TOE ST3DAT OREGOXIAX, rORTLAyP, MARCH 26, 1911. l-ORIXAXD. ORIOOM. EnirtJ at Fort land. Onpn. Paaternee -cBd-CM Mattar. eecrifta Batoe lavarlaDly la AdTaaaa. (BT MAIL) Pefo. s3r tariada. on yosr. Xa:!y. Sunday lnclutl!. a m month".... lallr. iuly Incited 4. I hroa monttia. 1.M Itatly. Bunda? tnelaaoti, one moola... Ia!;r. without Suaday. ou ...... J f; ri:y. ortthout Handiv. mlw moatha.... ri:y. without Buaday. thrae montb.. -t xjaiiy. ltbout Bundaj. ooo moats. 'ookl. eae yoa. ........... ... Iaa4ir. on yoar. ... ........ f-auas aad waokly. eae yoar. .....- 4 1W (ST CARRIKKt Pony. tia4aT tnetadod. en roar.. -M Xy?y. Sunday Induaod. oaa motuh..... How to II ess It Sond pootorflco moaoy orvl r xprn ardor or porooaal cho-efc a or local tank stamp, co.a ee eunroney lr at tha MDdtft rtaa, onre poatofflee tl-irooa la fu.l. including county and state. rn Kaloa iO to 14 pagoa. 1 coat; te 2a p-oa. a coata; IO to to pagoa. coata: 4 ta pagoa. coals. oraia paataga toubla rata. lamra Dualai.a Offli o Votro. m Cotia Ka Nw fork. Hnuiakk. building. Cal- ago. Stogo; building. I-ORTLA.ND. SISMV. MAHfH 2. Mil. CXOTTM CLtARtXO AWAT IX MEXICO. "Whffthrr tha resignation of the axed and reactionary Mexican Cabinet and the declared purpose of the adminis tration to give direction of affairs to younger and more progressive Minis ters will restore peace in Mexico, re mains to be seen; but probably It will have that effect. It Is undoubtedly Intended that It should calm the coun try and appease the revolutionists. The Immediate object of Finance Minister Llmantour's hasty and sensa tional return to Mexico Is now obvi ous. Limantour gave out an elaborate Interview. In which he commended the purposes and approved the policies of President Diaz, and therefore sur prised and greatly disconcerted the progressive element In Mexico and elsewhere who had hoped that through his mediation he might bring about harmony between the warring Mexican elements. Tet It Is now evi dent that Limantour was moved by a profound strategy In publicly allying himself to President Diaz so as to re tain the confidence of the venerable ruler and to achieve through htm a radical change In plans and condi tions. Quite plainly Minister Uman tour. realising that he was the man of the hour, perceived that his first and hlghrst duty was to restore or der and keep the peace In Mexico. He could have accomplished nothing by encouraging and fomenting rebellion and antagonizing President Diaz. Hut by giving new- direction to the Diaz policies he would support law. disarm the opposition, and above all keep for Mexico the confidence and good will of the great American and Kuropean Investors. These were the things that Umantour set out for Mexico to ac complish, possibly after a definite un derstanding with President Taft. It Is beginning to be known that - conditions In Mexico have been far more serious than the American peo ple as a whole have understood. There has been no organized revolution. The outbreaks have been sporadic and un related, though they have had a com mon Inspiration In the Insurgency that t has everywhere pervaded the Mex ican people as It has elsewhere seized other peoples. The uprisings for the most part have taken the form of re sistance of constituted authority, but In fact they have been accompanied by many circumstances of lawlessness, spoliation and devastation, making It obvious that desperadoes and adven turers from all quarters have taken advantage of the situation In Mexico to pursue their own desperate alms. Mexico has been In a foment of po litical eruption and dissension, but actual revolution has manifested Itself only In scattered rlaces. ProbUbly the Piaz government would have had llt tla trouble In supproslng the Insur rection If Its only difficulties had been with the men In arms. The real men ace to Diaz and his administration has been undoubtedly the determined otrtt of the Mexican people to bring about other conditions by peaceful means. If possible, and by violent methods. If necessary. The eager fili bustered and outlaws who rushed to Mexico from the United States and elsewhere merely precipitated the Im pending crisis. In due time we shall have from President Taft a full statement as to the reasons which Impelled him to end troops with such haste and other evidences of apprehension to the In ternational boundary- That It was done upon representations as to the disordered conditions of Mexico and upon appeals to the United States Government to Intercede so far as It could to restore order. Is more than ever apparent. It mar he that the otaters were mobilized upon direct tnvttat'on of President Piax. But whether or not Disx solicited precip itate action by the President, or merely assented. It Is clear that he ' baa never permitted himself to be at ! all alarmed by the apparently bellig erent movement of the American troops. The spectacle of sol diers rushing to the border has been viewed by the American people, too. with a good deal of calmness, though. Indeed, the Japanese bogle has been trotted out by sensation-monger and used for all it Is worth, and more. ' The result has been not a little nerv . ousnees along the Pacific Coast and throughout the country. Put there . evervwhere has oeen confidence that President Taft knew what he was do ing and took measures so radical and surprising only for the soundest rea sons. The President Is no tail-twlst-Ir.g Jingo. He detests war: he loves peace. He will precipitate conflict with any nation on!v as a last resort. We shall probably find as a result of this Mexican enterprise that we shall have matte of Mexico a better friend than ever. orcMc the mrLtw. The Jetty work at the mouth of the Sluslaw River hag deepened the bar te such as extent that it is now pos Bible for laxge-gtzed coasting vessels ' to cross In and out. On the strength of this Improvement It Is reported that a camber ef large mills will be built at tidewater to cut the timber which was burned over by the forest fires last Summer. This timber can be used to advantage ary time within the next three years, but beyond that time the deterioration will become quite pro nounced. Until quite recently It was reported that the Southern Pacific, which Is the heaviest owner of the land which was burned over, would but:d a line from Junction City or Eugene and haul the lumber out bv rail, lie porta from Eugene state that this project has been abandoned and t that the water route alone will be de i pended on to take caxe of the lumber that will be manufactured from this burned Umber. While It Is quit pleasing to note that there has been such a decided Improvement In the condition of the bar at the mouth of the Sluslaw. it Is unfortunate that the railroad project should be abandoned. The cargo mar ket for lumber, either coastwise or foreign, is a low-grade proposition. It Is only where mills have the advan tage of both rail and water transpor tation that the most satisfactory prof its are nosslble. There is an Immense amount of Tery valuable timber In the Sluslaw country In addition to that which will be taken from this burned- j over land, and for the better grades of lumber that will be manuracturea from this timber the Eastern rail mar kets are needed. A railroad from the Willamette Valley to the Sluslaw would also open up a country which can be only but slightly benefited or developed by the improvement at the mouth of the river. This country will supply a perma nent and steadily-Increasing traffic long after the timber Industry has been forgotten, for It Is rich In agri cultural, horticultural and dairy Pos sibilities. The lumber business at Tillamook and Nchalem la no greater today than It was twenty years ago, but with the completion of the rail road it will increase so rapidly that the entire surrounding region will ex perience a phenomenal growth. The Sluslaw district is less prominent than Tillamook and Nehalem. but it has resources that warrant the building of a railroad. This would Increase the development of the country In a man ner that could not be accomplished by improving the waterways alone. RETOR.M1NG THE 1JBKI. LAW. It is entertaining and not uninstruc tlve to behold the efforts which law breakers of a certain eminence make to modify the law so that It will ap prove of their wily ways. When the big New York insurance companies had definitely decided to take a plunge Into frenzied finance they Induced the Legislature to pass a law forbidding anybody but the Attorney-General of the state to sue them. The only re maining point was to obtain a suitable Attorney-General and they had things in their own hands. The Intrusion of Mr. Hughes was an episode which no human forethought could have guard ed against. The Illinois legislators who have been tarred from the Lorlmer pot are now trying the sume game. Since the campaign against them has been one of exposure In the press they nat urally turn for refuge to a libel law. What a blessing to our shady states men would be a libel law which for bade the accused to offer the truth In defense. As long as the truth Is ad mitted to the witness stand they may make big threats, but they will never go any farther. On the other hand. If they could obtain a law which would punish the llbeler for his malice or his Intent to defame, or his evil purpose, without regard to the truth of what he said, they would be In clover. Under the unmodified common law. that sum and pinnacle of human wis dom, the maxim was. "The greater the truth the greiiter the libel." This Is the doctrine which the Illinois states men of the Lorlmer persuasion wish to restore to its ancient prestige. It would then be a crime to announce that Lorlmer had bribed a solon even if It could be proved, and naturally conditions at the various state capitals would assume an aspect of harmony which In these troublous times Is too often missed. Under an Ideal libel law It would be criminal to report the pro ceedings of the Federal Senate when future Lorlmer are undergoing their whitewashing. In Johnson' time It was forbidden to report the ordinary debates of Parliament. He had to give their substance under a literary sub terfuge. Those were the days when the British government was avowedly carried on by bribery. THE PEIUWCAIJTT or coo. Sir Oliver Lodge- Idea of God does not ttnd unanimous acceptance among Christian scholars. Addressing the conference of the Evangelical Free Churches of England. Sir Oliver said that In his opinion God can be depict ed as a loving friend, "with whom spir its can commune every hour In the day. One whose patience, wisdom, long suffering and beneficence are never exhausted." This, according to the speaker. Is the genuine Christian view of the nature of the deity, and he went on to say that It was "hu manly simple." Other scholar -wnose capacity iui sound reasoning is at least as great as Sir Oliver Lodge's do not think as ho does on this subject. The personality of God Is a doctrine which Is. In fact, beset with difficulties. When a man does not appear to see them, the ditfl ...i,i. to not vanish on arcount of his blindness. It would hardly be possible, . . 1 (..l.tiin today to nna a man i v-m ..- scholarship who accepts the personal ity of God under the sharply defined aspect In which It presented Itself to Milton and John Bnnyan. To the au thor of "Paradise Lost" the Almighty was merely a magnified man. His fac ulties were more capacious than those of ordinary persons and his power more extensive. But his passions and habits of mind were essentially human. Milton's God file Into a passion when his will Is thwarted, precisely as one expects a rather badly disciplined man to do. He reasons on theological subjects with all the acuteness and all the narrowness of a Presbyterian dea- ti. .lino hu a-oorf intentions to be nullified by a foolish little quibble exactly as a superstitious Oriental monarch would. In fact. Milton's God. gazed at through the wrong end of a telescope, would look very much like a fanatical Puritan preacher with a dis position to lord it over his neighbors. Bunyan scarcely Improved upon th presentment. The notion that God Is a person, a superman, as It were. Involves us In all sorts of needless difficulties. Person ality Is a concept Inextricably Inter woven with time and space. It Im plies memory for one thing and mem- . , MU.iitt,M without time cast. pry to .... ....-- - - It Involves aeparatenesa from other persons, and that require space. But the deity must be independent of time and space, which are purely human limitations, and therefore It seems Im possible for him to be a person. At least, his personality must be some thing so different from our that it means nothing to us. The great Chris tian thinker of our day are substan tially in unison upon the point that God must be something far more nearly universal than personality could admit of. The idea that he is Immanent In all things appears from the oldest Chris tian times under one form or another. Spinoza Intensified th thought of im manence into- pantheism. Goethe transformed It into the representation . . , A .. . V. l r- V. (ha . OF ine universe na a xaimciu ....,.. deity weave from moment to moment. Thla was very attractive to Carlyle. who worked It out In "Sartor Resar tus." Wordsworth speaks of God as a presence "far more deeply interfused whose dwelling Is the light of Betting suns." Tennyson expressed the con cept of God's universality as contrast ed with his personality with telling beauty In "The Higher Pantheism." No doubt the doctrine of the divine personality becomes more and more difficult to accept as knowledge accu mulates. The nature which "ravens with beak and claw" cannot be the deliberate work of an Individual whose thoughts are entirely benevolent. We must reject either the individuality or K.i,vnin and Christian thought has decided to let the former go. It j would drive us all insane to Deiieve that God Is evil, but we can abandon the notion of his personality without much trouble. To many he becomes even closer and more precious as the thought of his personality fades and belief in his immanence grows. And with the fading of the doctrine of a personal deity the hope of Indi vidually distinct immortality seems to lose its outlines. Shelley says of Keats In the -Adonals" that "he has become a part of Nature." We dare say there are many Christians fully as devout as Sir Oliver Lodge who do not expect to retain their Individuality af ter death. To his mind the future world will be inhabited by persons not much different from human beings as they appear on earth. A more ra tional faith looks for a larger life In more intimate unison with the Creator. To many the prospect of returning to the universal fount of being from which we flowed would present the most attractive of all destinies. MCKENS. THE SATIRIST. a. inn, o ir ci K Cbesterton con tinues to occupy his lively and versa- .-irh rik'na the memory of the great novelist Is in safe hands. Nobody can possibly pe lorgoiien or Ignored when Mr. Chesterton has un dertaken to advertise him. Not that Dickens ever was in any particular danger of being forgotten. He has al ways been popular since he published fpifVatfitb Pan!" and the chances are that he always will be. To be sure. the more rarefied scnooi oi r.ngiisu stylists regard Dickens with more or less scorn. To their exacting eyes his language lacks dignity. His manner f . . i cven hitt crrammar oc- ia unit ,jw.-v i .... , rasionally halts. The same may be said of Sir Walter Scott. Thackeray Is the only man among tne eariy uniun novelists who paid much attention to what is technically canea siyie. no V. a . UaA m nrthl reward for doing SO. but there are readers who cannot dis tinguish his nicety rrom ancciauon. iiiii.iii oeema to have fixed his atten tion on better things than mere lin guistic delicacy, tie was ono oi wiuoc ino-niar llterarv Dersons who are In terested In human beings. It Is common enougn to nna umuu who are Interested In Man. States men, poets, philosophers and politi cians all share the same exalted feel ings toward Man, the abstract entity. Hut when It comes to men the case Is far different. To most literary char acters the Individual man Is repulsive. He has offensive habits. He is apt to be dirty In body and language. He gets In the way. He wants to smoke. Dickens' peculiarity was that In spite of all the exasperating traits which cling to the human creature as a neighbor nnd companion, he still loved him. To Dickens a man was not some thing to be educated, reformed and finally landed in heaven, but a fellow mortal to be lived with on brotherly terms. Sometimes he found his nelch bor amusing, sometimes pitiful. Now a u.n their needless sufferings moved him to Indignation, but he never tried to reduce tnem to miiipiuuii formulas. He rejoiced in their singu larities. To Dickens every creature on earth was an exception worth observing, ap preciating and writing about for its own sake. In this he resembled Shakespeare, who felt In the same way. Shakespeare stops in the frenzy of Lear' passion to depict the whim sies of a fool. The old nurse In "Ro meo and Juliet" interests him as much as the hero. Neither Dickens nor Shakespeare has much to say explicitly about the divinity Inclosed within the ugly shell of the human body, but clearly they recognize something god like there or they would not linger over It as they do In simpletons and rascals. It is common to speak of Dickens as a humorist, but Mr. Chesterton re minds us that he had also the gift of satire. Thackeray's satirical genius loved to dwell on the foibles of the humble In relation to the great. The snob excited his wrathful mirth. The kotowlngs of the climber to those higher up the social ladder moved him to derisive smiles. All this was amus ing and not unwholesome, but it was not Important. The snob plays a great part in that minute world which is called society. His gyrations there look as If they disturbed the universe. But In truth they do not. The sea of humanity scarcely shows a wavelet on the surface from all the Influence of all the snobs there are. Still, these creatures Interested Thackeray Im mensely. Just as an occasional scientist Is moved by some mysterious affinity to study malodorous accretions. Dickens has little to say about snobbery. He was concerned with that deeper human failing which goes hv the name of conformity. This he hated when it led to oppression and Injustice. The conformity of the beadle In whom tyrannical custom often came nearest to the poor ap pealed especially to his satiric Imag ination. Thackeray would have scorned to write about beadles. He could depict Becky Sharp the climber, but the Incomparably more universal and human character of Sarah Gamp was beyond him. Sarah haa the am plitude of Rabelais. She has the gen ial wealth of FalstafTs nature, while at the same time she la gross and mean. Nobody but Dickens or Shakespeare could have made such a detestable person funny. Falstaff la mean. too. He 1 a liar, a coward and a thief, but hi creator make u forget all that w hen he waves his wand. So Dickens makes us forget that Mr. Gamp la a cruel, old, sottish nurse. The question has been raised why Dickens' satire became so shrewish when he "wrote of the United States. When he deal with our fault he seems to lose the genial warmth that glows around hi British types, even the most abominable of them. He write about America with angry venom, and there are some who cannot understand why he did It: but the rea son doe not appear to be very mys terious. Dickens resented the dispar ity between our vast pretensions and our sorry performance. Whatever the case may be now. in his time the dis parity was real and disgraceful. After all the great noise we had made over human freedom, we bred slaves and sold them in the open market. The newspaper press of that time waa fully as malignant and mendacious as Dick ens describes It. Our politics was in credibly corrupt and the personal hab its of people in general were some thing frightful. To visit a Nation which had set It self on a pinnacle with noisy pomp as the last and best hope of the world and find it in this condition was enough to enrage anybody. No wonder Dickens boiled over with wrath. What he wrote about tho United States in "Mar tin Chuzzlewit," for example, was in the main true. We have corrected many of the faults ror wnicn ne De rated us, but our present state of gTace should not blind us to the sins which we have happily forsaken. THE CIMEXMAl OF MRS. STOWE. The centennial of Harrlet-Beecher Stowe will be celebrated in June of this year. She was born June 14. 1811, in the old parsonage at Litchfield, wnere lived and toiled her strong, . t i nari. t? ,tt T.vman Beech- er and his vigorous wife. Many broth- era and sisters shared wun ner im Puritanical home, and out of it most or them went into the great world, re nouncing the creeds of old New Eng land for a more humane and satis factory belief. Many years of patient toiling as a minister's wife, and the motherhood of many children preceeded the era In which "Uncle, Tom's Cabin" was written. Unconsciously to herself, even, the simple tale which depicted the wrongs of a race In slavery was being wrought out in her mind and finally its writing was begun, almost as it seemed, by chance and without definite plan or plot. The sudden fame that came to her through this work, her subsequent literary efforts, her slow decline physically and ment ally, which ended In her peaceful, painless death in 1896, at the age of 85 years, have often been told. The life of Mrs. Stowe Is a prose poem, the events of which are mostly of the commonplace order, but which, as a whole, yet furnish a presentment now of tragedy, now of comedy, now of pathos; shadowed by failure at times and again aglow with triumph, and dominated throughout by invinci ble purpose and principle. It is illus trated by the picture of her own face now the plain face, lined with phys ical suffering and the financial anxiety of the overtaxed wife, mother and housekeeper; now tne lace snaaeu with surprise at the unhoped fruition of her endeavor; now the face with the stamp of age and tne rennquisn ment of endeavor upon it. and at last the serene face from which the light of intelligence has slowly died out. These Illustrations are pleasing, strong, weak or pathetic, according to the period of life typified. Pencilled by the hand of time, they represent bet ter than the words of any biographer the various stages of gentle, yet force ful, life that will be best and longest remembered through "Uncle Tom's .Cabin." THE TRUTH ABOIT VOUXTEEB TROOPS Dependence upon .volunteer forces in sudden and desperate warfare is only verified after a large percentage of the citizen soldiers have been lost through causes induced by the unac customed fatigue of forced marches, by unaccustomed food, wretchedly cooked and irregularly served, and by enteric diseases due to a combination of these causes. The spectacle present ed by the volunteer troops that were mobilized in Southern camps during the early weeks of the Spanish-American war will never be forgotten by those who witnessed it. Eager, ear nest, brave, the volunteers who swarmed the recruiting offices and were marched to rendezvous fell a prey even to tho flies that blackened the food, and which the men ate only under the sharpest stress of hunger. Tvphold found in these conditions ready lodgment. The usual delays in moving a quickly mobilized army without an organized commissary de partment followed, and soft-muscled men, fresh from the vocations of peace, went down to death by scores, I.M.. tvio nnUA of battle was un heard. This Is not an Impeachment of the patriotism of the volunteer troops; that had already been proved In the eagerness of their enlistment. It la not an Impeachment of their courage; that was put to a severer test by facing. In idleness, the manifold foes of a fetid and foul camp, than it would have been by a clash of arms. It is not an Impeachment of any sol dierly quality except physical endur ance. It 1 merely to say that raw, unseasoned men will not. because they cannot, bear the heavy brunt of war, even before the shock of battle with the Immunity from Its inseparable ills that Is possible to well-disciplined troops, accustomed to the army ration and the fatigue of the drill and the march. The story Is simple, the moral is plain. The nation that Is prepared for w ar Is the nation that supports a well disciplined army, large enough to meet a sudden emergency. The nation not thus prepared should look well to its diplomacy that tho quality thereof he not easily strained. KIXiniOClTVS ENEMIES WARNED. "If no tariff wall ever had been thrown up between us and our neigh bor and brothers on the north," says Senator Beveridge in discussing Cana dian reciprocity In the current num ber of the Saturday Evening Post, "the proposition to construct one now would appear to all of our people ex actly like proposing to divide our own country lnt hostile tariff sections." The Indiana Senator, who some time ago broke away from the ranks of the standpat element in his party, warns the.people against rejecting reciprocity and quite pertinently asks: "If those special interests and politicians defeat the policy of Canadian reciprocity. Is it not natural and possible that our people. In their disgust, may swing to tho other extreme and directly attack our system of protection altogether?" The answer may be found In the steadily rising murmur of discontent that finds its cause in the great In crease in the cost of living and in the spectacle of our protected, trust-made millionaires Increasing In number and wealth simultaneously with a decrease In the savings of the consumers. Sen ator Beveridge makes his plea for Ca nadian reciprocity on the ground that we have now reached a stage of devel opment where the interests of the con sumers as well as the producer are en titled to consideration. The Indiana Senator experiences some difficulty In explaining that both consumer and producers would profit by the change and his argument might have been strengthened had he statea mat uei ther consumer nor producer wouia init.Mti tiv tha measure. Except be in i 1 ... .eoi tvio free interchange of products, provided for in the reci procity bill would have but little more effect than the present free inter change of the same products between Oregon and Washington. With no tariff barrier between the two coun tries, trade would be greatly facili tated and the establishment of cordial business and social relations would be much easier than at present. The complaint of the agriculturists that the reciprocal agreement provides for the free interchange of cattle and other livestock and grain, while it re tains a duty on fresh meats and other food products and on flour, is answered by Senator Beveridge with the state ment that the Canadians refused to agree to such interchange. "Special interests have developed there Just as .-. c,vu the Senator, and the fact that the Canadian protection it smtiil not arree on free trad i..t....ititi tha list naturally would not warrant the United States in refus ing to take advantage of the situation and secure free interchange of all tho commodities with which reciprocity It was Canadian insistence more than American willingness that re sulted In barley being placed on the free list, although free admission of this commodity has raised a greater storm of objection than has been en tered against any other agricultural product. Mr. Beveridge admits that there is merit in the argument that barley should pay a duty, but that so long as the United States produces a surplus for export and that surplus is sold abroad In the same markets that take the Canadian barley. It Is not clear that the American farmer will be seriously affected. The barley crop of the United States last year was 162, 000,000 bushels. That of Canada was oa AAA aaa vtiteheio Tf we dulv consider the fact that tho reciprocal agreement was a "glve-ana-taise- measure, mm that we could not get everything we asked for, the real merits of the ques tion are more easily discerned. THE FOOL AND THE AUTOMOBILE. Tnlleo .Ttine-A Tazwell yesterday sen tenced to 15 days on the rockpile a reckless automobilist, who drove his car at breakneck speed through crowds at a busy Btreet corner; and a Jury in the State Circuit Court found a $4000 verdict against another auto mobile driver, who ran down and caused the death of an old man. It i. o ittHHani-a that the scene of these two incidents, in which speed mania figured so disastrously, was at or near Sixth and Washington streets, the heart of Portland. Last Sunday, a small army of last j.tt.r, i-nw nrrested on Belmont street. They could not resist tne temptation to fly along where the go- irnori Each later paid $25 for his disregard of the rules of the road. w.,, thn real criminals of the flying mntnpar are the men and boys women sometimes who rush along streets, snln around corners hiin-ir nvpr crossincs at high speed. There is danger enough in the suburbs; but much allowance may oe made for the chauffeur who yields to , v, immiUn to "hit her u n" on a straight course: but none can be made fnr the ontomobilLst who win not Bu ..i h r-rnivrferi thoroughfares. ,... v... w... The automobile, in rigni nanus, to a vehicle of convenience, pleasure, ana ....lt. In tha hands of the SDeed maniac it is an engine of death and destruction. There are only a iew oi the latter. They belong on the rock- pile. They should all be sent mere. Trhn TTeeves. thoutrht to be the old est locomotive engineer in the United States, died at his home In Tacoma a few days ago at the great age of 100 ,oor, rv.nriiidln: a notice of his life ttnA Heath WfLS a statement familiar. proportionally speaKing, in oia j.-.ew England, and Indeed In pioneer annals from the Atlantic to tne x-acinc kit board: "He was the father of sixteen .kiu..n nt u-hnm four survive." This record is illustrated by thousands of little graves in pioneer churchyards showing the blight which maternal hardship and privation placed on In fant life in tnose eariy yeara. oninttkia from Oklahoma find "old v.mwn" in tho vlcinltv of Sheridan suited to their purpose of home-mak ing, agriculture, dairying ana mo into. A number of families, we are told, ex pect to take up land In that vicinity. A sensible determination truly, and ono that disproves the popular Idea that In order to find public land for entry the seeker must go to Oklahoma or some other section or wnicn tne cli mate, by contrast with that of Oregon, makes undesirable for tarming pur poses. Lucky colonists! Decent people, who own automo biles and have a pride in their con nuet. will sustain the Municipal Court In an endeavor to preserve the rights of pedestrians on downtown streets. The rockpile Is the place for tho speeder. ti.. Hiffoi-enen between the colored man and the nigger Is seen in Booker Washington and Pugilist Johnson. The whole world sustains tne iormer ana applauds the Judge who sent tne iat ter to JaiU - - A Japanese servant who Is handy with a gun has been banished from Stevenson. Wash. Another serious e th wAr for which the JI 1 1 1 1 tl t.. C v - . Mikado is accredited by tho Jingoes for being eager. Thhvlnir In the Legislature, accord ing to ex-Governor Folk, has been stamped out completely in raissuun. Oregon unhappily still awaits to be shown the way. The frogs are tuning up, the robins are busy with domestic affairs, the buds are swelling, the leaves are out, and Oregon Spring Is here. tv -Pnetfln Coast League will oc cupy the center of the world's baseball stage next Tuesday. No other league season opens prior to April. It Is the "white man's hope" that Jack Johnson will have to serve his Jail sentence for speeding. rrtL. ..mint nrnetleea IflW la COndlte A. IIO " lve to lying and deception, as the Spring campaign opens. No doubt that Albany "House With the Eye" blinked when its 63-year-old owner married again. The lesson of the day" disasters is to be ready. Scraps and Jingles Leone Caaa Baer. O.W- 1 nmnllmenta A WOman COn- siders bad form are the ones paid some other woman. Of two evils always choose the most pleasant. The catch of this season is a ripe. Juicy cold. O o a rnnii renutation may be a fair estate If there's no cloud on the title. Either way you can't mortgage it. OOO -vfoflol Vtsia lust been conferred on a man who has found an actual river within 600 miles of the position anoiiea it on a war map. oaa "H e-ives twice who gives quick ly." Sure thing. They always come around for a second donation. ooo Tnttne man writes to ask what sort of a tie to wear at his wedding. Could suggest several, but marriage tie seems most appropriate. , OOO Astoria naoer advertises under fish trade f6r a "girl accustomed to smok ing." which is one way of solving the problem of what to do witn our aausn- ters. ' ' . Why. T lnvA vou for vour ratted hair. Your painted eyes and straight-front waist. Tour well-rouged mouth Just suits my tnste. Your simpering smile and baby-stare I love even your lack or pen. But most of all I love you so cnnae vou'ra the only one I know Who lets me chat about myself. ooo The magic of first love is in its- quick death and long memory. OOO Girl writes to ask if Bacillus is Latin for bachelor. ooo Miss Calamltv Step-and-fetch-it, 'the sweet and cultured authoress, etc., of Kalama, undismayed by adverse criti cism, of what she calls her llfry ef forts, has sent in a thrilling poem about an automobile. She calls it "An eye for an eye and a toot for a toot. ooo "Happy is the man who findeth wis dom," but his glee usually ends with the finding. ooo An equivocal note is sounded In a streetcar advertisement which reads, "Mrs. Somebody's Pies, none like them." ooo That oernetration. "What's under done can't be digested," published In this column several Sundays ago. has hrnuirlit a better ono from a woman signing herself '"Housekeeper," who says, "What's underdone cannot be helped." ooo In Oklahoma the Young Abstainers' League has just celebrated its 13th anniversary. It is certainly interest ing to note that the percentage of heavy drinkers under 10 years of age Is steadily decreasing'. ooo Just as if times are not already bad enough for artists Jack London, so re port says, is going to illustrate his own books. The artists' union Is naturally up in arms about it and by way of re taliation some of them intend to take lessons in spelling with a view to writing the text for their own draw ings in the future. ooo It's mighty strange that civilization should add to Instead of detract from the horrors of war. I've Just read 999 "contributions" on the subject. ooo In Seattle a woman vagrant clad In two gunny sacks and with her hair flowing loose was asked by the judge if she were an art student or a disciple of Raymond Duncan. a o o Sensational confession has just been made by a woman who, racked by the torments of a wicked conscience, 'says she is the original instigator of the "cosy corner"; drapery, over-stuffed cushions, bric-a-brac and all. Dispassion ately speaking, she should be given not less than seven years at hard labor. ooo Some men may be judged by the company they keep, but a greater num ber are sized up by the company they promote. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian, March 26, 1861. We are credibly Informed that near ly 2000 miners may be expected through Portland in the next month from the Willamette Valley and Jack sonville. A great many go by way of Sandy and the Cascades by land, but still more will go by water. The Nez Perce mines seem to be the principal attraction , WALLA WALLA. March 17, 1861. An express from Fort Benton reports 250 lodges of Snake Indians, amongst whom there were three of the chil dren taken from the emigrant train which was cut off last Fall. "Win ship Blake" (the original L. L. Blake) has started out with 40 men and sev eral packs of goods to ransom them. A reward of J2000 is offered for their recovery. The Victoria Colonist complains that Oregonians come over to Victoria and sell their produce without paying li cense, and thus have the advantage of their own people. The Democracy are called on to par ticipate in a general pow-wow on the subject of the coming city election at the courthouse on Wednesday even ing next. At that time it is antici pated that the duty of the party In the coming election will be made appar ent. Kew Lease of Life tor Foraker. Washington (D. C.) Post. "Former Senator J. B. Foraker, of Ohio, is bound to come back into poli tics In the Buckeye State," said Ed ward Benton, of Toledo. "Senator Foraker during his Con gressional career occupied a most con- In tha hallo rtf ntir SPICUOUS JtUBtl"" - --- National Legislature. If he had not been oeieaiea iur t Lui Foraker would undoubtedly be the leader of his party in the upper branch of Congress today. "He has all the qualities which go to make up one who is called upon to lead. senator Foraker is aggressive, versatile and a man who expresses his opinions in the most vigorous terms possible. Such a man as Senator For aker is bound to be heard from." TOPICAL VERSE Is It Any Wonder? Him wuzza tootest ltsie-bitsle pecious lovle lamb. And him dea a sweetest pittie-lttie sin gle, yes. him am. Wis Mm tunnin' itsle footsie, an' him sayin" 'Goo-sroo-goo !' Him was hlra muzzer's ownest lamble boysie cootsie-coo ! ! !" To this the baby listens by the hour and day and week And yet his mother wonders why be doesn t learn to speaK! Ladies' Home Journal. He Said Good-hy. He said good-by forever With great disdain. And vowed that he would never See her again. The girl made no endeavor To have him stay. He said good-by forever, And went away. Life's path is full of dangers. Of places bleak. And they were utter strangers For 'most a week. Louisville Courner-Journal. In a Ballroom. Behind the tall pillars half hiding. He heard the soft strains of tha strings. And he looked at the gay dancers glid ing As If they found joy in such things: But he felt no delight in the measures. And he wondered how others could care To indulge In such profitless pleasures Or deem this a gala affair. He heard the soft strains and the laugh- ter. But his fancies weftt winging away. And he thought of a dismal hereafter That .might have been golden and gay; He saw in red cheeks and glad glances The love that may turn to despair "Ah, fools and their foolish romances!" He said with a desolate air. He longed for untroubled seclusion And. watching the gay dancers thought Of love as a foolish delusion With sorrow and suffering fraught: He scoffed at the maidens for flirting And wondered how men could still care For the shoes he was wearing were hurting And he couldn't be barefooted there. Chicago Record-Herald. L'Envoi of Love Letters. When earth's last love note is written and the Ink Is blotted and dried. When the oldest lover has vanished and the youngest sweetheart has died. We shall rest, and, faith! we shall need it lie down for an eon or two Till the master of loving missives shall set us to work anew. And those who wrote well shall be hap py: they shall sit in a satin chair. They shall write a de luxe edition of odes to an angel's hair. They shall find real loves to write to Rebecca, and Dorcas, and Ruth They shall work for an age at a sitting, and never say more than the truth. And only the master shall praise us, and only the master shall blame: And none shall propose for money, and none shall make love for fame. But each for the joy of loving, and each in his separate star, Shall write to the girl he loves truly. his thoughts as iney reaiiy . Exchange. And Then It Happened. I pressed a coin in a waiter's grip, . j, ti a nT,A ,ha tin But he up ana aecmitrii w tone t... - . , MnA ... c irtnri atiH Vtenminer. Ana ins eiimc " ' The thought of it stuck in my puzzled head Till somebody shook me hard and said: "WaKe up, oia mam xuu ic u,.. ingt" Exchange. The Able Complicator. When public questions first arise As seasons come and go. ' The only answer that applies Seems either "yes" or "no." The issue seems so well defined. The right so clear and plain. That no one ought to be inclined To take it up again. But when my Uncle Jim takes hold Of questions old and new The variations he'll unfold Consume a day or two; And we are all disposed to shirk A task so full of doubt. And leave posterity to work The fearful problem out. Washington (D. C.) Star. A Successful Dad. Others may laugh at my feeble endeavor To capture life's prizes and others may sneer; The whole world may loudly declare I ehall never Be worth the gunpowder to blow me from here. It may be I'm punk as a parlor reciter And when I begin grown-ups take to the woods; But that baby of mine! I can always de light her. She vows I'm a wonder, she swears I m the goods. It may be I can't keep a tune for a minute. . It may be my voice wanders far from the key: ... j t It may be the nightingale, lark and the linnet As songsters have quite a wide margin on me. Caruso and others may take down the money For singing their ditties to highbrowa, hut I , Have one little audlenoe, cheerful and sunny, .. .. , Who'd rather hear me than the music you buy. She thinks I'm a corker, a lalapaloosa. She nightly applauds every stunt that - I do; She'jl rather hear me than your John .Philip Sousa. To her the old nonsense forever is new. That baby of mine thinks I'm great in whatever I tackle the moment we've finished our tea. And though others may laugh at my fee ble endeavor, The praise of my little one satisfies me. And eo though the big world goes by me unheeding. And never a grown-up takes notice of me; Though Into my work failure others are reading, I'm still a success to the babe on my knee. When worn out snd weary, my long day Is-ended, And homeward I turn, I forget my dis tress; For I know that my baby still thinks I am splendid. To her, anyhow, I'm a corking success! Detroit Free Press. W'hy He Lost Her. The count, in truth, was very poor And something of a clown; Although he whispered. "Je f adore" Miss Voney turned him down. Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Herald.' . 7