THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 15, 1906. 4.1 IN THE RELIGIOUS WORLD International Sunday School Lesson, "The Good Samaritan;" Luke 10: 25-37. Golden Text, "Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy;" Matt. 5:7 BT WILUAH T. ELLIS.' SAN FRANCISCO Is well aware that the Good Samaritan is still doing bus iness. As deathless as the wandering Jew, and more ubiquitous, this character who typifies practical neighborliness is still extending balm and healing and suc cor to the world's needy ones. He is the man of catholic spirit who recognizes no lines when need exists, and who finds in every man who calls for his help a true neighbor. He incarnates the principle that anybodyVnuet help everybody who is down. Just as when the news of San Francisco's great calamity first burst upon the Nation, all classes of people, without respect to creed, condition or location of wealth, gave quickly and generously of their substance to the brothers bereaved on the Pacific Coast. This popular parable has passed Into the parlance of the plain people. The good Samaritan is a familiar story to every body. The man who may not know wheth er the book of the Revelation is in the Old or the New Testament, yet knows, in outline, this story of the good-hearted traveler who gave a lift to a man in trou ble In truth, the spirit of the present day Is becoming to be more and more in ac cord with the teaching or the great para ble. In no age of the world's history was there so much practical helpfulness put forth by men in behalf of men as Is the case today. A Quibbling Lawyer. "Behold how great matter a little fire kindleth;" even the "smartness" of a quibbling ecclesiastical lawyer may bring forth such a profound and far-reaching story as thst of the Good Samaritan. This glib doctor of the law was of the party who had little time for the new teacher from the north country. In self-assured fashion he set about to trap the Master. An Is too often the case In the courts to day he tried to raise a technical point just the sort of pettifogging and blinding of big Issues by minor legalisms, as the President of the United States has of late publicly rebuked. This lawyer was not trying to discover the truth, but to defeat an adversary. ki " His question ae to what he should do to Inherit legal life was disingenuous. While the words were still warm on his lips he knew that they were a mockery, for In his heart he believed he knew more of the law than this country rabbi from n'han r -. answered him by asking him another question asking the question which was common on the lips of the experts in Old Testament study, "How readest thou?" the lawyer an swered Rllbly enough. He possessed far more truth than he practiced. It was not more light that he needed, but more steadfastness to the light he already pos sessed. He was in the position of the average person today. We do not need to know more, but we need more reso lute purpose to impel us to live up to the level of what we do know. No new light, but new loyalty, is the greater need of th times. Men are Judged, not by the truth which they do not know, but by that truth which, knowing, they fail to practice. But you cannot do anything with a quib bling lawyer. As well try to teach calculus to a grasshopper, as the big principles of right and wrong to a crossroads shyster. This man had no higher ambition than to make out a case for himself. He was of the sort such as infest every courtroom today, who seek a loophole in the law, rather than to know the main purport of the law itself. When Jesus had answered him with a pointed, "This DO, and thou shalt live." he tried to wriggle out by asking, "Who is my neighbor?" This has been a pretty question for discussion many times among the ecclesiastics; and no end of hairsplitting arguments have been ad vanced upon It. The lawyer thought that In it he had found a poser for Jesus. The Point of the Story. Jesus answered the lawyer by telling a story. The point is not as clear to those who read it today as to those who heard it 2000 years ago, although the application is obvious. Local conditions illuminated It and made the comparison which Jesus drew a daring one. Among the men who listened to his story of the Good Samari tan, with its characters the poor man who fell among thieves, the priest and the Levlte who passed by on the other side nd the Samaritan who came to his help there were many who were themselces of the family of Levi, and of the priestly class. When the story-teller drew, true to life, the haughty Indifference and cra ven selfishness of those whose honor and office it was to serve their people, many of his hearers must have winced. The narrator went even further, noi'qt a"iiio o jo u jEinDii-tBd .ire The story would have lost Its point had It been any three chance men who came along by the roadside where the waylaid traveler was lying, and, by the way, that steep road from Jerusalem, down to Jer icho is still a dangerous passing for the traveler. The point was that the best people of Jewry had failed in this time of testing. They proved to be not true brothers to the men who had real claim upon them. Any Jew had a right to de mand assistance from another Jew. hut most of all from a member of the minis tering tribe of Levi. Yet in the test these fell short. Daringly Jesus Introduced a Samari tan, one of the hated outcasts with whom Jews had no dealings, and made him the hero of the story- mow tnose aevout Jews probably cursed In their beards as thus the rabbi mocked them! The Jew In distress had no special claim upon this Samaritan. Yet it was the Samari tn who proved himself of better heart than the teachers of the law who had passed by the unfortunate one. The Im plication was clear and biting. The man who does the deed is better than the man who only names the name. Correct creed cannot cover improper practices. The most orthodox Christian Is most reprehensible If his conduct Is selfish or cowardly. The Jewish officials fell short; the alien Samaritan rang true to the hour's test. A Highway Robbery. As this parable is a picture of life, we must face the dark side of the story. Still the world's highway is infested with thieves and robbers. Selfish men, un scrupulous men, evil men, bloody men, lie In wait all along the world's main traveled roads. This earth is not yet the earth it is to be. Avarice, greed, treach ery and cruelty are more common than. we like to think. The traveler must be on his guard against the foes who would do him hurt. It Is a mistake to teach that all men are good and that guilelessness Is suffi cient armor. Is it not better to save young men and women from falling Into the hands of evil than to save them out of the clutches of evil? Noble as is the office of the Good Samaritan there Is a still nobler. Prevention is better than rescue. To guard against is wiser than to save from. Whoever erects safeguards along the world's highway and makes safer the route for unwary feet, is doing a better work for his neighbor than even that of the Good Samaritan. Society Is is slowly learning that it is wiser and cheaper to prevent criminality rather than to punish it. Froud Prelates. When ecclesiastic correctness comes to take the place of humility, mercy and Justice, there is need for some new prophet to arise, Christ-like, to declare that the leaders of the blind have them selves become blind. Doctrinal sound ness is heresy if accompanied by love lessness in conduct. The bitter prosecu tor of the man whose standards do not conform to the conventional, may be as wrong as the man whom he arraigns. When the church begins to draw her clean robes of self-sufficiency about her self in complacency, then she Is reveal ing a stain of sin too deep to hide. The old, old warning of the kindly visaged young teacher of fearless mien and blazing eye, "Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees," needs to be sounded in trumpet tones, day after day. into the ears of a rich and powerful church. There is constant danger that while the world's smitten ones lie suffering, the church, with head erect and conscious of ner dignity, will pass by on the other side. We need not overlook the fact that the church is the best helper of mankind, to see that she is still, never theless, in constant danger of failing to face and meet the acute social problems of the times. In Cooper Union, in New York City, at those great Sunday night meetings the name of Jesus is cheered, and the name of the church is received in ominous silence or else with evidence of disfavor and resentment. While many leaders of the church are concerning themselves with little questions, the big gest problem of all that of serving so ciety in its dire need goes unheeded. If the church is to obey her master she must be a good neighbor to the whole world. What Makes a Neighbor? The lawyer's question, which he thought was a poser, was, "Who is my neighbor?" Propinquity and affinity do not alone make neighbors. A man a thousand miles away may be nearer me in spirit than the man who occupies the house next door. I may be a closer neighbor to somebody in China than to a man who sits at the same table with me. Furthermore, the man at the end of the earth may have needs which I can meet, as the man closest to me has not. Whoever it is possible to serve, by any means, is a real neighbor and the obligation to help him rests squarely upon us. Yet the practical meaning is not to be spiritualized out of this practical parable. The person nighest us. who has any sort of need, has first claim upon us. The man who is giving liberally to missions In India, and yet letting his trash pile offends the eye of the dwellers next door Friendship at Its Best Terse Comment Upon the Uniform Prayermeeting Topic of the Young People's Societies. 9 BY "WILLIAM T. ELLIS. JBSU3 was a faithful friend. His loy alty to those whom he loved never wavered. They might reject, spurn and betray him, but he whs a fjriend who loved at all times. May we not meditate long upon the example of the model man in this respect? Our friendships, which are God's best gifts to us. outside of his own love, would be mora noble and strong and helpful if we could learn Christ's lesson of loyalty. The best staff for life's pilgrimage is a true friend. Only in the realm of afection do wo come to understand God. He is revealed to us by love the love of his Son and all the holy earthly loves which he sends into our lives. "Every one that loveth . . . knoweth God." "When we take to our hearts a real friend we find that we have not only gained a friend, but also a new and wonderful conception of God, whose other name is love. Better one friend than a thousand ad mirers. A friend is the best fortune. He alone owns the riches of life who has a strong, true, loving friend. And without such a friend there can only be poverty, though coffers be filled to bursting and every material wish be gratified. We only live when we love. Jealousy is a canker in friendship's heart. t Would you know whether you are a true friend to him to whom you have professed affection? Here are the standards: A friend suffereth long and is kind; a friend envieth not; a friend vaunteth not him self; a friend seeketh not his own; a friend is not easily provoked ; a friend thlnketh no evil. Unselfishness is the price which must be paid for true friendship. There is a difference between compan ionship and communion. Judas had com panionship with Jesus: John had commun ion. Two bodies may walk life's way side by side and yet their epirits be miles News and Notes Among the 80.000 negroes In New York City there are 53 Protestant churches. A National Federation of Boys' Clubs with headquarters in Boston has just been organized Jacob A. RIls is its president. A first-class armored cruiser has recent ly been launched by the French govern ment bearing the name of the theologian, Ernest Renan. Rev. Sabine Baring Gould, author of the hymn. "Onward. Christian Soldiers." died recently on board a steamer en route for South Africa. The British Home Office is releasing from prison and turning over to the Sal vation Army each year an increasing number of transgressors. No less than 124,000.000 Mohammedans are under the rule of GreaJ Britain, Hol land and France, while 250.000 in the Phil ippines are directly related to the United States. The President and Secretary of War have issued orders that a Young Men's Christian Association be established at the Iethmus of Panama for the benefit of the corps of engineers, superintendents and Government clerks. Representative men among English Ro man Catholics, Anglicans and Free Churchmen met recently in Westminster Cathedral, at the call of the Archbishop of Canterbury, to plan for the preservation and defense of Sunday as a day of rest and worship. Six thousand dollars have been paid to the American Consul by the Viceroy of Canton for the destruction of mission buildings and personal property at Lien chou last October, when five American Presbyterian missionaries lost their lives at the hands of a mob. The inventories required under the new law in France have brought to light some curious problems of anatomy created by the "relic" custom of the Roman Cathode Church. Eight arms of St. Basllius have been produced, while St. James has 13 arms in France, ae well as others in Italy and Spain and other Roman Catholic countries. A revival In Norway similar to the one In Wales has affected all classes with the exception of the most aristocratic. It is said that this country has not known such has something still to learn about the royal law of neighborliness So has the woman who pounds her piano into all hours of the night, to the hurt of the sensitive nerves of her neighbor across the street, even though she be practic ing for a church performance. It is not all of neighborliness to work hard for civic betterment and yet let your chick ens infest your neighbor's garden patch. A good neighbor does not let the snow lie on his own sidewalk while he writes articles about municipal good govern ment. Considerateness and delicate sym pathy are the first ingredients of true neighborliness, and these are but extracts of the essence of love. Making the Neighborhood Bigger. Joseph Cook said that the 19th century had made the world one neighborhood, but the 20th century would make it one brotherhood. Certainly men's neighbor hood conceptions are enlarging. The blackman's woes on the Congo are stir ring the heart of civilization everywhere. The needs of Jack Tar in the big port cities of the earth are setting many di verse agencies to work for his service. The llvyeres of Labrador have had their claims upon the neighborliness of two continents freely recognized. It is a mat ter of simple record that the gospel of Jesus is elevating and enlarging men's conceptions of life's relationships and ob ligations. There never were so many people who felt the whole world as their particular burden as there are today. It is the neighborly laws of Jesus which in its outworkings, is making mankind over. Read what Captain Cook said about the Society Islands as he found them in their" beastlality and then read about those islands today as transformed by missions Life is safest and happiest where the gospel is most truly practiced. I was talking a few evenings ago with a tpotorman on the front end of a trol ley car, when he said, "Take Christianity away from this town, and I move out by the next train." The best of realms is that where Christ's sway is freely recog nized. The friends of Jesus are the best friends of the world. It is impossible to get close to him without getting closer to all one's fellow men. The cosmopoli tan, catholic and comprehensive help fulness of the day is undoubtedly a de velopment of the master's law of neigh borliness. Men have heard his command to the confuted lawyer, "Go thou and do likewise," and are proving their faith in God by their works for their fellow men. apart. Two uncongenial n: may be re quired to live and work in each other's presence constantly. That Is a compan ionship without communion. But each of these men may have a friend, hundreds of miles distant, with whom his heart is in sympathy. That is communion without companshlon. The Christian's privilege le a higher, sweeter one than mere associa tion with Christ; it is life in Christ. ' The friend whom adversity drives away never was a friend. ' "Greater love hath no man than this. that a man lay down his life for his friends," and yet lesoer love than this does not constitute friendship. There is a Friend that sticketh closer than a brother, and whose love is strong as death. Never did friendship have to undergo greater testing than his. The offering that he made on love's altar was more than life itself. That friertd is Jesus Christ, who stands today at the door of every heart, pleading for admit tance as a frienU. Until we let him in we shall never know love in its fullness. One of those striking phrases with which the Old Testament abounds is this, "Thy friCnd. which is as thine own soul." There could scarcely be a better definition of a friend. Unless the elected one is m you as your own soul, or more, you are not a true friend. Friends are meant to help one another. True friendship is edifying it builds the friends up into the noblest lives and makes of them their best selves. Selfishness, lust and vulgarity drag down, but love always builds up. Our friends are either weights or wings. It is a peculiai and significant fact that the highest friendship cannot exist outside of religion. "We love, because he first loved us." The two friends worthy to be true friends must both be taught in the school cf Christ, for anything lower than his Ideals makes the sublimest friendship impossible. And unless Christ be the common meeting ground and deepest bond j)f interest there must be irritating and destructive limitations to a friendship. To become worthy of the best friend, make yourself a friend of Jesus. From Everywhere a revival for 100 years, resulting, as in Wales, in the payment of old debts, the signing of pledges, and a purer moral at mosphere. Mr. Lunde, the leader. Is said to resemble Evan Roberts in his manner of working among men. Seven Sentence Sermons To ease another's heartache is to forget one's own. Abraham Lincoln. There is no wind but eoweth seeds Of a more true and open life. Which bursts unlooked-for into high souled deeds, With wayside beauty rife. Lowell. Never step over one duty to perform another. Anon. ' Where love is there is no toil. Bernard. He who is truthful, just, merciful, kind ly, does his duty to his race and fulfills his great end in creation, no matter whether the rays of his life are not vis ibly beheld beyond the walls of his house hold or whether they strike the ends of the earth. Lord Lytton. I used no ambition to commend my deeds ; The deeds themselves, though mute, spoke loud the doer. Milton. Fathfulness is thine and reverence is thine; who then can rob thee of these things? Who can hinder thee to use them If not thyself ? Epictetus. Leather Shoes Cause of Ills. Corr. The North American. The writer is an iconoclast in so far as advocating the breaking of images that are inimical to public health and com fort. I believe many of the ills of hu manity are due to leather shoes, which, I aver, are unhygenic and tend to the ill health of those who wear them. Why can we not return to the cloth shoes of our grandfathers and grand mothers, particularly as the leather trust is running the price up on leather? The leather shoe is a nasty thing at best, being made from the dead flesh of animals, that goes through various sickening processes before it becomes ready for use as footwear. Leather shoes prevent the free circula tion of air at a part of the body which has the largest pores, and where perspir ation most freely flows. We all know how promptly a hot-water foot bath re lieves a congestion of the head, and a plaster on the soles of the feet is almost an Instantaneous relief for rheumatism. This goes to show that nature never intended that this part of the body should be confined in an almost air-tight re ceptacle. Why do not some of our progressive business men establish another kind of footgear than leather? There's money in producing a shoe which will make an ap peal for cleanliness a.jid health. Such a reform might work wonders along many lines. A healthy foot might mean a healthy brain. Healthy brains mean bet ter morals and high civilization. New Stars in the Flag Joint Board Will Decide Upon Its Location. In anticipation of the admission of Okla homa to the union of states, the joitn board, composed of -high-ranking officers of the Army and Navy, with Admiral Dewey as chairman, has been officially called on to consider a rearrangement of the stars in the field of the United States flag necessitated by the increase in the number of states from 45, to 46. The 45 stars are now arranged in the flag in six rows, the first, third and fifth rows having eight stars and the second, fourth and sixth rows seven stars, as fol lows: Officers of the quartermaster's depart ment of the Army and of the Naval Bu reau of Equinjnent were recently called on to consider a rearrangement of this design to provide for the additional star in honor of Oklahoma. It was found that the addition could be readily made by a slight alteration without materially changing the general design. It was re ported that there were three ways of providing for the 46 stars in six rows. One plan suggested put eight stars in the first, third, fourth and sixth rows and seven stars In the second and fifth rows. Another plan put seven stars in the first and sixth rows and eight stars in the second, third, fourth and fifth rows. The third plan put eight stars in the first, second, fifth and sixth rows and seven stars in the third and fourth rows. Although the Army quartermasters ex pressed no preference in these plans, the Nalval officers were almost unanimous in faror of the adoption of the arrangement of stars according to the plan first men tioned. If that plan is adopted the stars in the new flag will be arranged accord ing to the following scheme: The existing arrangement of the stars has obtained since July 4, 1896. on which" date a star was added to the flag in honor of the admission of Utah to the union of states in the preceding March. Under the law the star Is added on the 4th of July following the admission of the State which it represents, and not on the exact date of the admission of the State. That is why it will not be proper to add the star for Oklahoma before the next 4th of July. All the papers bearing on the subject of the rearrangement of the stars in the flag, including official reports and suggestions and designs submitted by citizens, have been referred to the joint board. That board will be given ample time to con sider the matter and there is no doubt its recommendation will be adopted by the President and carried into effect. LOSES TOOTH, SAVES JOB Wichita Man Swears Off for Good After His Experience. Wichita Eagle. One Wichita man has sworn oft and sworn off with a vengeance. And no one will be surprised on hearing his story. "Tanking up" one day last week he "butted into" his employer on East Douglas avenue. "Well, now, what's the matter with you?" asked the employer, as the "half shot" work man brought his hand to his right chesSc wich a ludicrously agonizing expression on his face. "Got an awful toothache!" answered the laborer, who like most intoxicated ones, had but one idea, that of disguis ing his condition. The employer looked at him critically for a moment. What he mentally decided the employe doesn't know to this day, but he will never forget the terribleness of his next words: "Well, come with me and we will have it pulled out." John Bar leycorn had left enough pride in him to despise the entrapped liar, and he Immediately decided to be "game" and "stay" until the distracting finish. Witlraut question the dentist tok his forceps and, being directed to oje of the molars as the one that ached, he swung on, then around, then up and down and finally, with a swing of his body which all but landed him on the floor, extracted the fine, large, 'sound tooth. When the employe quit bleed ing, about three hours after, he took the pledge. Preparing His Trousseau. Sam Bernard included this in his re marks at a wedding breakfast in New York: "I am glad to see here a luxury to which all brides and bridegrooms are not accustomed. "I, for instance, called one day in June upon the dear old lady who did my wash ing and Ironing. " 'Where is your son this morning. Mrs. Smith?' I said. 'I don't see him around. I hope he isn't HIT " 'Oh. no,' said the old lady. 'He's to be married tomorrow and he's upstairs in bed while I wash out his trousseau.' " Visitor From Another World. Chicago Record-Herald. A laborer in New Jersey In excavating for a monument in a cemetery, dug up a meteor fragment weighing 25 pounds. It seemed to be composed of fused min erals, glass, stone and steel. It also con tained a mixture of various colored stones intermingled through the other wise gray mass. FAMED OREGON ORCHARD BY ANNE SHANNON MONROE. T'S a perfect shame for Clara to I farm; she ought to be doing P brain work!" So spoke one of this young woman farmer's old school friends, remembering her record when they both were at high school together, and Clara always led the class; remem bering her assistance to her late father in conducting the large business: of the Webb Safe, and Lock Company; re membering her active part in religious matters and her able work as assist ant pastor of one of Portland's largest and most progressive churches; remem bering, also, that she was commonly accorded "a rich man's daughter," thus not prodded on by the need to work at anything not dictated by desire. . Yes, surely, with such a good record and such opportunities for different lines of work. It was Indeed strange that she should take to farming. But perhaps this was only a Sum mer's holiday, a rest from the "brain work" of "Winter months. Perhaps she was just playing at farming. To see tor myself, I took the early morning Estacada car for Gresham, and an hour later was waiting on the Gresham platform for the rig which she had promised by phone woirid meet me frcm the Webb farm two and one-half miles distant. No rig was in sight. I started down the old Base Line road, meaning to walk over to the farm, but in a few moments met the rig and the young woman. She quickly drew rein, turned the horse and called to me to get in. I was surprised to see a fair, blue-eyed young woman of the college-girl type, apparently not a day over twenty. "1 am so sorry to be late," she said, "but you see I had a strike among my cherry sorters, and I had to settle it, which delayed me. There was no one else to send, as the haying is crowd ing the cherry-picking so closely that I can't spare a hand." "A strike!" I exclaimed. "That must be troublesome." "We compromised the matter," she said briskly. "They are only boys, and ihey do not reason correctly about their work. Last year we paid them a little more than I am paying them this year, but we had a rainy season last year and the cherries were cracked and otherwise damaged. That made the sorting a difficult job. This year there Is hardly a cracked cherry to be found; they have only to separate those with stems from those without, which is rapid and easy work. They get 10 cents a box as it is, and the rapid ones can sort 22 boxes a day. Not bad pay for boys, is It?" "Do you generally have much trouble with your help?" I asked. "Not now," she answered, with a laugh. "At first the' hands and the farmers thought it was absurd for a woman and a city woman at that to boss a ranch, and they did not take to the idea very gracefully. But now they've come around, and they treat me witn tne greatest respect. iwy hands are faithful, but a farm, like everything else, needs a head." I was beginning to 3ee that this farm had one, and a very clever one, too. . ' We were approaching the broad Webb acres 180 in all and I noticed that the young farmer eyed her fields closely. "I used land plaster to hold my hay back," she explained, a slight tone of anxiety in her voice. "The haying comes so close onto the cherry crop that we must hold it back, as long as possible. Right now everything must give way to cherries, but they will be finished in a few days, and then the haying will begin in full force. Yes, that hay will hold' all right. I was out in the field early this morning ex amining It. But in this hot sun it ma tures very rapidly." . We entered a long, beautiful drive way, across the far end of which was the farmhouse, a great white pile, flanked tt the left with a magnificent grove of fir trees, many of them 150 and 200 feet high, and to the right with the famous Lambert cherry or chard, cherries from which carried off first prizes at the Pan-American and the Lewis and Clark fairs, and brought to their grower both loving-cup prizes at the recent horticultural fair held at Salem. This cherry gold mine cov ers only 10 acres, but it comprises 1200 trees, all of the Lambert variety. "That probably seems to you like a good many trees for the ground covered," ex plained Miss Webb. "But cherry trees, you know, grow straight up; the limbs do not spread like those of the apple and other fruit trees. That Is the reason we can plant them so closely together." I inquired what the little pasteboard taps meant they were attached to the first tree of each row. "I have Jap pickers," she explained, "and I gave each one a number and a row. His number is attached to the first tree of his row, and when I go out to look over the work if I find a tree not closely picked I know who Is to blame, and he has his work to do over again. A great many cherries would be wasted, otherwise." "Do you have any trouble with the Japs?" I inquired. "Not now." she answered. "They took the contract ten of them to pick all the cherries at 1 cents a pound. They read ily agreed to this price, and started in to work; in fact, their readiness suggested something wrong, for usually a Jap does a lot of bargaining before he comes to an agreement. It occurred to me that their plan was to get nicely started and then strike for higher pay. Of couse I would be at their mercy in such an event, as a cherry crop delayed in the picking means a heavy loss. So I drafted a con tract and had every Jap come to the house and sign it. JThey objected most energetically, which shows plainly enough what they had in mind. ' A Jap. you know, has the utmost respect for his sig nature, and if he makes a written con tract he will not break it. His word is not so good." We had now reached the house and alighted at the door amidst the greatest profusion of Oregon roses, that clam bored over the porches and reared their stately heads from the tops of small, sturdy rose trees along the walks and drives. In the work of developing this representative Oregon fruit ranch noth ing seems to have been lost sight of that would add to the beauty, comfort and general attractiveness of a country home. All the natural resources of this myriad gifted Northwest have been utilized. The house, inside, prove4 as attractive. With its great airy rooms, wide hearth and ar tistic furnishings, as the outside had led me to expect. After meeting the other members of the family, Miss Webb's two aunts, one of whom lives there permanently, we started out to inspect the ranch under Miss Webb's guidance. In a big Mexican hat, stout shoes and short canvas skirt, the young farmer led MANAGED BY A WOMAN the way over fields, through orchards and down to where the handsome Lincoln sheep were grazing in their pasture, to the fat Berkshire hogs rooting around in apparent contentment in a great grove of fir trees, to the Jersey cows, lazy eyed and luxuriant, knee-deep In clover; to the blooded horses, with heads in air. quick of eye and keen of limb all evi dently accustomed to these visits from their mistress, who produced sugar lumps for this horse, a sweet apple for that one, and a bunch of pea vines for Pansy, a pet Jersey cow. not forgetting to call gaily to the dogs that jumped and bound ed about her all the way. Jack, a handsome black horse, followed clear across the pasture, his nose close to her shoulder, and when she closed the bars between them, he stood at the gate looking longingly after her. Then there was the old apple orchard to be visited, the only old thing on the place excepting the groves of giant firs; this orchard was a part of the ranch when Miss Webb's father purchased, it seven years ago, and the only part in cultivation at the time. It is said to be 25 years old one of the landmarks of Oregon. We also had pointed out to us the old emi grant road which passed through the Webb farm, traces of which are still un disturbed; a field where "Pheasant shoot ing Is fine." Miss Webb says; and the natural springs, a number of which gush and gurgle clear and sparkling from the ground, the water being conveyed through a system of pipe lines to every part' of the farm. Everj' field has its faucet, and fresh, cool, clear, ice-cold spring water is to be had In easy reach of man or beast. The farm, as Miss Webb explained, is divided into ten-ficre tracts, each tract being devoted to a certain purpose fruit, pasture, grain, hay, stock, etc. Good board fences and easy-moving gates en close It. The idea that dominates the Webb farm is to produce only the very best of each product. A common hog, 'Miss Webb explained, takes up as much room, requires as much care, and eats as much food as the finest bred hog in the land; the Webb hogs are from the cele brated Hood Farm of Lowell, Mass. The same principle is ' evident In the pres ence of only the purest blooded cows, sheep and horses. The cherry orchard was a revelation. There is not an inferior tree on the place. Standing underneath an unpicked tree, and gazing up into the limbs, one saw branch after branch completely covered with a black, gleamtttg mass of rich, ripe-to-bursting fruit, each cherry seeming to dispute with Its neighbor for space suf ficient to attach its fragile stem. The cherries actually clustered the en tire length of the bending branches like grapes on their stems, Jnd so large are the individual cherries that in packing them facing them. Miss Webb called It eight crowd the short side of half a box, and nine, the long side. Three layers, which filled a box, make it difficult to close the lid. In New York the finest grade of cherries that appear on the mar ket fill the same-sized boxes, nine on the short side, and .ten on the long. The Lambert's, Miss Webb's specialty, meas ure SVi inches in circumference. This orchard is only seven years old, and has been bearing in paying quantities since its third year. Last year seven tons of cherries were marketed, and this year the crop will be between ten and 12 tons. When it is remembered that every cherry sold from the place brings a fancy price, that none goes to the canners, but to the most expensive markets in the Northwest, retailing at from 15 to 20 cents a pound, the gain in giving ground room to the best variety exclusively is readily apparent. It is said that the farm yields from 40 to 50 per cent on the invest ment. Many visitors at the Horticultural Fair in Salem placed orders with Miss Webb for ten-pound boxes of cherries to be shipped to friends in all parts of the East, New York coming in for a number of or ders Their idea is to show their friends PROF. EELLS FINDS "MARE'S NEST." (Continued from Page 44.) when he promptly replied under date of "American Unitarian Association, Boston, Mass.. June 18, 1904," as follows: . . . "Let me say that you are under a mis apprehension when you think that I need to be convinced about the mythical char acter of the Whitman story. I remember lecturing in the Old South course two years ago on the 'Acquisition of Oregon.' In that lcure I was perfectly frank about the Whitman story. I used it, just as you use it, as a curious example of the substituting of a fiction for authen tic history. I remember pointing out the reasons for this substitution, and the way in which the Whitman story has been worked to get money for denomina tional institutions. At the same time I think the story of Whitman's ride has heroic elements in it, and I bore testimony to my admiration of the character of the pioneer missionary. The quality of per sistence and endurance which his career reveals is certainly heroic, no matter what the mission on which he rode. I am convinced that the journey was un dertaken simply to protest against the abandonment of his mission post. He may have done some good service on the way in advertising the resources of Oregon and promoting Immigration, but these services were Incidental. "With thanks and cordial greetings, faithfully yours. (Signed) "SAMUEL A. ELIOT." On receipt of this letter I wrote Rev. M. Eells, July 24, 1904. as follows: . . . "Am I to understand from your article in Oregonian of May 31. 1903, that Rev. Samuel A. Eliot wrote you that he was a believer in the story that Whitman's ride was for the purpose of saving Oregon, or that it did save Oregon or any part of Oregon to the United States, or that he ever wrote you that your pamphlet so con vinced him of Jhe truth of that version of the origin and purpose of his ride that in his lecture at the 'Old South' he took the Whitman side without so much as saying that there was another side?" To this Rev. Dr. Myron Bells replied under date of August 1. 1904. as follows: . . . "In reply to your question about Rev. S. A. Eliot, of Boston, I will say that he never wrote me any letter in regard to his opinion, ner have I ever said that he did. What I have said was that I have a letter written to me by Rev. Dr. W. H. Co"bb (Librarian), of the Congressional-Library, of Boston (dated Au gust 21. 1902) which says" and then he quotes what he printed in his article in The Oregonian of May 31, 1903. about Dr. Eliot's address on Oregon in the Old South Course, in Boston, as hereinbefore quoted. But if the reader will refer to The Ore gonian of May 31, 1903, he will not find An Mr. Eells' article therein the least in timation that he was quoting from a let ter of ivev. Dr. Cobb, or any other Con gregational clergyman, about Dr. Eliot's address, and he will find. Immediately fol lowing the list of names wherein he had sandwiched Rev. Dr. S. A. Eliot's name between those of sundry ardent Congre gational and Presbyterian doctors of di vinity, and other more or less prominent persons of those denominations, the posi tive and unqualified assertion by Mr. Eells that "None of these persons wrote to me because I asked their opinion, but all the quality of the fruit grown in Oregon. She gets for such boxes $2. The process of caring for the cherries from tree to market is interesting. Th Japs are in the orchard by 1:30 A, M., and they pick very carefully into baskets, taking pains not to separate the cherry form Its stem. The baskets, when full ar emptied into 20-pound boxes, and these, la turn, are carried to the sorters' quarters, where they are emptied on the long tables before which sit the boys who do the sort ing. Each boy has three boxes, placed like trays, just beneath the table, and ex tending out in front of It. Rapidly bis fingers run over the cherries, dropping ths first ones Into the first box, the stemless or split ones Into the second, and ths spoiled and crushed ones Into the third. The first box is the first grade fruit, the second box is second grade, and the third box goes over the fence to the chickens and hogs. There is an. average of about one second-grade box to eight first-grade ones, and one third-grade box to a hun dred of the others. One might almost say there is no waste, so small is It. When the boxes are full, they are car ried back to a place In the shade, stamped and nailed up, ready to be hauled to the city the next morning. Mis Webb was as handy with hammer and nails as any mad could be, inspecting each box carefully before nailing on the cover, to see tbafna imperfect fruit had gotten in. Victor Borg. who has been the capably foreman of the ranch for several years, is still foreman, but everywhere Miss Webb went about the place he manifested an active interest that showed a thorough) acquaintance with all the details of the work. She leaves no department of farm ing wholly to others. When in the hay field she tookher seat on the mower and drove the horses to see that the machine worked smoothly. There seemed to have; been some little difficulty and atfer driv ing several yards, she stopped the horses (three abreast), sprang to the ground and bent above the knives and levers to ex amine the mechanism of the .mower. She" oversees every part of the farm work, knows what Is to be done, how it must be done, and how quickly It can be done. She is watching the potato crop, the con dition of the barley, the oats, the hay, the fruit and planting for next year's work as she goes about the place watching that the loose ends are kept up. She is the; real "Bossy Lady." as the Japs call her, "Like it?" she repeated i'n answer to my question. "Why, it's the most Interesting work I ever did in my life. There are new surprises, fresh discoveries, every day of the world. No two days are alike. Just think of being out of doors all day and, of course. I must know myself by actual experience how to perform all the duties on the farm, in order to direct the work of others. I planted potatoes all one day when we were rushed, and now 1 know what problems the planters have to deal with. Yes, indeed, it's the most fascinat ing thing in the world to make things grow, and, then, think of the Money that's in It!" -. Everything grows with the rankest lux uriance in this soil, which crushes and crumbles under foot In striking contrast to the hard, cloddy, unyielding soil of many Eastern farms. No fertilizing is re quired, and artificial drainage is not nec essary, the farm being on a beautiful elevation of land sloping rather abruptly to the Columbia River, which lies, a sil very ribbon to the rear. Mount Hood tow ers, perrenially grand, to the east, a mag nificent view from the front porth. As I drove away at the close of a long day in fields and orchard, I thought of the young woman who is the presiding genius of the place of all the kinds of knowledge she had manifested during one period of 12 hours of her sound judgment and ap plication of business methods, her study of the crops her capable management of each one of the many departments of this wonderful Oregon farm, and I asked my self: Is' this not the very highest order of bralnwork? Is there any other line of Industry In the world to which brains can be applied with better results? I could think of none other. of them wrote voluntarily because they had read my ' pamphlet In reply to Pro fessor Bourne." When I sent a copy of Mr. Eells' letter: of August 1. 1904, to Rev. Dr. S. A. Eliot he replied under date of September 13. 1904. as follows: ... "I am glad you have traced the origin of the quotation assigned to me in the Sunday Oregonian of May 31. 1903. Your discovery of tha facts in the case is, fear, indicative of: the methods of Mr. Eells. I am glad that he has written you definitely, but I never wrote to him or justilied in any way tha use of my name In support of his conten tions. I think my good friend, Dr. Cobb, allowed his own feelings to color his tes timony in regard to my address two years) ago." SHREWD DAVID HARUM j Of White House Is Secretary Loebj Who Trades Horses. Washington Corr. New York World. The President was talking about tha miserable White House stable, which is built on low ground behind the Whita Houae, is antiquated and so damp thaC the horses kept In it are affected. H said that the condition of the stable is boj bad that he does not keep his own riding horses there at all, but boards them at a private stable. "You see," said the President. "thst place is damp and unhealthy. My horse,, Wyoming, caught cold there and died The stable has a bad effect on every horse kept there. They all get the heaves. Every horse there but one has the heaves every horse but one, almost shout edj the President. "Think of that!" "How many horses are there in the sta ble. Mr. President?" somebody asked. "Why, I don't know, but I'll find out," and the President punched a button for Secretary Loeb. "Loeb," he said, as the secretary came in, "how many horses are there in the stables now?" "Twelve," said Loeb, explaining that two of them are work horses and two some other kind, and going through tha list. "How many of them have the heaves?' continued the President. "One has the heaves," Loeb replied. "Why, Loeb." said the President, MI have been telling these men that every horse there but one has the heaves, and now you come in here and say only one of them has the haavs. How do you ex plain that?" "But, Mr. President." said the thrifty Loeb, "I traded off all those with the heaves for healthy ones." The President laughed. "Well," he said, "I guess after this no body can say this Administration is not run on business principles.' Device to Cool a Slck-Room. Exchange. I would like to suggest through your paper to the thousands who are obliged to remain in town during the hot weather especially to those caring for the sick my plan for cooling the sick room. I place a pad made of a folded piece of oldt blanket on the stone ledge of the win dow (which the sun keeps very hot), and keep It wet all day. The rapid evapora tion keeps the stone perfectly cold, and the air passing over It U perceptibly cooled ,and gives much relief to the in valid.