6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, APRIL. 17. 1910. M)t Bw$vnxm PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Fostofflce aa f-econd-Clan Matur. Bubicription Kates Invsxlnbl.T in Advance. IBI MAIL.. rmily, Sunday Included, one year ? f?2 Dally. Sunday Included, six months... 4-- lally. Sunday included, three months.. Ially. Sunday included. 'one month...- ' Dally, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday. ix months. . . Dally, without Sunday, three months l.i Daily, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year J ?JJ Sunday, one, year.. Z"ln Sur-day and weekly, one year (By Carrier.) ' , rally. Sunday included, one year 9.00 Xally. Sunday Included, one month..-. How to Remit Send Postofflce money order, express order or personal cnecK on your local bank. Stamps. coJn or currency are at the sender's risk. Give' postoffice ad dress in full. Including county and state. Postage Rate -10 to 14 pases. 1 cent: 10 to 28 paxes. 2 cents; SO to 40 pages. 3 cents: 0 to 60 pages. 4 centa Foreign postage double rate. Kaatern Business Office The S. C. Eeck with Special Agency New York, rooms -BO Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 610-01-Trlbuoe building. ?OKTXAjrr, SrT)AT, APRIL 17, 1910. BIRTHDAYS OS1 FLEETIXO TIME. On April 3, 1806, the first white man saw the site of future Portiind. That -was Just 104 years ago. I was Captain William Cla;k, who,swhiIe Captain Meriwether Lewis waited near where Troutdale on the Columbia River now is, explored the Willamette River (or Multnomah) as far as Swan Island and Columbia ""University. In 1S10 the Winships attempted the first .white settlement in Oregon at Oak Point on the Columbia River, and , next year the Aetor party founded Astoria. On May 2, 1843, Americans organized at Champoeg their first gov ernment on the Pacific Coast. June 19. 1846, the United States fixed the international boundary between Ore gon and Canada, by treaty with Great Britain. So that progress has many birthdays if wo but stop to think of them. There are a number of pioneers be longing to nJs early period, who have not yet passed, yet will go soon, and also have birthdays. These men and women are sometimes honored as Ben Simpson and F. X. Matthieu have been recently, and as their life runs out probably more of them will be remembered. John Mlnto, of Salem, 18.44, is one of the most conspicuous. Among others of the same pioneer year are J. C. Nelson, of Newberg; J. H. Hawley, of Monmouth; T. M. Ramsdell, of Portland; Dr. T. V. B. Embree, of Dallas; W. D. Stillwell, of Tillamook, and Green L. Rowland, of Xorth Yamhill. At Forest Grove is William Abernethy, 1840, and at La Fayette, James and W. C. Hembree, 1843. At Brownsville lives James Blakeley, 1846, at very advanced age. Of the year 1845 survive Solomon Durbin, of Salem; C. C. Bozorth, of Ridgeficld, Wash.; W. F. Helm and Charles Bolds, of Portland. Besides the men, are honored pioneer women, in even larger number, and equally rntitled to mention. It is kinder to remember these pioneers while they are living than to follow after their departure with flowers. There are many anniversaries in Oregon, of events and of men and women, which the younger generation can fittingly pause to mark. School teachers throughout the state would render a worthy tribute by bringing to attention of the children anniver saries of loeal and state-wide interest. AX OR-EXAMIXED GIBJU A Pittsburg girl, Mildred Stewart, who committed suicide for fear she would fail to pass her examinations, carried to its logical conclusion a ten dency which is manifest in almost ev ery high school in the country. Ex amination day is a time of terror. Its shadow is projected forward over the entire school term. .Every branch is Ktudied, not for its inherent interest . or value, but for the sake of the ex n ruination marks it will yield. Stu dents do not exercise their free intel ligence upon their studies. Their only purpose is to stuff their memories with such facts and arguments, all carefully cut and dried, as will be useful on examination day. Whether Ihey will be useful or not in later life is of no consequence. The wor ship of the examination idol keeps up R feverish excitement throughout the whole school year which, as the dread rrisis approaches, develops into a per fect frenzy of anxiety. The best stu dents are the ones who suffer most from the examination horror. Whether Ihey pass or not. the ordeal is suc ceeded by a reaction which often pros ti'ates them. Many are injured for life by the prolonged nervous strain. There are some arguments for con 11 nuance of the examination plague which appear more or less plausible. ut none of them will stand investi gation. The common belief that the ability to spout out a flood of facts on examination day is a valuable prep. aration for the exigencies of life is purely delusive. Life presents no exi gencies which demand ability of this kind. What life requires of us is rapid judgment in emergencies. The power to apprehend new situations is valuable, and likewise the ability to estimate the characters of our fellow men. None of these capacities is culti vated by the examination. mania. On the contrary, all of them are dwarfed by. it. The boys and girls who have passed through the modern educa tional mill,, with its periodical spasms of ejecting all they know upon white paper, are not by any means so well- -v informed as were their predecessors . . of twenty years ago. They do not so well understand the common facts of life. They are less curious about cur rent events of importance. They take less interest in books and public ques tions. Part at least of this unfortu nate situation must . be ascribed to the deadly influence of the examina tion fetish, which acts as an opiate upon the youthful intelligence, -while at the same time it unduly stimulates the nervous system. It dulls the mind and slays the body with the same stroke. The tendency of students to escape from the dire examination fiend by organizing debates and oratorical con tests is hopeful. It promises to be very helpful if it is permitted to live, but the school machine is not very friendly to it. One county superln tendent announces that he fears the debates will take the students' atten tion away from their examinations Of course they will, and that. is pre cisely the reason why sensible people welcome them with shouts of joy. We must invent some way to make educa tion less -mechanical before It will be worth the time and money it costs At present some of the 'I-est educated youths in the country never saw the inside of a schoolroom. DEALING WITH RAIIJtOADS. There's a reason for ..-.; noise about grabbing" of streets in Portland, and the reason is found in the city's ex perience. Railroads and other indi viduals find it no longer easy to obtain franchises or permits or relinqulsh- men's of streets for the cheap asking. Biggest of all the grabs was that of streetcar franchises in 1902-3, which the possessors later sold to the present owners for millions of dollars. A gas franchise was obtained the same way and recently sold for a large sum of money to Eastern investors. The pub lic levee, at foot of Jefferson street, was grabbed by a railroad for a ter minal. Streets in various parts o the city were vacated for benefit of one person and another. Jione of these concessions yielded a: ' part of their value to the city. It is natural for the public to revolt against these gifts and to demand that they shall cease. The railroads that desire concessions for bridge approaches and terminal uses now find city authorities, responding to the public demand. In this matter the city should treat with the railroads '. t a reasonable and conciliatory spirit. The railroads ask for a good deal r -.d should bo re quired to reciprocate correspondingly. But there shoul." not Te an unreason- ng reaction from the old era. of free gifts. Protest should not go so far as to deny the O. R. & N. use of a part of an unuE?d street whereon to rest a pier for a bridge that the city com pels the railroad to build, as at the east end of the projected Oregon-street bridge. Between the two extremes in this matter, as in others, is a rational basis of understanding and mutual benefit It is this basis that city autUorities have set themselves to find In l-egotia- tions with the railroads for cession to them of putlic Itnd. Their efforts will be Judged by results. Certain it is that no genc-ous gifts by the city will be tolerated. It is equally impor tant that jingoes shall not have the whole say" on the side of the public. KING KDWARD Til. The story told of King Edward's weakened health is a familiar one in the annals of the house of Hanover. It is alleged that he has fallen - into a state of melancholy which causes him to shun society, ignore his kingly duties and court solitude, even to the exclusion from his daily life of mem bers of his own family. Whether this is the beginning of the end, which will be neurosis or clouded mental vision, can only be conjectured.- Time alone can tell. ' The loyal sons of Britain wherever they ma be join with our own people in the hope that melancholy, the scourge of Edward's house, will not overtake the present head of the British Empire. The offspring of a long line of con sanguineous marriages, the children of Queen "Ictoria and the Prince Con sort were nevertheless almost without exception of exceedingly bright men tality during their earlier years. This was especially true of the older mem bers perhaps it should be said the two elder daughters of the family the Princess Royal, afterward for many years Crown Princess of Ger many, and for a few short months known as the Empress Frederick, and Princess Alice, later Grand Duch ess of Hesse. The birth of King Ed ward came between that of these two highly gifted sisters, and though an engaging and amiable youth, his mind was less brilliant than that of either of them, being more like thbse of his brothers, of whom there were three, and his younger sisters, also three in number. Of the four sons of the late Queen Victoria the youngest was an epileptic from his birth and died in his early manhood. The, others, in cluding kiiir isawara, were average young Britons in their youth, some what wild according to the standard of young men of idleness and wealth in their early manhood, and phleg matic, mediocre and apoplectic in their advancing years. Of the four sons. King Edward and Arthur, Duke of - Connaught, survive. The report that the former, at the age of 67 years, has become a victim of melan choly, foreshadowing mental inac tivity, is not surprising in conjunction with the facts of his lineage and the incidents of his immediate family history- His great grandfather, George III, was mindless throughout the later years of his long life; his grand father, the Duke of Kent, was one of the most stolid, stupid and gross of the many sons of that sluggish mon arch. But Edward was exceptionallv fortunate in his own father, who as consort and adviser of Victoria the Good, exercised the benign influence of a man of sensibility and culture upon his home and family. The early death of the Prince Consort was hot alone a blow to the British Nation Occurring at the time that it did at- the beginning of our Civil War it was a calamity keenly felt by our own Nation. In a domestic sense it was Irreparable, clouding as it did for many years the life of the late Queen Victoria, and depriving her sons of the wisest of counselors. Beyond this untoward fact lies the Intermingling of consanguineous blood in the veins of the royal family of Great Britain, a heritage that has cropped out In physical weakness all along the line; in- mental mediocrity that has been conspicuous in all of the sons and in many of the daugh ters of the late Queen and Prince Con sort, and of the relatively early death of a number of their children. The cloud- still hovers to some extent over the line. There was a break in the consanguineous relation when King Edward married Alexandra "The Sea King's daughter from over the sea." as sung by the poet-laureate of that day. The present Prince of Wales, King Edward's only living son, is," however, married to a cousin of the second blood. But two of the King's daughters Victoria, Duchess of Fife, and Maud, Queen of Norway mar ried "out of the family." In the off spring of these marriages -especially of. the former lies the hope of a sturdy race of kings for Great Brit ain in more remote years. In the meantime. King Edward has no doubt many years yet to live and, nominally, to reign. His immediate progenitors, with the exception of his father (who was a victim of typhoid fever and died in middle life), "died at the top," but survived physically to a great age, while his mother, "Victoria the Good," lived well past four-fcore years, re taining her mental faculties to the last, though sorrowful in spirit, be cause of the frequent' family afflic tions which she had suffered by death. King Edward belongs to tl ; pres- ent. He is many degrees removed from the conditions that prevailed in the time of his great grandfather and the immediate successors of the 1-tter upon the throne. Three generations of national culture and world-wide progress intervene between him and the last of the Georges. Well and carefully trained, through the tutelage of his mother's long reign in the duties of his position, in close touch with his subjects, yijoying all of the I honors of his kingly office without l being burdened with its grave respon sibilities, there is every reason to hope that the King's mental vigor will not decline in advance of his body, and that notwithstanding the heavy handi cap of heredity that he carries, he will live to a good old age. In the en joyment of mental and physical health. (OMKKMXO WE20LER. Whether Wezler is a murderer or not, he Is the kind of a man who easily falls into crime of almost any sort.. His matrimonial relations have been of that vague, irregular variety which means little more than the pairing of the birds in Spring. His occupations have not tended to give him a settled place In the world or cause him to feel much responsibil ity as a citizen. His habit of taking chance acquaintances into . his confi dence and discussing with; them his family woes and personal secrets be speaks a weak Intelligence. His fre quent changes of occupation indicate uncertain purpose and feeble volition.' He belongs to the flotsam type of hu man being which never accomplishes any good in the world and is apt to bring trouble upon everybody else. His wife must be esteemed happy to have secured a divorce from him before he had completely wrecked her life. It is doubly fortunate that the courts gave her the custody of their children. Wezler's morbid taste, -which led him to keep the picture of his dead child on his bureau, does not indicate any constant affection for his family. Probably it was merely .an effort to make himself interesting to chance visitors. It provided a topic for pa thetic conversation and gave him an opening for telling how much he pitied himself. More interesting than Wez ler himself is the question how it comes that we have so many men of his character in the world. Of course they are born with a predisposition to worthlessness, but why are they not moulded by the schools, the churches and the Sunday schools and their na tive trend turned to better things? What else are these esteemed institu tions for? If Wezler had been brought up under a thorough and relentless system of manual training, had he been compelled to work hard at a use ful occupation for a reasonable num ber of hours dally from his boyhood up, is it credible that he would now have been suspected of murdering his mother-in-law? LIGHT ox cossrsiPTiox. The saying of the evolutionists that all species are continually in danger of reversion to primitive types, is glaringly Illustrated by the proneness of modern "cranks" to mingle relig ion and medicine. The earliest priests were medicine men. The person who controlled the communications be tween man and his maker was also the healer of disease. He was in a most advantageous position to con quer the ills that flesh is heir to, be cause he had at his disposal all the power of the- infinite. Now, our healers of one sort and another are reverting to the position of the original medicine man and priest. They depend for their cures, not upon physical laws and material remedies, but upon the intervention of the occult which they invoke under various names, but always with the same intent. The underlying reason for this reversion to the primitive may be creditable to our intelligence or it may not. It may signify that there really is some healing virtue in the hidden forces of the world; or it may signify that man is incurably silly and ever disposed to turn away from com mon sense to the vain dreams of the imagination. Two little books, which have - re cently been received by The Orego nian, exemplify as 'well as anything could the scientific and the religious, or rather superstitious, methods of treating diseases. The particular ail ment which these books deal with is consumption, now commonly known by the more learned name of tubercu losis. The first book, by Dr. Woods Hutchinson, is rigorously scientific. It sticks closely to the facts, holds out no false hopes and directs the patient to seek his cure by resorting to mate rial means and rational methods?. The other; by a Chicago doctor named Keyes, and entitled "The Riddle of Life and Health," begins with a far rago about Adam's fall and proceeds with an irritating mixture of scrip ture texts and medical directions to .the end. Dr. ICeyes we assume that he uses the title "doctor" rightfully has in some way got into his head the idea that most of our physical ills arise from the failure t eat enough fats and cils. According to his no tion, Adam's fall consisted in devour ing a dish prepared by Fve under the insidious directions of the devil with out any grease. From the moment when Adam, swallowed it, we were all lost. It was this terrible crime which "brought death into the world, with all our woes and loss of Eden." Had Adam continued to rlive on grease, as the Lord originally designed, we should all have been immortal. Where the grease came from, Dr. Keyes does not reveal, but it may be supposed that all the trees in the gar den, except the forbidden" one, bore candles and machine oil. "The powers which constitute life in man," declares Dr. Keyes, "depend upon a fat or oil exchange. The curse of the human race today is the curse of Adam in breaking the first food laws" that is. in eating a dish which was devoid of grease. "The greatest violation of food laws is the hab: . of not eating fats," he says in another place, and again: "You will find it an invari able rule that all healthy, old people eat and assimilate a large amount of fat," either directly or indirectly. According to Dr. Keyes, consump tion, like every other disease, gets its hold on us because we do not con sume enough grease in our food When the .ailment :.as made some lit tle progress it becomes Impossible for the stomach to digest encugh fat food to assure recovery. We must, there fore, help it out by injecting oil under the skin. This grand discovery will not only cure tuberculosis, but it is sovereign against lerrosy, neuralgia, chronic skin diseases and rheuma tism. In fact, "oil is the body's nat ural serum for the prevention and cure of disease." Now, there is just enough truth at the bottom of these ravings to make them dangerous. In his lucid and instructive new book, "The Conquest of Consump tion," Dr. Woods Hutchinson empha sizes the truth that our only safe guards against- this dread disease are pure air, sunshine, rest and nourish ing food. If Wc possess these advan tages to begin with, we are safe from its attack. If the malady has fas tened upon us, still by proper regimen there is good hope of recovery up to the very last stages. Dr. Hutchinson classifies the remedial agents for con sumption in the following order: "Food, fresh air, healthy houses, shorter hours of work, longer sleep, good wages and more play." It will - be noticed that, like Dr. Keyes. Dr. Hutchinson places food first, but there ends the resemblance between the two physicians. The dif ference between a charlatan and a man of science is that the former Is forever seeking a panacea, while the other recognizes that complex effects depend upon complex causes and does not expect any single remedy to ac complish everything. Dr. Hutchinson ranges the food proper for a human being, consumptive or healthy, in sev eral classes, x he first i.nd most im portant is meat, though not necessar ily fat meat. The next Is sugar, which he deems more essential than oil of any kind. Fat comes third in the list and the best form of it, he thinks, is butter. It is only, fourthly that he mentions starch, which o many have lauded lately, in the form of rice, as the perfect food. Dr. Hutchinson has but a poor opinion of rice. He in forms us that the peoples which live upon It, such as the Hindoos and Jap anese, suffer . more than any others from tuberculosis. JtTBGE WTLXIAMS AM) THE "LASDAC LET." S Several Eastern newspapers we have seen speak of "the landaulet incident" in the life of Attorney-General Will lams. Heads -of departments, only, then had carriages, provided by the United States. The Attorney-General had his carriage, long before Judge Williams came to the office, and has had his carriage ever since. Every other member of the Cabinet the same. Now, th head of every one of the countless bureaus has his auto mobile. . And there just now has been a. row about a' new auto for the Speaker of the House, raised by Dem ocrats and Insurgents who wish to vent their spite against Joe Cannon. Judge Williams cared as, little for a carriage or "landaulet" as any man who ever lived. He could walk, or take a horsecar. But the roar that was raised abiut the carriage of the Attorney-General, in .his time, was tre mendous. Yet the carriaga was at the disposal of the head of the depart ment, long before Williams came to the office. It has been at the disposal of the head of the department ever since. Recently it has been changed in common with all the rest of the official vehicles to the far- more ex pensive automobile. An insensate partisan and dema gogic spirit struck at Judge Williams in this matter. Everything is deemed fair In politics, of courae. Represent ative Joseph Wilson, of Oregon, - had died before the middle of his term; and J. W. Nesmlth, formerly Senator, had been chosen at a special election to fill ut the unexpired term. Nes- mith's election was due to the univer sal disgust that followed the discovery of the - facts in the life of John H. (Hippie) Mitchell; Nesmith's hatred of Williams was extreme. It arose from difference of t.mper and of tern, perarqent, aggravated and intensified by the course of Tilliams on recon struction measures, and by rivalries in politics in Oregon Nesmith was chief among those who talked about "the landaulet" and other things. He gave the gossiping correspondents at Washington the choicest of their mor sels about th carriage- and about the family affairs of the Attorney-General in Oregon. Here was the Attorney General of the United States, riding about In a carriage at the expense of the toiling millions of the country; . the speaker had known the time when this uune proud and haughty o ficlal had been "floundering through the muddy road.; of Oregon on the hurricane deck of a mule, an animal that, as John Randolph had said, had neither pride of ancestry nor hope of posterity." It would be unbecoming in The Cregonian to repeat other things then said ; but there was a para graph in the "anecdota" about Judge Williams in The Oregonian of April 5 (next day after his death) which will throw light on this subject if any one cares to turn back to it. A IXHilCAT., MAYOK. Topeka. Kansas, is blessed with a law which forbids all labor for pay on Sunday. Many other cities enjoy the possession of similar laws, but they are prevented from being ineon venient by a Judicious system of non enforcement. The municipalities com bine the satisfaction which the con sciousness of a righteous law imparts with the liberty which ignores its ex alted provisions altogether. Thus both the spiritual and the carnal man are pleased. But Topeka was not satis fied with this easy-going arrangement. The people of that rigorously right eous town demanded that their Sun day law should be enforced. Natur ally, they expected that enforcement would go as far as the theaters, 11 braries, art galleries and saloons, and there stop. Pious sentiment almost invariably lumps books, pictures and gin together with play acting as un mitigated evils, on Sunday at least, and does not rest until they are for bidden. It did this in Topeka. and then sat down to enjoy the blessed serenity of a conscience which is aware of duty well done. Unfortunately for the peace of mind ef the elect, Topeka has a Mayor of a singularly logical turn of mind. He took the extraordinary view of the Sunday law that when it says "labor for pay" it means labor for pay, and proceeded to extend its ban over other things besides the librar ies, art galleries and theaters. "Does not a preacher labor for pay, when he stands in his pulpit and preaches?" in quires this pragmatical Mayor. "Does not the church choir sing for pay? Does not the man who plays the or gan work his fingers for pay? Nay, the very janitor of the church, does he 3t labor for pay?" Of course there is but one' answer to these im pertinent questions. The preacher certainly has a higher object than the mere accumulation of money In his lucubrations. He would save souls, as well as dollars. And yet, were the dollars not forthcoming he would in the majority of cases forget his solicitude for souls and seek some other occupation. Thus reasons the sadly backslidden Mayor of Topeka, and following out the logic of his heathenish brain he has announced that if he is compelled by devout pub lic opinion to. close the theaters on Sunday, he will close the churches, too. Of course, there is a nice point of law involved here. The question will arise, when the preachers are haled into the, police court, whether or not they really "labor" in emitting their sermons. To be sure, their tongues are occupied more or less actively during the period of delivery, but we do not apprehend that this alone would subject them to the penalties of the statute. The essential point will be whether or not their brains can be said to work. This delicate inquiry will naturally be left to the Topeka juries to decide, and it would be rash for an outsider to seek to an ticipate their verdict. Judging from what takes place in some other towns, however, one would guess that the Topeka churches will not be closed on the ground that the preachers "labor" on Sunday. ( James A. Waymire, dead in Califor nia, was well known in Oregon, in the early days. Left an orphan, he lived with his uncle, S. M. Gilmore, of Yam hill County, prominent in t:.e pioneer life of Oregon, and a member of the Legislature of 1860, that elected Baker and Nesmith. Young Waymire was among the first in Oregon to take up the study and practice of shorthand writing; he became private secretary to Governor Gibbs in 1863, and studied law with success. About 1864 he mar ried Virginia Chrisman, in Yamhill. A faw years later he went to California, where he practiced law and was elect ed Superior Judge. He was very ac tive In behalf of the gold standard and the election of McKinley in 1896. "The Harriman interests" seem to have postponed developme-t work In Oregon too long for their own good. Now, they have to fight for everything. Yet they might havecontrolled every thing. Never would "the Hill inter ests" have entered Oregon, If "the Harriman Interests" had been alive to the situation and opportunity. Now, there is feverish haste to counteract the competitive effort. The controll ing mind of "the Harriman inter ests" was badly advised by lieutenants and subordinates, who didn't know Oregon. Yet in the long run it may prove of advantage to Oregon to have been forced to submit to the delay that has brought in a great rival. Senator Aldrich's ill-health, it is said, will compel him to retire from the Senate. Some of his enemies will think they have scored a big triumph With so many job-hunters desiring to serve the public, It seems a strange omission that the State of Oregon has no salaried State Chemist. eelore it is too late, some one should suggest the name of Colonel Dosch in connection with exhibits at the Panama Exposition. The men who scaled Mount McKin ley wouldn't have done it except for Dr. Cook, so that he is entitled to credit along with theirs. We wish to notify each of the Eu ropean nations that none of them could make Roosevelt its ruler with out his consent. No, Mrs. Jones, if Mrs. Smith next door should learn your age from the censustaker, she probably wouldn't be lieve it. Anarchists at- said to be lying in wait for the Colonel in urope. They must think themselves more terrible than lions. Cost of living will mount higher yet. Prices of tickets to the Jeffries Johnson prizefight must be added. Any man. President or other, -who participates in a woman suffrage con vention, deserves all he gets. Some persons who abhor war think the way to escape it is to let the en emy have the strongest navy. The comet is said to be visible to the naked eye. Perhaps because one must get out of bed to see it. The man who gets up with the chickens nowadays is lazy. He should get up with i'-ie comtt. Still, what the censustaker finds out wouldn't make as breezy gossip as some other matters. Price is so high at bcyeotters t;.n not get along without beefsteak. At least chain the dog untK after the visit of the census man. A peculiar tonic is needed to help the eyes to see the comet. DISITEKKSTEU ADVICK. A ii d Delivered With So Much Unction and Keeling:, Too. The Spectator, Portland. What generous rivals the Democrats are! Here they are, certain they have the Republicans in a hole, sewed up, down and out, and beaten to a frazzle, and yet with that kindness and mag nanimity that are ever the mark of the noble-minded they are telling their op ponents how to win. It is an exhibi tion of lofty disinterestedness to make angels smile and cause Republicans to rember the fate of those who entertain Greeks bearing gifts. Not alone are the Democrats of Ore gon giving generously of their advice to the local Republican party how it can extricate itself from its present dif ficulties, and once .more march trium phantly to the National pie counter. In this neck of the woods, the Democrats are begging their opponents not to hold an assembly, for that way danger lies. "Boys," says our Bourbon mentor, "don't tempt fate by holding an assem bly. The people will never forgive you if you do, and if they won t forgive you how can you expect them to vote for you? We want to see the Republicans win, and we're frightened to death that you will be beaten if you hold the as sembly. So, for our sake, don't do it.' Was ever rival so single-minded? The Spectator wonders what the Kepubli cans are made of if they turn a deaf ear to that plea. How Did Br nn Do Itf Springfield Republican. Mr. Bryan must have visited Rome when he encircled the earth in 1306. How in blazes did he manage the Vatican and the Methodists? Perhaps Mr. Bryan beats them all In diplomacy. I1H.HKH UV1.G IS WODlLD-WIDB. Greater Prloes AH Around Cause, Sup ply ot Ko.ua! the Demand- Henry Barrett Chamberlln in the Chicago Record-Herald. Living cost has advanced so consistent ly upward during the recent years, and the tariff agitation has brought the prob. lem so generally into discussion that the average American citizen has come to believe that the entire- trouble rested within the boundaries of this country. Efforts to learn why prices have in creased have not been very satisfactorily answered. The farmer has insisted that he Is not to blame, the butcher has blamed the packer, and the latter has completed the circuit by shifting the re sponsibility to the agriculturist and the prices or roodstuils nave continued w oar. ,, It may not help the American pocket- book any to know that the Increase in the cost of living is not confined to any particular subdivision, but it may con tribute a mite to the food for reflection to learn something of the- situation in other parts of the world. " So widespread has been the demand for information concerning the present value of foodstuffs here and abroad that many of the United States Consuls and Const- j lar agents have been requested to investi gate and report concerning prices or foodstuffs. In general it appears tnat food prices abroad, and in cities where the wage rate is much lower than in this country, are as high as they are here. The reports indicate that the prices have been increased principally because ine supply has not kept pace with the de mand, and not owiirg to any combination for the purpose of increasing the rates on the various articles. , In Hamburg. Germany, the average price of sirloin steak Is Zih cents a pound. the latest Quotations on tenderloin Deing 431-3 cents. Veal chops bring 32 cents, while leg of veal is quoted at 30 cents. Pork rajiK3 in price from la to JJ cents; mutton from 19 to 30 cents, and ham from 13 to 51 cents, the latter being the price for a fine grade of the sliced article. These prices are furnished by a first-class dealer, whose prices are neither the high est nor the lowest, but tnera is siibiu variation between dealers in fashionable and unfashionable, the chances being that the superior cuts of meats will be found in the shops where the highest, prices prevail. From Hanover, which is considered an inexpensive city in which to live, the following prices were current during March: Beef and veal, 204 cents; pork and mutton, 19; smoked ham. 35; bacon. 22Vi; wheat flour. 4?4; rye flour. 3V; wneat bread, 5; rye bread, 3; coffee, medium Java roasted, 39H; table bwltor. 37; milk, per quart, 4'; egg-s, per dozen, 40. On the basis of income, tne uerman, in eomnara.tive occupation with the Ameri can worker, should not pay more than 50 per cent of the prices he now pays tor his food, but as a matter of fact he pays as much as the peopl here, excepting milk, potatoes and othef vegetames. tun sul Robert J. Thomson accounts for abil ity to live under such conditions to tuo ct that the German housekeeper is rigidly economical and would be able to maintain her table and exist rainy wen on the waste of many American families of similar position in life. So high is food cost that an effort is being made to counteract the shortage which causes it. largely because farmers are movine to industrial centers, by em ploying women in agriculture. It is said that fully 3,000.000 German women are operating farms or working thereon Germany has been able to keep its sup ply of food stulfs to the maximum tig- ures by intensive farming, the employ ment of millions of female hands, many of the workers coming from Poland, Bo hernia and Lithuania. In London the retail prices are not greatly different from those prevalent in Chicago. Here is a rtuidom list, with the prices given in American money. Ine (notations are from good shops, not the highest priced, nor are the prices for inferior provisions in any instance: Bacon, 11 to 28 cents; beof, 18 to 26; bread, two-pound loaf. 6: coffee. 24 to 44; eggs, 24 to 44; ham, uncooked. 20 to as; ham, cooked. 48 to 61 ; lamb cutlets, 36; lard. 10 to 18: milk. 8; mutton chops, 24 to 30; steak, 20 to 36; tea, 21 to 61; veal-. 24 to 32. This list is a fair average one. and the prices appear to compare favorably with tiiise quoted in American cities during March. The high cost of living is as surely abroad in the British metropolis as it is in the bigger cities of this coun try. In Austria-Hungary the problem of liv ing cttst has become so serious that tho chambers of commerce throughout the empire are investigating. An illustration of the advance In prices is shown by this table, furnished by tho magistracy of Reichcnbcrg : Kormor Present price. price. Beef. 2.2 lbs .MrW -' t .30'!i ..IT Fillet of beer. 2.2 lbs .4S .Ml Veal. 2.2 lbs 26'H) .2!0 .41 Vork, 2.2 lbs -'-'- .44'a' .4 I.iver. 2.2 IbB .24 Ueee. each .......... . 1.21 PiKons, each ....... -' -- Ducks, each "' l'l Wheat flour. 2.2 lbs. .OK .10 1-entils, 2.2 lbs "' Millet. 2.2 lbs ' .OS Hulled barley. 2.2 lb. .OS .11 SiiKHr, 2.2 lbs -I"' .1" Milk, quart. Beer, quart .07 .11 Antbraeite coal. 1 lOlba .34 ' Bituminous lll lbs. . .15 ..".2 This is a factory tofn in a district which is not very productive agricultural ly! but it shows how prices are soaring. When it is understood that tho average workman here is accustomed to live on 20 cents a day the need for some change is evident. Then again, the enormous in crease in prices of foodstuffs ha.s not meant an advance in wages, which are practically tho same as they were 20 years ago. Naturally food adulteration has thrived as an industry and inferior ma terials have been used in the manufacture of all sorts of necessities, a still further menace to the people. All of which merely tends to show the drift of things riid to indicate that tho trouble lies deeper than has been gener ally supposed. The cost of living prob lem is world-wide, and it will not be solved by legislative enactment. The Indiana Revolt. Topeka (Kan.) Capital. Indiana evidently is progressive to tho grass roots and thoroughly alive to the meaning and spirit of the insurgent movement. Its state convention is the first in the country since the administra tion came in. Party loyaJty on both sides is nowhere more intense than in Indiana, for a generation one of tho crit ical, doubtful states, where campaign ing has been fiercest. Its plain-spoken platform is a sign-post at the crossing of the ways, which points the road to the Republican party. Man Out-nnd-Out Enemy. Detroit Free Press. So. after all, it isn't worry, it isn't de cadent gastric juice, it isn't tile "gobble and git" counter, it isn't worn-out stom ach linings that force some men to give up mince pie and the midnight lunch. It's the enemy of his youth and his old age, the appendix. One may guess that henceforth there will be no closed season for appendices. The knights of the scalpel will hunt them early and late, for when a man grows too old to - con tract appendicitis he can always de velop a case of "appendial gastralgia." (;ooilbye to Literature.. Milwaukee Sentinel. The pen is mightier than the sword, it is said. Can Teddy R. wield the big pen after the fashion.'he once wielded the big stick? T TOPICAL VERSE "Weather Terms Ill-astrated. Maiden with a. powder puff nabbling here and there This reported weather-wiso Means, "Continued fair." , Hubby coming home at one. Zigzag course a-wendlng Weather signal. In this case Would be, "Storm impending." Baby climbing on a chair. If she slips and falls, It is not unlikely tlat There'll be "sudden equalla." Girl and lover have a spat. She flings down his) flower. Lover; angry, grabs) his hat And rushes off thafa "Shower." Man sees tailor on thfe trt. Seems a trifle nettled. Crosses to the other eide That suggests, "Unsettled." Boston Transcript. Love T'p to Date-. (A Sonnet in Dialoerue He Did I but dare, I know rd. love yon dearly. She If you were brave, you would nol falter so. He Tour lovely presence et ay "hi aglow. She And yet It seems to agitate you. merely. He Xay more than that! 'Twill be my death.. or nearly! She Tour mood is not indicative of woe. He How little of my mood you seem t know! She Do you believe that you could love ln cerely ? He Do I believe? Oh, if you would but trj me! She What is there, pray, to hinder such t thing? He Should I attempt it, then, would yot deny me? She Should I consent, and Cupid have nil A thousand kisses could not satisfy mo'. She Ah, this expression has the proper ringl Willis lieonard Clanahan, in Smart Se. De HallcylooyaU Comet. O, sinneh, ye s a-smilin' en a-winkln' on de pair. ' But de Halleylooyah comet gwine tr flick yo' wid its wraff; Hit's a-bollin' on de upgrade lak a rcd- liot train o' cahs Dat's a-makin' up do low" time whilst hit whizzes thoo de stahs So be good. Misteh flinneh, Caze do fac's en figgehsi fay Dat de Halleylooyah comet Am a-rushin' on do way ! To' say dey wan't no Adam en dey never. was no Eve. En yo' 'low dat talk 'bout Noer is a thing yo' doan' believe. But dey ain' no de.ad-en-gonenes3 in d sto'y dat dey'll tell When de Halleylooyah comet come an make de sinnehs yell! So look out, Misteh Sinneh, Betteh change yo 'min' terday Wid de Halleylooyah comet Des a-t'ahin' up de way! O, sinneh, yo kin chuckle en kin t05! yo' haid en grin ten kin do de double-shuffle on de dancing flo o' sin. But yo' got ter pay de flddleh ef yo' . doan' git out do dance Kn de Halleylooyah comet aln' gwin gib yo' much mo' chance So look out, Misteh Sinneh. Bes' come in l'uiii whah yo' stray Cazc de Halleylooyah comet Ies a-bunnin' up de way! Chicago Post. With Is Again. Now doth the little, housefly Begin to buzz around. Distributing disease germs Where'or they may be found; The awful little nuisance 'Most everywhere appear Tiekling our noses And likewise our ears. 'Tis time to open battle And keep it up with zest Against the most pestiferous And active little post: So bring along the poison. The screen, and let us try To regulate the Summer's curs That rapid-moving fly. Scranton, I"a., Tribune-Republican. 1'recdoni of Action. "I'm strong for Teddy." said pa last night. "His views on things arc exactly right. But of all that he's ever done or said. At least that I've ever heard or read. The thing that gives me most satisfac tion Is his latest talk on freedom of action. "Now. I'm for that every day and hour Kreedoni of action, with all my power; I'm going to stay out tonight till ten. And do as I please. I say, till then: I shall go and come in my own good way. And you won't have anything to say. "I'm a firm supporter of good old Teddy, I'll dig that garden when I get ready, I'll have no conditions imposed on me. I m tho head of the house and I will be free! I'll do as I want, when I want and how, Iror freedom of action I'll have from now." Then ma looked up from her book and said: "Just wind up the clock and then coma to bed : Tut "the milk bottle out. lock the cellar door. In the morning you'll paint the kitchen floor; All the freedom of action you have, my sweet. Tou'11 need in the yard when the rugi you beat. Detroit, Mich., Free Press. Heroic Treatment. Little Willie wore his stocking Inside out a habit shocking; To correct his naughty whim. Mother turned the hose on him. Woman's Home Companion. Willie didn't seem to care: Smeared some roof paint on his hair. Father, though his right hand tingled. Merely had the lad's hair shingled. Chicago Tribune. Thoughts on Spring. The east wind hints of middle May, harsh. The clouds are sullen, low and gray. The wild geese honk across tin marsh ; At least, that's what wild seen should do I never heard a throstle trill, I never saw a blackbird swing. "