? e , 'f H3 PORTLAND,, OREGON WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1904' Editorial Pas THE OREGON DAILY AN C S. JACKSON Published every evening (except Sunday) at The Jftfrnal Building, Fifth WILLIAM COLLINS WHITNEY. A 1! FIE, upstanding specimen of passed away yesterday, when A earthly career of William Collins Whitney to close. There was something Shout the man, in the sincerity and earnestness his broad human sympathies and his alertness, that strongly appealed even ' hever been brought into close personal rontact witn mm and who measured the man by his work. They felt that here was not only a man but in many respects an ideal American man. .Mr. Whitney came of good old American Ptock but unburdened with wealth. He received a university training at Yale and was afterward graduated from the Harvard law school. He took up the practice of corpora tion law In New York City. He Imbided much of his po- ' litical wladom from Samuel Jones Tilden, the acutest political leader of his generation. Until his recent retire ment from active business life he has always been in poli tics and practical' politics at that. He made his official reputation as corporation counsel of the city of New Ynrit and the reDutatlon there acquired gave him reputa tion In hla profession that brought lucrative returns. His marriage to ths daughter of Senator Henry B. Payne of Cleveland, however, brought him into alliances that put him In the way of acquiring great wealth, which other Vise might never have been his. The beginning of Mr. Whitney'a national career is found In the election of Mr. Cleveland as president. -They had been friendly from the time- Cleveland went to Al bany as governor and that friendship waa maintained to the last. The third nomination of Cleveland was due more largely to Whitney than to any other man or combination of men. He not only managed the preliminary campaign, but led the fight in the convention and carried through tola man despite the acrid opposition of Tammany, of which Bourke Cochran, on that momentous occasion, was the spokesman. In the subsequent campaign It was he who collected most of the funds and his individual contri butions were said at that time to have been enormous. When he accepted the portfolio of secretary of the navy few men In the country were more' conspicuous than he. Mrs. Whitney's social entertainments at Washington were on a scale of unparalleled lavlshness. But to Mr. Whitney himself this waa purely incidental. With an absolutely free hand In his department, he set seriously to work to create a navy. Not satisfied with even that task he de termined that the' navy should not only be American in name, but American in make. With this -as a funda mental basis of his work, he plunged in with his whole heart and soul and brought to bear upon it all the powers of his highly trained mind. The start was slow, but the result Justified his efforts and gave him a secure place In history as the father-of the new American navy.- Borne years ago he announced his complete withdrawal from business cares. Having accomplished his apparent purposes In politics, having acquired a an assured social position, he announced to go upon the turf. His Influence soon ing in that direction as it had been in politics and the standards which he set did much to put new life Into that great sport and give it new Ideals and responsibilities, Mr. Whitney's death was altogether unexpected. Its announcement came with shocking force to his friends all over the country. They had hoped for him years of well-earned diversion. He was so strong physically, so alert mentally, so entirely happy in his avocations that everything seemed to combine to produce a green old age. His sudden death is but another proof of the uncertainty of all things human. ' ' t Mr. Whitney was a fortunate man in nearly all his re lations. The element of good fortune seemed with him from the start; he seemed continually to fall into the current' of lucky circumstances. Yet as and breadth mentally, as his own efforts and friendly In fluence conspired to raise him to affluence and financial Independence, the growth of his human aide kept pace, which accounts for the hold which be always had on the affections of so many people and very largely, too, for the profound influence which he was so often able to exert In xomoAva xovrnr nr ajit. fcargs Run to Import His Works from ', London. From tbs New York Herald. It was estimated two years ago, when Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan purchased in London the great Raphael "Madonna of t Anthony of Padua," for which he paid 1500,000, and which is now in his house in London, together with many valuable art works, that the total value of his art possessions abroad was about 1,20,000. The duty which Mr. Morgan would have to pay, if he were willing to do so, to bring over these art works would, therefore, at 20 per cent, amount to $324,000. v It was said at the time this estimate was made that Mr. Morgan had decided to keep account of the duties lie would have to pay if he imported hlH art works and to purchase with the amount art works for the Metropolitan museum. Andrew Johnson, chief of the customs division of the treasury department, in an interview published two years ago. when the question of Mr. Morgan's bringing the Raphael to IIiIh country was discussed, said; 'lf Mr. Morgan Intends to wait until he can bring the painting to the United States without paying duty unless he Intends to pre sent it to some national or state Institu tionsuch as the Metropolitan museum or the Corcoran art gallery he will have to wait a long time." Congress is the only authority' that could lift the tariff which now exists on works of art. The duty on the picture would be $100,000. The chief of Mr. Morgan's art treas ures, kept abroad presumably on account ef the tariff, with their valuations, are. Iandscupe by Hobdon, from the Dorchester Houwe gallery... JllOOOO Mannheim collection of Limo ges enamels and antique. . . 450,000 Gravets' collection of antique -sculpture . 75,000 Eir Jonhua Reynolds' painting or ljuuj Jeuy ueim uuu ' .children 1 10.000 Ruben's portrait of a Grand Duke 125,000 Balleroy Castle collection of ancient tapestries . 100,000 'Raphael's "Madonna of St. An thony of Paduu" COO, 000 'Gainsborough's "Duchess of Devonshire" 150.000 - Total '. . $1,020,000 'early French decorative palnrtr. pur chased by Mr. Morgan and In his Lon don house, are not Included In this list. They are said to have cost him about $300,000. If added, at that valuation, I a hla other possessions above named, the total of about $2,000,000 in art works would be reached. To import these under the present tariff, Mr. Mor gan would be required to pay a duty of $400,000. ' While there are" other American col lectors and art lovers who are holding art treasures abroad until some reduc- INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER . PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. OFFICIAL PAPt3R OF TUB CITY OP critical emergencies. aids it Is only just self which would American mannoou death brought the him a man of mark but the whole range and combination of circumstances which met to make up his career united to make- of him a man apart who was not judged by the harsh standards applied to many of the men with whom he was Intimately associated in business and politics and mental poise of the of his character, in keen-cut pnysicai to those who had therefore gave fascination and uniqueness to his person ality which no other public man of his generation could claim. ' THERE was recently in the city of Portland a self respecting woman who had for some years sup . ported herself and her children without help from anyone. This winter she fell HI and, haying been obliged to sell everything salable in her rooms and having gone for sevecal days without proper food for herself or her children, she consented that a kindly neighbor apply for help to those able to give it. She received the help but has since declared that the next time she is 111 she will starve and allow her children to 'starve1 before she will permit anyone to help her. Ill in body still, but mpre bruised in spirit, she Is working to pay off her Indebted ness to those, who neither need nor want It, but to whom she will not remain under an obligation any longer than she must. Her complaint waa ladies in succession, friends, and was put through such a course of question ing and inquiry that her illness was greatly aggravated and she was so humiliated! that the food they gave her "tasted bitter." A little girl, one of a number at an entertainment for poor children given by a benevolent London woman, walked up to her hostess and with a severe' look upon her wizened little face asked her in quick succession: "How many children have you?" "Do you bathe them, every day?"- "Does your husband drink?" The woman gasped for breath before inquiring of the child what she meant. The little one, quite ignorant of the offense, said that her mother had told her to "behave like a lady, and that Is what the ladles say when they come to see us." Money Is not a panacea for poverty and nine times -'t of ten it is a mistake to give It indiscriminately. If dm.k has made a man poor money will not feed him, but his drunkenness. If he Js improvident free lodging, free food, free clothes, or even work ready made and too easy will only foster his Improvidence. But to those who will not apply for help save when in desperate need, to whom the Idea of receiving charity is only one step above the Idea of going to Jail, they are entitled to more consideration. COST OF ENTERTAINING HIS FRIENDS great fortune, with' WHETHER the president of the United States is to figure principally as a social leader In Washington and to rival the smart set of New York In lavlshness of entertainment and In newspaper notoriety, is a question that suggests itself after reading the plea for a larger salary for that office. It may be quite true that the private fortune of the president is trenched upon In providing entertainment for his friends. But, as the entertainment of his friends Is strictly a personal and private matter it would seem no more than right and natural that he should pay for It out of his private nurse.- "The president has a large family and is fond of enter taining his friends" Is part of the plea. We are all more or less fond of entertaining our friends and some of us have fairly large families, but vhen we strike for higher wag6S these points are not put forward for consideration. It is a far cry from the Jeffersonlan simplicity of the early presidents to the elaborate and lavish expenditures of the present incumbent of that high office and the ser vice' has not Improved In efficiency. If the president's salary Is too small for the amount of work he does, by all means give him more, but let us have a better reason for it than the one Just advanced. his determination became as strik he grew In power tion is made in the present art tariff, Mr. Morgan is the ir ilvldual owner whom this seemingly prohibitory tariff most affects. "Amu co&srxK" to dot. New York Correspondence of the Phila delphia Ledger. The dinner of thu Amen Corner on next Wednesday evening at the Fifth Avenue hotel will be the next feast here at which politicians will gather. While a number of prominent leaders will at tend the affair, it is not expected that they will make important statements re garding party policy. The Amen Corner Is now little more than a memory. There was a time when affairs of state were discussed, policies determined, candi dates selected and political leaders made and undone In the little corner of the Fifth Avenue hotel, near the elevator. It Is Kaid that even a president of he T'nlted States was virtually chosen there, but that was in the old days, when the necessity for secrecy In political schem ing did not exist, or was not deemed so advisable as it is in this time of plots, counter-plots and marplots. A few men of prominence now gather occasionally in the Amen Corner, and. in order to pre serve the traditions of the Institution, questions ate put and approved with the proverbial "Amen." But the corner is not what It lined to be. There are too many other gathering places for the Re publican leaders now, such as the Re publican club, for instance, where In quisitive newspaper men may not over hear what Is being planned. Senator Plutt Is still the dean and leading spirit of the Amen Corner, hut the senator's adherents are not so numerous as of old, and the topic often discussed in the Amen Corner Is the decline In greatness of the aged leader, as welt as the deteri oration In power and numbers of the Amen Corner Itself. Lincoln's Way. One of the characteristic anecdotes of Lincoln Is this: Stanton, much Incensed against one of his generals, wrote a se vere letter of reprimand, raking him over the, coals "from h to breakfast." as it wis put by an army officer of that day. In some manner the president heard of the affair, and sending Immedi ately for Stanton asked to see the letter before it was dispatched. Having read it, he tore it to bits and threw it into the fire. "You have said your say and feel better,'! know, and It wouldn't make you feel any better to let General know how you feel." he observed with a twinkle In his eye. Stanton forgave him, and the object of his wrath es escaped.. A .Mystery Explained. From the Springfield Union. ' It must be thst those 2,000 replies sent out by Senator Hanna got Into tbs dead-letter qfflcs. ) JOURNAL JNO. P. CARROLL and Yamhill streets. Portland. Oregoa PORTLAND Stripped of all these adventitious to say that he had that within him have achieved great success and made of THE RIGHTS OF THE POOR. 1 - ' that she was visited by five or six those . who helped her and their WRIGHT'S FBXHCZLY STTXE. From the New York Tribune. Few millionaires lived In such prince ly style as did Wright before the Col lapse of his fortune. In Park lane, London, he had a miniature palace, In the drawing room of which was a copy of the famous Cabinet du Roi of Louis XV. It took three years to complete, and cost many thousands of pounds. At Godal mlng. Surrey, he owned a country "seat. In beautifying which 600 workmen were engaged. It contains costly fountains and statuary brought from Italy. The stables alone cost a small fortune. They had uphnlHtered oak and leather settees, and polished gun-metal fittings, while valuable paintings and bas-reliefs adorned the stalls. His private yacht was fitted up with similar luxurlousness, and at one time he was credited with the intention of constructing a racing yacht to beat air Thomas Lipton's Sham rock. His widow Is an Atrtrlmn. and at the time of her husband's arrest she was reported to have said that she did not know whether he was an American or not, but he was always thoroughly Eng llsh. much to her disgust They were married In this country. In the descrip tion seat at the time his nrrest was re quested by the London police, Wright was said to speak with a slight Ameri can accent. He was rlenerlbed as to years old, height five feet 10 or 11 Inches, complexion florid, hall and mustache dark, large head, small eyes, receding forehead, small chin, with fleshy roll be neath, stout build and weighing about 252 pounds. Wright had the entree of prominent Club and social circles In lxndon. He was the owner of the steam yacht 8y barlta, and was at one time commodore of the Portsmouth Corinthian club. He belonged to the Royal Cinque Pors. Royal Dorset, Royal Temple. Royal Thames and Royal Victoria Yacht clubs, and was a member of several social clubs. He left a wife, a son and two daughters. It was at the height of Wright's fame that Harold Frederic, formerly the Lon don correspondent of the New York Times, wrote "The Market Place," in which he described Wright under the guise of Stormont Thorpe, the hero of the novel. The promoter's 19-year-old son is Just out of Eton, and he left two daughters, the older of whom is 17. and both of whom are' said to be strikingly Deautuui. Hot foreseen by the fathers. From the Springfield Republican. .. No provision exists In the constitu tion to meet the ca.se of a breaking up of the United States senate through the activity of federal grand Juries. Rut the fathers of the republic could not easily have foreseen such a time of rioting, for easy -riches as the country Artistic Beauty of Japanese Women's Dress Eliza R. Scidmore's Letter in the Chicago Tribune. Japan the land of the kimono! And, by the way,' all these beautiful Japa nese gowns are kl-monos, not klmmonas, as the word Is so often mistakenly pro nounced, and nearly always misspelled in dry goods house advertisements in America. "Kl-mdno" means, literally, "wearing thing," ... ""clothing thing." - Kl Is a derivative from the verb kl. kiru, "to wear, to put on clothes, to dress." The mono Is the general word for "thing, article," etc, and is used In "the same way in many compound words 1. e.: "se to-mono," porcelain (porcelain thing;, "oki-mono," cabinet ornament, etc. The syllable and word kl is a common one in the Japanese language, Hepburn's dictionary giving a whole page of mono ayllabio kt's. The only word at all re sembling in sound the klm-mona of the American dry goods clerk is the word "klm-mot au," contraband goods, forbid den or Interdicted things. The "kimono" (pronounced, with even accent on' each syllable, "kee-mo-no") Is the real thing. and since it has been adopted in all coun tries it is a pity not to ave the right name go with It. 5 w The Japanese do not talk about the Shinto marriage service, nor describe it. with the floral decorations of the chapel. or hall of tablets, as we of the west di late on- the 1 Roxburgh wedding. We know that both bride and groom wear the old Shinto ceremonial dress, that there is a filling and oft. ring of cups of sakl and of symbolical foods and fruits, that parents and the go-betweens are present and take part in the ceremony. xne Japanese families of the upper circles, who observe all our western eti quette and social forms, have this wed ding ceremany in private and follow it by a large reception br- garden party in foreign style, with tulle veils, orange blossoms, shower bouquets, and all the rest One of the most brilliant affairs of the kind this fall was typical of all the others, the criterion they follow. The grandson and heir of one of the oldest and richest peers of the first rank, re cently returned with a degree from a German university, married the daughter of a Tokio banker, a financier of note, who had served his government for a dozen years as consul-general at a Eu ropean capital. He and his wife speak English 'perfectly, their children have had English governesses always, and their household and entertainments com bine the best features of the two ways of living. The bride, who was a beautiful girl, wore her Paris wedding gown gracefully, and the great ballroom at .the Imperial hotel, the loggia and little landscape garden held . much the same company thai one had met at the Imperial garden party at the Akasaka palace. There was a difference, however, in that, nearly all of the Japanese women present wore Japanese dress, adding Immeasurably to the plcturesqueness and Interest of the grouped company. By contrast one could appreciate the senseless ugliness of the Parisian dress of the day of the fool sleeves, the idiotic skirts, the imbecile fussing, tuck ing, torturing, Inlaying, incrusting, and cutting up of good materials, and the insane hats the foreign women wore. Nervous prostration naturally goes with such crazy habiliments, and the restless eyes, the seamed foreheads, and twitching mouths of foreign women are as direct result of their overpowering clothes problems as are the serenely smiling countenances, the calm and re poseful manners of the Japanese women, the natural accompaniments of the long, graceful lines, the smooth surfaces, and Intelligently appreciated materials of their unchanging dress. Their uncov ered heads, with their satin smooth rings and loops of blue black hair, a simple hairpin of clear amber shell, a gold lacquered comb, or a narrow twist of crape as relief, were in delightful contrast to the thatches and eaves of flowers and grasses, of velvet and tulle, composing the picture hats, the poster headgear of the foreign women. The black, soft gray, "grape purple," lilac and lavender heavy crape kimonos of the Japanese women were relieved by painted borders around the edges of the tobe. up the fronts, and at the ends or the long, square sleeves. The tiny circle LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE Oppose All Sunday Opening. wnnrtlawn. Feb. 1. To the Editor of The Journal: We stand opposed to the opening of the fair on ounaays anu would-be so tnannrui to me juuinni i tt omiiiri use Its influence for the closing of the same, and not only the fair, but the saloons and gambling dens and theatres. They can do harm enough through the week without being open on Sunday. A. J. MUKUAiN, W. WHEATLEY, WM. -HEFFELFINGER. A wood. Plaoe to getUs. n, trh i. To the Editor of The Journal: May I ask space in the Alumna nf Vntir valuable Daner for a few short remarks which may be of In terest to intending seiners. iqere is considerable government land available i Knnniufl ntrv in this section of country known as the Dep Creek coun try, south or Toledo, iincoin county. Or. Also some few timber claims to k v,. vt Th land here Is generally small valleys and hills. The soil Is all good, even on tne lop or mo iiui hill or mountain. The formation is generally a dark loam, with cay-y sub soil. The soli Is deep snd will orodti" anything that can be raised in the coast climate, a failure Of crop being un known. This will make an ideal dairy country. It la now used for dairying and stock raising. The facilities for transportation are good, as the railroad is convenient, and also by boat to Ban Francisco and Portland. j ne ooai route, wo m"ubiuu, outahltaheri as Vt. but SOOn will be, which will afford transporta tion facilities Dy ran sua wnior. m. iA .i .,-ir.t TnUdn In nrettv good. lui Ql , a, no. " v . and prices good. Toledo Is the county seat of Lincoln county. Some varieties of fruit do well here. Bees ao wen and make a delicious honey. Roads are pretty good and a prospect of their being better, as there is considerable money available for that purpose. The people in general are ppenlng their eyes to the necessity Of good roads. There is considerable good bench land, which makes excellent homes when cul tivated. The country is wen watered, with good water. In fact, there are til tne advantages essential to the establishment of good hnmM k.r. HnmA - vrnrlr Hlld economy will be required. It is useless for a man to settle nere- ana expeci uungn to come to him spontaneously. , But ther la Tin fmuiii whv a man of small means may net make himself a comfort able home If he exerts hlnixMf a little. 'Hhis is comparatively n hew weUloirent. x no people ere jhw-huiuuii v-uiwn. ai one wanto U buy cheap lands he can do io here to advantage ususl in a new country,- v . I shall be pleased to answer any in- of the family crest is always dyed Into the kimono, on tha back, fronts and sleeves. . These painted crapes are more esteemed than embroidered ones, and often more costly. :.- , Designs for kimonos are the product of great artists today, and one buys books of such designs by Korln and the masters that are always In fashion The garment- is first measured and basted together there Is no first, sec ond and final fitting for a Japanese gown, no , miserable quarters of hours on foot before a mirror, while an anx ious - woman distributes pins around one's waist line. - The crape is then of . the plain bluish white tint in which It comes from the factory. - The beautiful design is painted with 'a brush on the moistened crape, stretched firmly on a board, one color at a time. Each color is covered with resist or mordant, the crape moistened again, another color applied and dried. Then all the painted part, the white or tinted ground with its design, is covered with resist and the whole garment dyed the required colorblack, purple,- gray or lilac. .. These careful processes at the hands of the most skillful Usen artisan artists accountSor the quadrupled post of the Initial plain white crape kimono, which is afterwards lined with the richest sint and stiffened around the bottom with many thicknesses of silk floss wadding. ' Tha crape petticoats worn un der such a gown have usually a , slight decoration In Yuson at their front edges and at the edges of the sleeves one sees the many silk coats of different colors worn beneath the gown. The feature of a Japanese woman's dress is the broad, obi or sash, tied In as many ways as there are provinces and great cities, differences in' age, and social rank in the empire, A soft crape girdle holds the kimono In place, and then the broad obi, 13 Inches wide and four yards and a half long, is t wound twice around the body and disposed in in Its great loop. A narrow ellk cord. passes over the obi. beneath the loops at the backhand fastens in front with a finely wrought metal fastening, this, and the beads on the cord, and the button or toggle at the end of nlrb or pouch cords, are the only pieces of Jewelry that belong with a purely Japanese cos tume. Many Japanese women, however, who cling to their native dress on all occasions, wear beautiful rings, set with precious stones, and they all greatly like to wear the plain gold wedding ring. The obis of heaviest silk and gold thread brocade are the pride of their wearers, and the most costly part of the costume. From the shining 6 and 8 yen obis of gold paper, raw silk, and cot ton that look like the gorgeous Kindan nishikt (gold brocaded silk), the obts quickly mount to 60, 100 and 160 yens in value. An obi at the latter price was the most costly four yard and a half strip shown by- Kioto silk weavers at the Osaka exposition this spring, a fabric that was all a sheen or finest gold thread.- These obi silks, woven 3? Inches wide, are doubled and sewed to gether with a thin layer of silk wad ding between, and -the bars and cross threads that mark the end of the web finish the end of the sash In full view. At this wedding reception there was such a display , of beautiful Yusen kimonos and gold brocade obis as I have never seen 1 before, and one glittering sash and then another so distracted one's whole, attention that conversation was impossible. There was one geo metric arrangement of squares and dia monds of gold woven in with threads of golden brown silk, and another obi was a sky of brilliant red, flecked with gold clouds and haze, across which flew flocks of white, storks with black tipped wings. This last one was worn by a beautiful girl, and it was not chance that brought me often in range of her superb sash. , Many (of these splendid fabrics are hp ir looms that have descended from mother to daughter for more than one generation, but while the Japanese dress seems to present no points of difference from decade to decade to the purblind barbarian, there are distinctions each year and each season. Japanese women easily recognize and greatly envy the wearers of the latest obis and the pat terned kimonos of this season's fancy. un.ry concerct.ii tVis "ountrv. Address, with stamp, WILLIAM REIDY. STOW WHAT WOtJXO TOU SOT From the Chicago Tribune. Speaking about graft, what would you do about this case? A young man named Clark is the pur chasing agent for a large corporation. Recently he has been making contraots for the winter's supply of coal, 600 tons a month. Some half a dozen firms of coal deal ers tried to get the contract. Finally all but two were eliminated. The other day, when Mr. Clark reached his- home his wife said: "John, I didn't know you were going to have the coal put in today?" "Neither did answered the aston ished Clark. "Well, there was ten tons put in this afternoon. The driver said there waa nothing to pay." When Clark got down to his office the next day he found representatives of the rival coal companies waiting to see hist. Clark was pretty mad. He called In one of the coal salesmen and said: "Did you send that coal out to my house yester day T' r- The coal salesman looked at Clark and saw the righteous Indignation in his eyes. vWhy, no, of course not," he said, with virtuous wrath, "we don't do business that way." Then Clark called In the other coal man, and he also hotly denied he could be guilty of such an outrage. Mrs. Clark says there was no name painted on the wagons which delivered the coal; at least, she did not notice any. Now, what Is Clark to do about It? j. p. MomoAjrn oiaXi sitax From the Chicago News. ' J, Pierpont Morgan's great rlyal in the Iron world is Miss Antoinette Berths Krupp, heiress to the great Krupp gun and Iron works in Germany. Miss Krupp probably Is the richest young woman in Europe. She is the elder of the two daughters of the late Baron Alfred Krupp. His last will and testa ment made her heiress to all his mill ions, Including the gun works at Essen, the ship works and wharves at Kiel, and all his iron and coal mines in West phalia and In Spain. Conservative esti mates make the value of this great property at least $78,000,000, When Miss Krupp becomes of age all this wealth will become hers absolutely. She is 1 years old. , a, i . Oa Its Way. From the Washington Post, r A few days sgo Senator Spooner told a story to an appreciative group of senatorial listeners. When the laugh had subsided Senator Allison, who feared the senator from Wisconsin might grow Inflated, asked: -"Is that one of Depew's stories?" ..' "Not yet," retorted 86nator Spooner. ' American Wheat i Fields to Find Strong Rivals in t Manchuria The great American wheat fields are likely to find a formidable, rival In the thousands of square miles of rich agrl cultural territory made available in Man churla by the, opening of the trans-Siberian railway, according to United States Consul. Miller at Niuchwang. China. In an interesting report he sets forth the possibiltles as follows:' The Chinese Eastern railway, the south eastern terminus of the great Siberian railway, in its course through Manchuria: to its end at Port Arthur, passes through 1,000 miles of as continuously rich agrl cultural country as can be found any where In the world. , , The valley of the Llao river produces and exports 110,000,000 worth of food pro ducts each year, 'it Is a country where crop failures and famine are almost un known, and where production Is as regu lar and constant as any place dependent on natural rainfall. ' v The country drained by this river and its tributaries Is approximately 62,600 square miles. Some of it is mountainous, but the larger part of it IS level lanl snd rich rolling hills, susceptible of culti vation. Almost every acre through which the railway passes is under cul tivation. ,:- The soil Is as easily worked as an ash heap and produces enormous crops of beans and millet without apparently di minishing it fertility. Considerable of the land In this valley In Mongolia Is in its native state, producing , only . native grasses as food for ponies; cattle, sheep and goats, It is owned in large tracts and controlled by Mongol princes, xms is a new field for the development of large tracts of land in which the modern steam plow and steam agricultural machinery will find ere long profitable employment Already there Is -talk among tho Rus sians and Chinese about its development As soon as the more available land is utilized in wheat production there is no doubt but branch lines will be extendedJ into this country and tnis land win De utilized in growing wheat. It is too near to the great and growing flour market in China to remain idle long. Today the Llao valley la the greatest in the world In the production of beans and millet, but in a very short time It will be great in the production of wheat as well, and then will gradually come the change suggested above. This entire valley is an excellent wheat- producing country, and the building of modern flour mills and the splendid busi ness they are doing Is making such a demand for wheat that its production will -be Increased as fast as the mills re quire it. After the Chinese market is provided it may lead to production for export to Europe. This Is already being considered and it is possible thst wheat exports from Manchuria to Europe may begin with two years, but It is most likely to take place first from the valley of the Sungarl, on aocotnt of the greater cost of getting flour from there to the Chinese market. The Sungarl river emptying Into the Amur is the waterway for the northern part of Manchuria and drains a district twice the size of the Llao watershed, but having little If any more -first-class agricultural country tributary to it. The latitude Is the same as the Dakotaa and the climate is very much the same. The entire valley seems to be especially adapted to the production of wheat and It has always been grown in a small way. for local use by the natives. The seed used is the native article, obtained en tirely from spring sowing, as there is not enough snow to protect the winter crops. The grain Is sown in April and harvested in September and October. It Is bound in bundles, hauled to the village and stacked, and thrashed at leisure by the men, women and children. The grain is laid upon the ground in a circle and stone rollers are pulled over It by donkeys led by children. The straw Is raked off and carried away for winter fuel, while the grain is swept Into a pile with the chaff and then tossed in the air until the wind separates the grain. The quantity now produced In the beat districts is thirty bushels to the acre. I . am convinced that this can be in creased by improved seed and deeper plowing. - Climatic conditions are very, constant and regular and the rainy sea son comes during the growing time without fall, and famines and really bad crops are almost unknown. The pro duction is growing at an enormous rate and keeping pace with the demands of the mills. Even at the present low price wheat is the most profitable crop in northern Manchuria. The production of wheat and flour-is a business with which the Russians are perfectly familiar; and If the railways they now have are extended so ss to KOTSBBV J.AT. W. 3. Nesblt In Chicago Tribune. "And he said to a lad. "Carry him to his mother.' "And when he had taken him and brought him to his mother, he sat ou her knees till noon." Kings lv;19-20. Your mother's lap! Did childhood have a better place than that? A place to snuggle sleepily at twilight for a chat; A tender arm about you, and a hand to stroke your hair. And lull you into dreamland while your head was pillowed there. The wealth of fairy stories, and the Bible stories, too. She told, and told, and told again, as mothers love to do, Till eyes all wide with interest and bright with Joyous gleams Went shut, to see the fairies in your little land of dreams. Your mother's lap! A haven and a . . 1 heaven, too, almost When little griefs of childhood all your heart and mind engrossed; A place where you might tell 'of the little sorry whiles. Until your tears had gone away, and she coaxed back the smiles. No bed so rich, in comfort, were you sick or were you wen; No song so sweet in melody as that which softly fell From Hps whose kisses banished every shadow or mishap Did childhood have a better place for you than mother'a lap? Test of Good Whisky. From the New York World. "Now, thero are plenty of kinds of whisky," said Representative Ollle James of Kentucky, "but the people in our state contend that our Bourbon is the best In the world. We sell to out siders all that does not' pass our test." 'What Is the test?" asked Representa tive Biedler of Ohio. ; . . . "Why," said Mr. James, "we inject one drop of It Into the veins of a rabbit, and if after that the rabbit will not light a bulldog, the whisky Is no good." ,. ' ' reaos. Brothers, Ics. ";'' From the Albany Democrat . Albany needs a sawmill. Why not swsp one of Its dally papers for one. Salem Journal. If there was as much buss-and mere noise, to them as In the Journal they might be used without swspplng. , , .x cover- and develop all of the available wheat lands tributary to them, there is lit tie, doubt but that one of the great-, est wheat-producing districts of the world will be in this part of Asia. . Harbin is the present center of . the . flourlng-mlll industry of Manchuria, and Is destined to become one pf the great-flour-producing centers of the world. It is situated in the heart of the valley of 'the Sungarl, on the banks of the stream, . where It has the advantage, of water transportation from the .wheat fields, as well as transportation by rail fram ttiraa ritffAMnt Hfranttnm - Tt haa. in addition to this, cheap water trans portation to the sea, two lines railway reaching the ocean one at Vladivostok and the other line touching it at Nluch wang, Dalny and Port Arthur. In 1800 the place did hot contain a single flour mill to produce a pound of flour. In 1901, at the time of my first visit to the place, there was one mill producing 160 barrels a day. ' In 1901 there were two mills, producing 760 bar rels a day. In the early part of 1803 there Were six mills.' with dally produc tion Of 1.440 barrels. In October. 1903. during my last visit I found eight mills, with a total dally capacity of S.800 bar rels, erected at a cost of $618,000. I was Informed that two more were in process of construction, and that eaxty in 1904 Harbin will have ten mills In operation, with a daily- capacity of 4,600 barrels of flour. . . . The greatest disadvantage that these mills are laboring under at present is cost of f uel. . Wood Is used for fuel, and it costs from $10,80 to $1S.87 per square sagene, or seven feet square. As. coal cropping;" are to be found generally throughout Manchuria there is little doubt but that It will soon be devel oped and take the place of wood at much less cost Under present conditions these mills sre making a profit of from 16 to 46 cents for every loo pounds of grain they grind. Most of these mills are putting all of their profits into enlargements and Improvements in their plants. On account of the large and growing trade of American flour in the Orient I have given this matter much thought and careful study. When the flour be gins to reach the sea In quantities It will be met there by largely subsidized steamship lines prepared to carry It to otner ports tn China at very low rates.. The great advantage, however, lies in the productiveness of the country, the Industrious and eheap labor prepared to produce It and its nearness to market. The lives of the people are very primitive- The men, women and children labor In the fields and maintain a cheap, lowly life, living in mud houses and sleeping on mud beds. The entire house hold furniture and outfit is no grester than could be carried on a single wheel? barrow. These people are well satisfied to earn from 20 to 30 Mexican cents a day per man, and for women and children much less. Their tools and methods are the simplest and crudest but they have mental powers sufficient to enable them to leanr to handle machinery and better tools with success. Manchuria. Mongolia, and SlheHa I have continually pointed out, offer a mucii oeiier xuiure market for nour mill machinery and agricultural lm. prement than for flour. Th center of this trade will develop about Harbin, and it would be advisable for our manufacturers to look lrlto this prospect. A permanent agency will have io uo estaoiisnea ana coneuaeraDie time given to work up a trade, . but It can easily be made to a-rnw tntn rr nm. portions. In doing this It would be ad- viBBuie iv cuiuvtu relations witn tne Russo-Chinesa bank, which has hranehea throughout Manchuria. The first trade will be in plows and hand cleaners for wheat These are now belne called for: hut th.r. ... nn n. rirms m toe country, ana not even cata logues that can be of use. Catalogues In tha Russian lana-uan ahmilri ha nut In some cases German may be under stood, out iungnsn catalogues are ab solutely worthless. In order to provide properly for this trade, which I am certain has a big fu ture, a good and shrewd observer should be sent Into tha mintfv tA -au,t people and their conditions, and imple ment anouia De aesignea to suit these. The primary factor must be cheap ness. For the heavv and attekv anlla nf the Sungarl valley a stronger and dlf- icreni piow is required than In the sandy loams of the Llao valley. Stones and rOOtS are altnoat nnlmnan an tha strong, heavy, and expensive plows sre i council ana couia noi De soiq. Advice to the Lovelorn, BY BXATKXCX FAI&FAZ, Dear Miss Fairfax: I became acquaint ed with a married couple through re siding In the same house. , The marital relations were not happy and they de" elded to separate, long before I got ac quainted With them. It was evident that the woman was the wronged one, as she naa Been heartlessly deceived, neglected and left at home every evening while the mart enjoyed himself In the lodge snd so ciety of other women. She, put up with all for the sake of her two children. Naturally I felt great sympathy for her, that led into a strong Jove between us. But lately the man seems to hava mm to his senses and Is making frantic ef forts to regain her lost affection, with, out the least chance of success. What Is my duty under the Circumstances," to tell her to forget me for the sake of hei children, or help her to free herself and let -the man bear the conaentianeaa rt hi cruelty? . j. c. M. It Is your duty and hers to give hef husband every chance to redeem himself I think you should either go away or not see her as long as he is trying hla best to Improve. There Is always trouble when people interfere between husband and wife. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young girl Of 18 veara and in Inva with a of 23. t have known blm for a short tlmd ana as i love mm so much that I can not express it in words I ask your sdvlcf what to do. . I. G. ' It does not require wods to express your love. Them Are a thmiaarwl iv.fr. ,n let him knnw wlthmit tailing hi . If the young man does not understand t i ma tnun, nm yourp. Dear Miss Fairfax; For nearly six months I hava haen Iraatilna- ' '!. iuMnjr with a young man. , When lis calls on' me and . any girl friend of mine Is at my home he Is surs to escort her home,' no matter "how early It la When I am at home without any friends he Is sure to stay until very late. Is it proper for him to do this? If not, (would! you, kindly tell me, what to say to him? M. G. W. A young man should not allow a young ladv to ma hnma-alnna if i. i. i.,. -.u I should think, though, that he would say something to you about It If it occurs tta.M ....... VlkBlei .. ' . .,' .1 -i - has lately been going through- i'rV-J..- v.. :-'..& ' ,.,