THE STTXDA" OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, MARCH 1. 1DOS. fet'BbCBIPTIOX RATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday included, on year $9 00 Dally, fcunday Included, six month".... lally. Sunday lociuded. three months.. 3-2s Lally. Sunday included, one month. .75 Iaily. without Sunday, one year 6-00 L-aily. without Sunday. lx month-.. Dally, without Sunday. thre month'.. 1.73 Daily, without Sunday, on. month. . J fcunday, on. year - 2.50 Weekly, on. year (Issued Thursday)... ISO fionday and weekly, cno year .oQ BY CARRXEB. I!ly. SundaT Included, one year JJO iJally. Sunday Included, one month ' HOW TO REMIT Send postofflcs money rder. express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ar. at the aender". risk. CIvo postofflcs ad dress In full, including- county and stata. POt-TAOB BAtCS, Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflee as Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Paces .'. 1 cent 38 to 28 Panes 3 cents 80 to 44 Pages S cents to CO Pages 4 cents Forelrn postage, double rates. IMPORTANT Ths postal laws ar. strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully Prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN Bl'blNESS OFFICE. The s, C. Hecltwttb Special Agency New York, rooms 4S-50 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune bulldinjc. . KEPT ON SALE. Chicago. Auditorium Annex; Postofflee News i'o.. 17 Dearborn street: Empire News Stand. fit. Paul, Minn. N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. (olorado Springs. Colo. Bell. H. H. Llenver. Hamilton and Kendrlck. UO-912 Seventeenth street: Pratt Book Store, !!1 Fifteenth street: H. P. Hansen. S. Rico. George Carson. Kansas City. Mo. Ricksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut: Yuma Nows Co. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugn. SO ' South Third. Cincinnati. O. Toma News Co. Cleveland. O. James Pushaw. 30T Su perior street. Washington, D. C. Kbbltt House. .Penn sylvania avenue; Columbia News Co. Pittsburg-, Pa. Fort Pitt News "Co: Philadelphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Office: Penn News Co.; Kemole, A. P.. 37.;5 - Lancaster avenue. . New York City. L. Jones & Co.. Astor House: Broadway Theater News Stand; Ar thur Hotallng- Wagons; Empire News Stand. Ogden. I). L. Boyle; Lowo Bros.. 114 TwMity-flfth street. Omaha. Barkalow Bros.. Union Station; Maceath Stationery Co.; Kemp & Arenson. I)e Moines, la. Mose Jacobs. Fresno, ('tst. Tourist News Co. Hacranieoto. C'al. Sacramento Newa Co.. 430 K street: Amos News Co. Knit I-ke. Moon Book & Stationery Co.; RosetifeM & Hansen; G. W. Jewett. P. O. corner; Stclpeuk Bros. Iing Beach. Cal. B. E. Amos. Pasadeoa. Cal. Amos News Co. Sun Diego. B. K. Amos. Han Jose. Emerson W. Houston, Tex. International News Agency.. Dallas. Tex. Southwestern News Agent. 844 Main street; also two streot wagons. Ft. Worth, Tex. Southwestern N. and A. Agency. Amarltla. Tex. Timmons & Pope. Han tranclco. ForstiT &. Orear: Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; I... Parent; N. Wheatley; Fairmount Hotel News Stand; mos News Co.; United News Agency. 1414 Eddy street; B. E. Amos, man ager three wagons: Worlds N. S-. 116-5 A. Sutter street. Oakland. Cal. W. H. Johnson. Fourteenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand: B. E. Amos, manager nvo wagons: Welllngham. E, G. ,oklt!rld. Nev. Louie Follln. Eureka, Cal. Call-Chrontcla Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND, Sl-NDAY, MARCH 1, 190S. REMARKS ON "INCONSISTENCY." Kvery person who speaks or writes much, and whoso words are allowed to have weight, must meet very often the charge of "inconsistency." Web ster said, this at one time; that at an other: the statements are "Inconsis tent." Burke made this statement In his speech on American taxation, but this totally opposite statement in his speech on the Nabob of Arcot's debts. Gladstone stood for this doctrine when Prime Minister, but for this different doctrine when a leader of the opposi tion. Shakespeare wrote the most op-, posite things, and texts in the Bible are contradictory arxl irreconcilable. Lincoln declared that he would not in terfere with slavery and denied that he was an abolitionist, yet within a year Issued the Emancipation Proclama tion, and was rated by all his political opponents not only for inconsistency, hut for violation of his word or pledge. Little minds revel in. these things. Usually you can gauge, by this charge of "Inconsistency," the intellectual, status of such as employ it against those whom they oppose, or rather, whom they carp at: for the opposition of such is negligible, or of little con sequence. Often The Oregonian is told that its statements, discussions or arguments pass unheeded: yet at times it thinks there may be something in them, af ter all. since it has long observed that the most earnest employment that many persons have is their search through its columns from day to day, and through its files for years past, to find "inconsistencies." To get togeth er from its columns passages written at various times and under different circumstances, and declare them "In consistent," Is to such persons appar ently the chief delight of their lives. Put what boots it? All subjects are discussed in the light of the day or hour of the discussion. Upon every new presentation there is some new modifying Influence or consideration that affects the discussion of every question. Moreover, no subject under discussion Is in precisely the same re lation or position towards other things that it was last year, or even last week. The human element in every thing of the kind is in constant flux and change. Again, the same subject, approached from different sides, de mands different treatment: and the different methods of treatment, though apparently "Inconsistent" to minas of carpers looking out for such things and going into raptures over their ap parent or pretended discovery, may not really be inconsistent, after all. probably are not. But If they can be made to appear so the critic cackles with delight, boasts of his achievement and claims his reward. Letters come every week to The Oregonian in which the writers base their argument against what it has recently said on statements of what it said or is alleged to have said at some former time, perhaps years ago. Such study of its columns of today and its files of the past would seem to show that some interest, and. indeed, some importance, may Jbe thought to attach to its utterances; for even Indignation sometimes char acterises these charges of "inconsist ency" awakening wonder that there should be such anger in celestial minds. The writer or speaker of today al ways is In the position or mood of to day; and his argument varies, there fore. In its method, illustration, pur pose or end. Some of the conditions and considerations that were present at a former time are not present now; others are present now which were not present then. Besides, no one man ever writes a great newspaper, and to the minds of the many various writers who must be employed, sub j.ts that must be treated present themselves in various anil varying as pects. The most careful editorial su pervision cannot possibly avoid dis crepancies of statement and of argu ment. Every great newspaper is con stantly under 'this limitation and lia bility. It is particularly so. in treat ment of abstruse, complicated or dis puted questions. In the field of opin ion there is little or nothing that is ab solutely certain; for, as soon as opin ion passes into certainty it ceases to be opinion. But opinion always remains, to supply the chief material for the work of the human spirit. Nobody now attempts to reconcile the discrep ancies even of the scriptures. Criti cism long since passed that stage. Tire universal canon of criticism and guide to interpretation, is that every writing bears the stamp of the times and of the circumstances in which it was pro duced. . They who do tiot know this have no key to the literature of the world. No writer whose contemporaries re gard his work as worth reading troubles himself about charges of "in consistency" that may be brought against him. Carlyle and Herbert Spencer pooh-poohed all such critics. "Inconsistency," said Emerson, "Is the hobgoblin of little minds." To those who made the accusation against Webster he answered: "Inconsist encies of opinion and of statement, arising from change of circumstances, are often Justifiable." But you never hear it charged that a writer or speak er is "inconsistent," when what the one writes or the other speaks. Is rec ognised as having no weight or value. The opinions of critics of this class, on any subject, are never taxed with in consistency, for they are worth no at tention. Nobody cares what they said yesterday; nobody cares what they say today. Nobody cares whether they are "consistent" or not. NEW CURRENCY BILLS. The Fowler currency bill ought to pass. Not because it is Just what the country ought to have, but because it Is the best the country can get at the present time. It is in every way bet ter than the Aldrlch or Senate bill, which indeed is worse than nothing at all. .' The. essential feature of the Fowler bill is that it proposes issue, through the National banks, under direction of the Controller of the Currency, of bank notes based on general assets, in lieu of the present bond-secured notes which are to be retired; the new notes to be secured on gold reserve, deposits and the general resources of the banks, to be approved by the Con troller, the whole to be under care ful inspection and regulation. This will make a flexible and movable cur rency; and for additional security there is td be a guarantee to which all the banks aft to contribute in. propor tion to their circulation. The bill is too long and too technical to be ex plained here in detail; but these are its leading features. The Aldrich, or Senate bill, on the other hand, proposes continuance of the present system and addition of a further amount of bond-secured cur rency, admitting railroad and other bonds as the basis of security. But bonds of this character are most unfit for such a purpose. The New York World well says that to issue currency on Mr. Harriman's hand-made Alton bonds (for instance) would be a pror ceeding too simple even for trustful Uncle Sam. But Senator La Follette proposes to strengthen the proposition by provid ing for ascertainment of the value of railroad bonds used as security by in quiry as to the cost of reproduction of the railroad whose bonds may be of fered. This again is impracticable. It is the earning power of a railroad, not its cost, that' makes the criterion of value. There ought to be a central bank with branches, after the fashion of the French or the German system. But we are not wise enough for that. The Fowler bill is the best available expedient for the present time. MIST GIVE AND TAKE. Mr. Samuel Gompers,' representing organized labor, and the steel trust, representing organized capital, have said that there will be no reduction in the marketable commodities which they have for sale. If either or both of these gentlemen, who declined to admit that the economic situation has undergone any change since last Sunj mer, can maintain the position they have assumed, the return of good times will be long deferred. The steel trust is maintaining prices at cost of loss of buiness. Organized labor In the Eastern States is maintaining wages at cost of loss of employment. There will be no Increase in the con sumption of the commodities which capital and labor have to sell until there has been a reduction in their cost. The situation offers no room for argument as to the worthiness of the laborer for his hire. This is not de nied. It Is the old case of half a loaf being preferable to no loaf, and resist ance to this movement toward a lower level of wages in particular lines, as well as of other commodities, will be useless, for In the end the old inex orable law of supply and demand will settle the matter. One year ago lumber freights be tween Portland and San Francisco were nearly 19 per thousand feet. Today it is impossible to find business for one-half the tonnage available, at one-half the rates in effect a year ago. The supply of tonnage overtook the demand, with the inevitable result. The steam schooner men could., no longer get $9 per thousand feet for carrying lumber. The mills which cut the lumber could not get the old prices for it. The mills made a cut In prices and the steam schooner owners cut the freight. This helped somewhat. It attracted lumber consumers who would not pay the old prices for lum ber, nor the J 9 freight rate. But, in spite of these reductions, the lumper business and the freighting business drifted from bad to worse, and in a final effort to keep it moving a slight cut was made in wages of engineers and Bremen. This has been so successfully resist ed that nearly 100 vessels are out ol commission. This resistance to reduc tion in wages has. of course, increased the number of unemployed on the Pa cilia Coast by many thousands, and has aided In delaying the recovery in in dustrial activity, for, while organized labor can withdraw from theCraarket the commodity it has for sale, it is powerless to force production or in crease consumption to a degree where Us services will again be in demand. The present widespread depression will not last long. The country is too rich and has too many resources avail able to be tied up for an indefinite pe riod; but the return of good times will be retarded unless both capital and la bor accept the changed conditions and "give and take" during the interval pending readjustment that must take place, before we can again enjoy the remarkable prosperity which so sud denly ceased last October. And this policy of "give and take" must be in evidence throughout the long line of industries and, occupations between capital and labor. SUBSIDY QUACKERY. Those statesmen who are so eager to bolster up-our .languishing South American trade with a ship subsidy fall Into two principal classes. Some of them are parasites of the trusts which -would absorb the subsidy; oth ers are too lazy to investigate the real causes why the trade does not flourish. An inkling of the nature of these causes may be gathered from the Daily Consular Keport for February 19- . The report is from Special Agent Charles M. Pepper, at Lima, Peru. Mr. Pepper says that of forty-seven customers of American firms whom he talked with . at Lima, forty-three complained that the goods sent them were not suitably packed. ' One man ager of a machinery firm said that it had taken him two years to teach a house In Troy how to pack machinery for the Peruvian trade. When the American company finally mastered '.he secret . of packing its goods properly they acquired a foothold in Peru and their business has flourished ever since. Why not try the effect of a few elementary lessons in packing goods upon trade before granting a subsidy to the shipping trust? Such sordid devices as packing, hon est labeling and genuineness of Qual ity are less pleasant remedies than a few millions plundered from the tax payers, but the chances are that they would prove more effectual if the pur pose is actually to build up trade with our Latin neighbors. If the purpose is not trade, but robbery of the home taxpayer, of course a sumptuous sub sidy would be more effectual. For all commercial ills our states men have but one remedy, like the old school of quack doctors who used the same drug for all diseases. When com merce is to be improved or trade ex tended, the first thing they think of is to compel the taxpayer - at home to hand over a substantial bonus. The idea of making those who want trade pay for it themselves may be heretical, but it sounds reasonable. Why not try it for once? AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY HISTORY. During recent years enormous work has been done on the sources of Amer ican history. A work that formerly was the occupation of a few is now the profession of a vast number of writ ers, lecturers and instructors. The elaborate and continuous work of such writers as Bancroft and Hildreth is succeeded by that of a multitude of writers who produce monographs on special topics. We thus get distinctive pictures, in detail. It is only within a few years that we have been obtain ing full .and satisfactory accounts of the various phases of the American Revolution. Scholars have been ex ploring every possible source of ma terial, both in America and Europe. Two books of remarkable value, deal ing with special features of our Revo lution, have recently appeared; one of them entitled "Our Struggle for the Fourteenth Colony" that is, our at tempt to bring Canada into the effort with us to obtain independence; the other, an account of "The Loyalists of the American Revolution." This last named book contains material that will bring surprise to the reader 'Who has made no special research into this topic, but whose reading of our rev olutionary history has been limited to general outlines. The author is C. H. Van Tyne, of the University of Penn sylvania. It is made clear thaf the loyalist party in the Revolution was-numerous and powerful; so much so that in fact it was the main hope, if not the main stay, of the effort to reduce the col onies to submission. It was especiaily powerful in New Tork, New Jersey and Connecticut, and, moreover, was numerous in the Carolinas; less so in New England and Virginia. Altogeth er, it is believed that it "Included nearly one-third of the people of the colonies"; among them were many of the most wealthy and influential fam ilies. Much of the wealth of the coun try, as may be supposed, was for the King, for wealth is habitually conserv ative; and the women of theso fam ilies sent into the British ranks as many of their young men as they could, just as the secession wo men of Baltimore and other border cities drove into the Confederate, serv ice, through threat of social ostracism, every young man whom they could reach. The loyalists were always the main reliance of the British army for Information and supplies; and their loyalty was steadily nourished by pay ment of gold or horses, forage, pro visions, transportation, and all else that might be wanted, while the Con tinentals had only paper, greatly de preciated, ,to pay with. The central position of the City of New York, held by the British almost from the begin ning of the war till two years after its close, gave ample opportunity both to protect the loyalists and to make the most of their assistance, and finally to give those who had most to dread' from the vengeance of the final victors opportunity to escape. Not less than SO, 000 loyalists served in the British armies during the various stages of the ;war a number much greater than all the foreign soldiers sent over for the British service. Tory soldiers in great numbers were with Burgoyne, and even when they did not actually enter his army, they held back the Whig militia from Joining, the Ameri can forces. Nearly two-thirds of the British troops by whom Lincoln was repulsed at Savannah, in 1779, were Tories; when the battle of Camden was fought, which brought ruin for the time to the American cause in the South, it was Tarleton's cavalry that had been recruited, almost wholly in New York, and Rawdon's volunteers of Ireland, raised in Pennsylvania, that carried the day. The warfare of such leaders as Marion, Sumter and Pickens, which forms the brightest pages of the struggle in the South, was waged almost wholly with Tories, supplied with arms and clothing by the British in Charleston and other ports. It Is amazing, on reading the rec ord in detail, to realize how terrible this internecine strife actually was. and how powerful was the aid given by the loyalists to the British from the beginning to the end of the war. , The supreme greatness of Washing ton stands out in this struggle to an extent that almost convinces that with arsy other man than Washington at the head of affairs the effort must have been a failure. Besides the mil itary difficulties, he was beset by ca bals and badgered by Congress. His patience, resolution,- judgment and constancy are now even more objects of admiration than at the close of the war which he so successfully conduct ed. Not another man In America wo'uld have been equal to the require ments of that most difficult position. There were many occasions when everything depended on him. Our in dependence was achieved only be cause nothing could subdue the soul nor shake the firmness of Washing ton. - "Ah! gentlemen," said Bonaparte It was just as he was about to embark for Egypt, and some' young Americans happening at Toulon, anxious to see the mighty Corsican had obtained the honor .of an introduction to him. Scarcely were passed the customary salutations when he . eagerly asked, "How fares , youi countryman, the great Washington?" "He wa very well. General," answered the youths, "when we left America." """Ah, gentle men," said Bonaparte, "Washington can never be otherwise than well. His name will live as the founder of a great empire, when mine will he lost in the vortex of revolutions!" If the story isn't strictly historical old Par son Weems openB his famous "Life of Washington" with it it is more true than history, and worth preservation forever. FROM ONE JUDGE ALL. . To most readers, we dare say, the theories upon which the Government's policy of forest' preservation is based are theories and nothing more. They seem to be remote from daily life, speculative, Impractical. To many persons the efforts of the President and Congress to prevent the destruction of the forests look like tyrannous-interference with private enterprise. What are the trees for except to be cut down and made into lumber? That thej- have other and more important uses Is a truth which has yet to dawn upon many minds. Considerations like these lend singular importance to any piece of writing which brings home the actual results of forest destruction to the merchant, the farmer, the dweller in the country town, and shows them what may be expected to hap pen to their property if the process goes on unchecked. The Oregonian thinks it worth while, therefore, to call attention to an article by Mrs. Huldah Klager which recently ap peared in the Woodland News, a paper published in Cowlitz County, Wash ington, giving a sketch of the history of the Lewis River for the last thirty or forty years. This river rises at the base of Mount St. Helens and follows an irregular course, for the most part through nar row gorges with mountains once heav ily timbered on either side, and dis charges into the Columbia about twenty miles below Vancouver. In the lower reaches the bed is now from a quarter to a half mile wide. It is strewn with sandbars which are pretty stable during low water, but when the stream is in flood they shift from place to place. Along the upper course the banks are fearfully eroded by every freshet. In the historic Win- ' ter of 1896, when havoc was wrought by floods all along the Lewis River, one farm of 160 acres was swept away entirely a few miles above the village of Woodland, while at a point some two miles below the village the current cut into fertile land along the bank more than ninety feet. More recently the river made an entirely new chan nel in one of the flats along its middle course. The erosion, of the banks fills the upper course of the river with trees, stumps and "soil which are deposited in the channel farther down. The chan nel thus grows wider, shallower and more obstructed every year. The Gov ernment sometimes sends a dredge boat to clear out the snags, but even if its work were thoroughly done the re sults could only be transient, since the deposition of soil and debris goes on continually. At a point a couple of miles, above Woodland the river has repeatedly cut away the public road.' Spring after Spring for several years the County Commissioners have pur chased land for a new road, and Win ter after Winter the river has washed it away. During the process the stream has gradually invaded the front yard of a farmhouse which stands near this perilous place, eating away the gar den, the flower beds and the fruit trees. ' At several points along the lower reaches also the river Is gnawing away the road. Everywhere it is nibbling at the farms. Some years three or four rods of fertile land will go at one swoop. In others the erosion will be but a few feet, but it goes on continu ally. The soil which is thus being car ried into the channel to obstruct navi gation is worth from J50 to $200 6r 300 an acre. Mrs. Klager mentions one small tract at Woodland which it cost $50 an acre merely to c,lear. Within her recollection three acrfe3 of this piece have slipped into the stream and the rest of it. is going. So much for the Lewis River as it is to day, a wide, almost useless stream, shallow except in time of flood, hardy navigable at any time, and a contin ual menace to the farms along its banks. Mrs. Klager remembers how it looked in her childhood. It was then a narrow, deep stream, navigable at all seasons. The Winter freshets were moderate and they did no harm, since the banks were everywhere protected by a rank growth of willows. She has watched the work of destruction pro gress from year to year until, very nat urally, she has begun to wonder where it will end. In another fifty years or so, she asks, what will have become of the fertile dairy farms and orchards in the "Lewis River bottom"? What will have become of the village of Woodland, with its dwellings and stores? To her there is but one pos sible answer. They will all have been swept a'way unless something effectual is done to stay the havoc of the river. Mrs. Klager has a theory that the steamboats are responsible for the evil ways of the Lewis River in recent years; but she is probably only par tially correct. The steamboats do their part. Their swells undermine the banks during the June freshet and cause yard after yard to disappear;, but the destructiveness of .the Winter floods is to be attributed entirely to the logging operations on the moun tains of the upper course. The Win ter rains now flow down through the gorges with a rush instead of being re tained by the spongy soil of the for ests, as they were forty years ago. As more timber Is destroyed the Winter floods will become increasingly ruinous to the farms and villages and the work of protection will become more diffi cult. In the story of the Lewis River we can read what is going on everywhere in America. The ruin wrought by this one stream would be negligible; "but hundreds and thousands of others are doing the same thing or worse. Dan gerous as the Lewis River has be come. It is harmless compared with many. It is this progressive ruin of the country by erosion which the Gov ernment seeks to stay by restoring the forests. Is not the work "worth doing? Is there anything speculative about either the danger or its cause? TEN HOURS A DAY. -The Supreme Court of the land hav ing decided the Oregon law is 'consti tutional, henceforth no woman in Ore gon shall be made to work more than ten hours a day by an employer; 1 This is a measure for the relief of the women and girls in stores; shops and factories, and is a good law. But what of the thousands of young women who would not take a job doing housework for , anybody at any price, yet marry and go into men's kitchens, where there are no hours for labor or, rather, no hours for re.st? . What of the multitudes of women in Ore gon, pant, present and future, who begin the day while it is yet night? They that is, .many of them, at least arise while. their lord slum bereth, build the fire, get breakfast and have it ready ere the morning chores are done; feed their chickens after straining the milk and setting it to rise'; get the children ready and off to school; then begin, on' dinner, with possibly a fruitless trip to the wood shed and an enforce visit to the old rail fence for something that will burn quickly. Then dinner and all the af ternoon housework, with it may be a chance to sit in the rocker and darri and mend until time to get supper and feed the hens and gather the eggs to be traded on the store bill. The. egg money she earns, but 'tis not hers to spend. After supper more mending while sitting up for the hoys or girls to get home when she should be in bed, having first filled the kettle with the parings that will boll in the morn ing for the fowls' breakfast. Ten hours, did the law say? Great is the law. The monotony is broken, perhaps, by a few hours in the rocker of a Sunday afternoon while she thinks of the easy time enjoyed by the lucky of her sex who come under the protecting hand of the . law. Ten hours a day? Yes, and many more. But some day she will take a vaca tion, give out her accumulated over time and enjoy a long rest. Only, God bless her, she will be in heaven. THE BUFFALO RANGE. We have heard much in recent years of the passing of the buffalo from the North American continent, but it is difficult to realize that this passing, after ages of occupancy of the great ranges, has been accom plished in less than half a century. The writer, recently coming casually across an old number of Harper's Magazine of January, 1869, found an article on the "Buffalo Range," writ ten by Theodore R. Davis and embel lished with crude illustrations, done, however, in the best style of wood en graving of that time. The incidents and facts related, though less than forty years have passed since they were chronicled, furnish a remarka ble epitome of the changes that these years have wrought on the great ranges the denizens of the wild that roamed over them, the nomadic tribes that subsisted by the chase, and the Army posts that sentineled the border lands of civilization and made homebuildlng in the great interior possible. The record has a remi niscent, almost a personal touch for those who knew of the great plains from having crossed them at an ox team pace fifty or sixty years ago. The "Buffalo Range," according to this author, once extended from the Atlantic seaboard in Virginia and the Carolinas westward to the Rocky Mountains, but there is no evidence that it reached points east of the Hudson River or north of Lake Champlaln. As late as 1712, says Mr. Davis; herds of buffalo were seen within SO miles of Charleston, South Carolina, but tie adds: "At present (1869) one must, to find them. Jour ney something like 2000 miles west ward from the Atlantic seaboard, the best hunting ground being between the Republican and Arkansas Rivers, a section of the plains over which I have traveled ponyback for days, when at any moment I could glance in some direction and look upon vast herds of buffalo." Mr. Davis says' further that per sons who have never seen the vast herds of buffalo moving can have but little conception of the, almost irre sistible power of such a moving mass. The "countless thousands" press forward, able to overwhelm any but the strongest barriers. "Count less thouands," but a little while ago hardly a specimen now, in all the vast region over which those crea tures roamed at will and fed abun dantly. The Indians even then fore saw that the buffalo would soon be gone through the wastefulness of white hunters, the narrowing of the range by the occupation of white settlers, and the introduction of "spotted buffalo" (domestic cattle) upon the range. "If," said this chron icler, "as the Indian fears ground lessly, however, at present the buf falo will pass away, I am at a loss to know what he would do, for the buf falo feeds, clothes and warms the no mads." The buffalo has passed away and the Indian policy of the Govern ment, then unknown, has answered the question as to what would become of the nomads without the buffalo. Looking at the crude pictures il lustrating some of the more frequent scenes and sights on the "buffalo range" less than forty years ago In every one of which, even then, the bleached skulls of buffaloes were in evidence In the foreground one can well see" that even then the buffalo was in process of "passing." Still, long and seemingly interminable lines of huge black beasts traveling single file from their feeding grounds to water; great black masses feeding quietly; the sentinels of the herd on the alert; the great bulk with heads down so low that the long, matted beard dragged the ground. Indicated numbers practically endless and a confidence in their own power to- pro tect themselves that seemed to defy extinction. The fact remains, however, that the "buffalo range" Jcnows the buffalo no more; that the species known as the "North American bison" Is now, in the wild . state, practically extinct, though, less than forty years have passed since a sagacious plainsman, riding the rangev saw no danger ihat the Indians' fear - that the buffalo would be exterminated would be re alized. The story of the extinction of the buffalo is one of a vigorous onslaught upon the wild and its denizens by the vanguard of civilization that is without parallel in the world's history outside of the American continent; a story all too familiar of Nature's lav ish abundance and man's reckless prodigality; a chapter in the conquest of the great WTest which in a few years will be regarded merely as a traveler's tale. 'The able seaman who writes marine news for the Tacoma Ledger, in com menting on the large flumber of sail ing vessels en route for Portland, says that "the reason for this is that there Is not sufficient water in the Columbia River for large steamers." The foreign-bound grain fleet this season, for the-seven months ending February 1 (January figures not yet compiled) shows seventeen steamers loading at Portland and twenty-two at Tacoma. The Portland steamers averaged 208. 835' bushels per cargo, those from Ta coma, Seattle and Everett 211, 622 bushels per cargo." Th.s striking dif ference of sixty-five short tons per cargo in favor of Puget Sound shows the great handicap under which Port land labors, or would show It if it were not for the fact that in past seasons the, average steam cargo out of Port land has exceeded in size that out of Tacoma. ' Of the forty-one grain sail ing ships clearing from Portland this season to February- 1, the average cargo w-as 118,840 bushels, compared with an average of 113,500 for the thirty-one sailers clearing from Puget Sound. Following out the Tacoma system of Jumping at conclusions. It is safe to say that this increase of 150 tons in the size of the Portland car goes is due to the insufficiency of water on Puget Sound. Wu Ting Fang, the Chinese Chaun cey Dp"ew. is back from the Flowery Kingdom with his head still on his shoulders. He has not only escaped the wrath of old Tsl An, who was re ported as seriously opposed to his- de sires for a modern civilization, hut he returns apparently with more power than ever. "I am going to see that my countrymen and their interests are properly protected," said Wu in an in terview in San Francisco, and he pro ceeded to enlarge on the increasing ef ficiency of the Chinese army and China's great desire for peace with all the world. He asserts that the white population of Honolulu is unani mous for modification of the Chinese exclusion laws, and intimates that some of the same" policy would be ad vantageous for the United States. Mr. Fang will be cordially welcomed back to this country, but if he has any in tention of making the way easier for admission of his yellow countrymen he might as well abandon the effort for the present, at least. So long as there is a surplus of white labor In this country there will be no disposition to make it easier for yellow men to enter. Now we understand it. Last year Assessor Sigler, finding that the O. R. & N. Co. had on hand? 16,180,000 in moneys due and surplus, promptly caused It to be assessed. Of course the O. R. & N. Co. fought the assess ment, taking it into the courts, where the company hopes either to defeat this just tax or to force a compromise. The first day of March, at 1 o'clock A. M. all assessments in Oregon being made as of that date is again approaching, but Mr. Harriman with great sagacity anticipated the action of the Assessor and took $8,260,000 out of Oregon. He would have taken it sooner or later anyway, but by hurrying the money away and escaping the Assessor's clutches by two days, he saves about $126,000 in taxes he doesn't pay, and makes the Oregon taxpayer pay just that much more to make up the differ ence. Counsel Cotton got back East Just in time to advise the Harriman management of the imminent peril to its surplus. Had members of the Legislature of Oregon years and years ago possessed virtue enough to beat Mitchell, as Beckham now has. been beaten in Ken tucky, the political situation in Oregon and the moral situation also would be very different. Republicans enough did stand out against Mitchell, but Democrats twice came to his support and elected him. Consequences of these infamies are seen in the present situation. The evil men do lives after them. To be commended are the members of the San Francisco Women's Clubs who have undertaken to provide enter tainment for Admiral Evans' 15,000 enlisted men. What a vast amount of labor to prepare and how the marines and jackies will enjoy the hot choco late and lettuce sandwiches with mayonnaise. If Salem saloonkeepers could read the spirit of the hour, they would drop their fight against high license. It is either that or selling whisky in "blind pigs" or going to work in some other vocation. Of three evils, choose the least. The Beckham forces in Kentucky tried to shift to "Ollle James" for Senator; but It wouldn't go. No won der. A man named Oliver, who calls elected to anything. "Ollie" Crom well! Lawgiver ITRen discharged his obli gation to the Widow McGrath by pay ing "his Bhare" of a Joint note. The widow lost the balance. That'aa bril liant and convincing plea for a law giver. Minister Wu says the Flowery King dom is on the eve of a big boom, and he proceeds to work the Associated Press for a column of publicity. Wu is the Tom Richardson of China. Mr. Cake publishes his "platform." He is for Statement No. 1. All- who are for Statement No. 1 should sup port Mr. ITRen, original proprietor and patentee of the idea. According to the latest bulletin, all competitors in the contest for United States District Attorney must get their papers in before next Tuesday evening. Paderewski, Then and Now BY LILIAN TINGLE. THE first time anyone asked "How did you enjtvy the Paderewski con cert?" you - probably gave a reason- able answer with some special expla nation as to how and why It appealed to you: but by the time the question has been repeated by not less than 37. persons you will have reduced the thing to a simple formula and reply mechanically, without interrupting any other train of thought with which you happen to be occupied: "Oh, yes, a very remarkable performance, wasn't it? Wonderful technique. Yes.'fndeed. his power 1b extraordinary. Where were you? No, I didn't see you. Yes. a tre mendous crowd. Did you get your car all right? Yes, we had to wait, too." This serves the purpose quite nicely, though It is not either criticism or appreciation. The best time to find out what you or anyone else really thinks is immediately after the performance, while your -musical soul is still aglow or chilled, as the case may be, and be fore you have read the account In the morning papers. I knew a young girl once who confided to me that -though she loved music, she simply hated be ing asked to go to concerts with cer tain of her aunts and cousins, because all through the performance they were continually expressing opinions and asking for hers, and she liked to be left in peace until all was over, and, with a long breath, she came back to earth again. Some people come back to earth with a thump. Said a voice In the crowd close behind me, as we came out, "Just1 heavenly, that last thing he played! Say, Hattie, you didn't forget to order that lobster for tonight, did you?" Here are more "voces popull" heard during or after the perfoanance: "You know my daughter plays that same thing he's playing now, but she doesn't take it nearly so fast and then there1 seems more tune to It, somehow." "It's perfectly grand; how much da you suppose he earns a minute while he's playing?" Lordly youth of (apparently) 1 or, 17 to mature but attractive young lady on whom he is endeavoring to make an impression: "Well, I have sometimes thought I'd go in for music profes sionally, you Know, les, i iook ies-i sons for a while Oh, about three; months, I guess No, it was quite aj while ago, eight or nine years, in facta but I think I shall take It up again! some day. Some of these fellows makaj quite a lot of money." I "You may call It music If you like. but for my part I can only call It noise. And there was so much of id that, try as I would, I couldn't even I itty asl n't hlW drop off to sleep. "His hair wasn't nearly as pretty T feA.,cr,t Ifr wnillll tA Rut SfMl'l hand lovely? I watched them through the glasses the whole time." I . . ' Very many people in last Monday' audience went to be astonished and to .see marvelous fcata of strength and dexterity for their money; and such were not dis-J appointed. But I, for one, recalled for-j mer performances both of this plano wlzard and of others, and wonderedj rather drearily, whether my present lack of .enthusiasm arose from the chilling advance of old age or whether the dif-j ference was in the master himself. Last time I heard him there were fewer "fire works" on the programme, and the totai volume of sound was probably much leas.' But on the former occasion he had played on the heart-strings of his listeners taken their emotions and tied them iri knots as he listed, and now it seemed t be only the plano-strlnga that were af- lecied. iou wonaerea, you were Biaruca, you admired, you .applauded, but you missed the inner thrill. ' It was nearly 10 years ago In the old Music Hall in Union street, Aberdeen. (Aberdeen, where? Scotland, of course. There is only one.) I have not kept the programme, but I can still recall some of the numbers, the most splendid of all being Bach's Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue. "I never thought a fugue could be like that," said a non-musical mem ber of the party. "You can not only fol low the parts without getting all Jumbled up in your mind, but you can even tell what the different singers look like." And truly the coloring he gave to each part was marvelous. He gave six or seven Chopin numbers some on the programme; some as encores. Including the well-known! Berceuse, In which he used the most sil very of pianissimo effects, and the "Fu neral March," which blanched the faces of his audience and left half of them' surreptitiously mopping their eyes and an Aberdeen audience, while an exceedingly musical one, is usually exceedingly unJ demonstrative. The Beethoven Sonata he played then was the one in E flat, con taining the minuet that little nubby' schoolgirls used to play and tall folks that they were "studying Beethoven! now." Perhaps they still do so. But there was one that night who vowed to! me that she would never, never touch id again until she had "begun to be a rea musician." She is a "real mualclan" now J by the' way. The Hungarian Rhapaodyj No. 2 and the Wagner-Liszt "Spinning! Song." both given the other evening ad encores, were part of this former pro-j gramme. Perhaps distance lends enchant- ment to these as to other things. "Moral stunning, but less Interesting" wan In my mind as I applauded them last Monday., In the long ago, too, he smiled and seemed pleased to be recalled gave us five encores at the very end. If I remem-J ber rightly, and appeared to be thor oughly happy in doing so. But the other night I heard a young girl say as she reached for her hat: "I'd love to hear, him again, but don't clap any more; he might not like it." America. Katharine Lee Bates. O beautiful tor spacious skies. For amber waves of grain. For purpls mountain majesties Abov the fruited Dlaln! America! America! God ahed hla grace on thee. And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea! O beautiful for pilgrim feet. Whose stern. Impassioned stress A thoroughfare for freedom beat Across the wilderness! America! America 1 God mend thine ev'ry flaw. Confirm thy soul In self-control. Thy liberty In law. O beautiful for glorious tale Of llberatlnz strife. When valiantly, for man's avail. Men lavished precious life! America! America! May God thy sold reins Till all sucoess be nobleness, And ev'ry gain divine! O beautiful for patriot's dream That sees beyond the years Thine alabaster cltiea gleam Undimmert by human tears! America! America! Ood shed his grace on thee. And crown thy good with brotherhood From aea to shining sea!