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Pitts, 1008 Market; Frank tt. SO Ellis; N. Wheatley. S3 Stevenson; 'Hotel 8t. Francis News Stand. Waahlagtes. D. C. Ebbltt House News etand. iPOXTXAND, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER IS, 1904 A StYSTEKY OF NUMBERS. Lost Summer, as several persons -were walking together on Clatsop Beach, one of them remarked the common phe nomenon that an occasional -wave would trash much higher on the sands than others; -which recalled to another of the company the concluding lines of i"Longfellow"s sonnet on the verse of Mil ton; whose "majestic cadences rise in mighty undulations," till, "ever and -anon, high over all uplifted, a great ninth wave, superb and strong, floods all the soul -with its melodious seas." Then the question was started whether the "ninth wave" was regularly higher than the others; but close observation for more than an hour by all the jnem .bers of the company could make noth ing of it, and it was decided that the theory could not be verified. Longfellow in fact seems to have made a mistake. It is the tenth wave that has this celebrity in literature or legend; but this, too, though it has Jived so long In poetry and other litera ture, la but a fanciful -figment, and un veriflable, except perhaps in accidental circumstances. Burke, whose mind laid everything . under contribution for illustration of argument in resistance to the influ ence of the principles of the French (Revolution, exerted on England, ob served, in bis "letters on a Regicide Peace," with respect to the "tenth wave": "Until at length, tumbling from the Gallic coast, the victorious tenth wave shall rise like a bore over all the rest." One in passing may ob- serve the special yet elegant and forci ble use of the word "bore," here. In Roman poetry the tenth wave Is spoken of, very xften, as higher than the rest. Ovid, with his accustomed poetic circumlocution, says "the wave which overtops all the others rolls be hind the ninth and before the eleventh' Mjucan, Lucretius "Valerius Flaccus and many more use the figure of the tenth wave. Tet no natural phenomenon had anything to do with It "We ourselves .constantly say ''ten to one," and use the word "decimate," like "ten times ,wcrse," conveying the meaning of large odds, great slaughter, or continual ag gravatlon. The Greeks used the word "myrlos" vlb we use myriad In the same sense, for the Immense and innumerable; though the plural probably was not applied to the definite number 10,000 till after the time of Homer. The "Greeks had observed, or supposed they iaad observed, that each third wave was larger than the others; and this conclu sion Is said to accord with very com mon observation. So the, Greeks ap plled the number three to express a 'mighty wave. "Trikumla" the mighty -third wave Is observed in Aeschylus 'and Plato. It Is a common opinion among those o have made special study of man In his primitive state that the number ten originally Indicated amongst all vtribes and races that which was im .jenense or innumerable ten being the utmost number they could express by ifcheir fingers the primitive arithmetic. tfo one doubts, therefore, that this as cendency of ten depends on a physio logical reason, one which makes it nat ural and "handy" for all men to reckon in this way. The science of number appears to be of all others the least artificial; yet there Is no art, not even the potter's, which shows more clearly k Impress of man's hands. As to the origin of the symbolical use of the number seven, whose most remarkable expression is found in the number of days of the week, no doubt Is entertained. It comes from astrol ogy. In the days before astronomy was a science. "Veneration for the seven is in literal truth a lesson of celestial teaching. Most of the heavenly bodies. which seem to revolve daily Tound the earth, maintain the same relative posi tion towards each other. But there were seven, visible before the telescope revealed others, and before the earth was known as one of the group, which wander without resting through the stationary camp. Among these seven wanderers, or planets, are the two greater lights that rule the day and the night, and the two usher stars that herald the morning and the evening. Enumerated in the order of their dis tance from the human observer, as de termined by the ancient astronomy, they are the Moon, Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. From the earliest times they have been an object of curiosity,, of wonder, of study, to Btar-gazlng men. "Their movements have been watched with the minutest observation, and every possible device adopted to unravel the mystery of Lhelr wayward courses. The feeling toward them Is well illustrated by the Assyrian and Persian literature. ' in which c great variety of honorary names are applied to them, such as the seven pearls, the seven golden - cor als, the seven eyes of heaven. seven tapers or torches, and so on. Each of these bodies has its own heaven, or sphere, in which it moves about the earthly observer. Hence the Idea of seven heavens, with Its correla tive of seven hells. It would lead one almost to infinity to follow out the variations of this Idea. By it the Jews, during their sojourn in Babylonia, In the days of the Captivity, were deeply impressed, and use .of the idea, with many variations suited to changes of time and circumstances, was carried forward into the later recensions of their Sacred Scriptures, and into the Christian Scriptures later still. It is the origin of the seven-day period, assigned to the work of creation; while the days of the week still retain their old astro logical designations, and still own in name the mastery of the planetary seven. .We have our Saturn-day, our Sun-day, our Moon-day; and if instead of having a Mars-day, Mercury-day, Jove-day, VenusnJay, like the people of France and Spain, we have Tuis'-day, and Woden's-day, and Thor's-day, and Freya's-day. it 13 mere translation of Roman names by their supposed repre sentatives in Northern mythology, A word about the prejudice against the number thirteen. The rate of mor tality varies with the ages of individ uals. Now of thirteen Individuals of different ages, anywhere assembled, there Is always a probability that one at least will die within a year. Of course that is true also of twelve only the probability Is diminished, and so on of every number; but by avoiding "thirteen" at dinner, or anywhere else, it is clear that we do not avoid the claim of IClng Death, according to his known rules and regulations. If we could permit ourselves to jot down the names of thirteen of our friends at random, the result would probaoly be the same, we say probably, for that Is all the reason involves. On the history and significance of numbers, mystic and otherwise, there is an immense literature, of which pos session even of an index would be a prize. One more remark only, at this time: "Whatever we may think of the mystic Import of numbers, which from Pythagoras and before Pythag oras down to our own time, as con tradistinguished from the stern facts, they are made to unfold and to impress upon us In all the relations of life, one fact is evident amongst the moderns at least there Is small doubt about the preference for Number One. CONDITIONS OF PROSPERITY. PORTLAND, Nov. 12 (To the Editor.) Great Is prosperity, but -what kind o pros perity Is It that exports millions In prod uct while millions of the producers lack? "What becomes of the butter fat money from this skimming of the cream of labor's making? They don't seem to have it. How are foreigners against whom a tariff must protect better able to buy than our own to have? How Is It a surplus when many are without? Is this surplusage .(?) from abundance here, none wanting, or Is It the dollars gathering the masters taking that tney are too poor to have? How long will the people be satisfied with this division, that gives them part of their earnings, while the rest supports a master, when they might have all under Socialism? Under Socialism self-providing would be first, exchange after wards. Let us hope we may have it. C35 First st. C. W. SAUNDERS. Let us have a word here. Let us be plain with It The Oregonlan is asked to answer. It will do so briefly. "Prosperity is great" for those who make themselves part of It. The gen eral mass of men and women can make themselves part of it, only by the exercise of the virtues of prudence, self-denial and indus try, directed by intelligence. The no tion that favored ones are absorbing the "butter-fat" the money is error. Money Is only a concrete expression. It Is nothing In Itself. There Is money al ways for those who will work for It, on terms that employers can afford to pay. "How are foreigners, against whom a tariff must protect, better able to buy than our own to have?" It Is no mys tery. These foreigners pursue a labori ous industry, which our own people reject. They practice economies of all sorts which our people disdain. They work the most hours and all the hours they can, instead of the fewest hours they can. If our people, with the op portunities they have, would pursue and employ only a partjf the virtues of steady and prudent Industry which are habitual with the peoples of the countries of Europe, they would have a marvelous prosperity. But they will not that Is, not yet. However, in the time to come they will because they must. They will learn that there are no resources for them in -railing against those of better fortune. Socialism is absolutely Impossible; but If It were attempted it would not im prove the condition or position of those not willing to pay the price of high success by highest industry, directed by the highest intelligence, accompa nied by the virtues of prudence and self-denial, which are willing and even eager to postpone the enjoyment of to day for the higher expectations of to morrow, or of next year, or of twenty or forty years hence. Equally' falla clous Is It that the labor of the wage worker does It all creates all wealth. The manager, proprietor, director, or "master," as this writer calls him, plans the business, organizes it, carries it, keeps it in operation. Ten thousand men offering to work, with no man to plan for them, or organize Industry for them, would be helpless, could do noth ing. The "prosperity" that our friend envies comes only to organizing Intel Ugence, to high capacity, to those who have power of initiative and of perse verance. It doesn't come to those who offer to work, say eight hours a day, in some field of labor into which all medi ocrity presses, and who then mistakenly expect for themselves the rewards that come to men of superior abilities and superior powers of organization, dlrec tlon and management. Nor could the state, under socialism. help out the general mass; for the state could not command for petty pay the superior services necessary to the sue cess of industrial and business under' takings; and the conditions would be such that the manager would have no power to direct or to Improve the ser vice. An industrial democracy, based on socialism, is impossible. So long as the world stands, or so long as human nature and human soci ety endure, there will be one only way. That one way Is individual Initiative, enterprise and Industry, directed by in teillgence and controlled by prudence, sobriety, self-denial and all the plain virtues. Every other thought is expec tat lem of -folly. Prosperity comes al ways to those who are" willing to pay the price for it; to a few others perhaps "by accident but their number is so small and exceptional that It only con firms the rule. CASES ANALOGOUS. Mr. J. "W, Shrader, 472 Belmont street. Portland, writes to The Oregonlan, In closing this "note" from its editorial columns of November 11: Governor Peabody has been defeated in Colorado and Alva Adams has been 'elected Governor. Which will be taken as notice to an rioters, anarchists and dynamiters In Colorado that they are to be at liberty to enforce their principles." And he adds the inquiry: Being a reader of The Oregonlan, I should like to know whether The Oregonlan ap prover the administration of Governor Pea body, of Colorado. If so, why? I am of the opinion that a vast majority of those who have followed this struggle believe that Peabody & Co. are the chief anarch ists of the United States. Since human society has a right to exist, and must exist. It has a right to take necessary measures to protect Itself- and to preserve its existence. Governor Peabody was dealing with men who had resorted to extremes of lawlessness and violence, resulting In vast destruction of property and whole sale murder. Ordinary methods of law could not cope with them. It was necessary, therefore, for Governor Pea body to proceed to extreme measures. That he has not been re-elected Is not conclusive against his action; for thou sands voted against him on partisan feeling or bias, who nevertheless ap prove what he did. He acted In an emergency as promptly- and as effi ciently as Governor Steunenberg, of Idaho, acted In similar circumstances, and was similarly justifiable. Peabody is a Republican; Steunenberg is a Dem ocrat, and both failed of re-election. Men of this stamp render immense service at critical times, but it Is sel dom they can be re-elected. Which Is an impeachment rather of partisan suffrage than of their official action. PRACTICAL SOCIAL REFORM. A start has been made in Portland toward the first social settlement. Philanthropic women, with love of their kind and endowed with common sense, have entered on the work in a practical way. No doubt It will combine the best features o,EnglIsh effort Imported into this country by Jane Addams, whose social reform through Hull House, Chi cago, is well known, and American ef fort put forth through college settle ment Success of the movement will depend not so much on the unselfish spirit and intelligence of those engaged In it, but upon their tact. Portland has not yet reached a stage where newly arrived immigrants, unfamiliar with English speech, cut large figure In the social problem. Most of the material at hand is partly Americanized, but with a steadily Increasing number of foreign laboring people, particularly from Southern Europe, seeking homes In the United States, it may be expect ed that the field of usefulness for social settlement work will rapidly widen. Experience In every city in the coun try where this new social reform has been Introduced proves the need of It, and Its success has been sufficiently marked to warrant similar work In all cities containing not only newly arrived laboring families of foreign "birth who are usually handicapped by adverse domestic conditions, but also among adopted citizens who continue to live In much the same manner as they did be fore they sought a new home. These require guidance and encouragement. Better sanitation, better prepared "food, neater sewing, more cheerful environ ment and increased natural pride con tribute to greater happiness. Children brought up in homes where better con ditions prevail make better men and women; hence better American citizens. Social settlements teach the great doctrine of self-help, and they aid most effectively In putting the theory into practice. The woman or the child In vited by such an unselfish agency to raise herself higher In the domestic and social scale rarely refuses the Invitation if it comes in a spirit free from pat ronizing taint. Usually the woman who receives benefits becomes an evangel ist In the work; so that the little leaven Introduced by a social settlement soon raises an entire district. Results are not easy to measure, except In a gen eral way;.but It may he set down as the sum of experience that effort such as Is proposed for Portland - is never wasted. A TRAGEDY OF THE WILD. A tardy report from the solitudes of Eastern Clackamas County tells of finding In her lonely home In the wilds the body of .a woman who had passed the greater part of the past few years In the deep solitude of the place. Her husband came home at rare intervals when work in the mill camps, or wher ever he was employed, gave out- There is more than a hint of tragedy in this woman's life and death. There Is the practical certainty of tragedy In both. Upon the first, in its humdrum of dally toll; its lonely days and nights; Its shriveled opportunities and unreal ized dreams of abundance; Its pitiful struggles which dwindled into the dry facts of a bare existence it is easy. now that the scroll Is unrolled and its bare data spread out, to speculate. While this part of the tragedy was being enacted day after day and year after year, no note was taken of Its in cldents, beyond perhaps a. comment now and then upon the utter loneliness of the woman, with a whisper that un kind n ess and even cruelty were added to the dally routine of her life when the husband was at home. Since there is no way out of a life of this kind ex cept as the individual makes it, this was all that could be done, and this "all" was simply nothing. But when the final tragedy was dis coveredhorrible in Its brief enactment but not more of a tragedy than that which had been covered by the com monplace events of slow-moving years a thrill of horror and dismay swept through the community and went puls ing out as "news" into the wider world. The details of the killing- of this woman will probably never be known. There was but one witness and this witness was the victim herself. One theory In regard to the crime will suffice as well as another. One opinion as to the possible or probable criminal and his motive Is as. good as another. Shrewd guessers may come close to the mark without seeking the perpetrator from a distance; others may come as close to the truth, by a mental or verbal arraignment of a nameless tramp as the ruthless criminal But throughout all only the bare and -revolting facts as shown by the dead body of the solitary woman, from which life had been ex tinct for weeks before Its -discovery, are likely ever to be disclosed. Let that pass. It lb not a matter of surprise that this lonely toller of the wilds suffered untimely and violent death. The man ner of her living may be said to have invited it The -strange part of the story Is found in the Isolated life that she led. .The human touch In dailv life is an essential need of human na ture. It Is often said that the world Is too wide for two people to live together dally constraint and Bitterness- On the other hand, there are too manv nm. pie in it to Justify any human creature living a life of utter solitude in an unfrequented locality. The husband who condemns his wife to an existence' this kind for months toeether Is nnt necessarily a criminal, and in the event her murder he cannot be legally held accessory before the fact: but to all intents and purposes he was an acces sory. And a woman who thus lives in the woods, like a- wild animal in Its lair, makes possible any fate, however shocking, that may overtake her. DANGERS IN THE CAMPAIGN LIE. It Is dangerous to fool with thi rm. palgn Lie. To spring a campaign He is to create instantly in the mind of th public the suspicion that you are on the losing side, that you know it, and that you have been oblleed tn arinnf some desperate expedient to pull your self out or a oad hole. Now, the cam paign He may not be a He at all. Tt may have a very substantial bails in truth. It may be a bald and un&rlnrnort exposition of some unlovely episode in the life of a candidate. Or a cam-nalim He may be 6ome Incident, unimportant in essence, mat the ghouls of partisan ship dig out of the grave of a for gotten past, and embellish with all th hideous details fancy can supply. Or a campaign He may be In all respects a He. Or it may be merely some embar rassing flaw in the candidate's party record, exposed to Injure him with his own followers. This last Dartlcular va riety Is quite famUiar to all devotees of the political game. It has the merit of being, the most harmless and least sensational, and so nerhans th mnt nearly Justifiable. The campaign He made a belated ap pearance during the late campaign, un der the auspices of Judee Parker. The Judge, having been nominated entirely at me instance of agents of the trusts, deemed it expedient to charge that his opponent, who had been nominated against the wishes of the trusts, and at the mandate of the plain people, was blackmalUng the corporations to secure a great corruption fund. We all know how this particular campaign He acted as a boomerang, to the great detriment of the Judge's cause, damage to his personal reputation, and benefit of Mr Roosevelt. Only one other camrjaijm He during the late campaign stands out conspicuous. It was an Ingenious per version of the facts, used by a por tion of the Republican press, against Gustav A, Johnson, Democratic candi date for Governor in Minnesota. John son's father was for fifteen years an Inmate of the Nicollet County poor house. He died there, and was buried In a pauper's grave. His son during a great portion of this time was in en joyment of a substantial Income; so the newspapers and orators who were con cerning themselves about Mr. Johnson's private manners and domestic arrange ments were much shocked. But here is the explanation: John son, Sr., was a chronic Inebriate, an in corrigible idler, and a hopeless spend thrift. He abandoned his family. Young Johnson supported his mother and sisters, and relieved them so far as possible of the humiliation and pov erty imposed on them by the unnatural father. These seem to be the facts, and they are all very interesting. Johnson has been elected, In face of a great ad verse plurality, partly because of the shameful attempt of his opponents some of them to give a harmful turn to a painful episode in his life. What campaign He true or false ever succeeded In accomplishing the purpose for which it was told? Some no doubt have reached the mark; but the greater number fall lgnomlnlously. The Murchlson letter a deUberate forc-- ery did much to elect Garfield; while the Halpln incident well-grounded in truth certainly did not impair Grover Cleveland's chances in 1S81. What, then, are the essentials of a campaign He to make it an efficient instrument In a campaign? The answer Is easily made. It must first be true, and second Its publication must be justifiable. The public likes fair play. It will not ex cuse the dissemination of slander or even of unpleasant truths about any candidate unless the facts of his record and the flaws in his personal character manifestly unfit him for holding" public omce. THE UNCHANGING SEA. Steam and electricity In the hands of our modern wizards are continually changing the industrial and even the social conditions of the world. In all of the arts and sciences more rapid progress Is being made than ever be fore, and Inventions and discoveries that seem marvelous today become commonplace tomorrow. This high pressure life is in a sense alluring, and we enjoy It. We would not replace the Incandescent with the tallow candle, the umiiea express wim tne ox team, or the trolley-car with Its equine-propelled bobtail predecessor. And yet it is in terestlng to turn occasionally from the contemplation of these modern miracles and gaze seaward, 'where in certain lines science, with all of its wealth of research and Invention, has wrought but few changes In a thousand years. Yesterday's dispatches told of a "Vic torla sealing captain who had skillfuUy navigated his craft through 600" miles of the wildest ocean on the globe by the use of a Jury rudder rigged out of a topmast. A few days ago news came down from the Arctic of the return to Dutch Harbor of a whaler which had been cruising in the north for three years. About the same time a state ment of the year's business of the Gloucester fishermen appeared, show ing losses of ten schooners and twenty lives, the property loss being greater than for any year since 1S30, although the loss of life was smaller. Here are thrown sidelights on a class of men with which time has stood still for cen turies- On- land their fellow-men first fought and vanquished the Indians, and then, through generations of. toll and struggling, conquered the forces of Na ture and earned their reward In the en joyment of the pleasures of modern civilization. The work of the landsmen has been constantly changing, but with the men of the sea Uttle or no change has taken place. They are still righting the ocean Just as they fought It centuries ago, and it is grudgingly yielding up a live lihood and annually taking Its toll of human life. The Victoria sealing cap tain, with his disabled craft; the whal erg, crutetnc for three years in the cold. sileat and almost unkafi&n rtfften. oi the north, and the hardy Gloucester fishermen, with whom Ufe I an endless succession of tragedies,- are today living out their lives on practically the same unchanged plan which was followed by their ancestors centuries ago. There has been a change, of course, with the ad vent of steam "along those trackless highways where commerce shapes the trail." but off of these highways the sealer, the whaler and the Banks fish erman are still of that old Breed of the oaken heart Which drew- the world together and spread the race apart. They strike boldly out Into the un known., with all of the courage' and dar? lng of the men who sailed with Drake, Cabot, Magellan and all of the rest of the ocean pioneers who "shaped the 'course before them, by the wake they left behind." History and fiction, which supply us with pen pictures of Indus trial and social life a century ago, will a hundred years hence display to our ancestors a vastly different view from that which has been handed down to us from the past. The wild animals and the wilder men that retarded growth and development ashore In the early days of. our country's existence have passed dn, and urban and suburban life and activity are alike changing rapidly. But the unchanging sea offers no such prospect for variety, and the "Captains Courageous" of Rudyard Kipling is in most of its details as truthful and nat ural a depiction of life on the fishing banks one hundred years ago as it Is of today, and win In all probability be one hundred years hence. The whaler Narwhal cruising for a thousand days In the frozen north Is as far removed from the world which we know as were her New Bedford prede cessors which sailed out of the old Mas sachusetts port a century ago, and the Victoria sealer, hundreds of miles from port In a stormy ocean, was as much at the mercy of the sea as were the an cient craft which carried Gray, Van couver, Cook, De Fuca and other navi gators over the same trackless wastes of water many generations ago. In vain man marks the earth with ruin, His control stops with the shore. A worthy benefaction is that whereby Senator Proctor, of Vermont, proposes to establish a home for indigent and worthy public school teachers who have passed the age of usefulness. These beneficiaries are In the main refined and sensitive gentlewomen who, not withstanding the utmost Industry and thrift, have not been able from the fruits of their endeavor to save any thing for the evening of life. A home suited to their tastes and habits of life, as well as to their every-day needs, will be a boon which they will enjoy and for which they will be Intelligently grateful. Generally , speaking, the woman who has spent the flower of her years as teacher in the public schools has earned much more money than she has received as salary. It is. therefore, in the Une of justice rather than of charity to see that provision is made for such of these as come down to old age without means whereby to compass the home comforts of life. The best way to know all about any thing Is to go and And out for your self. So the Northern Pacific Railway, which sees prospects of great travel westward next year to the Lewis and Clark Fair, has assembled its district passenger agents from all over the United States and Is sending them to Portland. They are now en route, and are incidentally learning more than they ever before knew about the rail road which traverses the country through which Lewis and Clark orig inally came. Railroad men are the best possible friends any enterprise de pending on public favor can have, and the plan of the Northern Pacific In showing them for themselves what the Fair is to be will undoubtedly be-of vast benefit to the Exposition and to the railroad. Eva Booth, fourth daughter of a re markable family, has succeeded Com mander Booth-Tucker as head of the Salvation Army In America. A woman who has "the genius and eloquence of her father," Eva Booth can scarcely fail to meet and discharge the grave responsibilities of the position to which she has succeeded. The name of Gen eral Booth stands high upon the muster roll of the army that does battle for humanity. That of his late wife is only second to his own, while those of their daughters follow close in line. They stand distinctly for those who love their fellow-men. It has been given out that President Roosevelt will, at the close of the offi cial term to which he has JuBt been elected, enter upon the duties of the presidency of Harvard University. The story may or may not be true, but If it puts at rest thus early In the fray the anxiety of the political busybody who wants Congress to create a place of honor and emolument for our ex Presidents, it will prove worth the tell lng. Somebody says that now, since Ore gon has given so splendid a majority for President Roosevelt, we may easily get half a million or a million more from Congress for the Lewis and Clark Fair. The Oregonlan -fears it may not be. Yet it has no objection to inter pose, if anybody desires to try It, The announcement that Mr. Sweeney will be a candidate for United States Senator in "Washington will excite much Interest in Portland. It's all right "We can't expect Mr. Sweeney to invest all his money here. The renomlnation of John H. Hall to be United States District Attorney is due to the desire of the President and the Department of Justice to retain the services of an efficient public officer. President Roosevelt -is going to the St, Louis Exposition. Can he be in duced to come to the Lewis and Clark? It would be worth our while. Mr. Manning would not Issue a war rant for the arrest of Sheriff "Word at the instance of an Incensed and out raged Chinaman. Touching! Apparently Maryland did go for Roosevelt; but it won't if the Demo cratic election boards get half a chance. Didn't Need th -Paper. Boston Commercial Bulletin. A countryman gave the following rea son for not subscribing to a local news paper: "I get all the news there Is. My wife belongs to the woman's club, oae of my daughters works m the mlllrtery se. and the other is in the delivery window at the postoffiee, and I'm the tffiwc owv THE UNANSWERED QUESTION. 8CUSNCH AND IKMORTALrrT By TOllUm Osier, M. D., F. R. S. Pp. M. Houghton. Mifflin A Co.. Boston. Price. 85 cents; In 1SW the George Goldthwalt Inger- soll lectureship was founded at Harvard for the purpose of giving once a year a lecture on the "Immortality of Man."- Since that time leading philosophers and theologians, among whom were Josiah Boyce, John Fiske. Benjamin Ide Whee ler. William James and Rev. George- A. Gordon, have filled the chair. But until Dr. Osier spoke no leading scientist had accepted an invitation to deliver the lec ture. Dr. Osier's lecture is an incisive state ment of his personal opinion or the public state of mind on this question, but it Is on the whole a nugatory and disappointing contribution to the tremendous Issue in volved In immortality, for it takes no ac count of the philosophical bases of immor tality, being content to give a brilliant re view of the present attitude of Western civilization. As he views the world today It is di vided into three classes. The Laodlceans, who, "while accepted a belief in Immor tality and, accepting the phases and forms of the prevailing religions, live practical ly uninfluenced by It, except so far a3 it ministers to a wholesale dissonance between the Inner and the outer- life. and diffuses an atmosphere of general'ln- slncerlty." The Galllonlans. who. "like Galiio, care for none of these things and live whoUy uninfluenced by a thought of the hereafter form a second group larger perhaps today than ever before in history. These put the supernatural altogether out of man's life and regard the hereafter as only one of the many inventions he ha3 sought out for himself." A third group even small and select, whom Dr. Osier calls Teresians, after Saint Teresa, 'lays hold with the author of Faith upon eter nal life, as the controlling Influence In this one." Having apportioned mankind Into these three classes. Dr. Osier discusses the leading characteristics of each class as he has found it in his own experience, the problem as he sees it being the inquiry whether mankind's conquest of Nature has made the individual more or less hopeful of the life beyond the grave; and his conclusion Is that "practical Indif ference Is the modern attitude of mind; like the Laodlceans, we are neither hot nor cold, but lukeworm"; and the giddy. self-Indulged pleasure-seekers at the top of the so-called social scale those butter flies whose aspirations are bounded by stocks and jocks and fighting cocks, whose delight Is "bridge," and whose care Is for the things of the world, are cited as ex amples of churchgoing Laodlceans. So, too, in ordinary parlor conversation, in the pulpit and in the press the immense Importance of the question of Immortality is deliberately ignored. Of the attitude of mankind generaUy he says, like Oliver Wendell Holmes, "we may love the mys tical and talk much of the shadows, but when it comes to laying hold of them with the hand of faith we are not of the ex cursion." The poUcy of states and the conscious direction of governments, both of which In no way regard the future existence of man as a factor to be considered, are cited by Dr. Osier .as ominous comment aries on the waning interest of moderns in this age-long question. To the objec tion that the question of future existence has never, with possible exception of the Crusades, affected national life, and that the real locus and power of the belief is In the heart of the Individual, which is never more clearly seen than when the sojourner In this worldly caravansarai Is about to fare forth from Its accustomed warmth and comfort to the misty dark ness of the hereafter. Dr. Osier cite3 his own experience at E00 deathbeds, as show ing how little the average man thinks of such questions when brought close to deathbed. In only SO cases was bodily pain or distress of one sort or another suffered, 11 showed mental apprehension; two posi tive terror, one expressed spiritual ex altation and one bitter remorse. All of which lead our author to the (for him) Inevitable conclusion that the ex istence of a future life is not demon strable from the spontaneous call of the human heart for immortality as thfq mor tal Ufe neared Its end. Rather he found that man went heedless or apathetic to meet the mystery that lies behind creeds, concerned to the last only with the needs of this Ufe, and still struggling and racing for comfort, riches and happiness. "So man hath no pre-eminence over the beast, and. as the writer of Bccleslastes said thousands of years ago, 'as one dletb, so dieth the other.' " The Galllonlans, who "care for none of these things," form, In Dr. Osier's opinion, a larger class than ever before In the history of the world. The un seen but powerful Influence of modern science on the concept of life held by the preceding generation, the effect of the general acceptance of evolution and the denial of the existence of tho soul by modern psychology, which sees in con sciousness only a material phenomenon, have all combined to create an ever-Increasing body of men who concern them selves only with the duties, labors and joys of this mundane Ufe. The effect of science has been to "minimize almost to the vanishing point the Importance of tho Individual man," while giving su preme importance to the cosmic and bio logical forces which, In their mighty orb- Its, take no heed to the petty interests, alms and aspirations of a single life. Lastly comes the lessening band of en thusiasts who see visions and dream dreams and walk the ways of this world untroubled and serene In the consciousness of the all-supporting, everlasting arms, To these It is given to know the myster ies, for they have tested and tried Pas cal's celebrated dictum, "The heart has its reasons that reason cannot under stand." In a few luminous sentences Dr. Osier sketches the Irreconcilable difference between the reasons of the head and the emotions of the heart, and concludes: "la our temporizing- days man Is always seeking a. safe middle ground between loyalty to the InteUectual faculty and submission to authority in an unreason lng acceptance of the things of the spirit ... As perplexity of soul will be your lot and portion, accept the situation with a good grace. . - On the question be fore us wide and far your hearts will range from those early days when matins and evensong, evensong and matins, sang the larger hope .of humanity Into your young soul. . . Some of you will wan der tkrotwh all the phases to come at last, I tract, to the opinion- of Cicero, who had rather be mistaken with Flato than se e. the right with those who deny altogether Ufe after death, and this is , asy Qwa oBfwki NOTE AND COMMENT. c The Billionaire. His palace was magnificent; Marble every part. And Just to be In keeping Of marble was bia heart. Grant County has Wyoming ambitions. Set your face against the cigarette, boys. What does a Chinaman want 'with a door, anyway? By getting Roosevelt as President, Har vard Vscoops" them all. Brazil's Intention to carry a big stick makes Argentina's hand feel empty. There's any amount of sand along the Suez Canal. Here's the Baltic fleet's chance. To a Y. M. C. A. audience Admiral "Bob" Evans recently delivered an ad dress. Censored, probably. "Uttle hoods of lace finish some of tho evening cloaks." says a fashion note. Yes, and the little bill finishes hubby. Thirty-four Sultans of Turkey have let themselves be assassinated. What slaves these monarchs are to precedent. Young Walton has received a 25-year sentence, which seems a high price to pay for the fun of being beaten over the head bya street-car conductor. Papers that run pictures of "the good angel of the Port Arthur garrison" might at least pick out a stock cut that doesn't resemble a patent medicine ad. Now Chicago Is to" have a subway. Soon any ghost anxious to revisit the glimpsls of the moon wiU have to be careful at which floor it leaves the elevator. In Its "local news" the New York Mail notes that "Ed Harriman, of this place, was a Portland. Or., shopper Tuesday! Ed bought the Columbia Southern Rail road." Pierpont Morgan has gained great credit for returning the stolen cope he purchased. This shows it is easier for the rich to gain credit than to pass through the eye of a' needle. As the Seattle .News wittily remarks, "the servant girl occupies a distinctive place in the domestic Ufe of America. But where the rub comes la In the fact that, she never occupies the place long." In the jungles of India is found a bee that works only at night How nice to be a kid in those parts and not have grown up people quoting, "How doth the little busy bee Improve each shining hour" at you. . "We went to St, Louis." wails the edi tor of the Hardeman (Oa.) Free Press, "to enlist in the Beer war, and when we got there we found that it was the Boer war. As we had been grossly deceived, we came on back home." In Seattle two editors have been call ing each other pet names. One has called t'other a "paretic mattoid." and up to the present he holds the belt, but of course tho dictionary has not been used up yet, not quite. The trumpeter who sounded the chartre at Balaklava hag just died in Denver. The trumpeter was as multitudinous as the many-voiced ocean, and the "first man into Port Arthur" will have to die several thousand times to beat the record set by the Six Hundred's survivors. Herman Wise, of Astoria, rises to re mark of a recent paragraph "Next time we hear of the Baltic fleet It may bo In action with the Swiss navy" "Oh, cheese It; such ta shot would be smelled around the world." The Japanese have bought a lot of Dutch cheeses, so there is a possi bility that Russia might use smokeless Swiss for their heavy gun projectiles. Insubordination at the University of California 13 serious, explains the presi dent, because rules of the War Depart ment'were broken; had they been merely university rules It would have been a dif ferent affair. This should prove encour agalng to the students. In future when they want to run their heads against a stonewall they wlU know enough to avoid mere university rules and choose one that is meant to be obeyed. Professor Howison, head of the depart ment of philosophy in the University of California, declares that "the presence of a large number of women students is Inconsistent with the attainment of high scholarly Ideals," or. In other words, the phUosopher thinks that a man cannot em brace philosophy and a girl at the same time. The remedy is so obvious that it might have occurred to even a- coUege professor. Let the high scholarly Ideals go hang. According to the Argus; the election in Seattle went as indicated In the following story: , M. M. Lyter was about the only Demo crat to be found In town Wednesday, and he had blood in his eyes. "It's a blamed shame," said he, fiercely "a dirty outragel" "What Is that?" inquired a sympathizing friend. "Why, the Republicans- held an election yesterday," said Mr. Lyter, "and they didn't let us Democrats know anything about it!" Some professor of something has discov ered that the human body shoots out rays which vary In color with the moods of tho soul inside the body. An angry man flashes red signals, a hopeful man blue, and so forth. When we all reach the point at which we can see these rays a new trouble wiU have been added to the life of woman. No fashionable woman could bear to be seen radiating a color that did not match that of her frock, and she would have to hypnotize ierself Into the mood of which the color went best with the style of her dress for the day. There was little apathy in the election if one may refer to it at this late "date so far as the Chippie Creek district was concernedt A Denver Times dispatch from Cripple Creek began as follows: Two Democratic Judges have been killed and one Peabody Deputy Sheriff la mortally wounded and' a great number of Democratic Judges have been beaten up and throws Into Jail, although the 'Democratic and Republican leaders met last night and signed an agreement "providing for a peaceable election. A pleasantly vague referMwgi.kjjfct to the "great number" of Dea&cgijMigaa that were beaten up, while. th-r fee SPtae reporter that violence sfee3 hay seen U3ed, is really amusing. DM set uw Dem ocratic and Republican teaiera - wigs. an agreement providing He a. yaMMe election, and here they K aiall 'y faft,lf there were no virtue in a 9tlmam:-.ffmm. though what most excitaa r wyir U the probable state of trfUm Hhi no ledge of peace been given! ;