LinuULH CClim LEiDEB i r cocoas, ti t H tlAYBtl. TOLEDO.. .OREGON If drunkenness) Is an excss for erfae. by tbe wit, w!nt U tie ex yum for drunkenness? . Lore Is always th ux old story, a will b seen by the tore letters that get Into court now and then. Tile Tbpeka Journal knows a 'aroma a "who will fuss when she gets to heaven because ah caa't jet a halo trimmed to salt her." Cas a farmer who aeCa preset-red eggs, with the statemezrt that they are fresh laid, be a Christian and have Vipe of a glorious hereafter? StEJ, It seercs cruel for Tom Law son to desert the country la Its boor of trial; merely for the purpose of mak 'C2 a trm beggarly mUHocs maait As Ohio convict made J20,0G0 while nerving a five-year term la the peni tentiary. Some people art such finan cial geniuses that they caa make money anywhere. Mr. Rockefeller Is pleased at the thocght of being regarded as a patriot. No dojbt he finds It a blessed thought X ES i'.U'lt ? e t-wv-jf rt be patriotic. Tom Lswson hopes the country wCl alt still and be rood while he engages la the unpleasant bat necessary job of chokies a few millions oat of tha sys tem for his own use. Pa Zimmerman, of Cincinnati, Is said to be busy settling the debts of his son-in-law, the Duke of Manchester. The duke's creditor! will doubtless be glad that pa has decided not to hoard hi money. The Washington Post has discovered a number of Congressmen In Washing ton with speeches In their pockets. .In asmuch as there is no law against car rying concealed speeches It doesn't seem that there Is anything that can be tone. A public school principal declares that "Chicago boys and girls twist their parents, around their fingers." One of time's changes. A generation ago It was the boys and girls who were twisted, Dd not aroand the fingers, bat OTer the parental knee. Premier Stolypin has given the Dam to understand that the Czar's will con tinues to be the only law In It as id a. Perhaps the Czar created the Duma merely because be thought It would be an easy way to keep Its members from stirring up trouble elsewhere. We note that the American press generally refers to Loszlo Czecbonyl as "the Vanderbllt count" This Is not meant as any sign of disrespect to a noble Austrian bouse, but merely Illus trates the fact that the democracy Is acquiring a proper consciousness of Its own aristocratic values. Missouri boa.-rts a new society, "The United Veterans of the Clrll War," made up of Union and Confederate sol diers. Missouri was on the border land between North and South, and "brother against brother" was more than a figure -of speech. The Missouri society may lend to a united grand rmy of blue and gray. The Finnish Diet has passed unani mously a bill providing that no alco hol fin! I hereafter be manufactured In Finland or imported Into the coun try. In Ru.sla, of which Finland Is a part, the manufacture of alcohol Is a State monopoly. The Finns evidently object to many things from Russia be sides the government of the Czar. "Healthy games, healthy foods and beaJtby bonies" would be enjoyed by every yoath. If the birthday wish of Field Marshal Lord Roberts could con. to paa. "And keep young." ad la the famous comniander-ln-cbief of the Brit lab army. "I have kept myself young on purpose. I never drink and I don't smoke, snd I am really not a day older than la 1SS0." At that rate "Boos," who wa born la 1K2, Is 43 Instead of 75, and the boys he speaks of so generously need not hesitate to "visa him many more happy returns. Of the many wonderful things in the world, few. If any, are more wonderful thin the manifestations of the care which God takes of the helpless. There was a splendid illustration of this care, exercised through human instruments, ia the will of the 1st Robert N. Car son, of Philadelphia. Mr. Carson be queathed an estate worth $5,000,000 for the purpose of founding and maintain ing a college for orphan girls between the ages of 5 and P) years who have neither father nor mother. They are to receive such training aa will fit them tor a Ufa of usefulness, and are then to be discharged at the age of IS or less. The girls are not to be dressed In uniform, bet are to be allowed the exercise of some) degree of ladlridnaj taste. SAYS ERRORS IM NAVY UNFIT IT FOR BATTLE Oscar II., King of Sweden, who die, recently after a reiga both long and prosperous except for on Incident amid the sincere mourning of his peo ple and the esteem t good mea of all cat iocs, was on of the most accom plished gentlemen and best men of his time. By every standard of pobiSe de votion and private morals he measured well. It is aa ironic comment oa cer tain tradi-tiocs once potent and ami re garded that Oscar of Sweden, who be came the kingly office so well, had scarce a drop of so-called "royal" or even "princely" blood la his veins. Els paternal grandfather was John Beraa dotte; a French peasant who found a marshal's baton ia his soldier's knap sack. His paternal grandmother was the daughter of a Marseilles stock bro ker of plebeian extraction. His moth er was the daughter of Eugene Beao harcais, with no claim to higher rank by birth than that of the distinctly "lesser noblesse" of France. Oscar IL was the second king of distinction of his family. There Is no question that John. Bernadotte managed his affairs welL Called to be heir of the child less ruler over a people of whose lan guage even he was Ignorant,- be adroit ly preserved and enlarged the domin ions of the dynasty into which he had been adopted. None of the princes ii;'..T k liu- luataoca O " t 'ill great Napoleon saved so much from the Napoleonic wreck. Hla son and the first grandson who succeeded him made no notable mark upon history. The second grandson of Bernadotte and third king of the race had abilities salted to his times. Intelligent, cul tivate.!, realizing fully the force of democratic ideas and the change from the traditional attitude of the king toward his subjects which they Involve, he conformed cheerfully to the facts. He was required to be a thoroughly "constitutional" monarch, and he played the part with enthusiasm. He deserved and won for himself and his country the respect of all nations. He deserved and won the love of his peo ple. He was the only king of his time who could go about bis country like any other man and be unattended when he so desired without fear and without danger. In the closing years of his prosperous reign h-j met with what was, from certain viewpoints, a misfortune and at least a mortification. There came a day when there muat hare echoed In his ears the words of an ancient Scandinavian king, so finely paraphrased by an American poet: "What was that 7" said Olaf, standing on the quarter deck; "Something heard I like the stranding of a shattered wreck." Eraar then, the arrow taking from the loosened string. Answered, "That was Norway breaking from thy hand, O King." Tet Oscar of Sweden had not the mortification of Olaf of Norway, that misfortune bad come to bim from go ing too fast and far and getting ahead of his times, and he had the consoling knowledge that through no fault of his were the lands over which his scepter extended and the dominions of bis house diminished. Two peoples had got at cross purposes, and It was not In the power of a constitutional king to lead together those who had to be driven if they were not to separate. Expert Declares the Boasted Fight lag Ships Are Merely Death Trap. A2JC0B BELT IS TOO LOW. Defects la Contraction Pointed Out and Promotion System Is Scored. Henry Reateriahl. associate of the Cnited States Naval Institute and American editor of "Fighting Ships," is the author of a startling article on "The Needs of Our Navy" In the Jan uary McCI ure's. ' Mr. Reuterdahl's ex- pertness on naval matters is not dis puted and neither la his patriotism. He agrees with President Roosevelt that a navy must be built "and all Its training given in time of peace" and with this in view he exposes defects In our first-class battle ships and ar mored cruisers which all but make them useless as efficient unite In a Beet on heavy g.;a and In real action. Mr. Reuterdaal's criticisms appear to be the more asazing on account of the contention that nwst. If not all of the weak points he emphasizes, will be acknowledged by sea-going officers, "or. if the reader Is si.-Bciently interested, by the testimony of his own eyes." His principal points are the follow ing: That the sheii proof armor of the American battle ships Is virtually be low the water lir. where It will do no good, leaving the broad side of the ves sel exposed to the shells of the enemy. That this defect cas been pointed DISASTROrS MUTE ACCI DENTS n Bxcxxr yxabs. s Lives lort 1SH Albion colliery. Soatk Wales. lr-CC Fratervilie, Tenn 1502 Rolling Mill mice. Fennsyl- vania ..................... . 1"5 10O3 Hnn Wyoming 15 1I04 Lacka-canna mine, Pennsyl vania JO 1904 Tercio. California VI U-05 Virginia City, Ala .. 152 1S0O Ziegier, 111. W 1005 Weiah coal mine 120 IMS Dtamoodville. Wyoming .... IS 1m5 Kuruisk. Btuaia PJ inCV-M, K. k T. Coal Company. . 13 1W5 Princeton, lad. 13 1303 Coal mine in Prussia., 55 11(63 Wilcox. W. Va 5 l'JOd BInefields, W. Ya 21 IIXjG Johnstown, Pa. 25 1906 Century, W. Va 15 i:.W Durham, England 25 1008 Dutchman mine, Bloesbarg, X. M 15 1M0 Courriere mine, near Calais, France UX) 1900 Japan 2V) 1I.0; Oakhill, W. Va 2 190 West Fork. Va.., "5 1000 Quarto. Colo. 22 U07 Saarius. Pniwia 22 11)07 Primero, Colo 20 11X17 Fayettevilie. W. Va H) i:07 Faarbruck, Prussia 200 1&07 Las. Esperanzas, Mexico 123 K"07 Forbach, Germany 75 1907 Monongahela, Pa. , 20 1WT Toyoka. Japan 470 lf07 Tsing Tau. China ..' 112 1907 Negsunee, Mich 17 t'j07 Mononah. W. Va SJH ' - w- v V 1 Wlf -AwtsUJwt, Am. - riUmQ IN A DESERT. There . Are Colonizing: Possibilities Even In Death Valley. The craze of "bomestaklng" which Is vecis to have reached Its limit In the choice of Death Valley as a colonizing pooKibility. With the Idea of trans forming the most arid and most deso late portion of the great American des ert Into farm land, a number of tracts have been bnmestaked. Irrljpftlon sys tems have been planned, and other preparations are now In progress for heinninz the reclamation of Death BILL IN CONGRESS TO CURB GAMBLING Measures Introduced by Tesa Members Would Prevent Op tions in Cotton and Grain. HAY COVES DEALS DJ ST0CX VO" .Vwxw .oja A BLOT OS THE last CHAPTER. vm ' Idea Threatens to Place an Embarg 'On Market Speculation at All irinH. Wajtalsgtoa corretpoadenr : HERE has keen a sodden awaken ing throughout the country to fbt fact that some thing is going 1 n Washington which threaten gambling ta sot ton and graiu, and possibly, too. which alma te place an embargo on speculation In stocks. Indlea ttor. nf t b 1 awakening appear In a regular flood of letters from the Interests threatened to the members of Congresa, who are Identified with the proposed restrictive legislation. - The reason which calls forth tbese letters lies In two bills introduced ly Senator Culberson, of Texas, and Rep resentative Burieson, of the came State, designed to wipe out speculation In cotton futures. The bills are identi cal nnd while they apply only to cot ton, as originally drawn, there ta like lihood that If either of them ta report ed out of the committee to which thev have been referred the provisions will be extended to apply to wheat and eth er grains. The central Idea In the Burleson but Is the application of the power to reg ulate Interstate commerce so as to e ttrain telegraph and telephone compa nies from trans mitting ' messages relating to a con tract for the fu ture delivery of cotton. The 'use of the mails also ta prohibited to pub lications contain ing notices or rec ords of the trans actions of any pro d u c e exchange wherein the con- c. a. cniinuvjr. The 'Femme da Lose." There are In these days the train de luxe, edition de luxe and hotel de luxe, but It seems to have entirely escaped attention that there Is also the femme de luxe. The femme de luxe associates only with the rich and prominent, lives but for amusement, spends money reck less'y. This femme de luxe and bomme do luxe difficulty is the disease which, spreading . with enormous rapidity, threatens to remove good conduct from the civilized world. A handful of men break every law, divine or human, swindle with Impunity, and behave like hooligans, and with them are a hand ful of women who have abandoned all restraint These are held np to the rest of the community as of such social Importance that their misconduct Is to be admired. London Truth. l Aaralast It. Vlakcy. of the Russian secret polio, clapped his hand on the tourist's shoul der. "Too must not etay In this country," be hissed. "Then 111 leave," the tourist mildly answered. "But bare yon a permit to leaver "No." "ien come with me." said Vlskey harshly, leading the way toward ths Kremlin. "I'll lock yon np tin you de cide what to do." Philadelphia Bulle tin. What an added respect a little bo) has for his sister's knowledge when be sees her mixing his favorite kind of cake. A woman never rails another woman "a snake la the grrss" anl?w they have bad trouble over iraic is.a;k out time and again ; that other nations rears ago recognized It as fatal ami now have armor wrapped around the tides of their war vessels from five to leven feet above the water line. That, dtspite repeated accidents on board our ships, the Navy Department rear after year bas approved of plans by which the greatest guns on the ships are directly above an oppn shaft leading to the powder magazine. That other nations long since recog ; nlzed the criminal stupidity of thus en dangering the lives of officers and men i and have remedied the defect by use , of common sense and ordinary precau tionary measures. That, without regard to the protests of experts, our battle ships have been built so low that If the sea la heavy (and ships are In action, the sea would jwash over the vessels, render some of their m-'tst effective guns useless and practically leave the ship to the mercy ,of the enemy. The officers In the American navy who command the battle ships and s.iindron are too old ; that under ex Isrinz HndIIIons young men cannot at tain command, and that the service la badly crippled as a result Thst there is too much "bureau man agmonf In Washington ; too mitch red tape In the Navy Department; that American genius Is stifled because of the bureau's Immersion In details, and that wltb-the Secretary of the Navy a civilian, be should bava a board of expert advisers. Other matters are dwelt on, but the foregoing are by far the moet Impor tant An afternoon's fight on water sealed KnsftiiTs fate In the recent war with Japan, nays Mr. Rwitenlahl. and the same may well be true of the next war Into which this nation Is plunged. The IsMiie Is sn Important and the stake an tremendous that the sea power which Is prepared In every resprt to meet the crista will be the victor. Valley. A railroad Is already built from Greenwater. at the southern end of the valley, to the bornx works owned by the celebrated "Borax" Smith of 20- mule team fame, and there Is an auto- mobl!ea stage line through the valley. Even enthusiasts do not claim that piping water from Telescope Pewk across the i uueral range Into the val. ley la also under consideration. aT X t3 Sit & Money Is suffering from bad circulation. Aa Aurora (III.) physician has discov ered that peanuts are a beaut; diet. This ought to be a circus for some people. An Eastern banker says, "We want more common sense." We want also more dollars, which are not so common now. If prices of bread and meat keep on coming down, pretty soon the average man can afford to eat three meals a day. Chief Sprybuck. the Indian who drank a qaart of blue paint is carryirg the "decorative interior" fad to an extreme. Witlu 1,300.000 divorce suits in ten years, the United States is plainly in need of a national "Stay-Married Association." After a while it may dawn on the army recruiters that the average soldier doesn't look a poo $13 a month aa any great graft Secretary Cortelyotl is trying to Im ptess ns with the fact that stockings were made to be worn and not to board money in. James J. Hill says the railroads need billions of dollars. From present pros pects, it will be soma time before they get 'em. An Italian count one American heiress married turned out to be aa ex-convict Ek.me of the other counts haven't yet been convicted. '''"il-Tint-irmisW W. P. iitrm'RN. tracts aimed at in tbe measure ai mode. Heavy penalties provide the means of restraining the telegraph and telephone companies. It is the conten tion of Representative Burleson that if Information of tbe kind prescribed can be kept away from the peop' living outside New Turk and New Orlcnus it will put the New Tork Cotton six change out of business. Frankly, It is admitted, that such Is the object of the bill. The Boards of Trade In several cities are aroused. Probably what they chiefly fear Is that public senti ment against spec ulation iu both stocks and bonds, which bas been accentuated by the r e cent financial condltlou, may hasten a demand for the passage ef the bill. Iu addition the B a r 1 e a u uieosure, Repre sentative Hepburn, of Iowa, bas in band a plan to regulate dealing to stocks. , Both France and Germany have adopted radical restrictive measures relating to dealings In stocks, grata, cotton and other things on mantlna, and their example Is being pointed to by American legislators who are ear nest Iu their luteutlou of doing some thing along the same line. The laws of France prohibit gambling In several ' securities and provide heavy fines aud Imprisonment for Infractions thereof. Tbe French penal code also prohibits "corners" or attempts to coutrol the supply or affect the prices of grain, flour, bread and other food products. SH0HT NEWS NOTES. St Christopher Is the patron saint f motoring. Brazil has no middle class. There are but two classes there the rich and ths poor. Countess of Warwick, on return to London, says America s only top is in N socialism. The grand Jury at Oakland, Cat, e fused to vote aa indictment against Har ry Kleinschmidt accused of murdering his friend. Frank Bellows, and the yoong 'man was release -