.6 'VTiiE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND.MAKCII -- 10,, 1907. SCBSCRIITIOX KATES., VT 1SVAEIABLT I!C ADVANCE, "d (By Mail.) rally. Sunday Included, one. year. . . .-. .Ia00 Daily. Sunday Included, tlx months 4 55 I'ally. Sunday Included, throe month!.. 2.25 2-al!y, Sunday included, one month. T5 XJally, -without Sunday, one year a.oo Daily, -without Sunday, six month U.23 Dally, without Sunday, three month.. 1.73 TJaily, without Sunday, one month 60 fcunday. one year Weekly, ene year tissued TrmrHday) 1-BO Sunday and "Weekly, one year.. - 3.W BI C MUUXB. Eaily, gundar Included, one year...... 9.00 Bally. Sunday lnclud.d. one month 73 HOW TO KEMW tend poaujfttce money order, express order or personal check: on ycur local bank. Stajtips, coin or currency ra at the Bender's risk. Giva postofllca ad dress In fuU, including ,county.and stata. TVOSTAGE BATES. Entered at Portland, Oregon. Foatnftlc an Second-Class a&auer-,- 10 to 14 Pages. r 4 1 cent to 28 Pages..,..,. 2 cents 30 to 44 Pages.. -v canta 40 to 00 rages. canta Foreign I'ostage, double ratea. UlfUKTAM The) postal laws are- starlet. Ncwapapera on which postage Is not dull? prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUtUNKSS OHICK. , The . C. Ueckwith . Special AgeacySw Toik, rooma 43-50 T ribune building. Chi cago, roowa &1U-312 Tribune building KEFT OM SALE. Chicago Audtloriu in Annex, Fostoftlce News o.. 1"S Dearborn street. ' St. Paul. Minn. N..;4t. Marie. Cornraercial Siation. Denver Hamilton, V Mendrick. 900-912 "evenu-enth street; "Pratt Book store, 1214 l-'lftcenth street;, i. .Welnstein; H. P. . Han sen. Kansas t Iry, Mo Ricksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh.- .10 South Third; Kagle News Co.. corner Tenth and Kleventh; Yoma News Oo. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw. 307 . Su prrlor street. Washington. D. C. Ebbilt House, Penn. 1 aula avenue. I'hUiHirlphia, l"n. 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HMiAV, MARCH 10, 1007. BOWIE. The death of John Alexander Dowie removes from the world an Interesting figure, and one that might have be come important had -the promise of his earlier years been fulfilled in his later conduct. As long- as he was persecuted for his peculiar religious belief and conduct his influence grew. When per secution dted out and- he was accepted as part of tht! ordinary routine of the world he became slightly ludicrous, his character degenerated and his influ ence Wiuied. That ho possessed sifts not common anions; .men is undeniablo5:. His mira cles may have been all humbug and delusion; still, the fact is extraordinary that he vhs able to convince a great many intelligent people that they were genuine. few of us could do this, no matter how strenuously we might try. Besides his more or loss dubious gift of healing. Dowie possessed an extra oitiinary fculty for business. lie was a ,brn organizer, a captain of industry. Until his powers declined he displayed the ttbility to handle men and direct their efforts to a common end in un usual degree. ' He understoodi finance and treated a great fortune by means as original as they are suggestive. Howie's personality was dominating, his nmihoUs unscrupulous. In dealing with di'pspnt or criticism among. his fol lowers or from without he employed billingsgate that would have excited the admiration of a fishwife. His pol h y, so long as he had- a consistent pol-ii-y, wast to crush opposition by vio lence, ami for years he succeeded. The spectacle of an individual acquiring the ascendency over a large group of followers which Howie had, in this age of intelligence and education, is dis quieting. Jt points to the possibility that we may again behold great relig ious revolutions In the world, perhaps the -birth of a new faith and the oblit eration of tthe old ones. If Howie could draw thousands after him, some greater than Howie may draw tens of millions. lCdneation and intelligence seem to count for. little in these mat ters. Whether Dowie was sincere or not we need not inouire. Probably, like other i-ligious energumens. he mingled aincerity with conscious deception, without being able to draw a distinct line between them. His extraordinary gifts probably deceived himself Quite as much as others, while his desire for power led him deliberately to assume faculties which he did not possess. To ffet him down as a. wilful deceiver is Bhallow. To believe that he possessed superhuman power is absurd. Just what was the secret of his exceptional influence over men is a mystery, and until it is explained we must expect to see his deeds repeated by others lika tini. Mankind, does not really love to be humbugged, but it does love to bo mystified; and it will follow after any man who can gratify this desire. A CHRISTIAN SOI.D1KR. General William Booth, the venerable head of the Salvation Arnry, reached New York last Wednesday morning, in what promises to be his last visit to the United Stales. After a tour of some weeks he wiil go hence to Japan and thence in due time to England, making a trip around, the world. It is easy to believe from the vener able appearance of Gereral Booth and from the tired eyes and drooping figure that tell of many active, earnest, mixious years of life, that he will not in all probability again visit America. A soldier in the truest sense of the word, he has done va-Iiant battle for humanity for many years. His plans . lor the betterment of mankind have been far reaching in their scope, and in their fulfillment they have brought comfort and happiness to thousands of hennes. This errand was not that of the warrior bent upon conquest through the death of bis fellow men, but that of a soldier of the cross, car rying a message that developed in the dwarfed souls of myriads of human be ings a desire to make -the most of life here, while creating a hope in i:s con tinuance hereafter. As was seemly, this man was met upon his arrival in New Tork by a staff of officers in the uniform of the Salvation Army and -escorted through the streets to the sound of timbrels end, the hosannahs of a marching chorus. Originator of a religious move ment that has come in closer touch with the masses than any and all J others of its time. General Booth has clearly won his title -of Christian sol dier. He has won his spurs, upon the broad battlefield whereon humanity struggles for a right to live.- Belief in the brotherhood of man has been pro claimed by others; it has been exempli fied -by General Booth in earnest, help- itii, cheerful work among the poor, the despised and the lowly. As an honor to his day and a benefactor of his race General Booth will, wherever he goes, receive a welcome befitting his place and his work. ALWAYS READY TO ASSIST. The Astorian and the Albany Herald, taking purchase. of the Astoria road by Mr. Hill for a text, are offering Port land some advice as to the method of business procedure required under the new deal. The Astorian assures us that "it will soon be up to the metropolis to adjun her financial and commercial prestige td the rare elements inherent In the new programme." The Herald, in commenting on the expected change, enters complaint against the lockage tolls at Oregon City, and says that "Portland should take note that the people of the Willamette Valley expect her to back and urge the appropriation by Congress equal to that of the state to remove this unnatural 'burden from Valley commerce." Our friends in the Willamette Valley, as well as down at the mouth of the river, can rest assured that Portland will in the future, as in the past,, re gard and protect the interests of ali parts of the state as she guards and .protects her own. It was Portland, irt anticipation of the new programme; and by suggestion of Mr. Hill's traffic managers, that made a strong fight for the Port of Columbia bill, which was drawn fo"- no other purpose than to improve the facilities for shipping af the entrance of the river. The aid which Portland received from the Wil lamette Valley and from Astoria'... la well remembered. But Portland has become accustomed to such treatment, and it -has not caused devia-tion from the line of duty laid out for us. Albany should "take note that the people" of Portland gave their hearty and un qualified support to the project for removing the burden on commerce which passes through the Oregon City locks. The river at that point should not be under -control of a. corporation or of the state, but the locks should be taken over and operated free of charge to the shipper by the Government, which for decades has maintained and operated similar canals for the good of the commerce that passes through them. The State of Oregon has come to the front quite generously with an appropriation of such proportions that the Government can hardly refuse to join in the purchase of the locks and in maintaining them. No interest nor no locality in Oregon can develop and prosper without Portland coming in for a liberal share of the resultant ben efits. For that reason, this city always has worked, and always will be found working, for the interests of the entire state. Our interests are all mutual, and, whenever it is' necessary to "back and urge" any project that promises good to any portion of the state, Port land can be depended on. ' WHY THE YOlTiG WOMAN WON.' A young woman freshman won the state intercollegiate oratorical contest at MeMinnville. There were seven con testants, all being young men but the winner. There will be, it may be sup posed, a disposition among critical minded persons to investigate the rea sons why one frail and inexperienced young girl student should so easily have vanquished a half dozen male competi tors, some of them seasoned debaters and experienced writers. There was. The Oregonian thinks, no question of sex involved. It happened that Miss Romig chose an interesting and sym pathetic themi: for her essay, and de veloped it with intelligence and sim plicity. The others, for the most part, chose topics that were trite and com monplace, and undertook to do and to say too much. , The Oregonian cannot speak of the merits or . the . platform contest at MeMinnville, but it has examined the various compositions, and it is pre pared to say that Miss Romig's was in contestably the best. It has, therefore, just a simple Suggestion to make to all college orators and writers for future contests. Let them avoid abstract topics, and take up a living, definite; specific theme, study It thoroughly and master it fully. Then they may do as well as Miss Roinig did. She wrote about child labor. She wrote as if she knew all about it, and, because? she "knew, she had ease, lucidity and facility of ex pression. Her essays had meaning and purpose and deep human interest. She won. She should have won. Tet others can do as well, if they go about it right, as she did. DO WE DIS1JKE CORPORATION'S? A great deal of talk is heard nowa days about popular hostility to rail roads and other corporations. It is said by President Truesdaie, of the Hela wre & Lackawanna Company, as well as by other magnates, that this enmity of the people to the wealthy monopo lies is a very sad thing to contemplate. He does not think that there is any good reason for it and he is convinced that it does a great deal of harm. It frightens the capitalists who have money to lend so sorely that, as rail road directors, they can no longer bor row of themselves as lenders without paying higher interest than formerly. This is tragic indeed. The Outlook narrrates an incident which it thinks may serve to account for some of the general prejudice against the largo corporations, and. since Mr. Truesdaie Is directly concerned in it. he ought to find the narrative instruct ive. It seems that in former years the steam whistles in New Tork harbor caused much annoyance to the people on shore. In 1S97 Federal rules were made to abate the nuisance, and in course of time they were accepted and obeyed by all the boats in the harbor except those of the Lackawanna com pany. This corporation persistently evaded them, causing great incon venience to other boats and a number of accidents. One of its pilots was finally, suspended for recalcitrance, but the company still employed him, in spite of the law. resorting to a series of tricks under the direction of Its "counsel" to shield him. Tin Outlook suggests to 'Mr. Trues daie that he can find in these circum stances a reason to expect some popu lar dislike of his company. It is. in fact, through a long series of petty meannesses, shifts, tricks and annoyances that the corporations have made themselves disliked. The bump tious refusal of a station agent to say how much a train is behind time; his surly replies to questions of all sorts; the impudent negro porter who stirs up the foul dust in a Pullman against the protest of the suffering passengers; the dining-car man who charges a cus tomer a dollar for a cup of tea; all these contribute, each in a small but effective way. to make plain, unso phisticated people hate the cor porations. The public has laid up in its secret memory a great mass of these petty insult-s and abuses, and when -the time comes it will probably show that it can return them in kind. This is deplorable, of course, but is it not human nature? MADAM Bl'TTERIXY. A long time. ago Mr. W. H. Mallock wrote a book with the title "Is life worth living?" After a careful discus sion of the question from several points of view. Mr. Mallock decided that life was. not worth living; or, at least, not unless one were a member of the church which, he adorns with his affili ation. The church promises a better state of -things in another world and this life is worth while only because it conducts us thither. "If all our hopes and all our fears were prisoned in life's narrow bound." Mr. Mallock thinks we could neither endure to live nor dare, to die. as the old hymn puts it. Why does the hope of another life be yond the grave add value to this one? Simply . because in the next we expect to. be happy. If we knew of any way to make ourselves as happy here as we hope to be there, then this life, as far as it goes, would be just as much worth living as that one. It is briefer, one may admit; but there is plenty of time in it to enjoy a good deal if we had the chance and to suffer a good deal if the chance of happiness misses us. The truth is that the systematic depreciation of this life has greatly contributed to multiply our miseries and-make them permanent. Touching ail efforts to make the earth a place decently habitable we have always been' taught that it was not worth while. -'It has even been suggested that misery here was for our good, since it must enhance . the joys of heaven by contrast; and there is a suggestion that it may be even wicked to try to bring about the reign of hap piness and justice among men. Sometimes we are taught that happi ness is. wicked.. This Is a vale of tears where we should be occupied with thoughts of our sins chiefly. Any time spent iu the pursuit of pleasrure is. , as it were, pilfered from the higher duty to weep over our shortcomings. There is something devilish a-bout enjoyment in any case. . Who can pray while he Is dancing? Who could Intone a psalm at the theater? "Poor, miserable crea tures," exclaimed Carlyle, addressing the -human race, "what have you to do with happiness?" John Wesley re cords in his journal that as he pro gressed toward holiness he made up his mind "Never to laugh, never to indulge in light conversation, never to go anywhere or do anything in which he could not invite the Lord to par ticipate." Wesley expected that he would be happy in heaven and that the Lord would take no offense at it; but to smile or play in this lower world would be unpardonable. But why should not the Lord- be as willing to participate in a dance or an opera like Madam Butterfly as in the ordinary church service? The next Jife is worth what It is worth. How mneh or how little that may be we shall know when we come to it. As for this life, it Is worth what goes into ir. as we pass along. Our days are chambers on whose wbited walls we hang pictures. Some of them are gay, some are sad. Some are but records of woeful deeds, others tell of kindly Dity and duty nobly done. When the leaf grows sere in the autumn we wander through these chambers aiid , gaze with joy or sorrow on the pic tures. At some of them we smile; over others we weep shameful tears. All might have -been beautiful. To every man when he awakens upon earth the Creator says. "Here is life. It is an unrealized possibilit-. Make it as rich with all things desirable as you can." The man takes the wonderful gift from the Creator, and by his folly, his ignor ance and his superstitions proceeds to ruin it. The contrast between what life might be and what it is is the end less tragedy of. the ages. Man has made the world sordid and -miserable; art shows us what God' intends it to become. The Venus of Milo is a prophecy: the harmonies of Beethoven foretell the golden age. which is an other name for the kingdom of God. The worid is now a clangor of brazen discords; then it snail move in' sym phdnious concords. Tii the days unborn existence shall be like a fugue by Bach, wherein the life of each man is inter woven like a divine melody.' It shall pass like a thread of gold in a queen's garment, precious in itself , -but far more precious because of what it makes a part. . All art is ' prophetic. Classic art prophesies by types. It sets before us the platonlc ideas in visible forms, whether of beauty, of strength or of sacrifice, and teaches that In the better times to come thus we shall all be. Modern art shuns the type and seeks eternal values in the individual. But romanticism finds value only in what is exceptional, while the realist dis covers it everywhere. The romanticist loves the rose light on the mountain tops at sunset; the realist sees beauty in the clear white light of noon. The romanticist revels in gems and gold; he is charmed by the adventures of the great; he recounts the fortunes of the noble. If he descends to common life it is to separate the destiny of some favored -man and raise him to lofty station. Realism takes the com mon man as he is and pictures both the joy and the misery of his lot-, In the joy it discovers hope for all. In the misery it sees a problem to be solved. r The -prophecy of realism is not merely for .the individual but for the whole race,, and the problems which it sets us to solve are for all man kind.. Realism is just as democratic in the music of Puccini as In the novels of Howells. - Puccini's score, as it rejoices, sobs and shudders through the story of Madam Butterfly, continually calls upon us not only to feel but also to think. "H-ere is the tale," it says. "It Is an old Qjie and a common. Here is the man's sin and there is the woman's misery. Here is his selfish and thoughtless pleasure; there is her piti ful death. It is no class tale, but one which has been repeated in every sta tion year after year since time began. Weep over it if you will, but also think about it. How shall we put an end to this useless suffering? Must it go on forever?" As .'oner as we remember the beauty of the music, those melodious dialogue.?, those, d,eeji eh onl sA t h o " rT r- plexing discords struggling into clear harmony, so long must we also remem ber the question they ask. Andi as the bleak clatter of the drums and the wandering wail o.f the violins find rest in ultimate symphony so shall we solve the problem of evil, and the groaning of the universe that perpetu ally ascends to heaven shall cease at last. OVERCROWDING IN CITIES. Sir Henry CampbeH-Bannerman is a sturdy Scotchman and- a native of Glas gow. He likes elbow room and breath ing space, and during a recent visit to his native city he took occasion to speak against the congeston of popula tion in cities as contrary to Nature, to health and to morality. In his view, unless- powerful counter attractive agencies are. introduced, the tendency of human beings to herd together like cattle will result in gradual destruc tion of the mass of the population. He takes his stand upon the hard ground of physical fact, .and in answer to the question "Why will this result follow this overcrowding?" he says: "When the powers of the air and the soil are not equal to the task that is put upon them the air and the soil will revenge themselves." We do not need to cross the ocean to find proof of: this state ment. It exists-in the tenement dis tricts of our large cities and in such laboring districts as find their worst and m6st appalling representation in Packingtown, the horrors of which were lately probed by Government investi gation. . One of the most powerfully written books of the last year, "The Jungle." goes into detail of these, horrors in a manner that should 'turn foreign mis sionary effort to the home field and in stitute methods of dealing with the simple, the ignorant, and the industri ous stranger within our gates, on the basis, not of theology, but of humanity. "We have had," said Sir Henry, "the spectacle of countless thousands of our fellow-men, and a still larger number of children who are starved of air and space and sunshine, and therefore of the very elements that make a healthy and a happy life possible." This view ;of life-as represented by overcrowding in great cities is so shocking that t-o follow it out in detail as it is presented in the story of "The Jungle" is to induce shuddering horror. It is a story that cannot be put away as fiction, since it ' bristles at every point with fact. The' horrors of the sit uation are: not- hinted at; they are plainly stated in words that mince not. Any one rising from 'the perusal of this story of eager hopes blighted, of simple honesty robbed of its hard earnings, of thwarted human effort put forth in the simple desire to get a home and a liv ing in a land of strangers, of degrada tion slowly encroaching upon purity of life and purpose, and sights and sounds, and filth and odors, and all grades of human misery, incident to the congest ed condition of this mass of workers and to the grinding greed of the men who amass vast wealth from this coin age of human misery, will be fain to ask with Sir Henry: What Is all our wealth and learning and the finest flower of our civilization and our constitution ajtd political theories what are these but diist and ashes if the men and women on whose labors the whole social fabric is maintained aro doomed to live and die in darkness and misery in the 'areas of our great cities? OCR FOREST POLICY. The year book of the Department of Agriculture, a carefully compiled, finely printed and beautifully illustrated vol ume of nearly SOO pages and issued in an edition of 500.000 copies, attests the effort that is being made by the Gov ernment to advance the oldest of sci ences by proper investigation and ex periment and by the diffusion of the knowledge thus acquired. The seques tration of forest areas under the name of forest, reserves being just now prom inent in the minds of public men, and vigorously championed- 'by the Presi dent, the present? standing of forestry as treated at length in the year book is of interest, especially, perhaps, in the West. The position taken by Sena tor Fulton upon the question of forest reserves; the successful issue to which he brought his view of the matter be fore Congress in his -amendment to the agricultural appropriation bill, prohib iting the further creation of forest re serves except by authority of Con gress,, and the addition of 17,000,000 acres -to the National forest reserves by proclamation of the President prior to affixing his signature to the bill car rying the amendment, makes the for estry question of paramount interest in this'state at present. Of the grand total added to these reserves, Oregon contributes 4,051,000 acres. From the year book of the Depart ment of Agriculture it. is found that vastly" more exact knowledge concern ing our American forests has' "been gathered during the last .seven years than had been gathered previously from the time that Columbus landed. As late as 1898 the specific problems of forest management in. the United States had developed ho efficient meth ods of forest protection and rehabili tation. The industry displayed by the Department of Forestry since that period is shown by records now on file. Commercial tree studies looking toward intelligent management of this branch of our National resources have been prosecuted for thirty-two important species. Working plans looking to their protection and perpetuation have been prepared in twenty-eight states, while field work has been conducted in every state and territory in the United States and in Porto Rico, Alaska and the Philippines. The scientific knowl edge thus gathered has taken form in a rapidly growing literature on the sub ject, and has furnished the basis for a system of professional education. There is. therefore, today scarcely more occasion, for an American to go abroad to study forestry than to study law or -medicine. ( At the practical beginning of its work the forestry service found in existence a fully developed system of lumbering which had brought efficiency and econ omy of labor to the highest point, but was enormously wasteful: It regarded forests simply as ' so much standing timber waiting to be cut. Men who regarded cheap logs at the mill as the supreme test and sole end of good lum bering, justly proud of their proficiency in a highly specialized industry and impatient of restraint, could not be ex pected to welcome with cordiality changes for a purpose that interfered with present gains, and emphasized the long look into the future of American forests. To work a reform, says this record, it was necessary to begin with existing conditions and improve "by criticising them. Had not the forest service taken the lead in finding out Just how practical rules for conserva tive lumbering might be laid down and ("Tied qmi, forestry could not have reached its present status in the Uijiried States. . Added to this was the fie'.d of eco nomic tree-planting, the comparative adaptability of various species to re gions and local conditions of climate, soil and moisture; the comparative use fulness of species that can be made to thrive; the protective benefits of plant ed timber and the rate of growth and the future yield that can be expected. The results of this, effort, as worked out through experiments, have established in the -minds of Western farmers gen erally the fact that tree-planting c be made successful and that it adds a Pmoney value to their farms. It has also called attention to the great hy gienic importance of tree-planting on watersheds, of public water supplies of cities, and it has developed practical methods for reforesting denuded moun tain slopes and for establishing new forest growth in regions of little rain fall. Finally it has contributed pow erfully to the great -work of reclaiming desert lands through water conserva tion and- to the whole irrigation move ment. It is this effort that the advocates of forest reserves seek to assist by the se questration of timber, areas by the Government, to the end that large areas may not be deforested while the smaller areas are being reforested. The latter process is necessarily slow the former alarmingly rapid. The creation of these reserves means, in the view of the President, that the timber will be kept out of the hands of lumber syn dicates for the benefit of the actual settler and home-maker; for the use of the present generation according to its needs, the surplus to be preserved for the benefit of children now growing up, who in due time will inherit the lands. The opposing view of forest re serves has been recently and succinctly stated by Senator Fulton and others iu Congress.' The forest policy of the Gov ernment thus outlined is before the people. The future will decide as to its wisdom and effectiveness. The chinch bug, the Hessian fly and other entomological factors in the wheat market have not yet appeared, but a very excellent substitute is in evidence in the Texas "green bug." The increasing appetite, together with the propagating powers of this new comer, has -resulted in elevating the price of wheat to such dizzy heights that there is reason to believe it will be a full cent higher before the "gree.i bug" fades or the bears take a fresh hold. One way to postpone a bill 'before a law-making body is to "talk it to death." A measure for which there is a strong insistent public demand is, however, not likely to be finally dis posed of in that way. Woman suf frage may be, shouted down, in the British Parliament, but if there is a vital demand for it among the English masses it will not long be smothered by an avalanche of words. The student who purloins his college oration and attempts to contest with it for championship with students from other colleges brings disgrace upon his university only to the extent that he is shielded by the faculty. The prompt censure visited upon Wallace Trill, of the Willamette University, by the fac ulty, for an attempt of this kind. leaves the plagiarist to bear alone the disgrace of his -inexcusable action. Sam ' Shortridge. attorney for Abe Ruef. who was ordered to jail for twenty-four hours for contempt of court, by Judge Dunne, of San Francisco, was a Salem schoolboy some thirty years ago. This is not mentioned with any feeling of exultation in connection with what will no doubt prove his vigorous defense of the late political boss of San Francisco, but merely as an item of local history. Mr. Ruef, says the news account, is ''quartered at the St. Francis, where a telephone connects him with the out side world, and he spends a large por tion of his time using it. replying to messages of sympathy- from his fol lowers and issuing orders to his lieu tenants." No doubt he looks forward to enjoyment of the same privileges at San Quentin. Orator Trill undoubtedly .went on the theory that Bcveridge would never miss a small matter of 300 words from any of his speeches, and the public couldn't tell how it differed from any other schoolboy's oration. While he was at it, why didn't, he plagiarize something worth while? Among the cheering proofs of en hanced real estate values is the sale at good figures of improved property that a few years ago was a drug. The A. O. . U. W. Temple, at Second and Taylor, selling for $140,000 is one of many examples. Fathers of families who, according to the dictum of the National Milliners' Association, must dig deep into their purses for feminine Spring headgear, have the right to call on Congress to regulate this traffic. "I never intended to evade any process of the court nor to leave the city," explains Abe Ruef. That's the reason, no doubt, that neither the Sheriff nor the Coroner could find him. The Washington Legislature has again definitely decided not to muzzle the press. They did not even get to the point of discussing the question as to who should bell the cat. Down in Texas the State Railroad Commission cancels all trains more than one-half hour late. That would be a good way In Oregon to keep the traveling public at home. ' , Detection was easy with oratorical plagiarists, as well as with Oregon land thieves. The evidence against all of them was in writing and they couldn't dodge it. Ex-Surveyor-General Meldrum denies vigorously that he was promised im munity for testifying against Binger Herman. But probably he wouldn't refuse it. . Today Is a good time for Port'.anders to begin learning how the city has grown since the rainy season set in last Fall. Fare to any suburb is only five cents. Detective Burns knew where Abe Ruef was all the time. It's a way Burns has, as everybody in Oregon knows. Do not put all the money In a bank. Buy a suburban lot with part of it. A home site that commands a view of Mount Hood Is worth its cost. COMMENT ON CURRENT OREGON AFFAIRS Forester Pinchot's Theories and Their Practical Application in the North westFooling a Fruit Inspector The Dande'ion Pest Shall the Leg islature Be Abolished? Protecting the State University. ANNOUNCEMENT that Germany and Rusia are buying pine cones in Oregon and other parts of the United States for the purpose of intro ducing American varieties of pines into those countries is of particular interest at this time from the fact that the present aggressive forestry policy of the Roosevelt administration is bor rowed largely from Germany. Glfford Pinchot, the leading spirit of the for estry movement, spent several years in Germany, studying the plan of refor estation in that country. He is a man of independent fortune and need not work for a living, but he became im pressed with the need for forest pres ervation in this country, and has de voted his energies to propagation of modern ideas of forestry. The fact that this generation does not appreciate the value of forest preservation and res toration does not greatly worry him, but he is striving to bring as many people to his way of thinking as pos sible, and is willing to await the judg ment of future generations as to the correctness of his theories. Ills Idea is that only mature trees should be cut and that in removing these reasonable caie should be exercised not to injure young and growing trees. Where tim ber land has been devastated by the logger's ax or by fire he would have new trees started, so that in the course of time 'new forests will have grown' to replace those that have gone. He be lieves that America should begin early a policy that Germany adopted after its forestr. had practically disappeared. He wants this policy adopted before the forests of Oregon, Washington and oth er Western states have passed through the sawmills, as have the forests of Michigan. Wisconsin and Minnesota. POOLING a fruit inspector is an achievement of which a Dallas man has boasted, much to the amuse ment of his neighbors. According to reports, a general spraying order had been issued requiring treatment of trees with a. lime-sulphur solution, but as this was not only expensive, but difficult, the fruitgrower - mentioned used it substitute. He used lime only, and gave his trees a coating of white wash before the inspector came around. Then he bragged about it. The fact of the matter was that he fooled nobody but himself, for he was the chief loser by the substitution. Though his diseased trees may endanger other orchards, they will be first to suffer the ravages of the scrtle. His smart trick was on an equaiity with that of the farmer who mixed sawdust with the cornmeal fed to his horse. He may have fooled the in spector, but he didn't deceive the scale Insect. F the dandelion 'cure suggested by a I Willamette Valley paper is as cer tain in results as represented, it will be worth a great dedl -to" people who have failed in their efforts- to keep lawns free from this pest The dande lion is perhaps the worst pest in Wil lamette Valley lawns. Digging out the plants is difficult and not very ef fective, for fragments of roots that may be. left will continue to grow and send up new tops. The new remedy suggested 1s . gasoline. ' According to the authority quoted,' a teaspoonful of gasoline on a dandelion plant will kill it, root and branch,' without injuring the grass surrounding it. The gaso line Is said to act particularly upon the milky sap of the dandelion. .While there re some yards that would need an ap plication of gasoline with a street- sprinkler, there are others that could be very quickly relieved of this pest if the gasoline will. do the work. JH. WIMLOT, of Beaverton, having torn down his extensive chicken nursery, the Hillsboro Independent takes occasion to remark that his ex perience has been the same as that of nearly all others who have attempted to go into the poultry business on large scale. They have found that it does not pay, and that the task of sup plying the markets with chickens and eggs must be left to the farmer's wife, who rtiises a flock of chickens as a side issue in general farm operations. The conclusion the Washington County pa per reaches is very commonly, believed to be correct, yet it does not follow that the poultry business must be car ried on according to old methods. Poultry-raising as an exclusive occupation does not pay because too much feed must be purchased, the fowls do not thrive best in large numbers and they require proportionately too much at tention. The time of the poultry-raiser has a cash value. It costs him money to attend to his flocks and market the product. The time of the farmer's wife has no recognized cash value, and she sends her eggs and chickens to mar ket when her husband is going to town on other business. As a rule she gets eggs only when prices are low. A happy medium might be struck with satisfactory results if the man who wants to go into poultry extensively would merely make this the strongest feature of farm work, but not make it exclusive. On the other hand, the market would be better and more uni formly supplied if the farmer's wife would give just a' little more attention to poultry by enlarging the flocks and caring for them so that the hens will lay when eggs are in most demand. EVERY mention of an organization of agricultural producers for the purpose of controlling the marketing of crops reminds H. M. Williamson of a movement he particularly observed about a dozen years ago. Mr. William son is now secretary of the State Board of Horticulture. At that time he was interested in horticulture only as edi tor of a farm paper. Strawberries were selling in Portland at 2ss cents a box and the growers were losing money. They held a mass meeting', agreed not to haul their berries to Portland before a certain hour in the morning, and to hold them for 3 cents a box until a certain hour in the af ternoon. To see the result, Mr. Will iamson went down to the Madison Street Bridge before six o'clock In the morning but found that practically all the East Side berry-growers had al ready come into town and had shoved their produce upon the market at the same old price or less. When he in quired of jicveral the reason for break ing the agreement eacli replied: "Well. 1 saw tlia-t others were selling, and I had to set rn before the market was supplied." On that day the de mand happened to be unususily strong and early tn the afternoon three cents was freely offered, bo that the few growers wflio held faithfully to their agreement received a more substantial reward than the approval of their own consciences. THK proposal that the Legislature shall be' abolished, as suggested sev eral times otf Is subject to one objec tion that is apparently insurmountable. The FederaJ Constitution guarantees to every state a' Republican form of gov ernment. When the initiative. a:id tef erendum araendment was adopted by the people, the amendment was fought in the courts for the reason, among other thircrB. that it contravened this provision of the National Constitution. The Orcgom Supreme Court held other wise, however, since the. adoption of the initiative and referendum did not abolish ttie Legislature but left that branch of the state government to ex ercise its powers, though subject to new limitations. To abolish the Leg islature would give Oregon a purely Democratic, form of government. PRESIDENT p. L CAMPBELL, of the University of Oregon, is showing rare generalship in his handling of agitation for the referendum on the University of Oregon appropriation. Whenever he hears of anyone who is taking steps toward having the appropriation held up. he go?s to that person and presents the facts and figures, shoving the needs of the school. just' as they were presented before th legislative ways and means committee. He shows that Oregon is spending less in proportion or hisher education than most other stater:, and that to hold- up the ap propriation would practically mean th closing of the university. He has a frank and pleasing manner, and thus far seems to have convinced everyono to whom he has presented the matter as he views it. PORTLAND'S sawmill and box factory strike is likely to have serious con sequences to all kinds of packing estab lishments, especially if it extends to out side mills and factories as threatened. Boxes havte been difficult to get almost all over the Coast. Tn California the oransegrowcrs have been hauling fruit to market in orchard boxes. In Oregon last Fall there was a scarcity of apple boxes. So long as the strike is limited to Portland mills the fruitgrowers wili not worry much, but if it begins to ex tend outside they will lose sleep over the problem of securing boxes in which to market their produce. TEN DOLLARS a head is said to be the record price in Oregon for stock sheep. This price is reliably reported to have been paid for a small band owned by Joshua Purvine, a , Spring . Valley, Polk County, farmer. Though larger prices have been - paid for .sheep for breeding purposes, it is asserted that this is the highest price ever paid in Oregon for stock sheep. Dealers say the great scarcity determined the price. CLATSOF PLAINS, one of the oldest settled "localities in Oregon, is the last to experience a "boom." .-The dis trict that hns been known for over half a century toy this name is located just south of the mouth of the Columbia River, and extends from the Columbia to Gearhart Park. . Probably no people in Oregon have been more frequently en couraged to believe that a real boom had come, or more frequently disappointed. Several times extensive portions of the "Plains" have been platted, but the cor ner stakes rotted away. When Ham mond started to build his road and bought land extensively at the head of Clatsop Plains, the hopes of the people down there became buoyant. But the subsequent disclosure that the road was not part of a transcontinental system dis sipated the expectations. Now, however, since the Northern Pacific has acquired the Astoria & Columbia River road the region where Lewis & Clark spent their first winter In Oregon is enjoying a re vival of real estate activity surpassed only by that in Portland. Clatsop was first in discovery and exploration. It has been last to receive recognition of its commercial opportunities. IN the effort to secure publicity of bank accounts of deceased persons or persons who have disappeared, the re cent legislative session passed two' bills governing the subject and both have be come laws. The Haines banking law re quires the bank examiner to report to the Board of Bank Commissioners the name of every person not known to be alive who appears by the records of a bank to have a deposit to which ho has not added or from which he has not drawn for a period of seven years. The Beach law requires every bank in July of each year to report to the Secretary of State the amount standing to the credit of every depositor not known to be living, who shall not have made a deposit or who shall not have withdrawn any part of his deposit for seven years. The act also applies to deposits made by persons who becomo insane or who are under other legal disability. Addresses of depositors must be given and the Secretary of State is required to publish the list or deposits thus reported. It is generally believed that the reports due in July. 1907. will dis close a large number of deposits that have been unknown to relatives of per sons now deceased. IN MARCH. Somebody knocks on the window pane. And rattles the doors at night; Somebody cries'and tugs at the latch. Which gives you an awful fright. Somebody whistles a shrill whee-ee. Then begins a low sad song: Somebody's only the old March wind. Who laughs as he goes along. Wilhelmine Barck Duniway. - Catching. -Pu.-fc. Jennie kissed me. lip to Tip. when she met me yester-mornlnp: Now, I'm laid up with the grip Failed to hcod the official warning. fay 1 went out numnier-clad And pneumonia just miJwfd me; Say "I told you but ro1 Jennie kissed me.