THE SUNDAY OREGQIAN, PORTLAND, . MAEOR .5, 1905, THE OREGON STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Officers of the New Organization, Its Purposes and Its Field of Endeavor. OF MUCH significance Is the hearty enthusiasm and public-spirited har mony of effort that characterize the newly organized Oregon "State Acad emy of Sciences. Practically all those engaged in professional scientific 'work in this state are members of this society, or else have signified their sympathy -with its alms. As laid down in the preamble of the constitution, adopted February 18. these alms are to encourage scientific re search and learning, to promote the dif fusion of scientific knowledge among its members, to aid In developing the re sources of the state, and to work in har mony with-other scientific-Institutions. Leading university and college men, rep resenting, as is eminently proper, many diverse branches of science, as well as the stated most important institutions of learning, have been elected officers of this association, and there is every Indication that the newly-fledged academy Is being built upon sound and broad foundations. Probably in no, other part of the world is there so much to fascinate and reward the scientific student and investigator as here in the Pacific Northwest, the scene j In past ages of the greatest volcanic out burst and lavarflow known in geological history. Here Is to bo found what Is pos sibly the latest example of mountain building on the globe Mount St. Helens which In 1S42 was actively at work up rearing its mighty dome, comparatively a new-born mountain, as indicated by Its symmetrical outline, very little erosion having taken place as yet upon Its sur- i face. And these Isolated snowpeaks, rising to such great heights from a moist and fer tile land, where Summer reigns the year around, afford to the botanist and .biolo gist an almost unparalleled range of cli mate for the study -of flora and fauna. Here in this mild clime where the rigors of Winter are practically unknown, a few miles' travel will show representative lorms of plant life that properly extend all the way from the temperate to the arctic rone. The greatest forests, known to man cover our hillsides. That compartlvely new and most cap tivating branch of science, the study of glaciers and the glacial epoch, from which we have but recently emerged, may be pursued with exceptional advantage here, for one mountain alone In our Cascade Sange Mount Rainier has no fewer than 20 great glaciers. Its glacial surface rival ing in area the entire glacial surface of. Switzerland a little known fact, but one that has been proved by comparison of the United States Government surveys with data collected by the Alpine Club. To the mineralogist a practically un known and Il!lmltabl6 field Is offered for study in the riches stored away by lavish Nature in our mountain treasure vaults. And how indispensable will be his service to the state in this development of its resources! Our rivers, lakes and ocean currents teem with noble forms of fish life, some of them quite unknown to other parts of the world, of highest value to commerce, -but presentipg problems as baffling and obscure to the biologist and pisciculturist as to the simplest, fisherman. To the ethnologist falls the strange and fascinating task of observing In the en vironment of modern civilization the cus toms and mystic ceremonial rites of an cient savagery, and of deciding the vexed question of the ancestry of Oils puzzling people, the North American Indians, the riddle of four centuries. Are they related to the Asiatic races, and did they come hither by way of Bering Strait, or are they indigenous to American soil, roaming the plains to the eastward when the earth was young, and the site of Portland lay at tho bottom of the sea? In the rich fossil beds of the John. Day Valley may be found relics of untold value to the scientific world, remains of mammoth and mastodon, rhinoceros and camel, and several species of the prehis toric horse, illustrating its evolution to the form wo know today. In that valley we find records in the rocks covering .pearly the whole period of ancient mam malian life upon the earth. As this life became extinct, many times owing to violent cataclysms of nature, new species cpringing up from these ancient grave yards, there Is reason to believe, in the opinion of Thomas Condon, our veteran geologist, that Oregon Is destined to be come the great battleground of conflicting theories regarding the Origin of Species. Surely no other region of -the globe promises such rich returns to the ac tivities and enthusiasm of the man of science. And yet these are only a few of the many fascinating problems that confront the now Academy of Sciences. The Officers. Edmund P. Sheldon, the forestry ex , pert and hotanlst, who has been olected president of the academy, combines practical field knowledge with univer sity training in science. He received j his degree from the University of , Minnesota, after which he rexnaineJ as- j soclated with that institution for sev- ; eral years as a teacher, devoting him- self to botany, ornithology and chemis try. Six years were spent in field work In forestry in connection with the Geo- logical and Natural History Survey of , the State of Minnesota. In 1S97 he I came to Oregon as a special field agent j of the Division of Botany of the United j States Department of Agriculture, and for three years he made a careful study of the treea and plsnt3 of Eastern Ore- gon. Tbenme turned Westward to the Coast, and for three yoars has been making botanical collections In Cali fornia, Oregon and Washington during the Summer months. In the Winter soason he was largely in tho employ of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company, of Portland. Thus for a num ber of years he has had actual ex perience in lumbering. August 9. 1904 Mr. Sheldon was ap pointed Superintendent of Forestry by the Lewis and Clark Exposition Com mission. At the Louisiana Purchase Ex position, at St. Louis, he had charge of the Oregon State Exhibit of Forestry. Under his administration tea State of Oregon had- the larg est, exhibit In forestry placed by any state a tho Exposition, and on this display Orogon received more awards than any other state competing. On January 9. 1905. Mr. Sheldon was elected Superintendent of Forestry, Fish and Game, for the Lewis and Clark Contennial Exposition. It Is now bis special endeavor to fill Oregon's ! epaec In the Palace of Forestry with products illustrative of the forest, fish and game resources of the state of Ore gon. Albert Raddin Sweetser, of the Uni versity of Oregon, the first vice-presl-dant, was born in Mendon, Massachu setts. He received his degree of B. S. from Weseleyan University. Middleton. Conn., later winning the degree of A. M. from the same. After graduation, he spent a year in the -Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Boston, in the department of chemistry. He taught science for several years la preparatory .schools, and in 1893 entered the grauJate school of Harvard Universltj, where he spent four years. During this time he devoted himself to zoology and "botany, particularly the latter, assisting; in the laboratory pf Cryptogamlc botany of Harvard Uni versity during the last two years of bis stuy. and giving a course in Crypto gamio botany at Radaliffe College. .'. Ijo,4,S97 Professor Sweetser accepted vJl" to .the chair of biology in Pa- ciflc University. Oregon, and remained there five years, until "elected to the same dopartment in the University of Oregon at Eugene. Three years ago Professor Sweetser was appointed State Biologist by Governor Geer, which of fice he has held up to the present time. Arthur Burton Cordley. M. S., the second vice-president, well known as the biologist of the Oregon Agricul tural College, received his early scien tific training at the Michigan Agricul tural College, from which he was grad uated In 1S83 with the degree of B. S. He remained at his alma mater two years as Instructor In zoology, then ac cepted a position as Instructor in zo The New Statue of Frances TM (Btue of the late France E. YVIUard, vrhlrii iro authorized for the WtU agios Tra uavellcd is the Capitol February 17, Tke cuts tor 2a Mis jjl 1 HS Top rorr reading from left to right: George JE. Co sal 11, Edward A. Beals, L. L. Hair kin, James ATIthyeombe. tower row readies: from left to rights Martin "W. Goraaaa, A. R. STreetex, E. P.. Sheldon James A. Lyman, A. B, Cordley. ology and assistant entomologist at the experiment station of the University of Vermont, resigning this at the end of tho year to accept a .position as assistant entomologist of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture at Washington, D. C. Since 1895 Professor Cordley ha3 been in charge of zoology and entomology at the Oregon Agricultural College, and is also entomologist and plant pathologist at the experiment station. A graduate student of Cornell Univer sity (1S99), Professor Cordley Is also-. member of the Association of Economic Entomologists, a corresponding member of the Washington Entomological Society and of the Ontario Entomological Society. The Oregon Agriculturist, In a report of the recent meeting of tho Oregon Hor ticultural Society, has the following: "Hon. E. L. Smith, as president of the State Board of Horticulture, said that on behalf of tho board he wished to give public utterance to the appreciation of the board of the very valuable work done by Professor A. B. Cordley, of the Ore gon Experiment Station, in ascertaining tho true nature of the apple-tree an three nose and supplying the Information needed in fighting this serious foe of the apple orchardlst" Miss Christina MacConnell, the third vice-president, has for 25 years held tho chair of chemistry and physiology In tho Portland High School. James A. Lyman, Ph. D., the recording E. Willard , Hall Selei of Statues la tic Cayltel at F. Mean. secretary, was" bom at Lee .Center, 111., entering Beloit College at the age of 17. from which institution ho received the degree of A. B. in 1SSS, and of A. M. In 1SSL After acting for a year as prin cipal of the public schools of Hlllsboro. K. D.. he turned his attention to the study of chemistry, and took post-graduate work In that subject at Beloit Col lege and the Johns Hopkins University. From the latter institution he received tho degree of Ph. D. In 1S92. During th ensulng year the University of Chicago began Its work, and he spent a year as a member of its chemical faculty. From that place he came to Portland In Sep tember, 1S93, to take up tho work of in structor in chemistry In Portland Acad emy, where he has since remained. George E. Coghlll, Ph. D., the corres ponding secretary, was born in 1S72, on an Illinois farm, where he spent the first IS years of hl3 life. He prepared for col Jego at Shurtleff Academy, in the historic town of Alton, 111. He later entered Brown University, where ho received the degree of Bachelor of Arts In 1S96. His graduate study began. In 1S97. under the direction of the late Professor C. L. Her ri ck. editor and founder of the Journal of Comparative Neurology arid Psychol ogy, and one of tho pioneers of that sdenc In America. During 1S93-1900 Mr. Coghlll was assistant professor of biology In the University of New Mexico. The two years following this ha pursued grad uate study in Brown University and In Germany. At Brown he was awarded the Grand Army of the Bepubllc fellowship, the best fellowship of the university. Ho was also made a member of the Society of Sigma XI. which is to the sciences what Phi Beta Kappa is to tho arts. During the Summer semester of 1902 he studied in the laboratories of Professors Boveri and Koelllker In Wurzburg. and the same year" received the degree of THE JOTTINGS OF OLD LIM JUCKXIN Ople Read's Philosopher Discourses on the "Rebel" and the "Yankee.' tj BOUT tho old stove in the cross j roads store they sat, the wise men of tho nelchborhood. " What they knew they rejoiced in, and what they did not know wa3 not worth knowing, xney possessed the wisdom of satisfaction irfth self. Amontr them was old icnrj tBalch, neighborhood's shrewdest guessor At tha weather. When he guessed right ly, ho reminded them of his forecast- When he missed It. he said nothing, in many of life's departments great reputa tions have been made in this way. The conversation had turned Into Its ac customed bypaths, and it appeared that there was nothing more to bo said on any conceivable subject, when old' Llm Jucklln remarked, addressing Henry Balch: "You used to be a Yankee, didn't you. Henry?" "Who, me? Yes, think I was. about the time you were a rebel. Seems fun ny now, don't It?" "Yes, Ilka a dream that gradually fades away. And did you ever think of the fact that notwlthstandln all the blood shed and the bitterness that necessarily followed, our family trouble taught the world the greatest lesson of modern times? Ever think of that?" "Well. I don't know as I have," old Henry replied, reaching over and pulling out the damper of the stove. "But what's your p'lnt of view?" ' ''It's Just this: Almost from the very beginnln of the world, tha wisest of men have said that a democracy couldn't exist for any great length of time. Near ly every republic had begun with blood and all of them had ended with failure. And when the American Government was established they said that it was not es tablished. They knew that it was an experiment, and they pointed to history to prove It, and history nodded and said, Ah, hah, that's a fact' When our war came they cried out, "Here you are.' And it seemed that wo were to fly off Into jagged fragments, thus proving for the hundredth time that republics were mere ly dreams of idle men. It seemed to be the world's final test. But wo came through It all, more cemented than ever before, and the nations of the earth looked at us and said: "Well, we'll be blowed. So our war, the test and its outcome, the proof, finally proved to man that after all It is roan that governs the world. Ignorance in the furthereat parts of tha universe has been Inspired with hope. The result of tha success of de mocracy In America has given to man a broader Idea of God. It has shown that a few men only wan't anointed by the Almighty. It has proved that the throne Is. a man-made seat, and not any more divine than the work bench. The Lord may havo been represented a-settin on his throne, but tho one that redeemed tha world stood at the work bench. The time is comin when, tho whole earth will bo Americanized. Every great book, that a man reads helps along' this Idea. Yes, sir. there's comin a time when a man wilt bo ashamed to live In a country where he's called a subject instead of a citizen. 1 wish I had a chance to talk to every schoolboy In the world. I'd im press these facts on his mind." "Yea," replied old Henryt-"but It" seems Photograph by Kiser Bros: Doctor of Philosophy from Brown Uni versity. The year following ho came to Pacific University as Professor of Biol ogy. Professor Coghlll's original work relates especially to the nervous system of am phibia and has been published in the Journal of Comparative Neurology and Physchology. This Journal has formally recognized his work by giving him a place upon Its list of collaborators. He is a member also of the Society of American Naturalists, tho Society of American Zoologists, the Association of American Anatomists, .and is Fellow in the American Society of Advancement of Science. M. W. Gorman, treasurer, is well known as a leading authority on the flora not only of Oregon, but of the Pacific North west Bora in Canada, he came to Port land, April, 1S85, and was so won by his first glimpse of the forests of Oregon, then clothed in a wealth of Spring beauty, that he decided to make this state his permanent home. During the seasons of 1S30-92-93-94 and 95, be made collections of plants in Southeastern Alaska. In the season of 1837 he was employed by the United States Govern ment to make a report on the vegetation. of the Lake Chelan District. Washing ton, and In company with W, G. Steel, ha was appointed to make the soundings that proved that lake to be the deepest as well as the most interesting body of water in the State of Washington. In 1S99 he spent a year on the Yukon, and White Rivers, discovering in that season alone seven species of plants en tirely new to science. The season of 1903 -again found him with canoe and collecting-press, north of Cook Inlet, making a collection and report for the United States Department of Agriculture on the flora of the Lake Hiamna region. L. L. Hawkins, director of the museum to me that those fellers In the East aro a-tryla to make a monarchy of this country as fast as they can." "Looks that way," Jucklln admitted; "but you might just as well say that a trlcklin' spring branch Is about to make the ocean fresh. All the power on the face of the" earth couldn't make a mon archy of this country. But speakln' about beln' a Yankee, do you remember old Sam Nesbltt? Of course you do. Well. just about tha time tho war got well un der way, old Sam took it into his head that ho ought to coma over to my house and kill me to help things along. He had raised a squad of fellers and they wanted to make a name for themselves. So one night when the moon was a-shinin hero they came. I had got wind of it, and was on the lookout. I d been mus tered into the service and was stayln home a few days to straighten things out a little. And I wasn't sleepln down In the parlor. I was In the garrett, I tell you,- and I looked out and saw tho gang a-comln . There wasn't any chance to get away, and I laid low and waited. Pretty soon they came a-thunderin at the door. My wife let 'em in. They asked where I was qrfl she said she didn't know. She didn't, exactly didn't know which corner of the garret I was hidin' In Old Sam 'lowed that ha was glad I wasn't in the house, for ho was goin to set fire to It and that It would be a shame for a man to be burnt up In his own house. When I heard this I sorter caught my breath, and so cold a chill ran up my back that It was all I could do to keep from sneez in. My wife told him that the bouse was old and would burn easily. It had been our Intention to build a new one. and that If he set It afire It would save the trouble of tearla It down. There was a pot of coffee on the fire. Now coffee was a scarce article, and when the perfume of It began to rise, old Sara he began to sniff- He asked her If It was Lincoln coffee, all other sort beln mado of rye or potatoes and such like. She -told him It was, and he told her to pour it out. So she got some cups and poured out enough for all five of them and they drank It and smacked their mouths. When they had put down their cups she went to tha door, stepped out, and with tha door about a third of the way open, she said: If you are goin' to burn this house down you'd better be about It. The fact Is, I was expectln' you, and that coffee was fixed. DIdn t you notice how bitter It was? It was dosed with strych nine- And as Dr. Seymour lives, at least ten miles from hero you will all bo dead before you can get to his house. Good night and good-by. With that she shut the door and ran away. Well, I never heard such scufflln In my life. Some of them didn't wait to get out at tho door. They broke through the windows, and one of them carried a window sash Tor up war,d of a mile I heard 'em going over the hill, ana j. laugnea ana took, inis op portunity to sneeze. Well, they galloped all the way to the doctor's house, threw themselves off of their horses and knocked down tho door In their haste to e'et in: and tha doctor He treated them. pumped them out and charged them a horse for his services. Years afterward I met old Sam In town, and I asked him if he liked coffee, and he looked at me and said: 'Llm, you blamed fool, ill give you the finest game rooster In the country if you won't say anything about that affair. I told n'm to send, over tae oiro. and librarian, was bone at Cleveland, O., March 17, St. Patrick's day, 1S4S. Ha crossed the plains by ox team in 1SS1-K, and at the age of 12 was thrown upon his own resources for a livelihood. Ha was In Nevada for ten years, up to 1S63, dur ing the days of tho pony express, Pluta war and Virginia City excitement. He prepared for college at Oakland. Cal.. and spent ten years at the University of Cali fornia, the last as an instructor In math ematics and civil engineering. He made .field work a specialty, and Incidentally,, It mav be naid. hn toolc the first Dost-srrad- uate degree ever issued by that university. He organized among the students the first outing parties into tee nign sierras ana elsewhere, Joseph Le Conte accompany ing them. Mr. Hawkins was United States Deputy Mineral Surveyor and made many Important underground surveys in tho mines. In the Fall of 1S79 he was "knock ing the bottom out of Snake River," un der Government contract, at Monumental Rapids. Ho had charge of the portages at tho Cascades and CeWo for two years and performed the feat of changing the 14 miles of narrow-gauge from The Dalles to Celllo to a standard gauge in five hours and 20 minutes, this being the champion record on the Pacific Coast for trackwork. Mr. Hawkins ha3 spent the last 25 years of his life in Portland in active business life, devoting a generous share of his time to the good of the public, as Park Commissioner, as an active member of the Boys and Girls Aid Society, as a Ma an ma, as furthering the bicycle path movement, etc He hasydevoted seven years to tho cre ation pr the City Free Museum, "which he hopes will not only be the finest on the Pacific Coast but tho permanent homo of the Academy of Sciences. Threo trustees will have tha manage ment of any property that may chance to coma into the possession of tho Academy. These trustees- are L. L. Hawkins, Dr. James Wlthycombe and EL A. Beals. Dr. Wlthycombe, by his high-minded; character and honorable life, has won tho admiration, respect and confidence- of all who know his work as director of the Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallls. His management of the affairs of that Institution has been, pre-eminently suc cessful, and he has been a vital and pow erful Influence for good in the life of the state to such an. extent that many are now advocating him for Governor. Ho has always been an. ardent admirer of rural life, a lover of Nature, and an en thusiastic agriculturist. Preceding his present work ho was for nine years State Veterinarian. Animal husbandry" is his specialty, and he has been engaged in the breeding of high-class horses, cattle, swine and eheep for the past S years. Edward Alden Beals, who is in charge of tho United States Weather Bureau of fice in Portland, Joined the United States meteorological service In 1830, and has been connected with the Weather Bureau for 21 years. During that time ho ha3 been In charge of the following offices: At lanta, Ga., Mount Washington, N. H., Chattanooga, Tenn., La Crosse, Wis.. Minneapolis, Minn., and Cleveland, O. Ho Is the author of numerous articles on meteorological subjects, among which might be mentioned the following: "The Aurora," published in the American Me teorological Journal; "Psychic Effects b the Weather," published in -ne supple ment of tho Scientific American, and "Rainfall and Irrigation," published In the Tear Book of tha United States De partment of Agriculture. The academy meets on the evening of the third Saturday of each month, its present home being the club rooms of the John Burroughs Bird Society, top floor of the City Hall. All who are In terested in science are cordially invited to become members of the academy, ba present at tha meetings and take part in the discussions that follow the reading of papers on scientific topics of practical value to tha community and the develop ment of the resources of the state. The proceedings of these meetings will be reg ularly published by the academy, a pub-t llcatton committee having chargo of this branch of the work. At present tho members of tha academy aro "discussing with much enthusiasm the feasibility of having a scientific congress during the celebration of tha Lewis and Clark Centennial in Portland. and he did, and I never mentioned it again as long as ho lived; but about a year afterward I heard that he had a chicken from tho Spanish cock-pits of Now Orleans, and I wanted it. But, knowin how much ha must be attached to it I couldn't think of insultin' him by offerin him money. But I went over to sea him one day. He was out at hs" barn talkln' to his chicken. And It was a beauty. I says to him. says I: 'Sam, that's the finest bird I over saw. Yes, he says, "with an air of pride, 'he's tha finest. 'I reckon that's so says L 'And he reminds me of one I used to own. 'But misfortune overtook him. Hs came Into tho kitchen ona day and jumped on tho table and drank ome coffee and it killed him. 'You don't say so? saya old Sam, with a dry grin on his face. I told him I did Bay so, and then remarked that I was in something of a hurry and must ba goin. 'Don't be pulled, says he. 'Oh, by the way. don't you "want this chicken?' "Well, as the other one you gavo mo has about run out, I believe I do.' So I took tha chicken and went home. We lost a good man when old Sam died. His Judg ment of1 a rooster was above reproach, and was of great benefit to me- By tha way. Henry, didn't you shoot at me one night along in sixty-four., down hero at the turn of the county road?" "Well, now, really, Llm, I don't rec ollect. But I was putty sociable, in them days, and it might have been me." "Ah, ha. I've intended a number of times to askfyou about it. It was a sort of long fire, as if it hated to give up and as you always hated to glvo up any thing. Henry, I 'lowed It must ba you." (Copyrighted. 1SC5. by Ople Read.) Mrs. Burden's Silk Sheets. New York Press. Silken sheets that cost 5500 a pair lull Mrs. Townsend Burden to sleep in her Madison-avenue home, and it is likely similar fabrics will be used exclusively in her Newport cottage tho coming Sum mer, although hitherto, when at tha sea shore she has been loyal to Irish linen. For her town house, at any rate, silk Is tho only material Mrs. Burden will coun tenance. Her shcefe cost so much, not only because they are made of the finest silk tho looms of this or any other coun try can produce, but on account of tho elaborate embroidery with which their hems are ornamented. In addition, tho fastidious matron's 'monogram blooms-in a corner of every sheet in needlework that shows It was done under the eyo of an artistic patron. Gold thread Is used for tho hem, and the effect certainly is gorgeous. Mrs. Burden adopted silk for sleeping purposes on the advice of her physician, who told her It combined light ness with warmth to a degree that would ba highly salutary. Tho esthetic side of ther innovation soon appealed to her, though, and whereas the first silk sheets she had made were white, she now ha them woven to order to harmonize with tha dominant hue of her room- Degrees of Crime In Alabama. Thomasvllle Times-Enterprise. An Alabama man was sent tp jail for kissing a girl after she said: "Please,, don't." If he hadn't kissed her after that ho would .probably hav been lynched,