. f-N: - " " T V .-.t.-v, .-.-., to PORTLAND. , OREGON,;. J r ; , ' ::" 'Eaitio'iriia!! ,0 )K -I T H E -. OREGON D AIL Y , ;.- :y-.v'. an P.. JACKSON 'Via.ui.vu Hnhf fnMl Sands) and . evarr Suadav morning at i'. 1 ' . i.' -) I , 1 N0V7 TO MAKE'TOE PORTAGE ROAD A t, YV: 3 USUAL the Oregonian seeks it A" j teron the upper mef steamboat project. When task A ' ;,Li. .-.-. u u . . iiuUkl wv uiu jmm ,V fortune were made in that traffic, ferent .now when freight ratet are aides there arc no boata on the tipper river now and it . -woald be a very difficult job to build them at moat of : the material would have to be hauled by rail to upper river point! where no conveniences for ahipbuildma' exist This is preciaely the talk that has: taken the nerve iand heart out of every public movement in Oregon for the past generation. Few great projects are of easy accomplishment; if they were jthey would not be great . , niS'Wat reaixeo ycarago juncn un mic uum iu a at Oregon City and achieved such-momentous results. ; ' When a railroad just half a 'mile intlcngth was built . around the Cascades there' was very much of the same '''sort of talk that weaow hear among he reactionaries ;'i)f Portland and Oregon. -, Everybody -whp had given the i'matUer a moment's 'study-realixed 'the' neid of the locks at the Cascades. In the course of time the government tmdertook the. task. The work ;dragged woefully for a ' .score of years 'and it looked as though it would never be ready for business. Then the way was built around the locks. One . followed ; freight rates .were instantly, reducedjone half. As another result, somewhat more mysterious, work on the locks began to be prosecuted jvigor, and its. feasibility as well as its need, became "self-evident in some important quarters which thereto fore could hot'be brought to believe that it was anything but a hair-brained project ' , ! But when that great work was done we rested on our . fears, although there was much more work ahead. .The project at Celilo was a greater enterprise, to be sure, but it waa calculated to bring about correspondingly great results. Years were wasted in mere talk; many of those who should have been heartily in favor of the project threw cold water upon it .. then and. now. (There were reports officially anq it looked as though the way was clear, af ter the last engineers' reports, to get the enterprise in mo tion. ; But it appear we had not even then fully learned 'the great lesson that God helps those who help themselves.- One day we' woke to a realization of it Then an appropriation .waa made by the state legislator to build a portage railroad about tha falls. .There were ' pome who believed, and many others who, if they did j not believe, freely said that it was a foolish enterprise. For a time, for tie cause or another, and there were scores of difficulties in the way, it looked as though the enterprise might lapse. Then at "a special session pt the legislature-held last year $100,000 waa voted to ' ""buy and present to the federal government a right of way '. .free of cost for the, canal, which had already received .the indorsement of the, government engineers. V In eer . tafn ways this eosnpjlcated the matter so far as it related d the porta;, enterprise, for it made it necessary, to r secure 'not jbew.b&t. two rights of way' Yet difficulties in , this case erJy stjwilated greater efforts and from (his flowed' at? feast two ery important results. The first Sf these is-the building of the portage road which, will ' rr7T"s . PUBLIC OWNERSHIP OF RAILROADS. fTHE SENTIMENT In favor of public ownership I VW ra'ilroads is undoubtedly increasing, and prin v f . ; , cipally, because' of the policy being pursued, In .various parts of the country and, in different ways, by the railroads themselves. ; ' ; .la the first, place, the people are justly auspicious of ' these- great combinations, consolidations and . mergers, . resulting in the practical ownership and management .of all. the 'principal railroads of the country' by a small group of New York multi-millionaires. These men are likely to abuse their power; indeed, they have abused and-are-abusing their power in various ways.' They have become too audacious and insolent and too neg : lectfuX-oi- the interests of the people, whose servants , rather; than; whose, masters they should be. l.In .Wisconsin, for instance, the senator. La Toilette, has been striving and fighting for years to compel the-railroads to pay a fair and just V . r . . 1 . t 1 1 . r proportion i taxes, ana w oceanic oidctwik racniuic . to the laws, and when ,inally La. Follettc and the people v 5 triumphed and got a legislature that rirtt rnnlmL ihev announced that in do no more railroad building in that state, nor, they "meant if they did not say, permit any to be done. Now Wisconsin-is not a verAold state and its resources are " ,JV?t yet fully developed? It needs more railroads, and . rmist have them -And when the railroad magnates, who hold" themselves above the law, begin to live up to the -dog-in-the-manger policy and say that they will neither build necessary roada or extensions of roads, nor per- , tnit them to- be built, it is entirely . . .. vmj .aa, . . . v. . . f n. n... ... ourselves. We certainly have aome , ' : tiuea to consiaeration. wno are uese aozen muiii-mu-: , lionaires of New York, who under a New Jersey law A. '.' can do or not do whatever they please of Wisconsin; can refuse to pay taxes, can make what- "ever :nucs mcy 7iatsc, n uhiiu up ' 'another at will who, in brief, assume ' of a, million people? Why should we A...U 4.1.. ..ui-.j. o a v m va v nut av w w ki va wuvasw and have them operated under the people s authority and ' in. thei.r interest Instead of by snd for this little clique . of New: York multi-millionaires?" (1 ' " -i" This the thnutrht that tlx rail manasrers themselves have bred and overbearing acts, in the minds of millions of people. Pub- Vr riiiiutt i ll u a Bin orooosition. it t .. .'. ... , taken thoughtlessly or rashly or without urgent rea- sons." But just so surefy as the railroad men persist in imposing upon and defying the will of the people Snd ' i in being unreasonable with regard to rates, taxes and ; needed extensions and development, just so surely will 4 this publie ownership aentiment grow, and swell, and become irresistible. . And let not the Rockefellers and ' Harriman and Hills andXoulds imagine that the people V cannot take the 'roads. The people can do whatever : they want to dp. ' And if courts stand in their way they will put new men on the benches, that will do their will - We of the far west realize the great benefit the rail ; r toads have been to this part ol the country. We know' . that the. Pacific northwest could not have been developed at all, or but very slightly, without them. We appre- : crate the fact also that they are at present doing much toiaduee immigration and to develop the resources and . increase the wealth of this state and region. Yet they : have fallen and are still falling far short of doing what . they should have done and should do. Year after year -.' , passes without roads being built to Tillamook, to Coos - Pay, through central Oregon, up the Clearwater valley. - The railroad system of which the Columbia and Willam ette valleys are the western arteries and Portland the tenaicua aecma disposed, aot only, sot to make these independbn t newspaper ; ' v :;. PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBUSHINQ CO, v .': sweets, Portland, Oregon. ,,;. OFFICIAL' PAPEH OF THE CITY OF PORTLAND to throw cold wa , ,nnrmnn a v. j but thinn are dif put. the canal. to much lower. Be- which insures a it is completed. fact it is much portage road and railway and canal. little naif mile of rail result immediately with a good 4al of i l. V. - , not let it slip. what confronta like the oregonian and reports made and in conjunction tions .the problem to do for them tbenf .and that f 01 positron to reap anpHE thought, late governor, now the railroads could revenre thev would natural for the people . u v a b... v.... fights that are en- in the great state uac kiij nuu rum to be the masters allow this? Why Miiiittva vuswsvw ma if mairnalra anH nourished, bv their ... a cannot be under- made, - . :v, J OURNAL JNQ. I. CAftKOU. Tha Teornal BuMlnr. Fifth and Tamhifl '. " ..; . - : .'; GREAT. SUCCESS, be ready for business in the course of a couple of months the second important result is that the government, rec ognizing what the people have done for themselves, has projection a continuing contract basts, vigorous prosecution of the work unti ' , v . . " - , " . Now we face the new problem. It is that of upriver boat transportation. According to. the Oregonjan this is almost impossible of achievement As a matter of less difficult than was the building of the securing the double .right of way for There are upriver boats already in commission and if the rates-sre lower., than they used to be the amount of traffic at their disposal is infinitely great,- In all that has been said there haa been no reference to the' trafficon the north side of the river. It'now.costs 75 cents a ton to transfer from one side to the oth., River freight , will 'by no means be limited to the lower "side of the river and will be quite as ready for, shipment .from; the other side when the outlet is secured.-: It is with this as it is with all other problems. It is something which the people-.themselves must face. They have 'now' had' enough experience to know what they can do when they get seriously to work. - The two successful undertakings of the projects at Celilo give ample proof of what they can do in the face of difficulties. The difficulties' thst confront us in solving the steam boat problem above Celilo will simply stimulate them to greater effort tor that is the new pregon way of doing things. The steamboat men themselves will see the great chance ahead of them for profitable business and they will The portage road will do what it was intended, to do and the upriver men will do their share. .Meantime all the public bodies of Portland now know them. They should get to work. The chamber of commerce did-great work on the portage problem; it should not weary in well doing, but should take hearty bold of the new problem now before the people of the state and not rest satisfied until every thing, possible haa been don to make of the enterprise ar a whole an unqualified success. This is a matter which should appeal to that body with peculiar ; force with other interested people and sec will soon be solved. Many people fail to realize that Oregon baa entered upon a new era. It has long tried the plan of waiting upon other people those things which were necessary for the-development of the state s resources; the plan did not work very well aa is evidenced by the backward condition in which things are found in many directions. The new plan is to do many of these things for ourselves and in so doing force others to do their duty. . The, plan is an infinitely better one-and' already Oregon begins to feel its rejuvenating influence. Of all publie enter prises ever undertaken this with Celilo as a base is the most important not only in its immediate enect but in ita remote consequences. . Its consummation means that the state will no .longer be at the mercy of any privately owned transportation agency or group or combination of the first time the state will be in a me advantages Qt a natural water haul and the ratea which should go with iC-i: n necessary extensions, but absolutely to encourage rival roads and rival termini. And local -people cannot build their roads because, for one thing, they have not enough capital at command, and also because such roads so built would be at the mercy of the big ones, that could embarrass, cripple and rain them. And the longer ;this policy is persisted in the more .naturally, and readily and strongly do the people's thoughts turn to publie owner ship as the only means of relief. AFTER THE WAR, WHAT? POWERS," that sweeping term supposed embrace a consensus of international are not ready for the new situa tion Jspan forces' upon them.- By right of arms Jspan is already master of the orient . Russia has ceased to be any greater factor than sistet nations will whCTT the final adjustment comes. Manchuria is a Japanese con quest with an excessive drenching of the blood that torins territory. Harbin is helpless, while Vladivostok is mere ly an arithmetical proposition. Unless "The Powers" set quickly; bringing" Russia to. the peace trough for a deep draught of humiliation, final negotiations will find the bear far from the Pacific..; Then, suppose Japan as serted a common prerogative of victory and held -conquered Russian territory, surrendering Manchuria, to China as pledged, with Fort Arthur retained as a sen tinel against encroachment, what would "The Powers" do? .. . '. '; j. - v ' ' r- In the crisis forced by financiers the past week there seems to be evidence of more than a usurer's bargain with Russia. Europe is faintly suspected of hastening peace to forestall the deep tangle that might result later, for it is clear that the world is not prepared for the issue of Japanese mastery of Asia's entire north Pacific ' coast That would ", be an - earthquake in' the oriental situation. Caucasian solicitude there has been over equable division of spheres of influence among white nations. Tresties and commercial projects have assumed inertia beyond any possible stage. of considera tion throughout the orient These ' dreams of . unop posed conquest have been rudely disturbed by the Jap anese Bozarius. Profound considerations of the past for proper balancing of German, English, French and Rus sian concessions must suddenly take the form of ques tions whether a new power is to have the foothold that indicates absolute mastery. : . : r . s-, Diplomacy, if dealing,- with the new. problems, is secretive yet, and gives to the public no intimation of the future alignment England is Japan's dose ally, and it would be constrained to witness the new oriental power reaping a copious harvest from its struggle before in tervening. France is near Russia,' which means that her Course will be with a strong bias for whatever will com fort the wounded bear, rather than repression of Japan's new-born strength.' Germany coquettes with the field, but has an ardent oriental policy that would compel grave consideration of Japan. America is more happily sit uated and would doubtless grasp a Japanese hand Sn eastern Siberian development as quickly as the bear's paw. " . . ' ;. ' ; " . The situation is yet beclouded and forecasts are pre mature unless the seer, indulging the-same has an inti mate knowledge of what . Japan, wants. Japan has de monstrated marvelous strength and might hare the cards to defeat a larger contestant than has just played to lose. . Another consideration is Her progressiveness. The Occident wants free commerce in the orient and this Jspsn has beeif foremost in encoursging. - Under her regime" development of eastern Siberia would be at a swifter pace' and on more intelligent lines than with the Slav.:": t': ; v' " , v ; All this the world has to ponder over, if the war goes on a few more weeks, when new 'conditions and plans will have to recognized and sew readjustments perhaps - . .-, r ?.,:V:.; '..;- r Small Change j ' O. ria, no doubt Portland needs It On day, pac probable; .next day, no peace. 1 ax your choice, . v . The eaar and hla extensive realm are woeruny out of proportion. ' ; Tha ravena counted oa to feed Elijah towt appear to have gone oa'a strike The eaer, it Is reportad, will have so paaoa until ha can get on top of Japan. aaora 1001 ne czar. , Peary has launched hi new ahlp at laat. but iv la not likely to be sunk by Duitug into tue north pole. . Only one aenator from' Delaware for two yeara mora On la tnouah for teta of Delaware's slse and political A Slrvertoit cow died from eating dynamite Bbe waa aa bla fool as taa mea who try to. thaw dynamite on a The military and BOlloa era still ahoot Iny down lnoffenalva peaaanta In Poland, makfnff tha csar's aovernnient odious mrournout tne eivuisee world. 4 ' Booker Washington has been at the Whits Houae In conference with tha president again, but as they did not eat together, ao far as known, the south may not roar very loudly. ,,, . Buffalo' Bill is regarded by the Judge who tried bla divorce case as e "bed actor," toward hta wife whom tha Judge tntnka la a good, much-abused woman. Tha woniaa usually has the best of it in court. .. ... . , .. 1... " One street masher got what waa prop erly coming to him Thursday, when man knocked him down and gave him a good mauling; There are others wbe should be served the same way. - BtUt there are women who like to be "mashed. . . , .. , . ' Mrs. Chad wick, according to her ate--'. paid or agreed to pay such commissions for loans aa would break a millionaire la no greet length of time ' la one ease she reoelred S7S.000 oa tha strength of an obligation for tltO.SOe, and la another she got ttS.SOO and. paid $1S.. 000 within a few day. She la deserving of no great amount of eympatby, but neither are tha bankers and brokers who skinned bar, or tried to do so. Between the two tha publio will be Inclined to lean to tha aide of the woman, thoneh without railing in love with her. I aaaMMjfc , William Weightmaa. who when lie died a few months aco waa one of the richest mea if not tha richest man ia Philadelphia, left the whole of Ms vast fortune to his only daughter, Mrs. Wal ker, to the exclusion of the widow and children of his deceased son, aad now they are trying te - get -a share of the Weightmaa millions, claiming that the dead capital 1st made ar ' Intended to make e codicil to this effect which Mrs. Walker denies, and says the slater-la-law and nephews and nleoee shall have nothing. Without knowing mora than these facta. It is natural and proper for disinterested people te hope that tha courts will find a way to make this avaricious - women - divide. ' Her rela tives must be vary unworthy folk In deed If they- were er are deserving of suoh treatment. Her action la tha mat ter ' Is In marked and unfavorable con trast te that of the hairs of a Pittsburg multi-millionaire wno died last year. disinheriting e daughter who bad mar ried agalnat bis wishes. They divided with her nevertheless, giving her $30.- 000,000. ; . , Oregon Sidelights Fourth ef July talk already. ; tt Good crop prospects everywhere. Me more rein-prayers for awhile-, ' Peadleioa creamery win open April L. New snow la the mountains looks good. Loggers getting active aad sawmills starting up. ' Albany Is the hub of the valley, alleges the Democrat Estaeada expects several bla new In dustrial enterprises in the near future. Ton ran't make a Polk ' county man believe that Polk Is aot the best county la the state. . iesa stock lias ' probably been . lost during the past year than la any year line stock raising became aa important Industry of the county, says the East Oregoalaa, Mountain View Correspondence Of Oregon City Courier: Grandma rrost had part of her house painted laat week. , i Elmer Dixon gave hia fenca a new coat of paint quite recently. , McHInnvtlle . News-Reporter: Every nook and corner on most of tha farms Is being cultivated tbla year. Farmers are clearing up tha waste places and build ing straight wire fences Instead of tha crooked rail fences of pioneer days. . A giant fir near Kelleher towers con siderably over 100 feet in the air, Is over 14 feet la diameter at the butt log, and sound as e nut This monarch of the forest will probably- not soon be felled, for the reason that logs from It could aot be converted Into lumber without the logs from It were blasted open. , ..- , Macksburg Correspondence of Ore son City Courier: A friend- of ours claims that oa the north banka of Cow creek. near Russia, be has located the missing link between man and monkey. Ha be came so frightened that since then when ha passes that spot after dark he al ways tmta out his lantern. . . Henry Hereon, says he ia going back to Kurope next eummer to get a frau. i , nam Oglasby seys that after the Japan Russian war la over hs will eendr for a Japanese widow. We'll go cahoots with you, Bam. - Waaco News: W fal that en apol ogy Is due one of our old subscribers and prominent mea toa account of the over sight of an event which to him and his Is of- considerable Importance We filled to announce tha birth of a bounc ing boy to the wife of Mr. Smith last Friday week. We ware sura this item waa In at tha issue succeeding the event but find that wo were wrong, , And, while tha new Is rather old at this time grandpa seems so hilarious 1 over the streak of good luck wa cannot resist tak ing a part In hia hilarity. In fact we feel that he Is entitled to considerable credit as he tells us that he has beta -araiung te ear xor just uus event- The Stenographer ; on Divorce ' : ; ; (By Belle Bltta.) "Have you been reading the report of the Buffalo Bill divorce easel" Inquired the Bookkeeper. .. . '.",-' ' I "Tea." responded tha Stenographer "It's like having a pass Into the Wild West bow.. x-r-y - "The B. Bills seem to have been one couple that knew how to Infuse ginger Into . matrimony," , pursued the Book keeper. "There was no married life dull in thaira." - - : -: .-a - "I should say not" replied the Bten ogrepher. - "Married life was a regular Fourth ef July ptcnlq for them, with anworu ana ooose "AcooraiDg to the" testimony. con tinued the Bookkeeper, "Jealousy drove the lady to drink, and the lady's facility with her tongue caused tha Intrepid In dlaa lighter to All himself full of red eye ao that he couldn't hear her re marka." ; . "They never scrimp thing la the west even . the evidence in a divorce ease," observed the Stenographer. "Well, remarked the Bookkeeper, "there -is a moral for all of us to be drawn from this simple story of the family life of the great scout and his bride". . . - , , - . - "A whole bunch of "em. 7 I should say!" exclaimed the Stenographer. ' "The particular chunk of wisdom to which I refer," said the Bookkeeper, Is the folly of bragging te your wife" "It's sUly and la bad taste to boast to anybody," retorted the Stenographer. ' "True" assented the Bookkeeper, "nut If simply premeditated ulaldeto brag te your wife" ...... . - "It wouldn't do a man much good If he did," Interpolated the Stenographer. "Moat ef the wives . I know have got their husbands sized up to the last balr oa their heads. -That's the reason the majority of husbands sing so small around home Teu eaa't toot off your bora to en eudieaoe that Is due to hand you the merry ha-ha as soon as you get through your performance. "You're a she Solomon, all right,' all light." assented the Bookkeeper; "but where a man butts into real trouble le where his wife believes his swell heed story, aad that's where Mr. B..BU1 lost out. . ' ' ' "It seems that Buffalo Bui suffered from the hallucination that he was as handy at smashing women's hearts as he ia at breaking glass bails. Aooord Ing to the way ha framed it up be was e Ions-haired Romeo that nothing In pettiooata could resist. . He Just had all the calico nypnouseo, -"This was a happy little pipe dream that wooldn't have done any harm If ha had only kent his visions to himself. But he couldn't He couldn't resist bragging to his wife about how all the women, from -queen viotoria up ana down, were hot-footing It after hUa from Crlnole Creek. Wyow to Constant! nople, and Mrs. Buffalo Bill stood for the fairy tale, and it got her golag with Jealousy. And that's whero"tbe shindy be sen." . - "And that's 'no Joke" cried the Sten ographer, "and Buffalo Bill laat the only man Who la chump enough to brag te his wire aeoni -woa a sunns ne makes with the ladles, and who has to par for his bet-air talk. - .- . 1 Know meaty 01 ' wmnoni - nw runty, ordinary looking men wno seep their wives' green-eye ty -relating at home how a peach looked at them across the ear, -or a regular lalapalooaa couldn't eat her dinner at a restaurant for gas- lag at them."- - ' "You'd think a wife would take one look et her husband ana know setter, nhsmred the Bookkeeper. ' "A man eaa always make his , wife Jealous' replied the Stenographer, "be cause she always thinks that other wo men have no better taste tnan ana - nas herselt" . " ' . . ' - "All of which brings me. dock 10 my text Insisted the uooaaeeper. -uai 11 s wise fur wbe never brags to hia wife.. Most women would never be teaions If their husbands didn't put them next by boasting of their ' con nnait-rta" - - V.' "Probably nis who is in" ... . , .... I.JI vlduai wno ditp in, " ...--., aid the Stenographer, eymceiiy. . -mxo BOonmT, Vrtirn-tha NeWTork World. Whether he is foregatnenng wun nis fellow Irishmen or hia fellow Oermena or his fellow Hungarians or his fellow Frenchmen or hia fellow liajiana or nis t,un-m Hnllandere Mr. Roosevelt la equally felicitous. ., 'w What could have been, happier than the little speech he made to the Friendly Bona of St. Patrick last night with, ita tribute to the work of the Irish In build ing up the republic and Its adroit refer- once to the beauties 01 uaeiiw tureT t sure a captious critic might sneer that the president's ' speech . was only a paraphrase of his German speech at the unveiling Ol tna siame ui no erlck the Great For Muhlenberg and Steuben and Herkimer he substituted Rarrr. Montsomerv and BuUlvan. The Irish pioneers were there In plaoe of the Germaa pioneers, in an or substituted for German valor, and Irish Influence for German Influence , But what of thatT 'It was a good sTveech. with plenty of red blood In It and plenty of appeal to American patri otism, along with the familiar exhorta tion that "the beat American la the man who haa In him the , Amencaa spirit the American aout" No matter what nationality Mr. Roose velt ia speaking to he manages to ahow himself in sympathy with Its language, Its . literature. Its traditions, 1U cus toms and its spirit . fiotbing numan is foreign to him, aiM yet stupid people are to be rouna wno cannot unnorinu why he la the moot successful politi cian of his day.,; ...'' ' . . ' . .1 'I s 11 ' ' I SQVABS SBAXi XBT omitlOI. From the Baker City Democrat. Colonel Butcher, who returned yester day from a two months' trip to Wash ington and New York on business but for tha special purpose of securing the return to tha naval academy of hia atep-1 son W. O. Cos. who had been dismissed by the department with two others on account of alleged defective teeth, the other two having been reinstated lent fall, haa a meat Interesting account of hia visit to tell and of the euccesarui termination of hia errand with the de partment of the navy. . . "While I am a Democrat and to that extent must differ with the present administration, I want to say right here and now that If anybody wants a square deal and haa a Juat eauae he can gat it from -President Roosevelt and the department at Washington. I am only a common man, aad a Democrat - aa I aay, but I soon cot Justice when the merits ' et my case were ' explained. Roosevelt Is a man of the people and for tha people and tha members of his cabinet were selected for their fitness for the positions which they hold. There may be aome underlings. In the different departments who are 'not Juat what they AAheold be at ail times aad pa ail nues- tlona, but It your ease la right and you reach tha head it will be takan cere or, and In moat Instance If you can make the subordinate officers understand you it will be taken cars of without bother ing the heads of departments. , "As te general business,' you eaa aay that stocks ia ail lines are eoomina. monev la aaay. there are no eomplalnta and there la plenty of money for : In vestment la the weat especially la mines but the people of money arc more from Missouri you have to show them. In other words, . pro positions must - have merit end wlldoatting : must cease. whether It la mines or ether Invest menta. ..';. -. v .. "I saw many people who knew of Baker City and our mining prospects and who considered we . had many good things out here" , -; ; , . , From the' Edinburgh Scotsman. ' ' ' AY the present time the finest apples from any eutaide source came from Oregon. Borne of the bast ere put up In bushel boxes, containing ISO fruits each. They have sold at various, prices, de pending upon the quality of . the sam ples. These range from 11s to IBs Sot fine specimens.' But ' the largest , ana finest have realised from lis te 10s. sovereign a bus net for foreign apples la February Is remarkable to .say . the least They are Newtowos. Immense la slse, clear-skinned, of high flavor, ana, above alL well graded end attractively pecked. Kaatern states Newtowa Pip nina. nacked In barrels, the best that oould be seat from these centers, have aold for as much as 41a a barrel- the highest price secured . this season, tor Newtowas la barrels, nut wnai is uu sum to SOs e bushel, equal to SOs a barrel T This wonderful difference Is not altogether - duo to ' variations la quality. . Tha small clean. bushel-Dox package plays aa Important part la re enact to erice. - - When .we first ' advo cated tha use of the non-changeable bushel-box by home apple packers, tha question et cost was at once raised as aa objection against its use But that Is of no account when the extra prices Beau red bv Its -use end the decreased cost of transit ere considered. The for elan growers now send us ever 1,000.000 bushel boxes of apples each year. Their see Is found remunerative by them. The prices that have been made for apples already this years are wiinoui naraUel In the trade But yet us foreign fruit-grower does not dominate the altuatloa la this respect exclusively. British apples heve also been aold this year at 10a a half, equal to SOs a bushel, and If tha fruit had been collected end especially graded and packed like the Oregon fruit It would have made higher ericca still. Months ago we gave first and exclusive newe of the actual collec tion and purchase of , these Oregon fruits In the Scotsman. We said that they bad been bought at 10s a bushel la the orensraa or Oregon, yv ens, as iv.vvv bushels were secured. It Is clear there were b'g profits on the deal. At the time wa announced the - purchase tons of home-grown apples were a drug at Is Sd aad la a bushel. These, facts prove the demand -for beet apples la tae British. markets m practically Insatiable at hisn values, even la seasons pf abua- daaoe ' With ao much land -available In the four kingdoms. It la. A. PUy. .that apple planters are pot more busy. As the result, of these high prices great Impetus, will be given to borne produce Industries. The rrult-growing move ment has done much good te country cultivators, and the prospects for ex tended production are certainly oetter than ever. Cold storage . for home grown apples will prove ef undoubted value to all oonnectae wa we easiness. :;V''l''" tUOX MMTU . ' FtOm Pearson'a Weekly. A ceaUemaaly looking man, with the merest suspicion of a Yankee accent has recently been srolng the rounds or tae west end (London) bars end billiard rooms, winning all aorta of queer bets from people who fondly imagine they "knew a thing or two. - One that hardly ever failed , to net him a few shillings er sovereigns, ss the ease might be, he called his "fly wager." He would of rep to bet thai ne oouia make a fly take all the matches out of aa -ordinary stone match stand, suoh ss is generally te be found on the counters of most saloon bars.- As soon aa the money was staked be weuia eetca a xiy from the wall, take It by the two wings and keep putting it en the matches one by one, tha Insect meanwhile picking them up with its legs Instinctively and with almost monotonous regularity. The ehabby genteel man. with the Iron Jaws and the gaunt cheeks, who used to haunt the Fleet street bars and bet un wary wights that he would swallow a beer glass there and then, has lately Joined the greet majority. He died from an overdose of ground glass.' for, of course, he took good ears to pound the tumbler to dust berore attempting to fulfill the terms of hia wagvr the which, by the way, hs Invariably won. A variation of this trick bet however, seema to be riffe In Paris, where a cer tain M. Alexandre offered the other day tn waa-er S.000 francs tf 100) that he would swallow a yard of galvanised Iron atove piping, i Hia .challenge waa promptly accepted by a curious and guileless 'American. Whereupon the Intrepid Alexandre repaired to a white smith, armed with tha piping, which was one-sixteenth of aa Inch la thick ness and five Inches In diameter, with the request that he would reduce It to powder. The request wss promptly carried out .Then, In the presence of the other party to the bet and a couple of wltneeoes, the layer of the wager divided the filings -into five portlona. mixed them Into five "aocas- or larger beer end tossed them off at intervals of 10 minutea. - ! A well-known bookie" recently lost 100 to a comparative Stranger, ' who offered to bet him that he could produce three horses which could go SO miles In three hours. The layer of the wager easily accomplished the feet by alerting all. three horses at once, by which artifice SO miles only wss the distance they bad te traverse In the time speci fied. . -'' :. .-'" ' ! Roger Crab wagered 1 1.000 that he would live for a year oa three shillings and slxnence. and won his bet Indeed, he more than won It for at the end.ef the 11 months he had managed to save threepence out of his "housekeeping money." , his expenditures for food, therefore, averaging Just ever' three farthings a week... For this sum even the cheapest . of ordinary vegetarian diet such aa lentils, for Instance was quit out of tha question, and he had to content himself, with nettle soup thick ened with corn flour, pudding made of bran and - turnip leaves chopped to gether, aad so forth. Tet oa this diet Crab not only survived, but ' actually gained some Tew pounds In weight while as for his general health, he de clared that he bed never felt belter than, he did at tha termination ef his self- imposed ordeal. Oregon Appl es in 5 H ;' v '' v Scotland ;; ' : ; ; I iWaaapniaaaa.,! ai l-llaea,a fa.,''V'aa'-a'lll " 'fl Bet Translations of Classics ; By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory. Dear Sir: WU1 you kindly alve a list of the best English translations per taining to ancient Oreece and Kome for a young man of limited opportunities for atudyT ., ; , Please name tha translations la the' orger of their Importance Yours truly, W. W. WOODWARD. Opinions differ es te what are .the best English translations of the classics. In the present eeae I can only offer the Hat which seems to ma to be the eloeest to the originals, end, therefore, the heat . i. . . :'-. ..,, . Mr. - Woodward asks me to give the tranalations In the order of their 1m- portance, and I would therefore begin With Plato, as I consider him tha most valuable thinker of ancient Greece,, or. or mat matter, of all history. The best translation of v Plate's Dialogues la that of Jowett ' I may also- aay that tha beat trans lation of ArtlstoUe's PollUcs" is by Jowett. The "Ethics" can be , found" in the Bohtt library. ' .' ' . f The prose translation of , the niad" by Lang, Leaf and Myers, and ef the "Odyssey by Butcher, and Lang are, I think, as good as can ie found. ' ' ' 'Of Herodotus Canon Rawllnson' has given, perhaps,, the finest translation. Of the Greek poets I., would es pecially mention: Sophocles, ' Aeschylus. Euripides and Aristophanes one may find fairly faithful translations In. the Bonn library scries. .- ,'r. Thucydides' Brest ' history alsdone Into English" most . fairly - by Smith, though Jowett'a translation la by some eonaidared the better. r'ZTZ r Of Xenephou's - "Anabasis".' and "Memorabilia at Socrates," 1, know of no translations save those la the . Bohn library, r may say that gr A. Grant's lime oook on.Jisnopnon is run of inter, est and Is, la. many respects, better than any mere translation could possibly be Demosthenes greatest speeches, those against Philip, aad those "On the Crown." may be found, excellently trans- letea, in the Bohn library. Ia the same series Horace and Ovid, may also be found rendered into fairly Intelligible English; end la the Bohn library may be found translatlona of Tacitus, a writer that one cannot afford to overlook. I must not forget the greet end good Marcus Aurellus aad hia Immortal TMedlta tlona," translated by Long. . I would aa to Mr. Woodward that tha brigh(young man who wishes to be come acquainted with the thought aad life ef the remarkable peoples bf whom we -are speaking would ao wall to buy. aad read the following works: , ... - V Toe Ancient City." by Coulangee a ; Mi, ar. iwrwn, Q reeks," by Blumner. a', . , "The Manual of Greek and Roman Antiquities.' by Bojeaea: aa old work. but very valuable in its inform all on ' seller's . "Stoles, - Epicureans and Eceptlce" ' .. .v.. j ,v Farrier's "Lectures - on - Greek Phil osophy." - , -. ' .- I mar add that Tor the money that the average young. man spends every two or three months ror cigarettes and beer. one might put upon the shelves ef his library the great Histories of Mommaen and wotet' which would tell Aim practi cally all that la known of tha two mas- ttu peoples of -the eldea time n-Hi ' - ' ' 1 ' 1 1 ii 1 1 '' 1 . 1 mfia t. JClarW an s(WeeSSaaeesBBaafS1 March 17 The wind la till htsH rrom toe n. w tae ice,, which is occa sionally stopped for a few hours. Is then thrown over, shallow sandbars when the river runs. We had all our canoes brought down, aad ware obliged to caulk and pitch very attentively the cracks so common in cpttonwood. QtrUTXOsT. From the Pendleton East Oresenlan. True to Its coarse Instincts, the Ore- goniaa takes every opportunity to throw a slur upon the work of the churches. and Instead, ef welcoming the army of evangelists to Portland tn aa intelligent and friendly spirit it gives Ita -usual snarl. In which la secreted an insult te tha ability and Intelligence OX the peak- ore , " 'Revivalists' are now to shake the whole population of Portland over the perilous edge of hell for some weeks. Soma people will keep their senses. Some win not." - - This Is the welcome ef the Oregonlsn to SO leading pulpit orators end evangel. lata who have aroused tha thinking peo ple ef Denver, Los Angeles, Pittsburg and ether leading cities within the past year. .-. , .-3. , The Oregonlan puts word "revivalists' In quotations, ss If It were a term of re proach. It says most people will . keep their senses, as If It were a dishonor for cltlaens to listen to -the discourses of educated end Intelligent speakers on this one greet' question before the civilised world es If It were -dlsgracefur to be come converted and lead e nobler-life than that found In tha gutter. . Last year the Oregonlan took a stand with the whisky Interests, and it has al ways been Identified with political- cor ruption 1st,, so Ita moral sense Is blunt ed and little more could be expected from It In en editorial way. . . - - - ' Shutting its eyee to the splendid ac complishments of "revivalists" and blinded by egotism to the good that comes through organised effort to uplift humanity, the Oregonlan. wraps Itself up la a sort of skeptical arrogance which recognises nothing good except In Its owa distorted moral code It assumes an lntelilxence and (wisdom apart from the 'gift of God In furnishing tha tnirutine mind ana tne puising neart. If people apeak of sacred things, they will not '"keep their senses, in the es timation of the Oregonlan. If they scoff they will be elevated to a high Intellect. ual plane. Compere the wont' or the Oregonlan to that of tha least of the "revivalists" now In Portland. That Is one way to estimate Its Intellectual slse , ;Y ''"v' .-' On Sfaay Osmaks, ' V;' -' From Madame - Once the motorist haa begun to talk. one must be content to listen and admire It Is impossible to get in a word edge wise.-- fret ths motor-manlso ja a much nicer person than the ordinary crank. He -tares one far teea than tha Invufiml, bridge-player, tha good shot ths skillful fisherman, the theatrical expert or the old furniture collector. Wet Veeghty, Merely VaaeUlaa. . From Harper's Bascar. ' . Mother Ethel, you naughty, 'child, what have you been, doing to .'make Charley ery. eot , Ethel I've only -been sharing .my eodllver oil with him. deer mamma. Yea. Said It was se alee.'- - - Agates the stales. " From the Washington Post 1 Bryan Indorses Le Follette, end Cleve land says Cortelyeu Is "all right" Stand back, gentlemen. Visitors are not par te feed peaattU te the elephant.