9 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN," PORTLAND, JANUARY 26, 1903. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. ( tBy Mall.) - ; Dally. Sunday Included, one year. . . ritv. Kundnv tnMurleri six months Dally. Sunday Included, three month. Dally. Sunday Included, one month. Dally, without Sundav, one year Dally, without Sunday, six months.... Dally, without Sunday, three months. Dally, -without Sunday, one month.... Sunday, one year - Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday).. Sunday and weekly, cne year BY CARRIER. Tlllv KiinHav Included, one VeftT 2.5 .75 6.U0 3.25 1.75 00 li.OU i.M 3.50 I 1 9.00 Dallv. Sundav included, one month HOW TO REMIT Send postoffice mom, order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postoffice iu dr In full. Including county and state. POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon, as Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Pages IS to 28 Paces SO to 44 Pages , 46 to 60 Pages Postoffice . ..1 cent ...2 cents . . .3 cents ...4 cents Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S, C. Beckwith Special Agency New York, rooms 48-50 Tribune building. -nt-taro. rooms r.10-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex: Postoffiee News Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station.- Colorado Springs. Colo. Bell. H. H. Denver Hamilton and KendrlcK. 9U8-912 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen. S. Rice. George Carson. Kansas CUT. Mo. Rickseeker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut; Yoma News Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugh. 50 South Third. Cleveland. O. James Pushaw. 30T Su perior street. Washington. 1. C. Ebbitt House. Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Ofl'lce; Penn News Co. New York City. L. Jones at Co.. Astor House: Broadway Theater News Stand; Ar thur Hotaling Wagons; Empire News Stand. Ogdt-n D. L. Boyle; Lowe ros.. 114 Tw'-nty-nfth street. Omaha- Barkalow Bros., Union Station: Msgeath Stationery Co. Iwrs Moines, la. Mose Jacobs. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co., 43o K street; Amos News Co. Salt Lake Moon Book & Stationery Co.: Rosenfeld & Hansen;' G. W. Jewett. P. O. corner. Los Anreles B. E. Amos, manager ten street wagons. Fnaadcna. Cal Amos Newa Co. Snn Dlrgo B E. Amos. San Jose. Cal. St. James Hotel News Stand. Dailas. Tex. Southwestern News Agent. 344 Main street: alo two street wagons. Amarilla. Tex. Tlmmons & Pope. . Sao Franclico Forster & Orear: Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. Parent; N. Wheatley; Fairmount Kotsl News Stand; Amos News Co.; United Newa Agency. 14 'a Eddy street; BE. Amos, man ager three wagons. Oakland. Cal. W. H. Johnson. Fourteenth and rranklln streets N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; B. E. Amos, manager five wagons. (ioldfteld. Nev. Louie Follln: . C. E. Hunter. Eureka. Cal. Call-C'hronlcle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND. SUNDAY. JAN. 2, 1908. THE HELPFULNESS OK CASUISTRY. All women and most mn are in rurable casuists. We mean casuists like Rip Van Winkle, who salved his conscience for taking a drink after he had signed the pledge by agreeing not to count it. Both sexes display a sad facility in slipping out of contracts marie with their own consciences, but women excel in the art. No matter what they pledge themselves to do Ih the way of sacrifice or reform, they will find a way of escape If they really wish it, whilec in at least three cases out of ten a man would feel irretriev ably bound. The science of eluding an- inconvenient duty, obligation or pledge without wounding the con science is called casuistry. It is per haps the only science which can be mastered sithout study and whose practical application requires nothing more than that native skill which the good Lord gives to. everybody. But while we are all born casuists, let no one think that study does not Improve' us in this as in other accom plishments. Compare the simple ef forts of a farmer to shirk a profitless bargain with the deft skill which a lawyer displays in effecting a similar evasion, and it is at once evident that, although nature Is mighty, art Is mightier. Certain religious bodies have ac quired a great reputation for casuis tic craftsmanship, though they mod estly disclaim the honor, protesting that It is . undeserved. The famous Pascal sought to fasten upon the So ciety of Jesus the credit, or reproach, of being able to prove that any course of conduct whatever was right or wrong according to convenience; but the fathers, in these latter days at least, declare that Pascal was a slan . derer. The "Provincial Letters' in which he took the Jesuits to task for their real or imagined obliquities form one of the great monuments of French literature, and if they are not Just they are certainly witty, which is often much more agneeable in a book. There was a belief in England at one time that every Jesuit was more or less aberrant from strict veracity in his dally walk and conversation. Even to this day the belief persists, nor is it confined to British lands. Throughout Europe the followers of St. Ignatius are often compelled to defend their reputation against accu sations of sinuosity, and there are few countries which have not thought it safer to dispense either permanent ly or temporarily with the advan tages of their residence. Just now it is said that the Society . of Jesus is much in favor at the Vat ican. There are those even who at tribute the late pronouncements against modernism to a quarrel be tween the Jesuits and a rival order of monks. This may or may not be true, but if it Is. it simply shows that in the elder church as in its younger sisters there is something which vastly "resembles secular politics. All the sects are driven to casuistry at times. When the duty of revising their belief befell the Presbyterians not long ago, they were hard put to it to make their old creed express the new doctrine. It was only by dint of the most exquisite logic that they suc ceeded. To cling, for example, to a creed which declares that the great majority of infants who pertsh go straight to perdition and at the same time believe that they go to .Abra ham's bosom demands a casuistic ex pertness which a Justice of the United States Supreme Court need not de spise. Our Methodist brethren are becom ing famous casuists in their efforts to escape from the rigors of John Wes ley's discipline, ' a code of ecclesias tical law which is found ill adapted to the exigencies of this age of bridge whist, theaters and decollete toilets, it Is a pretty problem wh,ich con fronts a woman born in lowly circum stances and early admitted to fellow ship In the Methodist Church whej. after rising to riches and high sod- cty. she is compelled to reconcile her youthful vows with her social duties. No diamonds, no silks, no dancing, no frivolity whatever, cgmmanda the stern John Wesley: but how can a woman "bloom in society without these things? No woman ever lived, or at any' rate very few women ever lived, who would not give up their hopes of heaven for social success; hence the precepts of the church would fare but hardly with these women were it not for the skill of their consciences in harmonizing contradictories. Of course the most expert casuists In the world are those amazing geniuses who reconcile the contradictions in the New Testament. No difficulty appalls them. Let Mark say one thing and John the opposite and the harmoniz ers are not frightened as ordinary mortals would be. They lick their chops as if they were sitting down to a feast, and undei their deft manip- : , ula ion opposmg statements are pres- ently seen to mean precisely the same thing. ' I ie..e..um;. U1 , longer passages in the New Testament , which all scholars have known to be spurious for many years. Some of ' Vll V 114, v I V J t ill O..L Ll vn ia3111Wllti OVlllO after another, but they have no right to a place in the Bible. The eighth verse of the fifth chapter of I John is an example. So is the conclusion of Mark's gospel . from the , sixteenth verse to the end. All educated min isters know that these passages and others like them are spurious, ytlt they go on serenely taking proof texts from them, reading them in church and treating them in every way as if they were equally Inspired with the genuine Scriptures. Many who know all about the matter even pretend to be scandalized when anybody states the truth concerning these spurious verses. How can an educated minis ter persuade his consicence to teach that a biblical passage is genuine when he knows it is not? He does it wpith the aid of the soothing art of casuistry, which flourishes among the clergy today in a quiet way. Not many of them follow the ex ample of Dr. Crapsey and justify themselves by open argument for preaching wjiat they do not believe. The majority carry on the process in a quiet way in their own minds; but t seems likely that without the help of casuistic expertness to sustain their faltering occupants there would be an extensive emptying of pulpits In this country. Casuistry is more essential to the comfort of our ministers than it is in Europe, for we permit to our religious guides far less liberty of thought than the benighted Germans or Scotch do. Of' course this indi cates that we are a great deal better than our brethren in foreign lands, but it causes more or less inconven ience to ministers who wish to exer cise their intellects and drives them to become casuists or leave preach ing for some other business. Casuistry has its use in every exi gency where it is desirable to prove that wrong Is right or right wrong. Hence its applicability is especially frequent in politics. When it befalls a spellbinder to prove that the farm ers are enriched by the Dingley tariff he at once betakes himself to casuis try and the task becomes deljghtfully easy. He can demonstrate that we grow rich by taxing ourselves, that we can make the foreigner pay the du ties on the goods he sells us, that it lines the pocket of the American con sumer to pay twice as much for his tools and clothing as the hated for eigner pays; there is nothing under the-sun in the way of idiocy which a deft tariff casuist cannot prove, though the late panic interferes some what with his hitherto triumphant demonstration that Dingleyism -cre-ates prosperity. THE GKEAT JOHN MILTON. John Milton was born December 8, 1608, in Bread street, London. Prep aration for celebration of the ter centenary in London has begun. Doubtless it will engage the attention of the whole English-speaking world. Milton's place in literature is so great aa to forbid conparison with any other. No one can say that any other name is greater. For there is no rule of comparison between such men as Milton, Shakespeare, ' Cer vantes, Dante and Homer. Of each of these it may be said that he is "primus inter pares?' " One universal reader or another might put two or three more Immortals in the same list. The decision would depend on the mind and temperament of the person who should give the judg ment. It is an easy criticism that Milton was doubly overladen with the. spirit of Puritanism, rife in his times, and with his vast learning. But no poet whose fame is co-extensive with the wnoie worm, except foiiaicespeare, ever has been -greatly in advance of his times. Homer and Dante and Milton used materials that lay about them. So did Shakespeare; but they had not Shakespeare's supreme power of penetration into the secret springs of the human mind. Classing Milton with Homer and Dante and above Virgil, Shelley, himself among poets supremely great, says that "Milton is the third poet the series of whose creations bear an intelligible relation to the knowledge and sentiment and re ligion of the age in which he lived, and of the ages which followed it, develop ing itself in correspondence with their development." Yet it is only the few special students who under stand fully such a poet as Milton, or Dante, or Homer. To them, how ever, either of these poets is an ever increasing wonder. Yet Milton's vital relation to the religion and politics of his age, which have been carried forward on many streams to our own times.-makes it possible still for every one who. Is willing to accept the study, to understand him. It is common to scout the belief in myth ology and demonology. But observe that the vital question for the poet is his own belief and -the state of the belief of his age, not the belief of his present readers. Milton's life was that of an ascetic, suited to his religion and politics. Todd, in his great account of the life and writings of this supreme poet says that "by controversy, and by the indulgence of early prejudices, Milton undoubtedly was soured." The same was true of Dante. Hence these poets often exhibit extreme as well as lofty indignation. It is useless to talk of consistency in a life so situ ated as was that of Milton. Hence the indignant inquiry how his love of liberty could ".have been consistent with his devotion to Cromwell, has no meaning. The sympathies of Heine and of all intense lovers of liberty were with Napoleon, wnose despotism thejr , felt was necessary . to the de struction of preceding despotisms. As the poet and defender of the religious- and political transformation of England, Milton holds g. place with out a peer. That age and its results are comprehensible only through him. The results have been as great in I America as in England though they have been deflected and changed as the rays of light passing through an other and different medium. But the influence and power of the English speaking world, but for John Milton, w ould not be what they are today. "THAT ABOMINABLE RACE." At the beginning of the' court term in Clackamas there were one hundred Iand sixty divorce cases on the docket. By this time perhaps most of these 1 people have been unyoked. Marriage I in PlailrosTioo aa slsawhara m a r Tint- , . , . ... be wholly a failure, but It is nearly sQ struggle on the choice pr,u wfco don.t ,ike tQ admU -fle feat. Tne of marri is main. tenance and perpetuation of the faml And th famil js said b writerg,to be the basis of society civilization and government. But are society, civilization and government worth, the effort? Evidently our couples who, after more or less ex perience, are seeking divorce think not. , And probably Frederick the Great was right in his rejoinder when some body said to him that he ought to do a particular thing, then before him, because it would conduce to the hap piness and support and perpetuation of the families of the kingdom.. "What!" he answered, "for that abominable race?" Perhaps everybody would better be divorced, and all warn their children. ) The stronghold of the Democratic This would be a beautiful planet, j party in the Northern states these swinging in space, without life, as ! fifty years has been the great City our astronomers suppose the planef j of New Tork. The metropolis has Venus to be. But beautiful if there j been the main factor of all Demo were no intelligent life to look orutic success in the State of New upon it? ; York and in the adjacent states of ; New"" Jersey and Connecticut. .New REFORMING WALL STREET. Walter Wellman writes to the Chi cago Record-Herald that AVall street "feels a sense of shame and remorse for its vicious methods and evil poli cies." This is encouraging, for if such a hardened offender as Wall street has been brought to a conviction of its sins and led to repentapce, there is great hope that the Avorld will speedily be reformed. Mr. Wellman is a competent observer and undoubt edly there is ground for his statement or he would not have made it. Still if; is possible that he has mistaken the temporary effect of chastening events for permanent conversion. One may still entertain a suspicion that . Wall street's shame is not for its vicious methods, but because they have been exposed; and it feels 'remorse not so much that its policies were evil as that they will no longer work as they once did. The principal business of the Wall street financial artists is to sell what they do not own to people who can not pay for it. Their transactions are all soul; they are destitute 6f bodies and substance. Nothing passes from the buyer to the seller. Each trans action is essentially a bet. 'One side wagers that shares will rise, the other that they will fall, and whoever hap pens to bet correctly wins the money. It is not the method of this business which Is vicious, but-the business it self. The only way to eliminate its evil side is to abolishit. A thorough going reformation of Wall street would leave most of its offices without tenants. The worst effects of Wall street upon the community are not the pan ics Which occasionally result from Its crazy speculations, but the steady im pulsion toward the gambler's habits and ideals which it gives to every business man in the country. The in fluence of Wall street acts as a cease lessly renewed Infection which poi sons the methods of business every where. It makes a ceaseless assault upon the conscience of every man en gaged in trade. If it can make him a gambler it does so. Only those who are especially fortified in habit and opinion can resist its relentless appeal. The United States can never boast of its morals with sincerity so long as Wall street and its 'lesser imitations in other cities are fostered by the law. The Louisiana lottery was harmless compared with these enormous gam bling institutions. They are especially pernicious to the young. When the youth is form ing his ideals and establishing the habits of his life the allurements of Wall street are constantly before him to snislead and pervert. This peren nial spring of iniquity does more evil by its example than millions of ser mons can correct by precept. We must always have a place where evi dences "of ownership can be bought and sold," but we need no place de voted to their use as gamblers' count ers. Wall street would cease to be a pest to the country if no sale were legal where the actual property did not pass from buyer to seller; but if the law made this requirement Wall street would cease to exist. . HELP FOR COUNTRY EDITORS. One would think there was an old country editor in. the Postoffice De partment, making laws and regula tions, a good fellow of the Tom Rich ardson order, who is bound to give the boys a boost andrlng them into their reward. He must be a man of experience with the frailties of the delinquent subscriber, that terror of the editor and despair of the editor's wife, w'ho in most cases is the finan cial "man" of the firm. For lo, and behold, comes the ruling that papers, to- get into the pound rate, must hereafter be paid for by subscribers in advance, or at best canhot run more than a year behind. Well, why not? All the prosperous, city publica tions adopted the rule years ago, and it should be enforced by the country weekly as a matter of plain business. If ever the laborer Is worthy of his hire, it is the editor and publisher of the local weekly, plugging and boost ing "year in and out for his home town and county, often worried into sleep less nights by visions of bills due and payable and nothing on hand or in sight to meet them. It is safe to venture saying there is not a country paper in the land that has not, at this date, from 3500 to $1000 on its books, owing by "good fellows," most of whom are honest of purpose, yet care less -or shiftless about paying up. These same "good fellows" have plenty of money on circus day, and when they attend the county fair, or other public diversion, or when they think of it at all, say to themselves they will pay some .day. They meet the newspaper man. with a cordial shake of the hand and -compliment him on the good worjie is doing, but that is all, . while- he wonders if the Creator gave some men a double al lowance of gall. In mistaken fear he hesitates to ,.cut them off. The day of deliverance is at hand; henceforth the sign goes up "Cash up and no grumbling." BRYAN AND HIS PAKTY. The Bryan-Parker- controversy, not important. in itself, is an indication, of the irrepressible conflict in the Democratic party which has existed ever since Bryan came "to ' the fore. Beyond doubt or question the larger masses of the party stand with Bryan, for what Bryan represents. But there is a powerful body that opposes him, and never can be brought to his sup port. The real significance of this fact lies in'the strength of this op position in the all-important states. We may look for the whole South, including Missouri, Maryland and Kentucky, to cast its vote for Bryan again. For Bryan's partisans are strong there, and his opponents, though numerous and uttering dis approval, stick to the party because of "the nigger." Most of the repre sentative journalism of the South Is unfavorable to Bryan, .yet will make no opposition after his nomination. But in the Northern States, where there is no negro bugbear and where financial and economic questions are deemed vital, the independent Demo cratic press cannot be. whipped into support of Bryan, nor can. his Demo cratic opponents of the general elec torate, who constitute large bodies of voters In great states that Bryan must carry or have no chance fo win. York City, indeed, controls all three states. But it is practically certain that Bryan cannot get the full Demo cratic vote of New Tork City and its environs, by tens of thousands. Yet he may get the votes of this group of states in the nominating convention; for his partisans represent the ma- i jorlty of the Democratic voters, and the tremendous defeat of Parker four years ago adds strength to the claim j tf their right to control the party. The party division is on a very sim ple principle. Using the names of two men to designate the generic dif ference in the party, it may be said that the Bryan men- will support no candidate of the Parker men, and the Parker men will support no candi date of the Bryan men. In particular this last applies to Bryan himself. Of course there will not be in either case a general bot, but very many certainly will, as heretofore, refuse to be bound. The question then arises or will arise after Bryan's third nomination how is the loss of these Democratic voters to be made up to him? The only resource or help that can bo had must come from the ranks of Republicans who hitherto have voted against Bryan. Will there be any such? Probably. Many? That seems unlikely, yet no one can tell. Bryan will be the Democratic can didate; but so unusual is the state of the public mind that no one can say Bryan cannot be elected. Such con sequence seems, however, improbable. Will he be able to carry New York, Jersey and Connecticut? Or Indiana and Illinois ? Or possibly Ohio? Con jecture is not quite so useless as predicti6n. Away with prediction, therefore, and let us guess that the chances are against election of Bryan. The New York Times, an independent Democratic journal of highest intelli gence says: "It is a truism that parties advance by victories, not by defeats. It is sheer blind folly to pick a candidate with whom the party would be beaten from the first day of the campaign. Indeed, his defeat would be desired from every point of view, for it would be worse for the country, worse for the party, if he were elected." No Democratic paper of high rank in New York supports him. Nor any Democratic paper of high' rank anywhere. Yet he will be the candidate of his party. We quote 'from the Times again: "We have during the last three months witnessed appalling evidences of the danger to the country's com merce and prosperity from the inces sant agitation against great business interests that "is the breath of Mr. Bryan's nostril. From a Republican administration a continuance of this dangerous warfare upon confidence and prosperity would not be ex pected." This 'will be - the basis of the campaign ih the pivotal states. RIVE"R IMPROVEMENT. River improvement is always a timely . topic for the simple reason that it is vital to the commercial in terests of the state. Our waterways were dear to the hearts of our pio neers,, for they were here peady for traffic long before the dawn of the transcontinental railroad era. In fact they were so utilized from the time that the settlers of the Willamette Valley and, a few years later, those of Eastern Oregon began to have even a small surplus from their" fields, or chards and flocks to send to market. Steamboat building began ' early on the Willamette in response to this demand. - The river, as Nature left it, was navigated by men with now and then the loss of a boat at Rock Island, or by impact with a hidden snag or a rock- uncharted in- the mind of the 'igilant captain. But for the stinted commerce of fifty years or more ago the river, as Nature made it, was adequate. Later, when Eastern Oregon began to . bo known as a "great stock country," and later still' as a bountiful wheat proijucing section, and the mines of Idaho and of Grant County were dis covered, the Middle and Upper Co lumbia River was levied upon for transportation, purposes with such effect- that there was one of the finest fleets- of steamboats that, up to that time, had ever plied inland waters. The steamboat era, so callled, has be come in its fullness and local gran deur a thing of memory, but the rivers-retain their place in the affections of the. people and stand therein as a perpetual guarantee against a hope less monopoly of traffic by railroad. It is in this spirit that river Im provement is urged. It is not argued more as a specific needfhan an in alienable right of the people that their waterways shall be kept In such condition as will enable them to meet (foreign ships cost. The present see the demands of a constantly growing lice on the Pacific enables producers traffic. Nature,, ever tending toward i to get their freight to market at the the restoration, of primitive condi-, ! lowest possible figure. Their gain tions, sends down through freshets j ma' e lle Boston Towboat Corn vast quantities of silt which shoal the ; pany's loss, but it is a case of the river beds. Time Is too precious to I "greatest good -for the greatest num spend in lining over shoals while car- i ber." - . goes wait at each end of the route; growing commerce demands quick dispatch. Deep-sea vessels, coming 1S07 was 2,3o0,000 pounds, as com into the Columbia under charter for pared with 50,000 pounds in 1906. grain, the prompt delivery of which 1 Much preliminary work is being done is pledged to the great commercial i toward opening up the mineral terri ports of the world, demand a channel I tory of the state, and with the com- of sufficient depth to insure them against delay. The improvement carried on heretofore by piecemeal, so to speak, has been In a degree effi cacious, but It has been wasteful and unsatisfactory. Permanent improve ment Is required, as both economic and effective. The committee of the Portland Board of Trade, to which that body, has delegated the matter, expresses the opinion that to secure economy and pefmanency in providing and maintaining a channel of sufficient depth to accommodate. the, commerce of the wide region that seeks egress and Ingress through the Columbia river, it Is necessary .to commence at the bar with a deep-draft dredge and work steadily upstream. Whether this opinion shall be indorsed by en gineers, it furnishes a basis for de bate upon the tjuestion of river im provement, which all agree should be of a permanent and, as far as possi ble, of a continuous character, In ac cordance with a, methodical and in telligently devised plan. Earlier Oregonians are Intent upon this question through grateful mem ory of what the rivers, as a means of transportation, were before the com ing of railroads; later Oregonians" the business and commercial men of today are intent upon it as necessary to accommodate our widening doep sea traffic. The question is one against which no dissenting opinion is heard. There may be a division as to methods whereby the quickest and most permanent results, may be ob tained, but upon the question of mak ing and maintaining our waterways as necessary adjuncts to our com merce practically all are agreed. WORLD'S COTTON SCPFXY. The Impregnable position of the United States In the cotton trade of the world is again demonstrated by the failure of Great Britain to make any headway in production of the great staple in the Soudan. For the past twenty years, England has been sending agricultural experts up and down the world in search of a new cotton district which coUld be relied on to relieve the English manufac turers of their dependence on then American planters. Africa has been a great field for experiments and in some small districts a fair measure of success attended them, as - was also the case in India, but at the inception of the industry, the Soudan gave greater promise of success than any other field that had been exploited by the British. Now comes Sir Reginald Wingate, Governor-General of the Soudan, an nouncing that the maximum of pro duction in the Soudan has been reached and that even the present output cannot be maintained, without seriously interfering with the growth of cereal- crops which are needed to support the population.' The esti mated yield for the season of 1907-08 Is much smaller than that of last year, both in total output and in yield per acre. Even this yield was ob tained at fearful cost to the peasant population, for, during the cotton growing season, they were deprived of the right to use the waters of tha Nile for the growth of cereals, with the result that large numbers starved to death. The Assouan reservoir, Which was supposed to have storage 'capacity ample for the needs of both cotton and cereal farmers, could sup ply only enough water for the cotton growers, and the" peasant farmers were unable to water their land. The outlook for the future is so hopeless that it is now generally be lieved that the industry at the Nile Delta will be practically abandoned. As the demand for cotton and its products is steadily increasing, and there is no great Increase in the out- put anywhere except in , the United States, it would seem that the South ern planters were pretty firmly in trenched in their position as dictators of the world's prices. The problem of finding something for the man" to do who, though will ing to work, is physically unable to perform the hard labor which the Board of Associated Charities pro vides for the able-bodied unemployed, is a difficult one to solve. Appeal has been made by a correspondent M. Potter through The Oregonian, for some work that a man thus situ ated can 'do, whereby he may support 'himself and his. mother, who is de pendent upon him. Here is a. man who proclaims that he -is willing to work at anything that he is physically able to do; one who would willingly saw or carry wood if he could. He is self-respecting, with a record of twenty years' work in offices behind him- a period of sedentary occupation long enough to soften the muscles and sap the strength of any man. He is deserving, doubtless, of the chance he asks to make his way in some voca tion that he can fill, though .his pres- -ent stress after twenty years at work of his own choosing is a'" sharp ar raignment of his disposition or ability to take care of his earnings. This aside, however, this man needs work that he can do he is willing and even anxious for work. What have you for, him, brethren of the Associated. Charities ?- The periodical sale of th'e Boston Towboat Company's American liners, that jun out of Seattle, is again an nounced. These steamers are sold through the newspapers every time there is any prospect- for a ship sub sidy bill. By a strange coincidence, the same, reason is always given for the sale. That reason is the inability of the owners to compete with the foreign steamships on the route. The Seattle despatch in yesterday's Ore gonian stated that the owners of the Boston Towboat Company -could not operate the steamers "with white crews and meet traffic handled by Orientals." Very few of the trans Pacific steamers carry any whites ex cept the officers, and the Boston Tow boat Company is not barred from em ploying Oriental labor on its vessels-' The competition of foreign steamship owners can never be successfully met until American owners are permitted 1 to use ships which- cost no more than The copper output of Wyoming in pletion of many new lines of railways the year 1908 promises to be the most active thus far in the mining history of the state. It isydifficult for those who followed the old emigrant trail I over the Black Hills, half a century and more ago, to realize that a vig orous young state, with its abounding Industries and resources, has been es tablished In the beautiful wilderness, peopled then only by roving bands of Indians, pastured by immense herds of buffalo and given'" over utterly to tenants of the wild. To those who crossed it in those early and yet late days, and who have not since re crossed it, Wyoming1 stands in mem ory as a sunny expanse of hill and mountain and plain; of swift, un bridged rivers, sweet springs and clear blue skies. The memory is a bright one and worthy "to be cher ished even in a utilitarian age. The colonist rates that will be in force on all transcontinental lines from March 1 to April 30 may be de pended upon to bring to . the Pacific Northwest a large number of thrifty folk, intent upon bettering their finan cial and industrial conditions. . The records' show that a very large per cent of men with families who come hither seeking homes and enlarged opportunities become permanent citi zens of the state and add, as the years go on, a generous allotment to the prosperity and material progress of the commonwealth. Escaping from the rigors of an Eastern or Mississippi Valle,y Winter, and coming hither on the verge of the beautiful Oregon Spring, intending settlers can scarcely fail to be charmed fwith the prospect. TheTnore colonists the merrier, pro viding they bring with them energy and determination, and a settled pur pose in life, without which success Is not to be attained anywhere. A young man was brutally mur dered on Railroad avenue in Seattle Thursday night while endeavoring to save his money from footpads- who had attacked him. That there have not been a number of similar mur ders in' Seattle and also in Portland is due to the willingness of victims to hand over their possessions. This reign of terror is becoming a serious matter, and the numerous highway men might do well' to recall that it was a similar murder brought about the lynching of a few undesirable citizens in Pioneer Square a number of years ago. It has been a long time since the official gallows tree has borne any fruit, but these unpro voked murders and hold-ups will, if continued, provoke vengeance. The way of the transgressor is hard and young ilr. Nordstrom, after a brief fling with other people's money, is now in the hands, of the law with long years of Imprisonment ahead of him. The young Astorlan who, on short notice", plunged from an hon orable position in the business and social circle in the city of his birth, has not only wrecked his own life, but has brought sorrow on his highly respected family and disappointment to his friends. . This tragedy of life preaches an eloquent sermon on the advantage of honesty and a proper' regard for the- rights of others. Ever since the first settlement of Oregon there has been dispute over the enigma furnished by the wax found in the sands of Nehalem beach. This mystery has perhaps been solved by Professor O. F. Stafford," in charge of the department of chemistry. Uni versity of Oregon. By historical re search and investigation in the lab oratory he has laid bare all the ob tainable facts. For those interested in the subject it is worth while to read Professor Stafford's article pub- ' lished on ?a?e 2 of. magazine sec- tion of this issue of The Oregonian. The Executive Board of the city may be supposed to know how to do the .business before it, without sug gestion from those who have no re sponsibility .of action. Yet it seems not out of place to mention that when the bid of a local company for construction of a steel bridge over Sullivan's Gulch, to cost about $65, 000, is only 137 higher than the bid of an Eastern company, the local concern might well receive consider ation. Many a man has made charges against ' his wife in a divorce suit which he would not have permitted any other man to make without a fight. Perhaps if District Attorneys would make a practice of going dissatisfied husbands and wives one better by making a few additional allegations of unfitness, misconduct and general cus sedness, the quarreling couples would get together for mutual protection. A message of dire import came rumbling under the sea a few days ago, all the way from Londonto New York. It was from the syndicate of the former city, that controls the en tire output of diamonds from two of the great diamond mines of Africa, to a diamond importing company of the latter, saying that the present price of diamonds will be maintained at all hazards. - A Polk County farmer has set out 175 acres of Efiglish walnuts and has planted the trees forty feet apart one way and sixty feet the other. ' While this seems a long distance, any one who will observe the spread of the limbs of a full-grown tree will see at once that it is none too far. This country would be infinitely bet ter off if the money expended in auto mobiles were invested in improved waterways. A strange arevelation of the trial In the Federal Court is that Mr. Brow nell was "hot-aired" himself. Consider the financial situation inj Portland two months ago, compare it with today and rejoice. Japan has learned that it takes money to make warships and ar mies go. - 1 ; . Edmund C. Stedman's Poems ' The. Htllnlde Door. Sometimes within mv hand A spirit puts tne jHlverj- key Of Fairyland: From the dark, barren hfath he beckons me. Till by that hidden hillside door. Where bards have paesed before, I seem to stand. The portal opens wide; x In, through the wondrous, lighted halls. Voiceless I iclide Where tinkling- music magically falls. And fair In fountained gardens mova The heroes, blest with love u And glorified. Then by the meadows green. Down winding waiks of elf and fay. I pass unseen: There rert the valiant chieftain wreathed With bay: t Here maidens to their lovers sing, And happy minstrels sins. - Praising their queen. For where yon pillars are. And birds with tuneful voices call, There ahines a star The crown she wears, the Fairy Queen ef ak.ll 1 i Led to that inmost, wooded haunt By maidens ministrant. I halt afar. 3 joy! she sees me stand Xouoting, and calls me near her throne.' .mi waves her wand. As In my dreams, and smiles on me alone. 0 royal beauty, proud and sweet: 1 bow me at her feet To kiss that hand. A woe! ah. fate malign! By what a rude, revengeful gust. From that fair shrine "Which holds my sovran mistress I am thrustt Then comes a mocking volce'a taunt. Crying, thou, fool, avaunt! She is hot thine! And I am backward borne By unseen awful hands, and cast. In utter wxirn. I"orth from that brightness to the mi-.tilght hlast; Nut mine the mlnrtrel-lover's wreath. But the dark, barren heath. And heart forlorn. Refuga In Nature. Mora wise, betake thee to those sylvan haunts Thou knewest when young, and. once again a child. , Let their perennial loveliness renew Thy natural faith and childhood's heart se rene. t Forgetting all the toilsome pilgrimage. Awake from strife and shame, as from a dream Dreamed by a boy. when under waving treea He sleeps and dreams a languid afternoon. Once more from these harmonious beauties) gain , Repose and ransom, and a power to fet The immortal gladness of inanimate things. There Is the might Mother, ever young And garlanded, and welcoming her sons. There are her thousand charms- to soothe thy pain..- , And merge thy little. Individual woe In the broad health and happy fruitfulneiis Of all that smiles- around thee. For thy saka The woven arvhes of her forests breathe Perpetual anthemM. and the blue skies smllfi Between, to heal thee with their Infinite hope.. There aie her crystal waters; lave thy brown, Hot with long turmoil. In their purity; Wash off the battle-dust from those poor limbs Blood-stained .and weary. Holy Bleep shall come I'pon thee; waking, thou shalt find in bloom The lilies, fresh as in the olden days; And once again, when Night unveils her stars-. Thou fhalt have sight of their high radiance. And feel the old. mysterious awe subdue The phantoms ofthy pain. Flood-Tide. As the darkened earth forever to the momlns; turns again. Aa the dreaming eoldier, after all the perilous campaign. Struggling 'long with horse and rider, In his sleep smites fiercely out. And, with sutiden pang awaking, through tha darkness peers about Hearing but the crickets chirrup loud, be neath his chimney-stone. Feeling but the warm heart throbbing, in tha form beside hie1 own Then to knowledge of his hamlet, dearar for ' the toll he knows. Comes at last, content to nestle in the sweetfl of his repose; So fell I from those high fancies to the quiet. qf a heart Knowing well how Duty maketh each one's share the better part. Aa again 1 looked about me North find South and Kaft and W et ' Now of all the wide world over still my haven seemed the best. Too Late. Crouch no more by he ivied walls. Weep no lor.g.-r over her grave. Strew no flowers when evening falls; Idly you lost what angels gave! Sunbeams cover that silent mound With a warmer hue than your roses red; Tomorrow's rain will bedew the ground With a puwr stream than the tears you ehed. ' '. But neither the sweets of the scattered flow ers Nor the1, morning sunlight's soft command. Nor all the songs oT the Summer showers. Can charm her back from that distant land. Tenderest vows arei ever too -late! She. who has gone, gan only know The cruel sorrow that was her fate. And the words that were a mortal woa. Earth to earth, and a vain destpalr; For the gentle spirit has flown away. And you can never her wrongs repair. Till ye meet again at the Judgment Xajr. What the Winda Bring. Which Is the Wind that brings the cold? The North Wind. Freddy, and ail the snow; And the sheep will scamper into -the fold When the North begins to blow. Which Is the Wind that brings the heat? The South Wind, Katy: and corn wUl grow. And peaches redden for you to eat. When the South begins to blow. Which is the Wind that brings the rain? The Bast Wind, Arty; and farmers know mat cows come shivering up -the lane When the Cast beglna to blow. Which Is the Wind, that brings theflower? The West Wind. Bessy: and eoft and low The birdies sing in the Summer hours When the West begina to blow. Pajamas Worn at Society Function. San Francisco Dispatch in New York: World. When Dr. Albert C. Kellegg celebrated his 42d birthday, his wife had a Chinese party in the" evening at their home an Oriental entertainment at which the cos tumes, color and music were Chinese. The guests bad ibeen asked to attend suitably attired. Four of the guests, after dining at the Cosmos Club, donned silken paja mas, tnoased the same in overcoats and, appeared before the guests already as sembled. ' From the burning of punk in the simu lated opium joint on the upper floor to the gay decorations in the supper room, where nearly everything Chinese was served, not to mention funny Chinese im personations and mimicry by Millionaire George Steiger, everybody had a good time. And there, was a real Chinese, or chestra. The women who didn't wear Chinese costumes wore Japanese kimonos. Hntber Rouen on Mr. Bryan. Wall Street Journal. The following are several ctfbice sen tences from the speech of Senator Davis, of Arkansas, in Cooper, Union:. "The old ship of state is on the verge of sinking." "There are 51 magnates in this country who own over l-3th of all the wealth In the country. How did these men get such vast fortunes?' By robbery and thievery." "A trust is a combination of crooks." "Down in my state you could not con vict a nigger erapshooter on the testi mony of an editor." "I can't believe that any man ever niada a million dollars honestly." And then this: "William J. Bryan l the greatest man this country has ever produced." And yet Mr. Bryan is an editor and Is rapidly getting rich. Only the Incidents. Chicago Evening Post. The Boston Transcript records a Providence wedding "which unites two of the great manufacturing families of Rhode Island, and which also unites two of thfl three great fortunes of the state." The bride and groom ' are properly only incidents in this great industrial merger.