6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. rORTIiA20, DECEMBER 24, 1905 Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Or., as second-class matter. EUBSCKUTION' RATES INVARIABLT IK ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) Dally and Sunday, per year 'JI'iK Dally and Sunday, elx months o-0 Dally and Sunday, three months....... Dally and Sunday, per month Dally without Sunday, per year Dally -without Sunday, six months.-...- 3.0 Dally -without Sunday, three months... l.3 Dally -without Sunday, per month -Oj Sunday, per year - Sunday, six months l-rrJ Sunday, three months ws BT CARBIER. Dally without Sunday, per week .tjj Dally, per -week. Sunday- Included -u THE WEEKLT OREGONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) Weekly, per year -5" "Weekly, six months Weekly, three months -&0, HOW TO REMIT Send postofnce money order, express order or personal check oa your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are af the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFTICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency New Tork. rooms 43-50. Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms MO-SI Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postotflce News Co., 178 Dearborn" street. Denver Hamilton & Kcndriek. 900-812 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street. Coldfleld, 'ev. Guy Marsh. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co. Ninth and "Walnut. Ixs Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 S. Third. Cleveland. O. James Pushaw, 307 Superior street. New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Fourteenth and Franklin streets. Ogden Goddard & Harrop; D. I Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1C12 Farnam; Mageath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam: 240 South 14th. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 439 K street. Salt Eake Salt I-ake News Co., 77 West Second street South: Levin. Miss 1. 24 Church street. , San i'raaclhco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 740 Market street; Goldsmith Bros., 238 Sutter and Hotel St. Francis News Stand; I. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott. SO Ellis; N. Wheatley Movable Newa Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Foster &. Orear, Ferry News Stand. "Washington, D. C Ebbitt House. Pennsyl vanla avenue. PORTLAND. SUNDAY. DECEMBER 24. A CLASS OF DUTIES. The need ot schools in every state for defective children, as those are com monly called -who have not the faculties of speech, or of sight or hearing, is ev erywhere admitted. It is pitiful to see ewh as, through some congenital condi tion or later disease, have not the ordl narymeansof Intercourse with the outer world. Almost all such can be helped by skillful instruction through senses that yet remain or may still be devel oped. It is one of the most sacred du ties of society. Best results never can be had (through isolated effort or pri ate instruction, but at schools where systematic -work is carried on. It takes children from their parents, for the time: but this is necessary. The work requires in teachers and guardians special fitness, a high degree of sym pathy and deepest possible sense of moral responsibility. It is dreadful "tb think of, if unsuitable persons are to "work" such institutions as adjuncts of politics. So, from this point of view, as to schools for young delinquents, or "re form schools," as we usually call them. Here is work that requires In teachers, guardians and Instructors special qual ifies of another kind. It is not often that persons entirely fit can be found for either of these qlasses of work. Such, when found, ought not to be dis turbed by any change of general ad ministration In a state. But it ought not to be necessary, or seldom necessary, to send children to reform schools. In most cases parental delinquency is at the bottom of it. This can be helped, slowly, or but to an ex tent, if at all. The best place for a boy to be is in his home, even if It be humble, or at worst a squalid home, wlh scanty support. Blood is thicker tnan water, and the unnatural parent is the exception. That family must be outlaw whose boy is not safer under its roof than in any public institution, be it never so wisely conducted. There are homeless children for whom homes must be provided. There are homes unfit to shield a child. For such cases state shelter must be pro vided. There are children, uncontrol lable at home, who "become pests to society. As the state cannot deal with the parents, who may always be re garded as in fault, for the delinquency of the children, it must take the chil dren and try to do something with them and for them. The tendency of society, however, is to excuse too read ily the irresponsibility of parents, who may in fact wish to get rid of their children. Society has a great work to do in encouraging parents to keap their children in the public schools toy day and At home by night. On this s!de society lacks the sympathetic organization necessary to Its own peace and welfare. Kindly co-operation, by way of employment, opens the door to a true helpfulness. "What Mr. Thomas X. Strong opposes, under the name of "the old potlatch system," does more harm than good. The duties of society, as of individ uals, in some of -these directions, have as yet been tout poorly developed among us. "We make progress, undoubtedly: but the material that must be dealt with Increases and multiplies at a rate that would be disheartening, but for the absolute necessity of having faith in the progress and destiny of the human race. THE TAX LEVY AGAIN. Fifteen mills on the valuation of the property of Multnomah this year would be equivalent to forty-five mills on the "valuation of last year. Last year's levy was forty mills on one-third of the present valuation. Hence fifteen mills this year will produce a great deal more revenue than forty did last. Heavy charges, moreover, existed last year which do not exist this year. Among them were county debt and in terest, amounting to a very large sum, and heavier state taxes, on account of the Lewis and Clark Exposition, Portage Railway and payment of In dian War Veterans. On the other hand, this year the city needs and must have more money than it had last year; for the gulch bridges are to be paid for, and increased appar atus and service for the FJre Depart ment. There are other small items of necessary increase, but the total is not Jarre. Fifteen mills on the present valua tion will produce some $200,000 more than forty mills produced on the valu ation of last year. And In many direc tions there will be much less to pay. By conference together the authori ties of the city and county ought to be able to keep the total levy down to fifteen mills. The whole people will be glad, if they do it. LETTING TOIJCIES LA1"SE. It Is an ugly word, to "lapse." It In volves, not a change of circumstances which come to a man without his fault, but a distinct act of will on his part, a letting go, a letting slip backwards. Generally, it is a cowardly word. It Is worse than retreating, for that may be of temporary effect, and be regained, but to lapse is to let go for good and all. "Why policy-holders in any one of the great Insurance companies, now under fire, should let their policies lapse passes any sober-minded man's calcu lation. It is a safe proposition that what there was to bring out as to their past history Mr. Hughes has brought out. into the full glare of day. The dirty linen has been all washed. In the eyes of the newspapers and the public. The upshot of all may be that some of the profits the companies should have Tecelved went Into the pockets' of the directors or officers; and that money was wasted by thousands in salaries and expenses of presidents, and -agents, and their nephews, nieces, cousins and aunts. Furthermore, unholy dollars went to pollute legislation. This said, all is said. First, as to the diverted profits. It looks as If every cent would have to come back to the companies' treasuries before Mr. Hughes and his associates and Mr. Jerome and his aids will let go. As to the extravagances of the past: The assets of the companies are so enormous, in spite of all that, their ex cess of possessions over liabilities so gigantic, that the only serious question for policy-holders is not whether their policies are safe? but How much is their share of this mountain of money in sight, and how shall they get it? But how shall they get either policy, money, or share of profits without a policy to base the claim on? For a policy-holder to allow his pol icy to lapse Is noL only to forego, with open eyes, the protection for himself and his family, won by so much saving, so much self-denial, but It Is a volun tary breach on his part of his contract with the company. The policy-holder came into relations with the company at a certain age, and his premiums were fixed on that age basis. fSo long as his life endures, or the term of his pay ments continues, so long he has the benefit of kite age on which he entered. If he lets his policy lapse, not only does he let go with It all future rights In that company, but. whenever he tries to get in Avith such other Insurance company as he deems safe and well managed, he finds the shoe pinch. Rotes have gone up with every year. Injured he Is, by his own act, and no power on earth C3n prevent It. His new policy costs more by every year In which he paid in on the old one. For life insurance In an cxnot science, tried and found true for a century and more. This fuss and flurry will be over soon. Business methods will be cleansed and purified. Whatever the big com panies lose in future by cutting off their promoting and stockjobbtng profits will he made up by having to pay only for decent, reasonable and falrly-pald management. Whoever thought It his duty to take out and keep up life Insurance in the past Is under the same obligation still. But to let his old policy lapse? He would be as sensible as some of the hopgrow ers in tile Willamette Valley fifteen years or so ago. The price of hops went down to 7 cents and stayed there for one year and the next. These growers plowed up their hopyards and planted potatoes. Then the price of hops went -up to 2"i cents or more, and stayed there, .or thereabouts. So the men that plowed their hopyards and planted potatoes kicked themselves and kept that action up. HIS SIN TIAS FOUND HIM OUT. Miss Myrtle Reed, a novelist, lam poons with woman's wit the blunders of men who write novels when de scribing the attire of their heroines. She gives some startling examples of these blunders, and Implies that even Carlyle suffers In authority when he ventures upon this dangerous ground, declaring that his attempt in this realm "reminds one of the language of flowers and of directions given for postage stamp flirtation." She gives man the credit of knowing silk by the "sound" and diamonds by the "shine." and notes that he invariably describes & woman as "richly dressed in silk," knowing not that a white cotton shirtwaist rep resents luxury, and a silk waist of fes tive coloring abject poverty, since It takes but two days to "do up" a white shirtwaist in one sense, and thirty or forty cents can lo it up In the other. Continuing what the Literary Digest calls her "gleeful indictment." showing that men who write books are at their wits' end regarding women's clothes. Miss Reed says: They arc hampered lir n rtrirtlnsp. thought of Ptyle or purled enters lata thtr calculations, and unless they linve a whole some tear of the unknown theme. they pro duce results which accentuate International gaiety. Many an outrageous garment hen been embalmed in a roan'i book, rtmpJy be cause an attractive woman once were some thing like It when h fed th novelist. Un balanced by the Joy of the J it ua lien, he did not accurately observe the garb ef the minis tering angel, and hence -we read f a "cling ing -white pawn" In the day of stiff etlka and rampant crinolines: of tlx? curve of the upper arm when H took nve yards far a pair of sleeves, and short walking skirts during the reign of hurtles and trains. Miss Reed goes on further and ar raigns Mr. Thomas Dixon, of "The Leopard's Spots," who, she declares. has outdone In stupidity every other knight of the pen who has entered the list to portray woman's clothes. Wit ness the fact that he dressed his hero ine, "Miss Sallle." Jn a morning gown of soft red material trimmed with old cream lace, the bodice cut low, showing her beautiful white shoulders, etc, etc "A red morning gown trimmed with cream lace, cut low ye gods and little fishes!" . exclaims Miss Reed, adding: "Where were the authorities and why was not 'Miss Sallie taken to the de tention hospital pending an inquiry into her sanity?" This vivacious, observing young woman has followed up her indictment of stupidity against men who venture upon this dangerous ground with testi mony that would certainly convict them before a jury of women. That the mis demeanor may not be repeated every time Mr. Richard Hardly Davis. Mr. Thomas Dixon, Mr. Stewart Edward White and all the rest of the masculine host who essay to dress their heroines "ravish I ngly" or "becomingly" Mis Reed suggests the addition of a supple mentary coarse In millinery and dressmaking- to the courses already planned in the new Echool of Journalism which is to be attached to Columbia Univer sity. The fact that the school days of the culprits who have been thus pub licly arraigned at the bar of woman's wit are over precludes the possibility of Instructing them in this subtle domain of knowledge by means of the course suggested. But the next generation of writers might profit by the instruction and thus save themselves from becom ing the laughing-stock of women who understand the art of dressing in a manner suited to the time of year and day. the prevailing fashion and the occupation in which the subject was engaged at the time of the portrayal. ITtOM" A WELL-KNOWN TEXT. In this most prosperous Christmas season Portland has known there are yet many places where Santa Claus will be expected Monday and where he may not go. Grownups get over the disappointment, but children never, though they live fifty years after. There be degrees of misfortune and qualities of hardship, and perhaps the greatest is that which embraces child hood. Children suffer for the sins of their fathers, to be sure, yet how much more do they sutfer for the misfor tunes of parents. Up at 314 Third street there Is a fam ily of mother and three little ones, the father of whom lies In Good Samari tan with a broken arm. They are strangers within our gates. Ten days ago he dropped In the lounglng-room of a hotel near the North End mills for a smoke after supper that the mill rules prohibited. He is not a drink ing man. Before it was time to go to work for the night run, bandits had shot him In the arm, and it will be well along toward Spring before he Is again at work. The dally papers had the story. This Is no City Board case, nor for other organized charity. It Is for peo ple with warm, red blood to lend a helping hand. The place Is easy to find this afternoon or tomorrow morning. Ask for Mrs. Rousch. Further remarks will be found in II Cor. lx:7. CHRISTMAS. The time draws near the birth of Jesus, the Christ. Over the world comes a change, momentary but won derful. For one day the principal mo tives for human effort cease to act and give way to their opposltes. Char ity replaces greed; kindliness replaces Jealousy and hate: brotherhood re places competition. Rlx'alry In acquisi tion yields to rivalry in giving. For one day In the year the conduct of the Christian world conforms, not merely In hollow pretense, but In reality, to the precepts of Jesus. There Is on earth. If not peace, at least the will ingness to cease from strife; and if one day is a little too brief to perfect the feeling and practice of good will toward men, still, considering how great the change Is from our ordinary habitudes, we contrive a fair Imitation of II Considering, too. that the Christ mas spirit is expected to last for one day only, the world shows, it must be admitted, great respect to the Gallllean shepherd by taking so much pains to give an air of verisimilitude to its brief submission to this rule. For one whole day in the year we are Christians In deed as well as name. The result Is said to be universal Joy. The pirate of commerce experiences In playing the part of benefactor a pleasure surpassing that of successful robbery. To their amazement mankind discover that .charity Is better than greed, love more satisfying than hate and mutual aid more blessed than mutual destruction. The Joy is uni versal, exuberant and loudly pro claimed; but it Is indulged In for one day only. Mankind partakes temper ately of the delights of the Christmas spirit. Remembering our love of pleas ure. It Is wonderful how we restrain ourselves In this particular. We might have two Chrlstmases In the year, or three, or haif a dozen. But no; "Enough Js better than a feast" Is our motto. We might be Christians all the year as well as on the 35th day of December, but we are not Inclined to indulge to satiety even in brotherly love. The world Is frugal of Its high est pleasures. Brotherls love was the chic original concent of the man whose birthdav we i celebrate at the Winter solstice. He discovered no new law of nature; he formulated no new principle of philos ophy. He added nothing to science, nor did he reveal the least mystery of the unseen world. When In the bitterness of his cruel death he reproached the Almighty with deserting him. science, philosophy and theology stood exactly where they were on that starry mid night thirty-three years before, when heaven opened before the eyes of the wondering shepherds and shining an gels proclaimed his birth. But one thing was not the same, and that thing was enough to make all the difference between the ancient world and the modern. No Confucius with all his golden rule had ever dreamed of it. No Socrates had dragged It from the deeps In the net of hi dialectic No stole pondering on the secret of the highest good had conceived it. Of all the cru cified saviors of the world not one had revealed It. The shepherd of Gallllee alone of all the human race perceived that men are brothers. In the solitudes of the Syrian desert with struggles which the imagination can only typify as fought soul against soul with the living principle of incarnate evil, he wrested the truth from the secret archives of the Almighty. Despised and rejected by the men he loved, hungry and unfed, sick and unvisltcd, he taught the truth by word and deed. Nailed to the cross, and In his extreme agony forsaken by God, .he proved it by his death. The brotherhood of man is the most fertile o all truths, and the roost pro found. Whatever Is good in modern civilization comes by accepting tt; whatever Is bad, by denying It. Old lQgenda believed by whole nations for J tage and private gain. At the bar con hundreds of years traced the descent of ' sldcratlons of personal honor do not al- particular famines from superhuman sires. Such families were above the common lot, made of a finer clay and divinely appointed to rule, while the rest were made to serve. No such legends could stand against the belief in the brotherhood of man with God as the father of all. They weakened and died, though slowly, and the practices they Imposed died slower still. Like the genii in the tale, the doctrine of divine descent took multitudinous shapes before it perished. It became the divine right of Kings, the divine status of feudal nobles, the divine re lation of master and slave, the divine classification of rich and poor; but. whatever Its shape, the Nemesis of the principle of Jesus hw followed and will ever follow It down to the uttermost death. Science confirms the validity of his all-conquering dogma. The lineage of King and serf, of millionaire and pauper, .runs back alike to the same ancestral monkey. In the brute we all began. From the brute we all have risen. Philosophy corroborates the In ference of science and demonstrates the unity of soul as well as body in man. Mechanical inventions tend to unite the family which envy. Ignorance, greed and the Intervention of space have sev ered. By virtue of the printing press all men may know the truth and think to the same purpose. By the telegraph they may act In concert. Machinery, when they learn how to .use It. wilt free the brain and hands of -all men alike for higher- uses. Democracy .is the teaching of Jesus expressed in govern ment, but thus far the expression has been timid, tentative and Inadequate. Inventions will make It possible to ex press his teachings In Industry and commerce. Some wholesale softening of the heart will make us apply his teaching In conduct. There are psychic waves now permeating the world which seem to indicate that some such trans formation of civilization may not be far away. Perhaps the kingdom of heaven is nearer than we think, with brotherly love for Its constitution and Justice to all men for Its practice. Then Geth semanc and the crown of th'orns will become symbols, not of tragic failure, but of triumph, and the Christmas spirit will be the spirit or everyday in the year. BENCH AND BAH. Such an event as Abraham H. Hum mel's conviction of an Infamous crime and his sentence to a year's Imprison ment startles the reader Into a train of thought neither soothing to himself nor entirely flattering to the administra tion of what we call Justice. To be sure, retribution Anally overtook Hum mel, but not until he had Inflicted Im measurable suffering upon his last vic tims, the Morse family; and of his sim ilar misdeeds In the past no record re mains but the ruined lives which he used the forms 6f law and the machin ery of the courts to destroy. Hummel Is a lawyer of eminence." Up to the time of his conviction he had a lucra tive practice and was so "much In the confidence of the courts that a Supreme Judge upon little more than his bare statement signed an oider which broke up a family and reduced a man and his wife to misery. Although Hummel's praotlce was shady and the Judge must have known that his character was nuestlonable. nevertheless the order was signed as aJ matter of course upon bis request. Probably the judge neither reflected upon the consequences of his act nor cared what they might be. Hummel dropped his nickel In the riot, turned the crank of the legal machine and the machine worked. He experienced not the least difficulty In using the appa ratus of the law to wreck an Innocent family. As It turned out .the apparatus was admirably adapted to that purpose and worked with all the smoothness and facility of frequent use. Not a Joint creaked, not a cog slipped. How many times had Hummel used the same machinery for similar ends before the Morse case happened? How many other eminent attorneys In Xew York and elsewhere are using the forms of law and the processes of Justice to line their pocketbooks with the spoils of hu man happiness? When the thing Is so easy to do. why should it not be done often? The practice is so profitable that It must be very alluring to able Intellects of the Hummel variety, while It is so safe that they have little to fear. But for the accident of Jerome In the District Attorney's ofTice. Hummel's career never would have been molested, and Jeromes are exceedingly rare. To such suggestions as these there Is, of course, an obvious reply. The high character of lawyers as a class Is a suf ficient guaranty that practices like Hummel's cannot be common: while the Integrity of the courts assures us that they could succeed only rarely, however often they might be attempted: but In a statement like this how much Is fact, how much Is mere words which try to supply the place of fact with deceptive sound? There are many lawyers of In dependent character and unbending in tegrity; that is easy to admit; but whether or not such men form a ma jority of the profession, or any large nronortion of It. Is more difficult to de- I clde. There Is a common belief that, i numerous as he Is. the higher type of lawyer Is being forced out of existence by processes of natural selection, and that a lower and much less admirable type Is taking his place. The old-fashioned lawyer, even when not conspicuously eminent, was a social power, and. with all his fallings, a power for good. He was often bibu lous, not too particular Rbout money matters, and possibly over-fond of Imi tating the eloquence of Patrick Henry; but he was a political leader, not a boss. He believed thoroughly in Amer ican institutions, and labored honestly, though sometimes mistakenly, to per petuate them. He looked upon public office as a trust of honor. He despised chicaner. At the bar his personal In tegrity set limits to his zeal for a client's InteresL He would fight to the end for the right, but not for the wrong: Upon the bench he was careful of precedent and form, but he was not oblivious of Justice. He would not be a mere machine to grind out Indiffer ently good and evil, happiness and mis ery. He would not lend his power to one social class In their warfare against another. It was this type of lawyers which brought the profession Into honor with the American people and made them our guides In civic enterprise and In legislation. It was on their account that we endowed our judiciary with despotic powers and hedged It with the divinity that other nations have re served for sceptered monarchs. The type Is vanishing from bar and bench. The lawyer in politics has become a boss. In public office he forgets the welfare of the people for party advan- j ways restrain him from exercising the last resource of falsehood and trickery to serve an unworthy client; upon the bench how often does he forget, his ob ligation to arbitrate Justly, and lend those powers which admit of no redress or appeal to strengthen the oppressor and wrong the helpless? "Govern ments. a cynic has said, "govern only those who cannot resist; courts punish only the weak." It Is for historians to decide whether the bench in our day surpasses In es sential Integrity Bacon and his prede cessors, who took gifts without much scruple. The gifts are different In form and more decent. jus as modem meth ods of robbery have become suave, al most benevolent sotaelM. X railroad pass Is less shocking than a. bag of guineas, though not necessarily less ef fective; a champagne dinner Is not so rude as a threat backed up by an army, but may accomplish as much In open ing the eyes of Justice Unless a Judge Is more than human, he will lean to his own class; he will favor those who do him favors. Sins against the men whom he dines with will Inevitably ac quire the aspect of crimes In his eyes, and judges do not dine wlth the poor. Possibly the nature of things Is such that the helpless members of soclety ought not to expect habitual justice from those In power. If they receive an occasional taste of It. like Hummel's conviction, very likely It Is all they can reasonably expect. Mr. 31artln Winch, knowing what Mrs. Amanda W. Reed Intended by her will: knowlntr. too. that she never re garded any place other than Portland as her actual home; and desiring, more over, earnestly and loyally to carry out the provisions of the will. Is entitled to congratulation on his success in the courts against persons residing In an other state, who attacked the will on grounds without other merit than their desire to convert to their own private use a great property which Mr. and Mrs. Reed had accumulated In Oregon, and which they Intended should be de voted to promotion and support of an lmnortant Dublic Institution here. It Js justice also to Portland and to Oregon. as well as to the memory of Mr. and Mrs. Reed and to the zeal and fidelity of Mr. Winch. Relatives of the Reeds, nearest to them, had already been re membered by the testators. It was one of the purposes of the Reeds, through all the later years of their lives, to ren der to the city and state which was so long their home this public benefaction: and It Is gratifying that their Intention is not to be defeated by the Interested assumption of other parties that they were not residents of Oregon. An eyewitness describes the awful scenes of the late riot at Vladivostok. The details are not different from those of similar events In the past, of which Longfellow wrote: 1 hear even the Infinite fierce ebarus. The cry af Enr. the endlej groan. Wall through the ages that have gone be fare us la lone; revrrfceratWea reach our ewn. The savage In man makes record In cruelty and fire and murder, writing It In blood, when the leash of civilization Is slipped. Atrocities are the same whether the victims of mob violence are Jews, negroes. Armenians or Anglo Saxons. The warning to the Czar to get his family out of harm's way at tests the fact, which runs through all history, that leaders, however humane themselves, cannot control the savage spirit that they have evoked In their followers. The purpose of Columbia University, as outlined by President Butler. Is to encourage the widest possible partici pation of students in athletics. That Is to say. athletics will become a part of the. course of college training In the creat university Instead of the exces slve strain upon the few. If there is anything In athletic training In connec tion with college work, this Is Its proper rating. Physical development should run parallel with mental development, not only in the case of a picked, trained and coached few. but in the case of the many who go to college for prepara tion for the work of life and leave It to begin life's battle. The time Is speed ily coming when college athletics must be placed upon this broad basis or abolished. The Washlngon Secretary or State will not attend the volunteer insurance meeting of Governors and Insurance commissioners at Chicago, because of his "Inability to leave his duties here." Mr. Nichols also say3 that state Insur ance departments are "competent." No doubt. But there are a great many thousand policy-holders In Washington who would be glad to have full details of the Justly celebrated trips to New York of the Washington Insurance Commissioner, and what they accom plished for the Commissioner and for the policy-holder. It is probably a mistake to believe that hunger and cold will fight on the side of the autocracy in Russiu. That has never been the case in any previous revolution, and will not in this. Hard ship Is the enemy of constituted author ity. In the most peaceful nations It overthrows political parties regardless of reason. In times of revolution It Is the ally of the forces of destruction. Governor Toole, of Montana, declines to call an extra session of the Legis lature, as requested by a committee of the Montana Rate Association, for the enactment of a railway commission bill. He, perhaps, fears that the remedy prayed for would be worse than the disease, of which Montana shippers Justly complain as grievous. Mrs. Simmons has failed In her laud able and disinterested effort to show that she was Insane when she sold a valuable piece of property too cheaply. The court knew better than to establish a precedent of that kind. There would have been a violent outbreak forthwith In Portland of ex-post facto Insanity. There are a few people, in Oregon and elsewhere, who can give ex-Governor Odell a few -pointers on what happens to a political boss -when he gets Into a quarrel with the President of the United States. If Professor Marshall shall go In as superintendent of the Vancouver School for Defective Youth, he will at least labor under no illusions as to his popu larity with teachers and pupils. The newspapers talk of a "quiet Christmas at the White House." With six children In the family, and a pros pective brother-in-law In Sister Alice's stocking! The Czar blames his ministers for the disorder In Russia. The ministers blame the people. The people blame the Czar- The result is revolution, of course.. President Corey, of the steel trust, has at least demonstrated by his little domestic diversion that he has a. most Interesting lot of relatives. The decision In the Reed will case will do much to dispel a common Illu sion In California that nobody lives In Oregon. The PInkertons say they didn't dis cover Bruin. Well, somebody did. This Is a good day for you to re , member that there are ethers. CAVIL Ve Judge a man's company by the con versation he keeps. Clean politics Is a contradiction in terras. Why do you afflict others with a recita tion of your personal concerns? You know- how obnoxious such conversation la from them. If you have a grudge against humanity, tell some fellow that he Is a wit and sick him on the world. The antonym of honest man Is politi cian. a . A good lawyer Is one who defends your cause as though he thought you were really right. - In conversation, when they are not talk ing themselves, people pay no manner of attention to what Is being said they are too deeply engrossed In what they are going to say when the speaker has finished. Life Is usually greeted and bade good bye with a groan. ' Courtship Is where you get your affinity; marriage where you get wise. Presiding over, an Insurance company Is like taking taffy from a tot. To Insult a man who respects himself Is Impossible; mean-spirited persons are al ways being agonized by the opfnlons of others. Some people affect to despise servants; their views on this point would be modi fled by reflection were they capable of It. In society we are all servants: some serve us and we serve others. We must serve to live It Is the price of existence. m m However narrow and partial we may be In most things, we are catholic enough in our condemnation. Too bad that Corey and Miss Gilman are not to marry; fools and actresses make such Ideal matches. About the only thing many persons ever attain facility at Is the use of a knife and fork. Selfishness is a detestable trait In others that prevents us owning the earth. Cheer up: think how much worse your troubles might and no doubt will be. Nothing Is new under the sun not even this observation. Deprecation of others Is agreeable to us because by Inference we endow our selves with the virtues we deny them. Immorality is getting caught. Comparison is a fundamental law of thought observe how a beautiful woman always accompanies herself with a plain one. When called on to speak at public gath erings, men usually tell stories because that course Is easier than generating thought In a mental vacuum. The people rule this country, and the bosses rule the people. The clink of coin is the music that lulls virtue to slumber. HARRY MURPHY. HISTORY BY JUDGE WILLIAMS Suggestion That Recollections Re Preserved in Book Form. ATHEXA. Or., Dec 22.-(To the Editor.) I have been reading with a great deal or pleasure and profit Judge George H. Williams' "Six Years in the United States Senate." or his personal recollections, as published In the Sunday Oregonian. These articles are well written, ably gotten up and. it seems to me, they should be read with considerable Interest and profit by the reading public. It cannot be denied that Judge Williams is one of our great and good men. an eminent lawyer and statesman, a scholarly and learned man, and one of the noblest In the history of Oregon. The Idea has forcibly Impressed Itself upon me that if many more of these articles are written It would be well to have them published In book form and put upon the market. So far. I know of no rending matter that is so lucid and so full of the constitutional and political his tory of America, relative to the period of time about which Judge Williams writes, as these articles. It seems that hereto fore those who have written our history about the days of reconstruction, the Civil War, negro suffrage, etc., have lacked essential knowledge of the exact condi tions of affairs, or have been too decply prejudlced to write learnedly and enter tainingly of them. Hence, the sons and daughters of the Union and Confederate soldiers, and others who were not living in those days, have been left to grope In the dark as to the true history of our country during that, period. Now that an able man, unbiased and un prejudiced, who knows our true history In that period, sees fit to write and make known the truo. history. It should be ap preciated and his writings properly pre served. WILL M. PETERSON". On Senator Mitchell's Death. Ellensburg Capital. Xothlng In the long history of The Oregonian ever became It more than Its editorial on J. H. Mitchell's death. Those who know the moat could best appreciate the admirable good taste and dignity that dictated those re markable ten lines. Come Home, Come Home. Arthur II. Cloagh. Comet home, come home; and where to home for me. Whose ship Is driving o'er the trackless a? To "the frail bark here plunging on Its way. To the wild waters, shall I turn and say To the plunging bark, or to the salt sea foam. Ton are my home? Fields once I walked In. faces once I knew. Familiar things so old my heart believed them true. These far, far back behind roe lie; before The dark clonus mutter, and the deep neas roar. And speak to them that 'ceath and o'er them roam No words oX home. Beyond the clouds, beyond the waves that roar. There may. Indeed, or may not be. a shore Where fields as green and hands and hearts as true The old forgotten semblance may renew. And offer exiles driven far o'er the salt sea foam Another hoasr. But toll and pain must, wear out many a day. And days bear weeks, and weeks bear months away. Ere. If at all. the weary traveler bear. With accents whispered in bis wayworn car, A voice he glares to listen to, say, "Come To thy true home." Come home, come home! And where a home bath he Whose ship Is driving o'er the driving sea? Throat h ctosda that mutter and o'er waves that roar. Say, shall we tad, or shall we not. a abore That te; w Is not ship or ocean foam, ONE COLUMN OF VERSE. Winter. "What though thy Visa bo cold. O "VVlnter drear? Thou brlnacst much the heart ot man - to cheer! The rich red holly berry 'midst the trreen; The xrackllnir of th slowlns lops at e'en; The hills and dales In purest jrarb of snow; The tlnkllnir of the slelghhells as they ko Adown the- road, with maids of merry mood. "With rosulsh- glances peeplne from their hood. The gallant swains to tease, set up behind Th frisking steeds that speed them like the wind! The clear, clean sweep of skaters on the Ice; The crystal fiakea so wondrous In device; The cold, calm heavens brilliantly alight With friendly stars than on a Summer night In that they closer come, and seem to b Just twlnkllnjr nelchbora unto you and mr! And in the wood what lovely scenes ara thr TVhen. clad by fahry hands and frosty air. iiiuui ana orancnes ot ine sleeping trees Are woven Into silvery filagrees! "ual music in the chimes that ring out clear Across the crisp of Winter's atmosphere! KTandeur ,a the swelling harmonies Of Winter winds, and what tranaulllltles In Winter's silences! And for the soul of man. what -sweeter thrill Is there than In ).. r . vi.n. That In the darkest hours of Winter's day "lu 'np neart as with a splendid ray i-rom out the sran. east, west and south and north When Christmas morn from frosty night John Kendrick Bangs; Carloitu's Indecision. Catholic Standard and Times. I would Ilka mooch to know Why Carlotta treat me j. Kvra time I ask eef sh Kc-s goln' marry wectha me First she smila. den she frown. Don she look me up an down. Den she shak" her head an iyj "I gun tal you phrees'mas day. Onee. w'en we are out for walk An I am begin to talk She say: "Don'ta speak no more. Oh, com", see dees Jew'ler store. My! Ju look dat dl'mon reeng! Eet ees Justa sweetes theengl Only seexa-feefty, seer Data da way she teaaa me. Flndln theengs for talka. 'bout Jus for mak me shut my mout. Blmeby, w'en she turn for go. I say: "Com. I must a know ' "Oht" she stamp her foot an ay: "I gon tal you Chrees'mas day." I would Ilka mooch to know -Why Carlotta treat me- so. AVata for she always say: "I gen tal you Chrees'mas day"? A Matter or Taste. Some men like the stately maiden with nna statuesque charms laden. A Juno in her majesty of mien, and man ner, too; With the head of a Greek statue, calm browed, or eyed, looking at you. Marble fairness In her beauty but she chills me through and through. Same adore a lovely Venus, who has con quered soon as seen us. lounging In her languorous beauty with a rare and thrilling grace: With a soft, entrancing, willing, luring, daz zling, -winning, smiling But I never could live up to the perfection of her face. Others love a tender creature, shy of glance and fair of feature. Whose soft mouth it looks as never harsh or angry word it spoke: With a gentle, blue-eyed beauty, with whom love would be a duty Let others choose the clinging vine, but I'm no grandstand oak. Give me that half girl, half woman, that sweet maid who's wholly human. Who can pout and flirt and quarrel who can laugh and who can sigh; Who with mischief fairly prances with tha Joy of life Just dances The demure little damsel with a twinkle In her eye. Baltimore American- A Statesman's Problem. From far and nea Once more they come! Of intellect A mighty sum Is gathered In The classic halls. " Where many a stately A Echo falls. That silent man With furrowed brow O'er some grave task He ponders now. Is it the tarlnT Frets his soul. Or sohemes for railway Bate control? Does he Imagine Isthmian semes. Or view the distant Philippines- J . Nay. nay. He figures With great glee On what his mileage Ought to be. Washington Star The Holiday Children. Atlanta Constitution. Dey's de holiday chillun. Dey knows what tcr do W'en de holidays comln"; Dey layln fcr you! Dey knows all de tricks What you don't understan Dey's sweet 111 schemers In 1.11' Folks Lan'I Dey's de holiday chillun. Up airly en late: Dey knows whar yo" heart Is.? En climb ter It straight! So. keep yo hjeart open, " En free be yo han WW de sweet Il'l schemers Fum Ll'l Folks Ian! The Seven Ages; ' A little laugh. . A little fun; A blossom bordered , Way to run. A getting tall. And serious, too: And then the school To labor through. Then blossom bordered. Ways ot love Just two on earth And stars above. Then to the altar, -Then away To homely cares Of every day. Then joys untold. Then new delight! A baby crying In the night. Then something more Than parent's glee A gran'chlld Climbing on your knee. And then to sleep; Green sod above; . But life's worth living. For the love. . Houston Post. Hopeless. "Why won't you marry me?" I asked- j Imperiously, as tf right, "You'll own you have encouraged ..me. Tes! Test Up to this very nlghC It Is not fair to make me so The laughing stock of all the town. If you refuse, at least be Just. And tell me WHT you 'turn me down!' She listened with her eyes downcast. Nor ever raised them to my gaze. Her shy. sweet attitude enhanced Her loveliness beyond all praise. The momenta passed. No word she spoke. There was a long and trying pause. Then softly, but so firmly that I lost all hope, she said: "Because!" Somervllle Journal. As to Fairies. John Ivcndrlck Hangs In. St. Nicholas. I wonder If the fairies St - . On toadstools when they rest And If, when they would sleep a 'bit. They like a reuefc-rooM b3V'