THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 15,' 1907. ciflc. It Is not contended that the Coast cities could ' not protect them selves from naval attack; but it is clear that to do so against a Hawaii in hos tile hands would cost a sum enormous ly greater than that required to make these Islands impregnable. "Economy demands that American possessions here be made absolutely secure. That condition having been reached, nothing extraordinary in the way of defenses or garrisons would be required in California, Oregon and Washington. So long as Hawaii re mains unfortified or fortified inade quately, Japan will feel that war with the United States Is within the sphere of practical politics "Possessing this base and protected It she could not do much on this slda of the ocean and probably would not venture here except with her commerce destroyers. It should be remembered that in the war with Russia the Jap anese navy refused to give battle far from its base, though they might hava taken Rojestvcnsky unawares in Madagascar waters or in the Straits of Malacca. - s "A beginning has been made toward fortifying Honolulu and Pearl Harbor, but what the Advertiser wants to press upon the notice of its visitors is th fact that the entire programme, when completed, will not prevent the landing of hostile forces, efficiently convoyed, on the otner side of the island. Bat teries of heavy guns are nearly aa requisite there as here, and there ought to be provision for a large gar rison. Malta is the example; we should emulate that." Y. W. C.. A. CONFERENCE AT SEASIDE COMES TO END Gathering Looked Upon As Interesting and Profitable In History of Organization Delegates Thoroughly Enjoyed Every Session here by floating mines, mortars, siege guns such as she could easily trans port and mount Japan could make herself a dangerous enemy. Without SI it1, - - v a B v- i a. 1 a H - ' As Some Critics See Us tw"'"" " " ji "-. '-fr- l.f?3"1'''3 : T- riiirir - 1 1 mf m frniiwi .4 REPfiESENTATtVES OF THE. 5IX NORMAL SCNOOUS O F OREGON r m 1 r 7Qf Y.W.CA,. GIRLS FROM MOMTAfsIA fcc j- ii .rl.it w, ii iBr Y.VinJ ,Mj ni 4 1 v :)i nwi iiiuiiiihwii PWITf.n,.5?TS"J( gnwyjrKMw-Jvwwvy.TFw-wiTil"i'v.B5i- riv -v ! house:, seasip, oe: &jiJxtiM(S p&t-ecATEg ; 1 T " ' iWp - - V ..mi , ' ' " v. HriPVT L ' ' 1 - ' j - IIIIIIMII IN- ' ' " -r. ... y 1 ..-,-. ..,f. .M- ' 4Ait IM ni i immbw ihii i ill i r g iiii ii Miiiii inn T n w I I ................................................... ,! ...31 . m.-.rll.nTiiiH-;i-(,i-,B..,r, j " Til II -iMMk BELLING HAM, THE conference of the 'Young Women's Christian Association of the Pacific Northwest, which has been In session at Seaside since August 81. closed 8unday. Large delegations from the associations of Oreson, Wash ington, Idaho and Montana have been present. In addition to the girls rep resenting a number of strong college associations. During the sessions ot the conference the girls have had splendid opportunities for recreation and have enjoyed themselves im mensely. Beginning at 9 o'clock the morning each hour of every day has been filled, either with a talk from some secretary who has had long experience in the work, or with a dip in the surf, or a drive In the afternoon, made pleaBant by the cool breeze from the ocean, or with the vesper service. Meetings have been held every night, the time usually being taken up by the presi- - ' gft rSl ' muuse . 5EA?PE. ORE. local association have met by them selves to have a heart to heart talk about all the happonlngs of the day. Among those in attendance at the conference have been Miss Helen S. Barne and Miss Mary F. Dunne, Na tional secretaries"; Miss Mary McLean, of Adelphi College, In New York, and instructor In sonloloe-V! Tir Trnnlr nf aent or secretary of some flourishing I Oakland, Cal.; Dr. Laflammo, of In association. After this, Just before the dia; Miss Francis Gage, state secretary retiring hour, the delegates of each l of Oregon; Mrs. Walter J. Honeyman, staie president of Oregon; Mrs. Lola G. Baldwin, secretary of the Travelers' Aid department of the Portland Asso ciation; Miss Constance McCorkle, sec retary of the Portland Y. W. C. A.; Mrs. H. D. Campbell, Miss Helen Hutchin son, of the local association; Mrs. Best Johnstone, extension secretary of the Seattle association; Mrs. Frank Black, of Seattle; Mrs. Wood, president of the Seattle association; Miss Dunne Yest and Miss Delta Watson, who ren dered excellent service as the business secretary of the conference. The local association has been mak ing an earnest endeavor to Interest other associations in the Travelers' Aid work for girls, Portland being far ahead of other cities in this branch. Mrs. Baldwin spoke several times dur ing her stay at Seaside, telling of the work here. Mlss( McLean, of Adelphi College, who is malclng a tour of the United States fc-wSE.M e. Hl&K SCHOOL : PELECATION A. MAPPOCX 'n ordir to leard of the Industrial con ditions among girls, spoke each day leuing or the results of her Investiga tions among the working girls of other cities. Her addresses gave those pres ent at. the conference a much clearer Insight Into economic conditions sur rounding girls, and the facts brought to light will go ,far toward helping to strengthen the Y. W. C. A. work both in Portland and other CoaBt cities. The women and girls who have been In attendance at the conference have gone in attendance at the conference will go to their home associations feeling that they have gained largely, both in knowledge and In health and that the Y. W. C. A. of the Pacific Northwest will take a step higher and extend the arm of its influence a little farther, that It may help the young woman in need at the opportune moment. REDUDTION IN WEIGHT CERTAIN A Beauty Shop Where Women Can Get Thin "Stout Ladles Taken Down" Is Its Sign. ON a side street In London there is a house bearing the sign "Stout ladies taken down," and within the little house there is the equipment for the most complete thinning cure in the world. Many of the processes tljrough which the patients are put are kept secret,- but others have either leaked out or been told by those who have visited the establishment for treat ment. The English woman who pre sides over the places declares, among other thongs: That all women who are too. fat can be reduced. That it makes no difference whether one reduces in Summer or Winter, ail seasons are alike to the woman who wants to get rid of excess of weight. That women are more easily reduced than men. That a woman gains 25 per cent In attractiveness by losing 1) pounds of weight provided she is beyond normal. When a woman enters this 'place she prepares to leave her flesh behind. First she steps upon the scales and is made to put down In a book her ex act weight. It is sometimes difficult to get a voman to weigh herself, for the rea son that stout' women do not want to know what they weigh. But. once upon the scales and having recorded her weight in a book with her own hand, it is easy afterward to get a woman to weigh herself. The secret is out, and she is proud of each pound lost. , Many lectures ar given to women on how to lose flesh, and there are mental suggestions as well as physical pro cesses. In a booklet which Is handed to patrons in the reduction establish ments there are these bits of advice: Think you are losing weight, and you will lose. Think yourself into get ting thin. Don't fret, but Just expect that you wHl lose weight. Don't weigh yourself right after din ner nor right after you have taken a big drink of water. A pint weighs a pound, and many a woman has fretted over added weight when it was only a glass of water that made her heavier. Weigh yourself at least three times a day, preferably before each meal, and keep tally of your weight from day to day. Weighing is of the utmost Im portance to the woman who wants to know if she is getting thinner. , Then be careful of your diet. There are people who assert that it Is im possible to get rid of fat and that once fat is to be always fat unless some illness intervenes. But this is a mis take. The person who is too, fat will gen erally begin by dieting. This is all right if one knows how to diet. But the woman who simply cuts down her food supply will lose her health. Here are the diet hints: Eat all you want once a' day; the middle of the day Is the best time. Don't eat very much in the evening and nothing at all before you go to bed. Let your breakfast be light, and don't forget that the stomach has its likes and dislikes. Eat little, but eat well. It is along the lines of exercise that the beauty shop does its best work. It tells you how to exercise and what exer cises will take oft your pounds. Each patient requires a different set, and it is one of the duties of the little estab lishment to adapt the exercise to the person. In the case of a woman who was large around the waist line there were the bending movements. Thy were all performed with the muscles of the hipu. They were four in number. The first exercise was the hip exer cise. To perform it you stand squarely upon both feet. Then you lift one foot and kick out violently at the side. The second exercise is the abdominal exercise.' and it ia good for the man with increasing girth as well as for the woman. It Is the bending exercise. Placo both hands upon your hips with your fingers pointings front. Bend backward and forward. Keep swaying and swaying until you are tfred, which should be in about five sways. The third exercise is the rowboat exercise.- Seat yourself and grasp the arms of your chair. Throw yourself backward as though you were rowing; then forward, going through with the rowing exercise until 'you feel as If you had rowed far enough. Then take the fourth exercise to rest yourself. This exercise is for the arms. Take a step forward and throw your arms behind you as you step. At the samo time breathe deeply. Repeat stepping forward, throwing back your arms and breathing deeply, until you feel as though your muscles were all alive.. Then stop and rest. To bring down the neck of a woman who Is too stout takes both courage and persistence. But the woman who wants to wear her necklace will not lack either of these. She will beat her neck with sea salt and water; she will stretch It until the fat begins to disappear; she will pound It and pinch it and keep at It until its flesh fades. The attention of polite' London was called anew, to the little thinning shop early in the season when one of the court ' ladies began to get stout. In her case the cheeks were to be thinned. "Your face begins to look piglike." said the attendant at the beauty shop with more frankness than- policy, "and you have no expression at all In your eyes, which are sunken behind the mountains of fat. "Then, too, your color is too high. A florid color makes 'a woman look old before her time. A young girl or a very young matron can have rosy checks, but never the woman who has mounted into the forties. "Then your fat lias grown up high at the side of your face. It makes your face look pumpkinlike. "You have high, fat cheekbones, and you do not seem to know how to do up your hair. Everything has combined to make you look fat and old." The lady gasped. But there was nothing to do but listen, for she had paid her money to hear the truth, and she wanted it in large, full doses. The woman who advertised "stout ladies taken down"' kept on with the taking down process until she had re duced her patient to a proper frame of mind. Then she began to reduce her physically. She took a pound of flesh off each cheek and left the lady pretty and vivacious once more. It is Impos sible to be vivacious if you are too fat in the face. ' "Penn" In Philadelphia Bulletin. It la amusing in England to note the odd notions which often exist there about the United States and things American, on the part of ordinary Englishmen. I once had occasion to go into a Holborn publishing house, especially engaged In the sale of text-books for schools. I ex plained that one ot the principal pur poses of my call was to purchase one or two books that would give an idea of the sort of Interpretation which is put upon the events of the American revolution, as taught' to English youth. Courteous attention was exchanged in the endeavors of the manager of the house to get me what I wanted In his stock or to send for It elsewhere. "But," said a young man, an apparently well-educated clerk, who looked over the catalogue for the text-books In vain to discover one which gave anything like a full account of the revolution, ' "I must say, sir, that when I went to school we boys were taught very little about it. Your American boys, sir, must know more in a day about English history than ours do about American his tory in a year. I can see this from the kind of American text-books we some times get here." It is, therefore, not sur prising that most Englishmen grow up into manhood with queer Ideas about the size and geography of the United States, the difference, for example, between Mas sachusetts and Pennsylvania, what New England Is, the location of the Indians, what caused the revolution, the difference between a President and a Governor and other such themes of elementary import. I have known not a few American boys and girls who could reel off a list of all the Kings and Queens of England from the time of William the Conqueror to Edward VII almost without stopping to take breath, but an English youth has usually no knowledge at all of American rulers save that he has read something about Washington, has a misty idea of Lincoln as an emancipator and has heard Just enough about Roosevelt in the news papers to be in some doubt as to whether he was an enterprising college professor or a reformed cowboy. It Is still not uncommon to run across Englishmen who have a idea that New York is the capital of the United States, that Pennsylvania is chiefly peopled by Quakers, that Indiana is the state which is given over to the Indians, that Chi cago is on the Mississippi River, that Abraham Lincoln was the great soldier or General of the Civil War, that Phila delphia is Bomewhere down in the South ern country, that the American business man usually goes about with a revolver or . a bowle knife, and that Englishmen who live in this country are likely to be pounced upon by mobs. These are a few specimens of the sort of observations which are made seriously by men who have had presumably what we would call a "common school education." Even excellent business men sometimes have hazy notions on such things. I once met a delightful English gentleman, Jainea Webster, of Liverpool He had Just made a Journey for the first time In Canada and through the Northern and Western states. He expressed his hearty admir ation of most of the things he had seen, of the unexpected degree of civilized com fort which he had found in our houses and of the organization of hotels and great stores even in some of the youngest cities. He admitted that he had been considerably surprised at what he saw. "But." he added, "there is nothing which, will give more amusement when I settls down to home again and have my friends around the table than to tell them what I saw, then to watch how incredulously they will listen to me. Why, I know that some of them actually believe that It Is not safe to go Into an American hotel unless you have a six-shooter by the side of the plate on your table or under your pillow. I have been told that Londoners In going through 'Craven street, which leads down to the Thames embank ment from the Strand, in which a tab let commemorates the site of the house occupied by Benjamin Franklin when he was the agent of the colonies, often contended that Franklin was an Eng lishman by birth, some even insisting that he was one of the Presidents of the United States! In one of the Lon don newspapers the Express there appeared not long ago a statemant that Mr. Blaine once held that office at the time when "Secretary" Garfield was as sassinated, while the fact that the Vice-President of the United States is also the presiding officer in the Senate ge'ems to be a frequent cause of con fused thought In English newspaper offices, as If it were supposed that he was eleoted by the Senate and. not by the people through the electoral col lege. This part of our , method of electing Presidents has been more than once alluded to In editorial arti cles in the English press, as if It had created the Impression of being a sort an institutional establishment, assem bling every four years In Washington, in a building provided for that pur pose. Yet it .nay be doubted whether such blunders are, after all, more nu merous or morj amusing than those which are made by a large portion of the American ri-sj in its treatment of British politics a .id its comment on British publicists. Jeff Hayes Grapevine Press Report Hawaii, the Malta of - the Pacific AS indicative of the changing order of things, political and commer cial, in the Pacific Ocean, the Army and Navy Journal quotes from the Honolulu aGzettehe following signif icant remarks regarding the strategic Importance and insignificant defenses of Hawaii: "What is needed for the protection of American coast cities and American commerce In the Pacific is that Hawaii should be made the Malta of the Pa- BY JEFF HATES. IN THE TELEGRAPH 1 AGE. ik ORE than a generation has passed 1 I since the occurrence narrated here with took place, and at tins safe dis tance In time and removed from the scene of action, the perpetrator may boldly crave an unconditional pardon for the part he took in the affair. The re lating of the Incident possibly will cause those handling The Associated Press news today to smile, certainly to mar vel at the audacity displayed by the in stigator of the proceeding, but it will be admitted that times have changed. Yet It cannot be doubted that had the truth leaked out, the Journal which printed the stuff Imposed upon it, would have come in for an unmerciless criticism. . The fact is, however, the Joke was never discov ered, arid now, after a lapse of 30 years and more. It is being told for the first time. The circumstance to v hich I re fer occurred on the evening of July 4, 1878. The writer was employed by the Atlantic and Pacific Telegraph Company to take press reports at St. Louis. There was but one wire from Chicago to St. Louis and that was the complete repre sentation that this company had In that big city. This single wire was kept very busy, but, running over highways and byways, it was constantly getting into trouble and on the evening mentioned the line was down, probably caused by some enthuslatlc bucolic who made the glass Insulators a target. The St. Louis Chronicle had Just made its bow to the public and was the only client that the Atlantic and Pacific Com pany had for the -sale of their ' press news. That paper depended very much on this branch of their service, and when Its conductors were Informed that the wire was down and that there would be no news, the editor became very muoh distressed over the unfortunate situation that presented itself. The newspaper and telegraph occupied adjacent offices and the editor with growing anxiety made frequent calls on the telegraph people, persistent in his demands that in some occult manner they fulfil their obliga tions. He feared to Issue the paper with out telegraphic news and What could be done? I became very much interested In the matter and was ready to do every thing within my power to" help the paper out, but there was no wire nor was there any probability that the trouble would be overcome that night. During the height of the editor's de spair, Henry W. Cowan, an operator known from Maine to Oregon, quite acci dentally dropped in to see me. Naturally I explained to him the situation that was vexing and worrying the whole of fice. He listened attentively to all I had to say and then asked in a droll way whether I had ever heard of the "grape vine telegraph line," suggesting that -In an emergency such as then existed a trial of Its merits might be successfully appealed to. What followed stamped Cowan as a resourceful man of genius, one well cal culated to overcome circumstances of the most damaging character alike to Jour nalism and the telegraph and avert threat ened disaster. When the newspaper man departed a short circuit was made up from the man anger's private office to the regular press wire. A connection had at last been ef fected. At this wire Cowan seated him self and the news that soon began to come in over this line clearly demon strated the inventive cleverness with which he was possessed. The first Item that came over this line was an Imaginary cablegram of congrat ulations from Queen Victoria to President Grant, felicitating him on the 100th anni versary of his country's independence. This was followed by an account of an expected war in South America. They are always fighting down there, so that was a sure enough item. "How the President and Cabinet spent the Fourth" came next, and this in turn was followed by a little po litical gossip concerning Samuel J. Til- den and his chances for obtaining the Presidential nomination. A few fires with no casualties, a steamboat race on the Mississippi were next In order. Then came the Pacific States news. A blr strike in the Comstock mines was related with almost genuine sincerity; an arrival of several thousand coolies at San Francisco was also worthy of chronicle. The report was copied in the highest style of the art by Cowan and the editor was in great glee. Some 10 or 12 sheets of this kind ot matter was furnished when the grapevine line, too, gave out, but the newspaper man was satisfied. He even wrote an elaborate editorial about the Queen's cablegram to the President, com menting favorably thereon, but he pro nounced in scathing terms upon Tilden's aspirations to the Presidency, calling the attention of his readers to the item in the "telegraph" columns. I had serious misgivings as to the out come of our -Joke, but resolved never to speak about it unless the matter came up, and it never did. Cowan left for Chicago the next day and that was the last time I ever saw him, and It is presumed that he went out of business furnishing press reports to guileless newspapers. - "All's well that ends well." and so- It was In this case. The paper was satisfied and its readers were probably also con tent, but I wonder if such a hoax could be perpetrated in this day and generation and let it be passed by unnoticed! Teaching Larks to Sing. London Tit-Bits. Strange as it may appear, there are men who make a living by teaching larks to sing. It might be Imagined that this is much the same as painting the lily, but It Is a fact that the ordinary cage lark re quires a considerable amount of training before it can sing well. The untrained cage lark will imitate sounds in the same manner as a parrot, even such sounds as the creaking of a gate. When these birds are neglected sometimes tho only sound they will give ia an Imitation of the twittering of the com mon sparrow. The man who undertakes the education of larks has to be up long before day break. In the Spring before the break of day he goes out Into the country, taking a great number of. cage-birds with him. Reaching a strip of meadow he places his burdens on the ground and patiently wait for the coming dawn. About half an hour after the first light appears the wild larks begin to sing. The wild lark always sings its best soon after dawn; later on in the day its song cannot compare for beauty with its earlier efforts. The birds first begin to sing as they run about the long grass, but they sing" their very finest lays a little later, when they mount high into the sky. As they soar until they appear to vanish into the azure, their song becomes more and more beautiful. It is a very strange fact that the im prisoned bird hears only one of the free brlds; though there may be dozens sing ing, it has ears for that one only. Every note of that song It remembers, and when It is home in its cage next day it will ren der the identical song with remarkable fidelity, entirely from memory. Henry Hudson Celebration. New York Herald. An interesting and definite plan has now been put forward for the celebra tion two years hence at New York and on the Hudson River of the three hundredth anniversary of the discovery of the river by Henry Hudson, and of she one-hundredth anniversary of Rob ert Fulton's practical application of uteam power for navigation. Ther is to be an eight-day celebration, begin ning Saturday, September 18, 1909, and ending on the Saturday following. It was September 19, 1609, that Henry Hudson, in the Half Moon, reached his farthest north in his passage up the river to which his name has been given.