waives j- : - .. - .- -:. a -ow. -mji- imm -JC5r- "e'V'v IX V A QtrBSTTIOX mark will soon go into th chair of Boot. Hay. Bayard B'.alne. geirard and "Webster. Tbil ! Bald In no criUciem of Philander C. Knox, picked by President-elect Taft to b hla Secretary of State, for the abil ity of tho new Incumbent of a great of fle la admitted, and bla patriotism has bn establiahed by the great ervlcea he ha already rendered the country. Still bo la a question mark, for surely no man of greater contradictions waa vr called on to serve the Nation tn the office which ranks only behind those of tha President and the Speaker of the House la Its sower. Mr. Knox is by nature and disposition a conservative, yet in his achievements as Attorney-General, he proved himself In the results ha accomplished far mor rad ical than any man who has erer held the post. Originally ha sained his great fame as a lawyer while serving- in a legal capacity corporations lUte the Carnegie Steel Com pany. Tet he was the first prosecutor of the United States to show that there was vitality In the 9hennan Aiiti-Triift Law, and hla treat victory over John.G. John son In the Northern Securities case ranks as the areateat legal victory of the rad ical Roosevelt administration. Mr. Knox ia accounted by his neighbors an aristocrat, yet his passion for Jiwtlc is so great that he took up the case of a friendless boy who had been chested by a corporation, and by throwing Into his ! case all tho power of his great legal mind, ho forctd the corporation to make redress to the extent of JS""- For this service he never received one dollar, and the boy f.r whom it was performed Is a negro. Moot profound of students who has delved more deeply Into constitutional law perhaps than any living American, Mr. Knox haa also ambitions in a sport Ins direction, for he has a psir of the fastest liores to be found in the United j Slates, and with them is anxious to break tl-r trotting record for gentleman drivers. Most unostentatious in hi manner, Mr. Knox nevertheless goes to the very ex treme In the likxury of his homes. Ho ha tt'ree. ono In Washington, one in FiUsburs and one In Valley Forge, where his love for history ia ever cajoled by the surroundings marked by such great deeds at the time of tho Revolution. And finally conies an Interesting con tradiction in his personal appearance. In stature. Mr. Knox is perhaps the shortest man who ever held the office of Secretary- of State. He Is only five feet four inches tall, which Is the height credited to Napoleon Bonaparte, yet be ha a head bigger perhaps than any of hla predecessors save possibly Daniel "Webster, whom historians credit with having had a most unusual cra nium. This Is the many-sided man who will b at the elbow of the President of the United States during the next four years. And the marvel of the contradictions that greet the investigator at a hasty glance Into his life is Increased when a closer examination Is made Into his career. He has come into the highest honors, politics has favored him. and yet he never was a politician. The whole bent of his mind drew htm away from the pettiness of political life. He comes from Pennsylvania, ruled for half a century by the Cameron, Quay and Penrose dynasty, which to put It mild ly bas never represented the kind of environment to . tempt the high class man Into association. Yet his mental powers compelled this very ring to rec ognize him. Mr. Knox bad been practicing for ZS years before he received an Invitation from President McKinley Jo come into the CaUioat. In tnat time hla practice had not been of a kind to bring him Into popular at tention. In the main he had done oorparation work, and though his fees were perhaps as large as those of almost any lawyer In the country, he was loss known than d.-Mcns of minor lights who came into i the limelight because of their connection with criminal eases. Murmurs came f a case in which a boy. having been badly hurt in an ex plosion of natural gas, was hurried off to a hospital. Agents for the respon sible corporation cheated the helpless ounsster Into an outrageous settlement. Then Knox, lawyer for many corpora tions, rove in his wrath and smote this one. and just from his sense of right compelled a proper settlement on the victim of the accident. t But en this commendable action did not elicit any acclaim. Mr. Knox i not a man t publ'sh Vs charity far and wide, and h!a somewhat cold, restrained J exterior did not timulite newspaper writers to make a hero of him. Hence when he went Into the McKin ley Cabinet he was virtually unknown to the country at large, and many per sons, mistaking the meaning of his per fectly legitimate regulations with trusts, feared that his selection meant immunity for the criminals of wealth. But Knok disabused this notion with most admirable speed. The high water mark on his public service was performed In 1?03, when he conducted the legal proceedings that dissolved the Northern Securities Com pany and blocked the Wall street plan for combining all the railways of the country into one great trust. Then the Nation began to sit up and take notice. Mr. Knox wasn't much of a poseur, but he was a doer. The next greatest thing he did for the public, one that Is not so generally known, was to write the report for the Frick committee of Equitable Life As surance Society directors that was the first official exposure of corruption In the Equitable. Then he drafted the Elkans law, which stopped railroad rebates. Senator Quay, of Pennsylvania, died. The Republican party of the Keystone State, assailed by a growing reform move ment, did not dare pick out a man of tts kind, so Mr. Knox still maintaining his law of contrasts, was elected to the Senate as the junior Senator from Pennsylvania by men who probably would not have considered him In days when machine supremacy was less In danger. In the Senate. Mr. Knox has main tained bis record of performances, and will go Into the Cabinet with a record unmarred by a single blunder, and with a career free of the least taint of sel fishness or solf-seeking. Mr. Knox's neighbors In Valley Forge say that the new Secretary Is not always i as sociable as he might be, that he does not always stop and pass the time of day, and yet it is a fact admitted that if the rights of tho humblest of these neigh bme were to be Imperilled, no man would fight harder or longer before the courts of the Nation to obtain justice for them than this quiet, self-contained lawyer. Even as a corporation lawyer. Mr. Knox picked his clients. It Is little short of astonishing that In his career In Pennsyl vania be never took a retainer from either the Pennsylvania Railroad or the Stan dard Oil Company, the two richest cor porations in the state, and from whom PEIZE CATS ON EXHIBITOR CAT 5 "1 T si iiV-l v .iie-.-. WrXix;:,:X-i:; ;W TORK. Jan. - (Special.) In the concert hall of the Madison-square Garden the Atlantic Cat Club heM Its seventh annual show this week. Mrs. J. C. Mitchelson's imported short-haired silver tabby has won many first prizes. I la name is "The Bujainar Silver." Mrs. Champion's "Argent Glori ous" has won two firot prizes and. seven special prizes. Both these cats were shown at the Gardeo In this exhibition. THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 10, 1909. nearly every rich lawyer of note profited. He is bitter against over-capitalization, he thinks that the encroachments of dis honest combinations on legitimate trade should be stopped, but on the contrary, he is Just as Insistent that no corrective laws should.be permitted to interfere with proper enterprises. This curious combination of radicalism and conservatism, which gets its perfect equipoise from a logic crystal clear, and a most perfect grounding In the law. Is said to have been the trait that com mended him to Mr. Taft. who believes It to be good policy now In tho present somewhat unsettled condition, of busi ness to let it be known that while in his administration wealth will not be allowed to take any unjust advantages. no spirit of demagogery will be per mitted to make a target of men and en terprises of worth merely because they have been successful. Mr. Knox is now 55 years old. He was born In Brownsville, Pa., his father, David S. Knox, being a bank cashier of moderate means. Mrs. Knox, the new Secretary'a wife. Is very fond of social life, and will be a big- figure in the cabinet group. There are a married son and a married daughter, as well as Phil Knox, youngest son of the family. The Matter at sir,. CMrago Recerd-Hrald. Taller buildings, greater store iarganess la the atyla; "Biggest locomotivs yet," every little while: 'Tls the day of -greater things, deep or wide or tall: Edges of my lady'a hat iprcad from wall to wall. Life insurance toi ara rice half way to tha stars; Staampihlps half a milt In length; longer trolteycars; Fortunes swollen to a alxa ne'er dreamed of befora; Erary year tha cannon's range lengthens more and more. Longer, stronger, heavier everything grown: Excellence depends. It sema. on the slza alone; Tet tha toot old stork adheres ancient way Eight-pound bahlea are In style, Caesar's day. That Nocm Lanch. LrOUio'HIe Courier-Journal. The hffh school flrln with thfir gloisy curls And chk ot dainty pink. As they mlnc along In a laughing; throng. Look mighty nloe, I think. But I'd like to know how cheeks can glow Like rosebud In a bunch On tha dally fare of a male eclair Or a macaroon for lunch. AT THE ANNUAL NEW YORK SHOW. mi ' I I (WvrrV SIDED CMARACTER,OP TME PENNS"YLVAN)AIN I yCMOffEfN TO BE THB MEAD OP TAPT5 CABINET - IV MAN IN VMERIC. ; 11. -a - ts - ;-; v' vs?'- K' .. J K -.,:XXV X"? - n y ' " - " "1 Ii crease in expense and without delay, I Vvj; .? . f A .;' X i r.-'- tev - ":.is I la great step forward In journalism. -' f ? X ' ' f & .. . i t 4 - - i ""J III I ' ! lY If 1 a, , j J , M" ' .. ... is- r. t,, .ii. , ,.a-..J.jj Smithsonian's Annual Report Notes Wonders of Progress Steam Turbine, Typesetting Machinery, Wiroless Telegraphy and Salton Sea All Come in for Comment. ASHTXGTON. Jan. 2. (Special.) The nnnual report of the Board of Regents of the Smith sonian Institution for 1907, transmit ting to Congrrcss, as required by law. a statement of the operations, expendi tures and condition of the Inntltutlon and Its branches for the year, has just been Issued. The Steam Turbine. The Steam Turbine on Land and Sea," Is the subject discussed by Charles A. Parsons, who calls' attention to the recent wide adoption of the tur bine principle for the generation of electricity, for the propulsion of ves sels, and for driving air-compressors. fans, and pumps. In 1900 the:e were only 75.000 horsepower of turbines on land and 25,000 on sea; In 1906, there were 3! turbine steamers afloat; and last April, different countries of the world had just built or were building:, turbines as follows: United States, 1 scout, S mercantile vessels, 'and 5 torpedo-boat destroyers: Japan. 3 large liners, 4 passenger vessels, 1 dispatch boat: France. 6 large battleships and 3 destroyers; Germany, 2 cruisers and several destroyers; Italy, a cruiser; Austria, a cruiser; and Brazil, 2 scouts. Negotiations were pending for 4 large battleships for Russia. On land, in al most every country, the new construc tion of large electric generating units were nearly all turbine-driven. Printing Improvements. In "The Development of Mechanical Composition in Printing." Professor A. Turpain, of the University of Pol tiers, France, describes the various steps taken to aid tho printer in set ting up his type. These steps began with the introduction in 1776 of combi nations of letters known as logotypes. They went through the various forms of composing or arranging loose type and later of casting single letters and solid lines. developed little by little, they have finally culminated In the remarkably efficient machine called the clectro typograph. and its cousin, the teletypo graph. by the combination of which not . i inn iiiiihiiihiimiiiwimiifhiwiiiwii inmiiiiniiiiri "rrr - -4 "A 4 SL - ' H only is the highest mechanical skill ob tained, but perforated bands, which, be ing run through a casting machine, au tomatically form type, may be repro duced directly by telegraph at any com mercial distance. Thus at the present day a newspaper article telegraphed from New York, or Si. Louis, or San Francisco, in this form can be received on perforated strips ready for the cast ing machine In various distant cities, and it is possible for large newspapers to have country editions without In- S 1 J if.- - '."WV i ... ... '1 . - l' - - v t PRESIDENT-ELECT TAF'T'S VHTER UARTER8 AT AUGUSTA, CIA. AUGUSTA. Ga.. Jan. 2. (Special.) President-Elect Taft and family moved into the Terrett cottage at Augusta recently. This cottage is in the rear of a hotel where the Taft family will get their meals'. Mr. Taft will probably spend the entire Winter In Augusta. Wall : ii nawil Wlreless Telegraphy. Professor J. A. Fleming, of the Uni versity of London, contributes a sum mary of, advances In wireless teleg raphy which have made possible the publishing on board great ocean liners mid-ocean small daily newspapers containing the latest news of the day from the two continents. Certain fun damental'prlnclples. underlying elec tric wave transmission, are explained, and the results of experiments of Mr. Marconi and Professor F. Braum, of Strassburg, in what is called directive telegraphy are outlined. As to the latter he says: "It will be seen, therefore, that popular notions on the subject of directive telegraphy are wide of the mark. Whilst we can not yet project a narrow beam of long wave electric radiation, or focus It en tirely on a given receiving station, at a great distance, much can be done to prevent radiation being sent out from transmitters In directions in which It Is of no use or not desired." To produce directly photographs in color, the ablest photographic chemists have experimented for nearly a hundred years, but not until 1S91-92 were the first permanent direct photographs in color made. During the year covered by the report, however, two additional processes were announced, the auto- chrome process by Messrs. A. and L. Lumlere. and the Warner-Powrte pro cess, both of which have given beauti ful results which can be obtained at i cost to make them of practical every day value. The development of the art and an explanation of the new pro cesses are contributed by T. TV. Smlllie, of the United States National Museum ' Inside the Earth. Professor J. "W. Gregory, of Eng land, In a paper on "The Geology of the Inner Earth, records the latest devci onments of knowledge in regard to what Is below the earth's crust. The Inner earth appears to consist of ma teria! similar to that found in meteor ites, dark stony and Iron matter, heavy and solid. Whether the Interior of our sphere is fluid or solid or gaseous makes little difference since under the Immense pressure within the earth ma terlals can transmit vibrations and re sist compressions like a solid; but they can change their shape as easily as a fluid. They are fluid just as lead Is when forced to flow from a hydraulic press. They are necessarily intensely jijlii; li -f,-y.-f si-'skb- . "".t :-..v... 1 1 . Jk .4 '.lrll; .' lifl 1 ! wnt mv 'ntct:M.f i f it a l sH , -it ? Li, hot. That there are ores of value to mankind in these underneath rocks is now generally admitted. Truth About Sulton Sea. The Salton Sea, says V. H. Newell, Director of the United States Reclama tion Service, and Its apparent miracu lous growth has given rise to almost Innumerable popular discussions, many of which are founded upon misappre hension of facts, lue sea Is not a sea at all but an accumulation of waste water in the bottom of a depression 200 or more feet below sea level. Rela tively to a real sea it is a mere puddle or duck pond in a vast extent of arid desert which at one time was the floor for a large body of fresh water. It is not a new thins', but a revival tu his toric times of what has probably oc curred frequently in geologic history. The widely advertised effect upon the climate of the expanded Salton Sa, Is practically negligible. The wonderful results attributed to the sea In Increas ing rainfall in the southwestern ftatea and territories. Is a case of placing the cart before. the horse; that Is to say. the apparent increase in rainfall throughout tne West is more likely to have been the indirect cause of the Increase in area tn the Salton Sea. than the reverse. Mr. NewoII describes vividly the. break in i.ie dike of the Colorado River, the knife-like cutting of the new channel, the organised at tack on tha water and tho final suc cessful closing of the break during the year. The sea may now evaporate at from five to seven or more feet an nually, but for many years it will prob ably be a mark of Interest to the trav eler, and the inhabitants of the Imperial Valley must live, as do the people of Holland, with an eya to- protection against this enemy of their homes. Immunity From Consumption. 'Immunity In Tuberculosis" is the present live topic treated by Dr. Simon Flexner, of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York. From the first great steps In th'j discovery of the tubercle bacillus by Rohert Koch in 1882, experimentation has developed until at present three distinct kinds are recognized 'that found In man. in cat tle, and In birds. Besides this there is the so-called tubercle bacillus of cold blooded animals, which, however, is only dangerous to animals of that class, such as fishes. The thr:e main sorts of bacilli are transferable in more or less degree. It Is generally believed, from bird to beast and from beast to man. Against the probability of infection between man and beast stands ur. Koch. Experi ments in inoculating cattle and rab bits so as to rentier them Immune have been conducted for several years, and have met with some degree of success. Whether these may lead finally to the practical Inoculation of man, so that, without too much danger In the 'pro cess, he may himself l.e made Immune, remains for the future to disclose. Tariff In Carina Center. Arthur. Ciianman In Denver Republican "We've observed down here In Cartus all thla tariff Ilxln- lane How some fellers want It lowered on iteel rnlls iuiiI liulea anu nimik; And wa had the other etnln a dee-hata hnrd to beat Deuce BMdle havln' ehalienued i lie view of btandiiat Fete. They talked till well toward niortiin' about uc tarirr raiei Of tacit and Hoaj, and frog' le-, of pupa fcnd clileKen crateH. Of Swisa elites,', tin and leather, of culiuod goods, gljps and fur. Of aaddlea, chapf. and lit&il g.-u r. of hnrre- alioa nails and spurs. Tfcara wasn't harth words spoken until tiia tandDat a-ent Remarked Deuce didn't savvy what "ad lalorem" meant: And Deuce said "ad valorem" was the In jun name for borae, And Ktandpat rave a heehaw, and tha hoottn' atarta. of course They hot holes In each o!hr. and they won t be out tor weeks; They wounded Bill, the hn-kaep. and his barroom s full or leans; And we feel rlsht now tn Cactus that tha tar ff'a mostly rlRht. But tha tfltes on shoortn' irons should be raised clear out et signt.