majority of Oregonlans, even, the British complacency and optimism merely scratch the surface of their pos- than the melancholy and misanthropy, sible enjoyments. The beaches are vis- the sardonic view of life and virtue. ited in a solemn, business sort of J the depressing reverie, the sorrow for way, and there Is a certain state, and misspent youth and the requiem over perfunctorlness about such outings as the dead past, that lie at the basis of the Mazamas take wnicn almost make Byron's most Impressive and imagmat- work put of them. 1VG work. Popular though he has heen. Perhaps the finest possible form of therefore. It Is possible that Byron may outing for thos,e who enjoy Nature and become the poet of the few of those odd nooks of civilization ls'to be had In -who -can dissociate the man's work out-of-the-way places along the Lower fr0m the man. the dream of the hour Columbia, or Eome of Its Indentations, from the convictions of the life. This in the foothills of the Coast or the iq no mean distinction. One might wish Cascade Range, or at the small settle- to be no more popular than Dante or ments along the Oregon coast. There Shelley. If that were to insure the Is probably no place on earth where the homage of the rarest souls, delights of camping are more keen and 1 numerous than In Oregon. Game and fish are plentiful, the air comes from the ocean fresh and invigorating, and the balsamic odors of the firs have a peculiar quality both of solace and of stimulus. The Lower Columhla Is peo pled by a hrave and hardy set of men and women, whose puhsults and mode of life are as picturesque as anything found in flctlom Travel is mostly ef fected by means of boats, and there Is no more lovely or suggestive picture than that afforded In Wahkiakum County settlements of a Sunday even ing In the Summer time, when the boats of the worshipers are moored at the meeting-house, when the sunset's red light rests on the ruffled water and the shadows are settling down on the hills and valleys. Another happy and contented people, whose vocations are simple and honest " and whose very name Is hospitality, one meets along the Inlets of the Oregon seacoast; In the bays where the' little schooner marks, a great event in its entrance; along the rivers where produce is car ried to market and merchandise brought home by the farmer's scow, which is carried on the flooding or the ebbing tide. The charms of Nature's faceJn Ore gon the hurried visitor and the camper can see, one to admire and the other to love. The climate and the scenery combine to give life a zest and a delight which few who have once lived here are ever afterward content to go without If we adopt the Ptolemaic philosophy of life, which makes the uni verse turn about the Incidents of man kind, we might w'ell ask ourselves what achievement and what attainment are contemplated for the dwellers In, a re gion so blest If there Is any Inspira tion In bay and ocean sunsets, we ought to have Italian painting and sculpture; if heroism In crags and peaks, the free spirit of the Swiss mountaineer; if music in river and vine-clad hills, the Columbia should reproduce a Wagner end Beethoven; if chivalry In fruit and owers old Spain should here breathe when Nature sleeps;" The sunny, after noon and the soft night and the break ing storm are very popular, and it may be that the novelists know from experi ence that the weather Is the best topic to Inspire the reader with confidence and stimulate his curiosity. Possibly thousands have read "The Millionaire's Son" to learn if the storm that broke shortly after & o'clock was repaired by 6 o'clock. Others may have read "The Sherrods" to trace the soft night into hard moraine:, and "The Castle of a uu.ru morning, ana xne tasue uj. ' : , y- y, . s Twilight" to discover the fate of the Prove Portland's supremacy In the flour Ing grounds which by a ship-channel sunny afternoon. Did It grow cloudy towards evening? Read the book and learn. "WHAT HATH GOD WBOUGHT?" How have electricity and human sym pathy bound together the civilized world! Before they sat down to the evenlne meal Friday, probably five- sixths of the enlightened men and women who Inhabit the globe rejoiced over the birth of an heir to the Russian throne. In the capitals of Europe, Asia, America, Australia and Africa the happy event was known at practically the same .moment that thirty-two guns of St Peter and St Paul fortress belched forth the announcement to the ivaltlne populace at Peterhof. Not faster did the news travel throughout the Russian Empire than It spread over the United States, until In Isolated farming districts, remote mountain mines and distant seaports in the bleak tundra of Cape Nome and the wilds of frozen St Michaels, as well as in commercial and news centers, mil lions of mothers held spontaneous In formal thanksgiving service over regal maternity. In that moment the world with one accord forgot war, perpetua tion of dynasties, nihilism, national greed, cruelty and oppression. A new born babe was the touch of nature that made the whole world kin. That part of the world which must wait for its news nowadays upon slow malls Is inconsequential. All Its Indus trial, political, educational and social activities have been brought into In stantaneous touch by the genius of Franklin. Morse, Field, Bell and Edl son, and the chief agency of communi cation is the Associated Press united with the dally newspaper. To the five pioneers in electrical Invention and In dustry the name of Marconi must be added. It would oe interesting to learn how many persons received news of the birth of Alexis Nlcholaevitch while they were sailing the seas hundreds of miles from the nearest wire. Even In these days of startling scientific, achievement, when the mind has been trained to re ceive and believe, not to sneer and. re ject, accurate messages between shins CURIOSITIES OF MODERN FICTION. First impressions, if not everything, are at least Important. That is a tru ism applicable to books as well as to persons. When we meet a stranger we are Impressed by his appearance and dre,ss, and his first sentence is likely to be a factor in our estimate of his pos sibilities as an entertaining companion So with the novels that offer them selves as the companions of an Idle hour. ' The appearance and the cover design attract or repel us; the frontis piece, now so frequently In colors, as a bid for approval, adds to the general effect, and then the momentous first sentence In the- story nails our atten tion or provokes us to throw the book aside. In the circumstances one would ex pect writers to exercise all their inge nuity upon the opening sentence of their tales of love and war to turn lit erary window-dressers, in fact No such attention, however, appears to be paid this Important branch of the writer's business,' - An examination of the 'season's numerous novels discloses little of novelty In- this respect, at least among the. rank and file. It may be, indeed, that all the" writer's care Is lav Ished upon the last sentence, which Is said to be the first thing read by the "young person" who is the novelist's main support That Is another story. Just one opening sentence from several score of novels is remembered as an instant challenge to the attention. 'Araby," by the Baroness von Hutten, begins .this way: A string. At one end of the string- Fluffy Daddies, at the other end Araby! "Just a little bit of string" draws one along, and before the reader is aware of It he Is half-way across the Atlantic with Fluffy Daddies and Araby a dog and his mistress who are having a great time aboard one of the mail steamers. Ex pede Herculem. "Araby" Is a "Smart Set" book. Another book by a writer of a similar type Is "The Middle Course," by Mrs. Poulteney Bigelow. Like many another story dealing with the society that dines, "The Middle Course" begins at a din ner table. Many dramas, both tragedies and comedies, begin at a dinner table, though they seldom end there, unites one of .the principal actons be choked by a fishbone or die of a "surfeit," like one of England's early Kings. The dinner table, with the "soft can die light," and all the rest of It, lndl cates the setting of the Btory; the cur tain goes up on Scene I, dining-room in Castle Soandso. And here it may be remarked that the dramatist has one advantage over the novelist He has no need to worry over his first line, His audience is trapped; cinched for at least one act, and If he can Interest them within that time his play will be a success. The novel, on the other hand, is liable to. be shied into the corner, or used as a missile to disturb the cat. Of the more prosaic openings two kinds predominate. In real life, most strangers open the conversation with a reference to themselves or jl sage ob servation, upon the weather "we have no conversation nowadays," recently declared a writer, "we talk, about the weather and our ailments and call that conversation." So in novels we find that most of them are long on weather and personal details from the hero Here Is one of the personal kind from "Florestane the Troubadour," marked by preciosity: I, though the least of eingcrs, and no poet at all by my own .device, may yet be ac counted worthy to chronicle the deeds of the poet Florestane, who. In his first youth. caused great marvel by his songs, so that the fame of his graceful conceits went forth while ho was yet a stripling. That tells the reader a whole volume about the story of "Florestane the Troubadour." Then there is the per sonal opening to the aetective story. The unraveller of mysteries Is usually possessed or a pseuao modesty tha leads him to belittle and magnify his deeds at the same time. The wily man of "The Darrow Enigma" begins this way: M as tne part i piayea in tee ev-? i am about to narrate was rather that otr passive observer than that of an acUve parUclpant, need say little of myself "Look, to your knee your baby brings the oldest tale since earth began," ! says Kipling "Once on a time there was a man." G. P. R. James, in his day an Industrious writer of novels, was famous for the "solitary horseman" that "might have been seen wending his way" In the first sentence of each of his stories, and here is a similar be ginning from "The Career Triumph ant," by Henry Burnham Boone: Once upon a time there came walking down last year's corn-row a young girl with very blue eyes ana very black hair, which hung in a long braid down her back. Another solitary makes his appear ance in the first sentence of "The De liverance," by Ellen Glasgow: When the Tusquebanha stage came to the dally halt beneath the blasted pine at the cross-roads, an eldorly man, wearing a. Happing frock coat ana a eott slouch hat, stepped gingerly over one of the muddy wheels, and threw a doubtful glance across the level to bacco fields, where the young plants were drooping In the Juno sunshine. It is only the weather that can bring all novels together. The - adventure story, the melodrama the Introspective novel, all of them, are as likely as not to begin with something about the weather. When man lived In a cave or a tent the weather was the great topic All depended upon the weather. Now that stout houses and cities shel ter us, the weather has ceased to be of such Importance, hut the hahit of dis cussing it survives, and the habit Is re flected byy the novelists. Notice the pre cise statements In the first sentence of "The Millionaire's Son": The storm which had threatened the sultry September afternoon broke over the city short ly after 5 o'clock. And the suggestion of mysterious wealth in the beginning of Phillips Op- penhelmer's melodramatic "Yellow Crayon": It was late Summer-time, and the perfume of flowers stole into the darkened room through the half-opened window. Margaret Horton Potter begins "The Castle of Twilight" with the statement -that "It was mld-Aprll: a sunny after noon' and George Barr McCutcheon begins "The Sherrods" with "Through the soft Summer night came, the sounds of tho silence that Is heard onlx creating an enormous demand for mill feed at prices far In excess of those prevailing before the industry attamea Its present proportions. The dairying Interests, supplying by far the largest demand for mill feed, will always make Portland a much better market for that important product of the industry than can be created where the possibilities of the dairying business are limited, as they ,are In the country tributary to Puget Sound.' Argument is unnecessary, however, to tween the Oregon Commissioner and Alexander Grant, a." seiner holding the land under a title from both states, but a -seining license from the Washington Commissioner only. The ship channel is supposed to mark the dividing line between the two states, and above tide water, where it is less subject to change, the boundary thus established Is generally respected. In the vicinity of Astoria, where the most of theseln- lng grounds are located, the ship chan nel changes quite frequently, and sein- CHANGE OF NAME PROPOSED. We are told that Superintendent Looney, of the State Reform School, will recommend In his report to the bi ennial session of the Oregon Legislature that the name of the institution over which he at present presides be changed to the "Oregon Industrial School." In support of this idea Mr. Looney de clares that the present name is a stigma of disgrace upon the Inmates of the school, and that- It Is thcr pur pose of the state to encourage and help lads who have gone wrong rather than to brand them for youthful misdeeds. The truth of this last statement no one will undertake to deny. It is conveyed In the name of the Institution through which the state, at great expense, car- Ties out its purpose to help and encour age derelict youth. It may be doubted, however, whether It is wise completely to sugar-coat the pill which it 13 necessary to administer to these boys in order to purge them of their wild and unruly ways. A plum may answer as well as a pill in such, cases, but par ents who have wrestled successfully with the problem of juvenile correction do not approve wholly of the Idea of penalty made easy. Furthermore, Is It Just the thing to confound terms in this matter? An Industrial school" Is an Institution to which honest, orderly, energetic youth find their way, either by their own ef forts or by the aid of their parents, to prepare for an honorable vocation in life. Is It well to strain a point In be half of the unruly, incorrigible or crim inal boys who are in an institution solely by compulsion, to the discredit of orderly, obedient" lade of the class that is found In Industrial but not in reform schools? It is Just as well to proceed slowly In a matter of this kind. "Reproach naturally follows misdemeanor. This is a feature of transgression that it is not wise to eliminate entirely, even if it were possible to do so. The prodigal son Is not the only one whose feelings are entitled to consideration in the household. His brother, who has pa tlently and obediently plowed and sowed while the other has been given to idle and vicious ways, is entitled to a degree of consideration. It is one thing to treat unruly and vicious boys kindly and justly and quite another to make heroes out of them or to set them up as special objects of consideration. The stigma Is not in the name "Reform School," but In the fact that the boy finds himself committed to It It will be hard by merely changing the-name to make the institution one which he will feel It an honor to have attend ed. It Is just as well to call things by their right names. trade of the Pacific Coast Facts speak for themselves. The Portland Flouring M1113 Company, of this city, is the larg est milling concern on the Pacific Coast. It owns and operates the larg est mill In Tacoma, and also the larg est mill In Portland. -Both of these mills have been in operation for nearly twenty years, and their owners are per fectly familiar with the advantages of both Portland and Tacoma as milling points. The capacity of the Portland plant Is now being increased from 2400 barrels per day to 4500 barrels per day. The capacity of the Tacoma plant will remain the same as it has been, al though the warehouse system by which this company supplies Its Tacoma mill is more extensive than ever. If Ta coma possessed any advantages, over Portland as -a flour milling center, the Tacoma and not the Portland plant of the Portland Flouring Mills Company would have been enlarged. division of the territory were in Wash ington a few years ago are now in Ore gon, and vice versa. Under such cir cumstances it is doubtful If a satisfac tory solution of the trouble can be ar rived at until the authorities of the two states agree on a plan of concurrent jurisdiction over both sides of the river and the intervening seining grounds. MINNEAPOLIS OF THE PACIFIC COAST, The construction by the Sperry Mill lng Company, of California, of a moder ate-slzed flour mill at Tacoma has sup plied the Tacoma newspapers with a text for some amusing predictions as to the future of the milling business in that port. The Sperry people are com plimented for their' excellent Judgment In recognizing advantages which the Ledger assures us" "practically insure Tacoma the control of the grain trade of the Inland Empire and the largest share of the flour milling industry, and the export trade In wheat and flour." Continuing, the Ledger Imparts the strictly new information that "Tacoma has for some years been the chief flour milling city In the state, and for some time past has ground more wheat Into flour than, the older city of Portland." From these statements, which cannot truthfully be termed facts, the Ledger makes the deduction that "in due time Tacoma will become the Minneapolis of the Coast." Of course every one in the milling trade knows that Tacoma does not grind any more flour than is ground at either Portland or Seattle. The Ledger has confused its figures, and has included as flour ground at Ta coma a large amount that has been sent there from Portland and other milling points for shipment to the Orient Even with this flour included, "Tacoma's for eign shipments of flour last year were smaller than those from Portland. Se atle's shipments were S20.000 bushels, Tacoma's 894,864, and Portland's 917,193 barrels. The City of Tacoma will al ways be a fairly good milling point It has tributary to its mills the wheat from a great district that is untouched by any road running into Portland, but there are natural reasons too plain to require argument for their demonstra tion why Tacoma can never become as great a "wheat market or as great a flour milling center as Portland. To begin with, every wheat crop in Oregon, Washington and Idaho that reaches maturity under normal conditions will turn off more of the cereal tributary to Portland than is tributary to Puget Sound. There are, of course, excep tions to this rule, when drouth, frost or other unfavorable climatic condi tions cut down the yield in Portland territory and leave the crop unscathed In Puget Sound territory. Normal conditions, however, are the only ones that can be relied on in es timating the division of the crop for a term of years, and these give Portland access to more wheat than can be reached by the millers of both Seattle and Tacoma combined. This advan tage was illustrated in the wheat ship ments for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1904r Portland shipping twice as much wheat as was shipped from all Puget Sound ports combined. The ex cess of flour shipments from Puget Sound not Tacoma, the self-styled Minneapolis of the Pacific Coast, but Tacoma, Everett and Seattle combined over those of Portland alone was largely due to the Inability of millers in Portland territory to secure space on Portland steamers for their heivy flour offerings. This was a handicap which will be removed within a short time as soon as Huntington railroad methods are superseded by something more up tQ date. Another and perhaps the strong est point in favor of "Portland's su premacy In the flour trade -lies in the rapidly increasing market for mill stuffs. The Willamette Valley has .practically abandoned the business of wheatgrowlrig, and Is engaging In . dairying on an extensive scale, thus THE STEERAGE EBB AND FLOW. Contrary to general belief, the estab lishment of a $10 rate for immigrants coming from Europe to this country has not resulted in an influx of un desirable foreigners. It failed even to stimulate travel among those who were desirable additions to our population, and proved that the foreigner who could raise $10 for passage to this coun try could raise a little more, for Instead of there being an Increase in the num ber arriving from Europe for the first seven months of the year, there was a decrease. The undesirable element which it was feared Would be sent us from abroad, because In many cases the country from which they sailed would willingly advance the price In order to be rid of them, were prevented 'from coming by the vigilance of the transportation companies themselves. When a passenger Is carried nearly 4000 miles and supplied with food and lodg ing for the voyage, all for ?10, the men supplying the cheap transportation will take but few chances on being obliged to carry their $10 passenger back to Europe for nothing. Accordingly, but few of the foreigners coming in under the cheap Tate were ordered deported. Official statistics show that the ar rivals at New York for the first seven months of 1904 were 427,937, compared with 568,166 tor the same period in' 1903. For the greater part of the seven months the cheap rates were in effect, and yet there was a decrease of 140,000 in the number as compared with the same period In the preceding year, when rates were higher. The cheap rates from New Tork to Europe were not in effect until long after those from Europe to New York, but the statistics show that 178,674 emigrants departed from New York in the first seven months of 1904, compared with 102,996 for the same period last year. Cheap rates were responsible for a portion of this Increase In travel, for in July alone the steamers took out of New York 66,059 emigrants, but a con tributing factor has been the. labor troubles in the East. Mention has been made in the news dispatches of the large number of employes Involved in the Chicago meat strike who have pur chased emigrant tickets to Eurooe, and It is probable that the unsettled condi tion of labor In other parts of the East has aided In the movement to the old country. These figures on the ebb and flow of the "steerage" passenger traffic present an Interesting phase of the labor supply and demand. Had the economic conditions in this country In 1904 proven as favorable for labor as those of 1903, the remarkably low rates across the Atlantic would have attract ed a much larger number of Immi grants than came over in 1903. With plenty of work at satisfactory wages, a cheap outward rate from New. York would offer but small inducements for the ex-foreigner to return to the land of his birth, where living Is cheap, while at the same time his absence improves the chances for some other member of the union. There is undoubtedly a- necessity for a little more stringency in tne laws governing the admission to this coun try of any kind of an Individual who has the price of a ticket. At the same time the comparative statistics here with mentioned indicate that under certain conditions liberal immigration laws are not wholly harmful. If the restrictions were too great, the foreign laborers who have come here in flush times wuld not go home when times were hard, for fear that they would not be permitted to return. It Is said that the Czarina of Russia, In her frantic desire to give an heir to the throne, denounced the religion (the German "Lutheran) which she reluctant ly renounced at the time of her mar riage .to the Czar, but In which she still secretly believed, having been persuad ed that this was a necessary prelim inary to the fulfillment of her great desire. If this is not a newsmonger's fable, It indicates with pitiful plainness the terrible reproach upon which this yomg woman has lived, and its weak ening effect -upon her fine and sensitive nature. The Inquisition in other days won "converts." Its methods as prac ticed in Russia today may be equally efficacious. The Czarina's older sister, Elizabeth, wife of Grand Duke Sergius, sought to retain her religious belief and still be a Russian Grand Duchess. She was a determined, highmlnded and brilliant woman, and kept up the un equal contest for conscience sake against the priests of the Greek Church and the orthodox imperial family for half a score of years,' only to succumb at last. One can readily Imagine the greater pressure that has been brought to bear upon the Czarina to compel her to forsake, forswear and denounce her religion, and it is not a matter of sur prise if she has yielded, and now be lieves that a son has been given to the empire as a recompense for her surren der. When superstition and fanaticism are given full sway under the name of religion, there is no limit to the ab surdities that they may incorporate Into "belief" and proclaim as facts. The general public has sympathized with Mrs. Bennett in her contest for $50,000 of her late husband's estate against W. J. Bryan, who claimed that sum as a gift conveyed by a letter left by decedent, "to be opened after his death." This sympathy was largely if not entirely impersonal, being based upon what, in popular opinion, was the merits of the case. Prosaic, practical men could see no reason for a gush of affection or 'admiration on the part of Mr. Bennett toward Mr. Bryan that would divert $50,000 from the widow of. the former Into the coffers of the latter, The claim set up through the sealed let ter looked like a cheap or bold scheme to get something for fiothlng. Few will be sorry that the claim has been dis allowed by the Supreme Court of Con nectlcuL Mr. Bryan is no doubt dlsap pointed by the decision, but he is not impoverished by It Though defeated in his chief ambition by the people of the United States, he has made the po litical notoriety which he has acquired quite profitable, and Is still In the arena well equipped to make money. Con gratulations are due the widow Ben nett. As for Mr. Bryan, he neither de serves nor asks sympathy In this mat ter. He will doubtless accept the out pome of his suit philosophically, as be comes a man who is used to defeat. ' A dispatch from Des Moines, la., states that Letson Balllet, the Oregon mining shark, who found so many shin ing marks in the East, Is to be again tried for swindling in connection with the sales of stock In the White Swan mine. The postal authorities are after him, and a strong effort will be made to land him in jail. It is not improb able that mining stock peddlers in vari ous localities in the state have sold consderable stock that possessed an in trinsic value no greater than that which was sold by Balliet Fortunately for their liberty, they conducted their op erations on a much smaller scale and used better judgment in the selection of their victims. Usually it is the wholesale operator who escapes while the small fry are brought to book. In the White Swan case the Government seems to have landed a pretty big fish. and apparently does not intend that he shall wriggle back into deep water. If Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, can ac complish anything looking to a. settle ment of the packers' strike in Chicago, his presence, has long been overdue In that city. Wise heads and cool heads are needed in this crisis, 'which is not only one of labor and capital, but of public convenience and health, and of humanity that is broad enough to take In the dumb creatures that by thou sands await slaughter. And these heads ' should be and practically must be on "the shoulders of men in wnom tne restless laoor ele ment as well as the men whoe Invest ment of capital gives labor its oppor tunity has confidence. Such men can be found. Perhaps Mr. Gompers is one of them, and there are others, as. the settlement of the great coal strike by a commission appointed for that purpose two years ago abundantly proved. It Is clear that the principals In the present contention will not come to an agree ment. Stubbornness meets stubborn ness and arrogance meets defiance every time a council of representatives of ,the contending elements is called. The oil of peace must be poured upon these troubled waters by men able to Judge the case upon its merits. Vio lence stands ready to strike with its red right hand at any time. If Mr. Gompers can avert the general strike it Is certainly in the line of his business to do so. In any event, he should make the effort, as he Is the man of all men to whose suggestions the strikers would be likely to listen ap Well worth reading Is an article on page 39 of this Issue, from the Journal de St. Petersburg, an Influential Rus sian paper, reviewing a book, "The Fu ture and Power of the United States," by M. Hanotaux, member of the French Academy. He views with wonder and no little fear the growth of the country in the past fifteen xears, saying: "Here there is a vast army armed to the teeth for the arts 'of peace and even for the arts of war, lifting Itself beyond the oceans, not a month from the ports of the Old World, but a week. Tomorrow this colossal empire, master of the Pan ama Canal, will interfere In some way between Europe and Asia. It will con trol the commerce of the West and the East, for It will hold the principal way. Such, then, is its power." It is rather refreshing to listen to a foreigner who does not disguise his admiration of a country which in his view Imperils the Old World. ;note and comment. The girls- now have their shoulders tanned, xnrougn wearing mesuy lace; The boys, poor lads, are also tanned. But on the same old place. Revised Proverb. Neutrality is the better part of valor. The Czar promised Russia a constitution if he had a son. That's more than ha could promise the" kid. , Elijah Dowle has saved three women from drowning Still, that Is no guarantee that he can save souls. v The Japanese display the same energy in going after Port Arthur and the Lewis and Clark Fair grounds. The breaking of a trapman's rib by a Jumping Chinook salmon sounds like a joke to every one but the trapman. A Kansas City -woman has sued for di vorce because her husband yields to all her wishes. He might win her hack by " opposing the divorce. Ten to one the British officer, on enter ing L'Hassa, which has been a sealed city for countless generations, remarked, "What a beastly hole." Now that the church has blessed and . aided the saloon, why doesn't the saloon send an occasional keg of beer to the churches on a hot Sunday? Of course It was a- Butte girl that held up a swindler at the muzzle of her revol ver and compelled him to disgorge his plunder. A Portland girl wouldn't have done such a deed, because she wouldn't have let herself he swindled in tha first place. The monument on Plymouth Hoe, where , Drake was playing bowls . when the Ar mada was sighted, bears a Biblical in scription referring to the dispersal of the Spanish ships by storms: "He blew with his mouth and they were scattered." Tha Russian Armada scattered without even a blow. In Lowell, Mass., a man got 90 days in Jail for offering a girl 25 cents for a kls3. Perhaps the magistrate thought the scoundrel was bulling the market, or that a man must bo crazy to bargain for something that's no good unless taken. To buy a kiss is on a par with fastening a trout on your hook hefora beginning to fish. Elections aro on in Paraguay. As in this country It Is essential that a candi date for the presidency should be able to run well. Indeed, Paraguayan candi dates usually run better than ours, as they are spurred on by the bayonet points. The best runner gets out of the country the other electa himself and Is assassinated. St Louis still has time to get tha Dalai Lama for the Pike. New York already has the 'Potter cock tail," and one of the papers tells how it is made: "No dinky little glass, but a long one, with a good-sized piece of Iceln it No chopped ice, mind. Now, then, a good hooker of gin. That will about do. Squeeze in the juice of a lemon and don't add any of the rind. Now then, a dash of raspberry syrup. Fill her up with car bonic, and there you are." It sounds good enough to he named after a bishop. Perhaps the best story told about Lord Kitchener's single-hearted zeal to have work accomplished, to the exclusion of all other considerations, concerns a young subaltern, who, during the progress of some construction work In Upper Egypt, had tha misfortune to losa some native workmen through the accidental explo sion of some cases of dynamite. He tele graphed to Lord Kitchener, then Sirdar: "Regret to report killing 10 laborers by dynamite accident" In a few hours came this laconic dis patch: "Do you need any more dynamite?" A gang of Seattle footpads were polite enough to return their victim $1 out of the 26 they found In his pockets. If "the rebate system grows, it will take away all the profits of robbery. Competition will lead to a ruinous In crease of rates, and Seattle citizens may he confronted with signs like this: GO HOME BT 3ROADWAYr-10 per cent re bate on all we get from you. De Gang. PIKE STREET AFTER MIDNIGHT S per -cent on all sums over ?10. Young, Tracy. THIRD AVENUE AT ANT HOUR. Tha swell road. Handling the highest class of trade only, we are able to offer 15 per cent discount on all transactions; which must be on a strictly, cash basis. The Push. The Pittsburg Dispatch has discovered a "startling similarity in meter- and thought" between Kipling's "Recessional" and Sir Walter Scott's "Hebrew Maid," and a correspondent asks "whether or not Kipling got both the suggestion and the inspiration from Scott's lines." One of the stanzas from Scott's poem is as follows: Our harps we left by Babel's streams, The tyrant's Jest, the Gentile's scorn; No censer round our altars beams. And mute are timbrel trump and horn. But thou hast said, "The blood of goat, The flesh of rams I wUl not prize! A contrite heart, an humble thought. Are mine accepted sacrifice." Nothing very damaging to Kipling's reputation in that This is a red-letter day in the history of Brown's Park Band. A special con cert will be tendered beneath the cool lng shade In the City Park to those public-spirited citizens who have con tributed so handsomely to the band fund for the current season. Every person likes to see that he Is getting value for his money. It is human na ture. This special concert and the con certs that have preceded it will demon strate that Brown's reed band is worthy in every way of the thousands of dollars that have freely been poured at Its feet by public-spirited citizens This year the band is better than ever, and Bandmaster Charles L. Brown; by his executive ability, thorough knowl edge of music and command of His men. has demonstrated that he is Portland's premier band leader. Salmon come and salmon go, -but the old dispute as to where the jurisdiction of the Oregon Fish- Commissioner ceases and" that of the Washington Commissioner begins goes on forever. The latest contest hinging on the exact location of this imaginary line is be- Joseph Qannon, Speaker of the lower house of Congress, Is an apostle of the morality of industry. He views his country with the enthusiasm o youth. Seldom does a public man talk so freely for publication as he did to Frank Car penter the other day in an. interview at his home in Danville, 111. What he said is published in another part of this paper. The brief recital pf his early struggles ought to be an inspiration to every poor boy who reads 1L Being a Czar has some compensations. If Nicholas has to wear amor-plated pants and sleep in a steel safe, hi3 domes tic life must be rendered happier by the custom of painting, engraving, carving and embroidering the .imperial initials on buildings, ships, uniforms, flags, and other things. To save the great expense of altering these initials, it is necessary to christen the heir with names beginning with the same letters. What worry and wrangling is saved by this accident of the Imperial life. Should the Czarina wish to call the youngster Montmorency de Pey ster Marmaduke, the Czar has but to whisper that Montmorency doesn't begin with an A. tfhe young Alexis must have been named after less wrangling than has been caused by many a Tom or Dick. A New York letter devotes some consid eration to the story of a kleptomaniac said to be at large among the "Four Hun dred." Several thousand dollars worth of jewelry, it appears, has been stolen re cently at receptions in New York and Newport, and detectives are now scat tered about among the guests at all fash ionable functions. The people without fabulous-ly-priced jewels appear to have the better time. They don't have their guests watched by cops, and they are not made the victims of similar espionage by their hosts. , , Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers? O sweet content! Art thou rich, yet Is thy mind perplex'd? O punishment! Dost thou laugh to see how fools are vex'd To add to golden numbers, golden numbers? In theory we all .agree with the poet, but in practice we all try to add to golden f numbers, golden .numbers. WEXFORD JONES.