THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND. ArRTL 10, 1910. POKTUXO. UEEGON. Entered mt Portland. Oregon. Postoffloe mm Fecond-Class Maxtor. Subscription Bate Invarlablr ta AdrmiK-e. fBT MAILO &ily. Sunday Included, one year JS.09 I'ally, Sunday included, nix months... 4.2j Iaily, Sunday Included, three montbf.. 2.2j iJaily. Sunday included, one month...- -"3 raily. without Sunday, one year..... - rJly. without Sundav. alx months.... 3-'J5 Daily, without Sunday, three month 1.75 Ially. without Sunday, one month 6 Weekly, one year : 1.0 Sunday, one year 2.50 fcutday and weekly, one year - By Carrier.) tally, Sunday included, one year 9.00 Dally, Sunday Included, one month.... How to Remit Send Foatofflce money order, express order or personal check on your Jk-1 bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the s-nder's risk. Give postoffice ad dress in full, including county and atate. Postage Kate 10 to 14 pases. 1 cent; 16 to 2 pages. 2 cents: 30 to 40 pases. 3 cents: 40 to 60 paces. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Kutem Business Office The S. C. Beck with (Special Agency New York, rooms 45 50 Tribune buildine. Cbicaco. rooms 01O-512 Tribune tuiltiins PORTLAND. SVMAV, APRIL. 10, 1S10. rOUTlt'AL RANCOR IN rOR-MEK TIMES. Though defamation of eminent men, by partisan spit ? and rancor, in our time, has frequently been very com mon, it has seldom reached during recent jears the malignant fury that characterized it very commonly in earlier days. It- may surprise those who haven't read the history of Wash ington's Administration closely and in detail to be told that our first of Fres Merits first also of men and of patri ots was reviled and defamed more Terribly than any other man who ever has occupied that position, or any other in our country, with Hie pos sible exception of President Lincoln. The second volume of MeMaster's (treat "History of the People of the United States" contains perhaps the best collected account of these attacks on Washington. The citizen of our own day, who hasn't had the curiosity to look up the record, might be in credulous when assured that a swarm of enemies, detractors and calumnia tors filled the publications of their .day with invective - and denunciation of the man who in a higher sense than arty other in all history was the Father of His Country: for Washington was the one man who achieved the inde pendence of this country of ours and preserved it. But for him the Revo Iittion would have failed; but for him anarchy would have followed the Rev olution, and then some kind of mon arch leal or oligarchical government. During the war he was beset by ftibal In the army, consisting of plot ters and adventurers, who, themselves without military ability or constancy in the fat:.. schemed to undermine and overthrov- him. The heads of this cabal in the army were Lee, Con way, Gates and Mifflin; Lee. after the lapse of more than one hundred years, proven by papers in his own Handwriting, discovered in England, a traitor negotiating with the British Ministry for betrayal of the colonies Crates, inefficient and useless in the army, but possessed of inordinate van ity; Conway, a despicable conspirator, w ho wrote anonymous letters to prom inent men in and out of Congress, al leging Washingt' n's responsibility for recent military disasters, believed even to have forged Washington's name to papers designed to further the plans of the conspirators, and a, Uttle later driven from the army; Mifflin, more Flupiil than malignant, yet at one time desiring to place Lee at the head of the army, and at another time to ad vancc (Jates to that position. These men and the supporters of their fac tion had much influence at oneltime and another in Congress. The attacks of the conspirators on Washii ;rton were Incessant and venomous to the last degree. He never could know the extent of tho conspiracy, nor assure himself against betrayal of his opera tions and or the army, even at the most critical times. There was an ex ample of it in the conduct of Lee at Monmouth, where there was delib erate attempt to betray the army and to sacrifice the cause. These wretches, through their agents, poured forth a constant stream of abuse upon the ob ject of their hatred. By these con spirators Washington's motives and patriotism were as incessantly im pugned as his abilities were depreci ated. It is not probable that any other man whom our history has pro duced could have sustained himself and Ms cause amid such dangers from treachery on one side and In the face of a powerful enemy on the other. After the war political and party de tractors succeeded the military cabal. From the beginning of Washington's first term as President to -the end of his life he was a-ssailed bitterly by poli ticians: his motives and his acts were subjected to every species of attack; it was asserted continually that he was plotting with others to betray the lib erties of his country, establish an aris tocracy and convert the government into a monarchy; that he was a pro tector of rascals and scoundrels in of lice, and even was guilty of peculation himself. The principal begetter of these accusations was Jefferson: but he was usually adroit and secret in his proceedings, and only n part of his work came to the surfa-eo in his own time. He asserted that the Govern ment under Washington was "gallop ing into a monarchy." and affected to believe that the zeal, the patriotism, the eminent public services of Wash ington and the men whom he had gathered round him, were but a cloak to cover up horrid plots dangerous to the liberties of the people. Jefferson was incessant in the prompting of the more open assailants. Freneau'-; Ga zette was the principal organ through which these attacks were delivered, for a time: afterwards Bache's Aurora. Jefferson; as Secretary of State, kem Freneau in official position in his de partment, and Freneau in his old age declared that Jefferson himself wrote ' or dictated the most virulent of the nrticles that the paper had published. ISaehe's Aurora said: "If ever a na tion was debauched by a man. the American" nation has been debauched by Washington. If ever a nation was deceived by a man, the American na tion has been deceived by Washington. Let liis conduct, then, be an example to future ages: let the history of the Kederal Government instruct mankind that the mask of patriotism may be worn to conceal the foulect designs against the liberties of the people." Men in Congress made similar at taclrs. Among the most factious of these was William Giles, of Virginia. He urged the House to censure the President, in particular for his foreign policy: he did not believe the Admin istration had been tlrm and wise: he felt no regret at Washington's retire ment, but believed it necessary for the welfare of the country. The Aurora newspaper, March 6, 1797, the day af ter Washington's retirement from the Presidency, said: Lord, letteet now thy servant depart in Vacs, for-' mine eyes have seen thy- sal vation." was the pious ejaculation of a pious man who beheld a flood of happiness rushing In upon mankind. If ever there was a time that would license the reitera tion of the ejaculation, that time is ' now arrived, for the man who is the source of all the misfortune of our country is this day reduced to a level with his fellow-citizens, and is no longer possessed of power to multiply evils upon the United States. Every heart, in unison with the freedom and happiness of the people, ought to beat high with exultation that the name of Washington ceases from this day to give currency to political iniquity and to legalize corruption. Similar extracts, containing accusa tions against Washington and the men whom he had gathered ar und him. might be multiplied without end Washington leaned on Hamilton more than on all others; and Hamilton iwas declared to be a negro (he was born in the West Indies), and a traitor, who designed a separate monarchy for the United States, and, failing in that, reunion with the British crown. It is needless to review in any detail the fiercely defamatory matter uttered against Lincoln, down to the day of his death. Multitudes still living have distinct recollection of it. The pres ent day offers bad ex; tples of defam atory accusation against men in high place, but nothing perhaps quite so violent as those which may be recov ered from study of the records of for mer times. SENATE IS "EASY" HOISE "HARD. It may be feared that the appropri ations granted by the Senate may not in all cases be conceded and confirmed by the House. We speak now of the appropriations for Oregon and Wash ir.gton for rivers and harbors, which have passed the Senate. The Senate doesn't act in a spirit of candor about local appropriations. Whatever may be asked it usually will grant in most casts not expecting the appropriations to be approved by the House, but relying o. the House to reject them, or to pare them down. Such is the situation is to the appro priations in the river and harbor bill for Oregon and Washington. All who have had experience with legislation at Washington know this is true. These local bills can be got through the Senate easily; first, be cause the Senate doesn't want to bother; second (yet this is the chief point of the matter) because the Sen ate expects the House to take the re sponsibility and trim everything down. On the part of the Senate the action is evasive and uncandid. On the part of the House, where the fight is to hold down appropriations, or at least, to distribute them, "there is contact with actual conditions, hence it is more difficult far to get local bills through the House than through the Senate. In fact, It isn't difficult at all to get bills or amendments of this kind through the Senate. But when it conies to getting them through the House "Hie labor, hoc opus est" as the great classic poet said, when talking of the difficulty of the ascent from Hades. What will go through the Senate without question matters of this kind it will require a hard fight to carry through the House. The Senate, in deed, expects the House to reject most or all of them, certainly to cut them down. They go through the Senate easily for this reason. So, if Oregon and Washington don't get all the appropriations allowed by the Senate in the river and harbor bill, there can be no ccasion for sur prise, on the part of those who know. PI.VMBERS iXD LAWYERS. Plumbers, whose alleged trust has been assailed in the local courts, seem desirous of convincing the public that no trust or hold-up exists. But none of them offers the one essential proof that of reasonable prices for plumb ing. Instead, they all stand together same as ever, to collect the huge prices that make nightmare for every per son who builds a house or puts up a skyscraper. Plumbers could give a more con vincing sign than by "fighting" the present case in court, though of course they have been summoned to the house of justice and needs must answer. Substantial reduction of charges and curtailment of graft would make so much difference that a jury could see the square deal without the harangue of an advocate. The over-burdened public is waiting expectantly for the Jobbers, who sell the goods at whole sale, the bosses who sell them at re tail and the journeymen who sell "time," to do some gracious act be sides hiring lawyers. However much the plumbers may suffer at the hands of the thrifty lawyers, that will not lighten the burdens of the builders. So that the public views, with extreme solicitude, the co-operative effort of the plumbers and the lawyers. PRELIMINARIES TO 1012. The Chicago Tribune has made a poll of the Democratic editors of the country to learn what their Presiden tial preferences are. Out of the 1415 who responded only 418, far less than one-third of the whole, are for Bryan. Harmon's popularity falls short of the peerless leader's by no more than four editors. He had 414 votes. A curious point in the poll is the popularity of Roosevelt among the Democrats. It turns out that 169 of their newspapers want-hint for the next President. This is more than one-third of the. number for either Bryan or Harmon. In fact, there is a significant lack of unanimity in the sentiment of the answers to the Tribune's question. The Democrats are no more united on men than thev are on principles. The party has at present no leader and no platform. It comes as near being chaos and noth ing else as a party can without losing its very name. The New York Times, commenting on the result of the Trib une's poll, remarks that the tariff will be the issue in the next campaign and that the country will not trust' t:.e Republicans to revise it because they have broken the promises they made hi 1908. Governor Harmon, of Ohio, also thinks the tariff will be the predomi nant Issue, and hi3 opinion is impor tant. The fact that he stands next to Bryan both among Eastern and Western Democrats Indicates that he may probably play a decisive part in framing his party's next platform. Judge Gaynor cuts no figure as yet. Only thirty-nine papers in the entire country made him their first choice. But he is a growing man. Every day he does something which gains new respect for him and increases his fol lowing. It would be unsafe to assert that he will not head the next National Democratic ticket. He combines in his personality most of the elements which will insure tremendous popular ity when he becomes better known. It may be admitted that tariff revision will be the principal issue in the next presidential campaign. Mistakenly or not, the country . does not like the Payne-Aldrich . bill, and nothing can ever make it popular. But that is a very different thing from admitting that the people are ready to trust the Democrats to re vise the tariff. The discontent which is apparent everywhere in, the country is not with the Republican party, but with certain Republican leaders. Prob ably a majority of those who sincerely demand tariff revision downward are loyal Republicans and their wish is to obtain their purpose by changing lead ers within their own party rather 'than by going over to the Democrats. The Democratic party does not enjoy the confidence of the country and does not deserve it. . In more than one crisis the leaders, such as they are, have betrayed the public to the so called "interests," and the feeling-is prevalent that they -would do the same thing systematically if they con trolled the National Government. The next Congress may be Democratic, but if it is, the reason will be, not that the people like or trust that party, but because they have not as yet any other sufficient recourse. In districts where Republican candidates appear whom the voters believe they can trust to carry out the promises of the platform of 1908 there will be little or no dan ger .of Democratic victories. The key note of the coming campaign will be not merely tariff reform, but political sincerity. The voters are moved by a predominant moral passion which all hands will profit by recognizing and bowing to. AN TN TERES TING BOOK, THIS.' Few recent books have interested the churches more than Charles A. Gordon's "Religion and Miracle," which seeks to prove that the Chris tian faith does not depend : upon miracles for its validity. -. Dr. Lyman Abbott, in commending the work in The Outlook, remarks that Jesus re fused more than once to base his au thority on his miracles. His mighty works were simply evidence of his power and kindliness, not of his di vine mission. In our day among people of en lightenment the miracles not only do not strengthen' the appeal of Chris tianity, but they actually weaken it. They form a burden to the faith in stead of wings by which it soars. They are something to b'e accounted for, excused, hustled aside with more or less open apology. Current Literature. Irtn commenting on Dr. Gordon's book, reminds the reader that he is a re sponsible pastor and not a mere in novator whose words carry no weight. His pulpit is in" one of the historic Congregational churches of Boston. His purpose seems to be to free the Christian religion from that connec tion with miracles which is likely to become more and more of a burden to it with the development of intelligence. To paraphrase Dr. Gordon's own language, he has no interest in de stroying any person's belief in mir acles. He is only concerned to show that, where the belief in miracles has actually been destroyed, Christianity still remains in all its essence. -'The future of religion is not to be identi fied with the. future of miracle." This appears a much: safer vS well as a more rational position than that of the rash theologians who proclaim that a person who rejects the miracles must necessarily reject the whole mission of Jesus. . Dr. Lyman Abbott goes so far as to say that "if it could be proved that Jesus Christ did not arise from the dead, the proof would take no intelligent disciples from the Christian church." This is a strong statement, but perhaps, if not, true just yet, it will be in a few years. Of course much depends on what one means by "intelligent." THE HIRED MAN. A matron dwelling in the country asks some interesting questions of The Oregonian in regard to the proper treatment of her hired man. Her hus band is away fronf-home much of the time, and therefore the management of the farm naturally falls upon her. Being unaccustomed to such business, se is perplexed by a number of. un certainties. For example, should the hired man do the chores on Sunday, or should he lie abed while she does them herself? On week days should the chores come in as part of his reg ular ten hours' work, or should he do them before he begins and after he finishes-? If the hired man does not work out a full month, ought his pay for the fractional part to be computed on the basis of 26 days or of .10? Im portant as the particular points re ferred to are in themselves, they are still more important! because they are significant-of the relation in which this woman stands to her hired. help. Since this relation is very much like that of other people in the same situa tion, it is not too much to say perhaps that our correspondent's questions are of universal interest. In the good old pioneer days there was a community of interest between the hired help on the farm and his employer. His home was with the family. He dined at the same table with the proprietor and his wife. In the evening he shared in the conversa tion which intervened between supper and bedtime. On Sundays the farmer and his hired man did the chores be tween them and then rode to meeting together In the family wagon. The re lation of the hired man to his em ployer was idyllic and democratic. In due time he often married one of the daughters of the household and suc ceeded to a portion of the inheritance which he had helped to till in the days of his youthful poverty It might Have been better for the country if the circumstances of those charming times could have been per petuated everywhere, but they could not be. The pride of prosperity grad ually Invaded the farm as well as the town and the ideal relation between the husbandman and his help disap peared. The hired man no longer dines with the family, but devours his food in a shed or at best in the kitchen. At nightfall, instead of sit ting round the glowing hearth to con verse on intelligent themes with his employer, he too often slinks away to the saloon, if there happens to be one in the neighborhood, or seeks his pal let to lose his sordid memories in sleep. - No more does he hope" to marry the farmer's daughter. She moves in a social sphere far above him, and if she distinguishes between him and the cattle he cares for, it Li because of the gentleness of her heart and not be cause she recognizes him as a fellow-being.-. Taking these, unhappy changes into account it naturally follows that what some of our agitators call the "class struggle" should show itself on the farm quite as plainly as in the cities. The hired man usually makes it his principal business to do as little work as he possibly, can for the pay he re ceives. The farmer on the other hand seeks to wring from him the last atom of toil that his tired muscles will .yield. He is a piece of machinery to be used to Its utmost capacity.-When the cogs are .broken and the joints creak irreparably, God only knows what is to become of him. The farmer does not and moreover he does not care. These facts are n-t stated in order to cast odium on either party. Sad as they are they are an inevitable outcome of the advancement of civilization. No body is to blame for them. Nobody can help them. Social evolution is just now passing through a phase where the old family aspect of servitude has van ished and nothing better has as yet appeared to take Its place. The con sequence is a squalid - chaos which makes the heart of the philanthropist bleed . but for which his brain seeks vainly for a remedy. Nobody w-ill hire out to work on a farm any more if he can find any other employment and on the other hand the farmer's boys, harried to death by the prospect of unremitting toil, flee to the towns. The production of food falls off pro portionately every year. Prices rise and discontent stalks through the land. The Inefficiency of American agri culture is to be attributed more to the scarcity of help than to any lack of in telligence among the farmers and the scarcity of farm help, like that of domestic servants, must be attributed to the social degradation of the calling as well as to the material hardships which the degradation naturally en tails. i rroni these, premises -we mav now perhaps -answer our correspondent's questions without much difficulty. Of course, the hired man ought to do the chores on Sunday. - Whether he will or not depends on his employer's de termination. All that he can shirk he will shirk. On week days the chores ought to form part of the regular day's work. If they consume extra time the hired man ought to receive extra pay for doing them. The employer should no more ask him to work without pay than he should expect pay without work. For a fractional part of a month the hired man ought to be paid on the basis of 30 days to the month. since even when he is not actively at work he is supposed to be on call for emergencies, such as the Sunday chores and the milking on the Fourth of July in the morning. HOOD RIVER'S CT'RFEAt. The reason for which Hood River has repealed its curfew ordinance is curious. The city seemsto have but one policeman for night service, and, inasmuch 'as he is busy at 9 o'clock receiving hobos at the train and des patching them on their way to the vast and empty void, he has no time to at tend to errant children.. Hence the lit tle ones will hereafter parade the streets until midnight. If they are so disposed, and sleep in the apple-houses or even in the orchards. A town which can afford Xo employ only a single policeman finds itself in numerous embarrassing dilemmas as a matter of course, but rarely is it necessary to choose between the hobos and the children as it seems to be in this instance. To keep the place clear of hobos is a duty which the officials cannot neglect. To provide for the welfare of the children is a duty which it appears that they may neglect un der sufficient pressure. The employ ment of a second policeman would cost more, one may suppose. than the morals of the city's children are worth. But perhaps the city fathers of Hood River have come to the conclusion that the curfew ordinance did not ap preciably benefit the morals of the children. If it did not, we can hard ly blame them for repealing it, but for the information of the public they ought to have assigned the actual grounds for their action instead of imaginary ones. Speaking generally, any municipal regulation which seeks to relieve parents of responsibility for their children's conduct is not to be commended. It may be assumed fairly enough that the proper persons to keep young children off the streets at night are their fathers and mothers rather than policemen. There are serious objections to per mitting the young to become too fa miliar with the officers of the law. A certain indifference to the disgrace of arrest is likely to result froni asso ciations of this sort. A curfew ordi nance might possibly convert a merely unruly boy Into a criminal under some conditions. Perhaps after all Hood River knows what it is about; but it is disappointing that it does not say so. OUR DANGEROUS NAVY. Another fatality has been added -to the long list which has- made the American navy a poor place to look for good life insurance risks. This latest disaster. In which one man was scalded to death and two others seri ously injured, occurred on the cruiser Maryland. The accident, as usual, was caused by defective boiler-tubes. These disasters, in which defective boilers have nearly always been re sponsible, are so frequent that it would seem appropriate that a search ing investigation be made with a view to fixing the responsibility for them. Boilers in a Government vessel are seldom, if ever, subjected to a more severe strain than is placed on boilers in merchant marine craft in regular service, but taking the relative num ber of craft in the navy and in the merchant marine, the percenage of disasters of this kind in the latter is so smuu as to oe naraiy noticeaoie. This indicates clearly that the Gov ernment Insists on a more rigid system of inspection, construction and opera tion of boilers in the merchant marine service than in the navy. The situa tion calls for reform either In the construction department or in the en gineering department on board the vessels. From surface indications it would appear that some branches of the navy department may be suffering from the same complaint that is no ticeable in other branches of the Gov ernment; that is, too much red tape, and not enough horse-sense or me chanical skill. There is always a reason for boiler tube explosions. If the boilers are in charge of high-class engineers, it is difficult to understand why these dis asters occur with such frequency. Up to date our new navy has killed more of its own men in the boiler rooms than it has killed enemies in battle. If these accidents happen . as fre- quently in time of peace, they will be much more frequent and deadly in time- of war. NEW BRANCH OF FARMING. A Walla Walla dispatch announces that members of the Farmers' Union , have decided to build a large mill at or near v alia Walla for the purpose of getting more money out - of their wheat than they are able to get under existing circumstances. Thus far the Farmers' Union has had plain sailing in all of its enterprises. World-wide conditions since the union was first organized have been such that higher prices for wheat and other farm prod ucts were inevitable. For this reason there may have been a tendency to credit to the Farmers' Union some of the advantages in price which were really due to other influences. Flour milling is a business separate and dis tinct from graingrowing. Since the world began there has been an allot ted place in the great industrial plan for farmers and millers as well as a large number of other tradesmen and manufacturers. The best results for the individual or for society have n6t followed the occasional attempts to consolidate too many of these callings under one management. For this reason farm ers who are to make milling a branch of the agricultural industry may be disappointed with the results. The flour milling capacity of Oregon and Washington is about twice as large as the demand for the output. This nat urally creates strong competition, and it is doubtful if there is another local ity in the United States where flour is manufactured on a smaller margin of profit than in the Pacific Northwest. These are the conditions the farmers must meet with their mill. The ex periment will be watched with inter est." It is not a new one. CURING CANCERS. Some time ago the. Pennsylvania Medical Society - appointed a cancer commission to investigate the ravages of that terrible disease and report upon possible methods of abating them. The report has now been pub lished and readers who wish for th full text may find it in the Philadel phia North American of April 2. It is one of those admirable scientific utterances, peculiar to the modern medical w-orld, which seek to benefit humanity by preventing rather than curing disease. Were the doctors as selfish as men in general seem to be, they would certainly not try in this way to injure their own business. The report of the cancer commission is but one among many similar efforts to enlighten the public as to its health, no matter what the effect may be on the incom of physicians. Progress seems to be steady in the direction of getting the better of disease by at tacking it in the early stages or pre venting it altogether, and we may see the day when the principal business of the doctors will be' to advise us how to retain our health while we still have it rather than how. to regain it after it has been lost by ignorance or care lessness. - The Pennsylvania Medical Society has no new cancer cure to offer. The reliance of the report is entirely upon surgery. It even -goes the length of warning people against quack reme dies of various sorts, especially the contemptible "X-Ray" cures which are so much advertised, r.nj3 so . utterly worthless. All proposals to cure can cers by means of lotions, plasters, magic incantations and the exercise of faith are set down as humbugs. In the present condition of science the only safe reliance is the surgeon's knife. but it appears that this is by no means to be despised or feared. By timely action it is asserted that four-fifths of the lives now lost from cancer can be saved. Timely action is the essen tial point in the matter. In the be ginning few cancers are dangerous. Not many of them are situated in parts of the body inaccessible to the surgeon, and, if completely removed by the knife before they have had time to distribute their wandering germs to the vital organs, the patient need not fear that they will return. The report contains some instruc tive notes upon the origin of cancers. Vlthout speculating upon the difficult question whether or not they are due to a parasite, it takes the safe ground that a cancer is liable to appear in any part of the body where there is re peated Irritation. A broken tooth which lacerates the tongue may cause a cancer. The use of a clay pipe which sticks to the lip in smoking may have the same consequence. This is again one of the principal dangers from the cigarette habit. Cigarettes are pernicious enough in themselves, but when we takeT into account tha fact that by long use the habit of smoking them may develop a cancer on the lip they become doubly obnox ious. If one must smoke cigarettes or perish of ungratified desire, he should by all means use the kind which are provided with some sort of tip which will not cling to the lip and lacerate the membrane. Warts and moles, in whatever part of the body they may be situated, are said by the Pennsylvania physicians to be pre disposed to become cancerous. As long as they show no irritation all is well, but let the clothing or any other cause set up an ulceration and they imme diately become dangerous. ' It is a duty which every person owes to himself and to those who depend upon him to watch for the symptoms of cancer so that he may resort to a competent surgeon in time to have the disease safely and completely re moved if it appears. The malady is increasing rapidly. Already, it is re ported, there are parts of the country where it is more fatal than tubercu losis, and its share of the annual har vest of death grows greater constant ly. During the year ending last Sep tember. 30.000 persons perished of cancer in the United States. This number exceeds by 10,000 the victims of that disease in 1901. It follows that the cancer death rate is accelerated more than five per cent a year, and the reader must bear in mind that this Is a geometric ratio. The victims ac cumulate precisely like compound in terest. The Pennsylvania Helical Society makes no recommendations as to diet or habits of life which might be sup posed to help ward off this mysterious and fatal malady. The truth is that most of the alleged facts of this sort are superstitious. It is said by many persons, for example, that tomatoes predispose one to the attack of can cer. Others saj' that the trouble is caused by eating meat, but there is no scientific foundation fop' any such statements. They belong to the wide realm of fancy. It must still be con fessed by the physicians that they know neither the cause nor the cure of cancer. Our main reliance for aid when once attacked by it must be upon the surgeon's knife. Fortunately this reliance is safe in eight cases put of ten. Cancer is not necessarily a dan gerous disorder. It only becomes dan gerous by neglect. When it has so destroyed the tissues that an artery is opened, of course there is no more hope. When its germs have been car ried by the blood to vital parts of the body, life is again to be despaired of. But taken in the early stages, as it may be In almost every instance, can cer admits of easy and permanent cure. The communicabllity of tuber culosis has often been attested by the fading from this disease of one mem ber after another of the same family. This fact has given rise to the still largely prevalent idea that the dis ease Is hereditary, when in fact it is merely communicable, the seed; in such instances falling upon receptive soil. A pitiful example of this fact was lately drsclosed in Portland through the ministrations of the Visiting Nurses' Association. Five cases were found in ojie fat-ily; f these the father and mother had passed to the incurable stage and the three children are suffering from the malady in its incipient stages. These people have, presumably, lived in the same rooms, breathed the same air. slept, perhaps two in a bed. eaten from the same table of food prepared by the mother and, all unconscious of the danger of infection, have communicated the dis ease to one another by the close con tact of their daily lives. This situa tion, in view of the effort that has been made to disseminate knowledge upon this subject, is astonishing. It shows how much yet remains to ' be done in the way of educating the masses upon the nature, prevention and treatment of consumption. Tho new site secured by the School Board for the Lincoln High School is an admirable one for the purpose. After the mistake made in the location of tho Washington High School build ing a mistake that is apparent to any one who approaches the building from whatever direction the School Board and citizens generally are to be con gratulated upon securing a location for the new Lincoln High School that is at once sightly and well suited to the purpose. To do the School Board justice, it was not in favor of building the Washington building on its pres ent site. But the district owned the lot, which, from its close proximity to the Hawthorne School, was not sale able property, and many taxpayers in a spasm of economy vigorously pro tested against the expenditure of money for a more suitable location. IX was not until the costly pile of stone and cement took shape that th'i unsuitability of the site was fully manifest. Experience is a costly teacher, but those who learn in her school have a graduate- knowledge of the subjects taken. A patron of the Washington High School protests against a. levy now be ing made upon the ctudents of that school to pay the expenses of bringing a Salem High School baseball team to Portland to play the Washinjrton High School team. The protest is based in justice and prudence. These games between teams belonging to schools outside of the city should be discouraged, if not interdicted. The best place in the world for high school boys over night Is at home. The rea sons for this are so obvious that it is unnecessary to reepat them. Inter collegiate games are distracting enough and in many ways objection able; inter-high school games, except as thej- are played between students of the high schools of the same city, may easily become pernicious. It is not wise to encourage them. Employment of women as stenogra phers, clerks and telegraph operators in the offices of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad has been stopped by order of the directors. The order will not dis turb women already in the service. This class of employes, it is under stood, have been remarkably faithful and efficient in the several lines of work designated, but by reasons of tho limitations of their sex they cannot rise in the ranks. And as the higher officials of the railway companies are drawn from the ranks of experienced subordinate v-jr:ers. It Is manifestly Judicious to keep J.hese ranks full of available material. Tho order is an arbitrary oner but not more so than are the demands of business gen erally. . The old adage that "the fool and his money are soon parted" does not always hold good. The modern game for separating the fool from his money, as played by Mr. Maybray and a number, of others, discloses the facf that there is nothing very "soon" about the performa-.ee. When the modern bunco man taltes the trouble to carry a victim all the way from New York to Florida in a special car, the parting of that particular fool and his money is attended by so many complications and incidents that, com pared with the old gold-brick game in which the Indian handled the gold, it is like a race between a thoroughbrel and a plow horse. The money that Gifford Pinchot is spending in Europe would plant many square miles of land in the United States that needs reforestation. Yet Plnchot's fad is conservation. George Gould will give his daughter a $600,000 mansion. He expects the son-in-law to put up the money to rtn it. No wonder Count Boni was not eligible. A comet is an illusory ghost of some departed star glory sent from 1' nit less space to make so-called experts on planet earth think they know just what it is. Legend and superstition call f r sunny w-eather on the second Sunday after clear Easter. Now we shall tee again. If Roosevelt made Tillman sick that last time, Tillman ought to know at last that Rorsevelt is a pretty big man. Meanwhile the coal of Alaska is safely conserved just as it has been for the last ten million years. Mr. Heney also goes abroad. Things have been rather tame :-i America since T. R. went away. An early morning comet gives sky gazers excuse for staying out the night before TOPICAL VERSE Throusli Thick and Thin. You who whisper that you love mc. Pause a moment: tell me this: Will you. think you. still drain of me? Will you crave of me a kiss. When the years have added fatty Tissue to my slender frame? When I'm neither trig mr natty. Will you love me just the same? Wili you still keep up your ardor When 1 am of ample frirth? Won't your heart far me srrow harder When my footsteps shake the earth? Do you think you'll love nte duly When I grow so lursre as that? Tell me, darling; tell me truly. Will you love me when I'm fat? New York Telegram. In Ilwana Tuinbo's Story. In Bwana Tumho's story We got the painful facts. And all the details gory Resulting from l-.i.x acts. He tells us how he sisrhted And what he aimed to hit. And when the ball alighted. Just what became of it. 'What time I killed a li n," Says Bwana at his best. "I firmly glued my eve on . The middle of his chest. The hall a 40 rtodel Impinged upon his hip And ranged into the caudal Appendage nar the tip." In Bwana Tumho's story We hear the bullet thud. And what is even more. we Can smell the fumes of b1or4. He's very frank about it, And leaves the reader no Alternative to doubt it. Was even thus and so. "I came upon a kudu." - Says Bwana in a place. "And doing what but few do, I shot him in the face. The bullet smashed his gizzard In forty thousand bits. And strewed from A to Izzttrri His obfuscated wits.'' Jn Bwana Tumbo's story There is no tempered word Or show of allegory Concerning what occurred. It's all set down precisely. As it appeared to him. And nothing is said nicely That truth to tell war; grtm. "I hit him in the shoulder." Says Bwana in his stj-le. "He shut up like a foider. v And perished w-ith a smile. It was the Holland slew him The steel-nosed 42 And It made a hole clear through him, That I tossed my helmet through." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The Pinal War. Oh, East and West shall know not rest and the seas shall run blood-red When the fierce war dogs of the. world break loose from the thrall of their resting bed. There's a sign in the North and a sim in tlie South that blood shall flow no more But the signs of the stars say too, that Mars must have his glut of wttr. 0 God! what a hell the signs foretell of the final clash of the Powers, When the great steel ships which their sons have built shall go to thir testing hours: Then blood in the North and blood in the- South and blood in the West will flow, And the old white priest of the hoary East shall reap blood as his woe.. We have set our seal on tho might of Bteel, and the steel some test must find. Uro we cast away tho grim old dream and know that our eyes were blind. There is but one door that leads to th - light and Mars knows that right well. He will give tho word when hts wrath I stirred which will loos a his hounds of hell. Then East and Wtest shall kaow not rent and the flags sliall dip In th red. And. the seven sean shall open wide to engulf tha Nations' dead. And tha stars shall smoke and tha sun grow dark till the mighty caxnaga cease, Then over the world shall he unfurled the one white flag of Peace. Boston Transcript. Resolutions. 1 ain't a'goin to git mad when the gas man comes arotrn' With a bill that lookB as if rdi furnished gas fer half tho town. I won't fume an' flare an throw a fit, an' tear my hair an' cuss. When tho stovepipe comes a-rumblin' down on' makes an awful muse. Or if when I have gone to bed. The telephone should ring. An' to my bare an" tender feet I'd quickly have to spring To find there's nothin' doin". An" they've rung me by mistake, I'll simply swaller down my rage. An' bear the cold an' shake. An' all the other cares of life I'm goin' to ignore. There ain't'no pesterin' troubles Goin' to hurt me any more; For I've made my resolutions That I'm goin" to keep or bust. An' rm never goin' to worry Or sit mad until I must. Indianapolis News. The Spendthrift Muses. He slaved along for se-veral years And made a tittle money. He had a host of woes and fears, But saved a little money; He never had the time to spend An evening with some cheerful friend. He kept on toiling' to the end And saved a little money. He died last week, and folks now say He saved a little money; Nobody mourns although he may Have raved & little money; I hope that when I come to die Folks will not worn me where I lie. Therefore, old scout, I shall not try To save a little money. St. Louis Star. Seedtime and Harvest. I've got a new seed catalogue. All full of pictures bright; No flower bed or garden patch Was ever such a sight. They make me want to seize my rpade And dig from morn till night; I like my new seed catalogue, "Tin such a wondrous sight. The roses are as big as plates. The onions are the same; To lug the watermeloi s round Would make a fellow lame. The beans are 14 inches long. Cucumbers 23; O, what a mess of giant stuff. Within my book I see! I'll plant a bed of everything. And then I'll watch them" grow; I'll get a magnifying glass And study every row. And if I gut a Summer squash As big as half a crown. I'll b the wonder of the year In this suburban t,own. Boston Herald.