EDITOELVb EVGEOP THE THE JOURNAL a. jargsoin MCWSPAIT.B. . I'uhlUnef might be drawn for the former that would meet the approval of the su preme court. Ho commends (he in Junction process for certain pur- hi 7 in imiyi 'poses hut th nks it has been greatly ry 8oarty Bwrulna. at Tt. J;rnl fcu Id- - ,. rifth and V.mhlll tri Unrtlaad. Or nvorwrtrki-d ami needs limit InK- 1' mmlmtoo turub th. mull aa aoa-ual erj m ttr. TKLKI'lli)M-MAIM T17S. in 1hn.H111.11i1 r..rhw1 b thla Bomhr. frll tha irilr.r th rt.-nrtff'f nt T" want. fOliKiU.N APVEItllSlKO I! t IKKSKNl ATI VB CrorlaMt'llruJaniln PxtI1 Art-nlitn AW Hruiiawtra PolMlna. 1125 Ktflb Yor; TrlMin It lifting, inuigv 8ibacrlitlo Tnrnit hy mull to nf iilUr is taa CoIImI Butr Cunndi or Mfiico. DillY. On nu fSoo on nioBtb t!MAV. Oh jrf HIS" 1 Onr month PilLY AM) HI'N l A Y. 0. 7r 1T.M I Om ui-nlh Philosophy frlumphs easily over past, and over future evils, but present evils triumph over philosophy. Rochefoucauld. commends the employ-era' liability law, now befuro the supremo court, and the eluht-hour law. herever It Is practicable. Worklimn"'" have reason to be pleaaed with his posi tion on these subjects. On the subjects of forest, ranges the public lands and Irrigation the president dwells at length, and gen- erally tnkes n i s!t 1 u that will meet with public approval. ne inlRht smile at his saylnK that while per sons who are ninkmn groat ionunes by destroying the forests nro d blame, the peonli- who allow this to be done are more to blame, and at the same time fx1 makes no criti cism of the tariff tax on lumber to express an opinion In any given case, than an ordinary cltUen or even physician, yet we think that such questions and the evidence elicited thereby are a good deal of a farco. This conclusion la pretty v ell established by the fact that In almost any murder case similar to that of Thaw or Mra. Bradley, the alienists themselves diametrically disagree. The prosecution and the defense can always find an equal Lett erf m 7 . mm i m m . w- aa sa a -m - i 1J Councilman Daker Erplalna. Portland, Or., Deo. I. To the Editor 01 mi journal: "That a lie whloh Is half a truth la ever me blackest or Ilea: That a lie whloh la all a lie may be met and fought with outright; But a He which la part a truth la a harder matter to flgfet." -Tannrson. In your leading- editorial of Sunday RUBBER BAND MORALITY you quote me as having stated at the iiiDouiia: or ma council laai w as followa IH).VT FX) R (JET rOKTL.lND. TROUDIX)US. panicky time A has been expected and pre- dieted for several years. It had to come. At the gait a good many people were overriding prosperity It was Inevitable. But now that It has come, and has been pretty well sized up, and It is seen that it cannot amount to any pro longed period of serious depression but la rather a "flurry" net a win ter, but only a summer storm the country will be all the better for Its happening. It will have cleared the atmosphere. ''There will have been .aorne damage and loss, but nothing that will be appreciable to the coun try as a whole a year or two hence, and for awhile to come prosperity ' will be ridden less recklessly. This being pretty well understood as the general fact of the situation, Portland and by "Portland" we mean every organization and person of potentiality should turn its at tention more away from this passing Bquall, and toward some of the large things that it should be constantly ' striving to accomplish. It Is to be hoped that money for various needed and projected improvements will be available early next year, but until It Is we shall have to wait with what patience we may; but the general Idea of making Portland the most w hich hns encouraged and nlded this dest ruct Ion. There are a Merles of cssavs of considerable' length, one good one on the importance of farmers In a country. Jn tho execution of the laws, the president says, thero are two great evils, sentimentality and technicality. The first must be rom ertled oy an awakened public con science, tho second (alas!) by legis latures, courts and lawyers. Improvement of waterways Is com mended, of the Mississippi In par ticular. A good word Is said for the Seattle fair. The parcels post and postal savings banks are recommend ed. The Philippines and Porto Rico are dismissed in two brief sentences. As to the first, Taft will report; as to the second, "I again recommend citizenship for the people of Porto Rico." There will be the usual differences of opinion about the message. II seems a rather labored effort In large spots, and Is twice as long, at least, as there Is any need of. But with most of It the people generally will agree that Is, the very small min ority who read It. RIVERS AND HARBORS CON GRESS. A' beautiful city In America should be kept constantly in mind, and no op . portunity missed of doing whatever can be done in that direction. When monetary matters return to a normal condition; when the courts have passed upon the bend propo sition, and when finally the required bonds have been sod, Portland can mbve forward more rapidly than heretofore. But everybody need not sit with folded arms even now. Mun icipal destiny comes not altogether by nature; vigilance and epterprlse must play their part. JUST AS EXPECTED. THE PRESIDENT has expressed himself so often and so fully in public that there is little that Is novel in his message. He aid about what everybody knew be forehand he would say. The so called panic has given him a ' lead er," and in the opening portion of the message the large moneyed, cor poration and Industrial interests may discern signs of moderation or con servatism, though there is really no retrogression from the policies he has pursued in the past. At most, he only emphasizes what he has often said in favor of being "sane and safe." The president urges that the fed eral government should control not only railroads but other interstate corporations. He advises some changes in the interstate commerce Jaw, particularly one allowing rail roads to make combinations as tc rates, under government supervision. On the currency question he quote? nd .reiterates his recommendations Of last year foran "emergency" or an "asset" currency. This, issued imder strict government supervision, and heavily taxed, 6 or 7 per cent, he thinks would infuse elasticity into the currency system, so that in time of stringency it would expand, and when the asset notes were no longer urgently needed the tax would force them out of circulation. He does . not press this scheme, however, evi dently realizing that the currency Question is not his stronghold. . The country is definitely committed to the protection policy, the presi dent says, j--hut he thinks the tariff should be. revised every dozen years or so, as a purely business matter and independent of party politics He baa nothing to say, however, as to the present excessive schedules, or their connection with trusts and monopolies, and . he would have no tariff revision till after the next presidential election,' 1 An income tax and an inheritance tax are advocated.'especlally the lat ter, and he Intimates that - a law it NOTHER congress besides The Congress will meet In Wash ington this week, namely, the Rivers and Harbors Congress It can enact no legislation, but can and will exert an Influence on the Congress in support of llber support for the improvement of the country's rivers and harbors. It will insist, and will present convinc ing reasons for its position, that the Congress appropriate not less than $50,000,000 a year for a period of not less than 10 years for this purpose. This proposition is gain lng ground In the country, and the demand for large and regular river and harbor appropriations will be come irresistible. The Panama canal will no doubt be a great benefit to the country, but the same amount that it will cost expended on the Improvement of our rivers and har bors, within the same time, would be of far greater and more direct benefit. The project for a canal from the Great Lakes to the Gulf, and for adequate Mississippi river levees, which it is understood the president will advocate in his message, is so extensive as to be in a class by it self. Though in a sense local, the locality it will benefit is so great that the whole country should unite in support of it, andit the same time should insist on The improve ment of other rivers, and the con struction of other canals, and the Improvement of harbors, to a far greater extent than has been done heretofore. We of the Pacific northwest, and especially of Oregon, are particular ly Interested in this matter, we ad mit. We want the Columbia river opened up as fully and as rapidly as possible. We want the govern ment to help open up the Willam ette at Oregon City. We want Coos, Tillamook, Yaquina and other har bors Improved. If members of con gress look only at our present pop ulation, they will not be inclined to vote this money. But they must be made to understand what this great region is, and given a glimpse of what it is to be. Oregon has been prominent In the work of the rivers and harbors con gress. Portland has done more to get it into action than any other city. Oregon needs earnest and first class work done in her behalf in congress this winter. We must "keep everlastingly at it" until our rivers are opened up to commerce. number of equally eminent alienist who will answer the hypothetical question to suit the lawyer asking it. How thon la a Jury enlightened by such testimony? Is not a Jury rnthr mystified and befogged by such evidence? Nor Is there need of aueh evidence even to comply with the provlalons of law, for a Jury never pays any attention to the law of insanity as aimlied to tho case In hand. What tho Jury considers Is the facts; It Is Influenced by popular aentlmeat occasionally a little by a lawyer'a plea; and lastly by the leaning, if there be any. of the Judge. We doubt if. In ono case In a dozen a dingle Juror forms an opinion In consequence of testimony given by alienists in answer to a hypothetical question embracing the detailed clr cumstances of the case, including biographies of the defendant and all his ancestors and relatives. The principal facta, that could be presented in a few hours, are all that the Jurors care to know, or need to know. In such a case as that of Mrs. Bradley they care nothing about these technical opinions as to Insan ity. Most such evidence Is some thing worse than a waste of time and money. A SOLAR rLEXUS BLOW. C OMMENTINO on the high price of print paper the Oregonlan remarked: - "One of the consequences of tfte high price of paper, therefore, will be improvement or elimination of poor and flashy Journalism. The paper that sells for one cent, or even for two cents, can't afford to use up 60 much paper for gaudy display. The class of Journalism which they represent will sober down." In this statement the Oregonlan hits its evening edition a solar plexus blow, for that paper Is addicted to "gaudy display" and is sold at cents a week, or less than 2 cents a copy. It must "sober down" if the Oregonlan writer is correct in his hypothesis. The Journal will continue to be sold at 2 cents a copy on the streets or 10 cents a week, delivered by car rier. "Kvarv Ranubllran In th city council ahoulrf vota la nir thla monav. Thaaa mm wera unpointed undr a Republican adinlnlxtratlon, and a HnpublU-ana wa owa It to ourselves to tea that thla money la paid." What I did ay waa to thla effect: "I am a believer In the civil aervlca pro vtnlona of the charter of the city of Portland, nnd with all due rpect to mjr Democratic brwthren I call attention to the fact that one of the areatest cham pion of the civil earvU-e waa Urover Cleveland. The can be no quaatlon but what theae men ware removed with out any rauae Juatlflable by the city charter, of which city charter hla honor, the mayor, clalma to be a atrona: advo cate. Theae detectlvea were removed with out chargea, and In order to auataln the aharter of the city of Portland ttaelf and protect the civil acrvke provlalona thereat. It Is the duty of every Repub lican member of thla council to vote for thla ordinance. It la manlfrat that a child can see a distinction between the excerpt which you print and the actual atatement l made. You endeavor to mnke my apeech one of party polltlce almply, while wnai I actually aaid waa In aupport of From the 8t. Paul Newa. Here's a rubber band. The distinction of a rubber baad la that It etratehea. It will fit Juat aa well around a tea cup aa It will around, a child's building block. Dlfferencea of alae and a nape are nothing to the rubber band. It accemmodatea Iraelf to many ahapea ann raany eiaee. Our Ideaa of morality are very much nay, ao many ruooer Dan as. They atretclrf You wouldn't call youraelf a cheat Then why didn't you remind the conduc tor of your fare thla morning? You can't get out of It by laughing about It or aaylng that It a a good Joke on ma aireeicar company, or tnat 11 duean't amount to anything. It waa a fraud. You know It. You airetcned your rubber conaclence. You wouldn't admit that you were a Mar. Than why didn't you tell your wife the truth about laat night? Yon can't get out of that either, by aaylng that what aha doean't know won't hurt bar. You can call It com mon aenae, or policy, or a white lie, but you know what It waa. A man la not a perjurer, but he will go Into court and wltneea the beat he ran for hla frlend'a aide. A aaleaman la not diahoneat, but he mlarepreaenta hla gooda. The prealdent of a corpora tion would acorn to pocket the dollar bill you dropped, but he haa not the least acruple aaalnat overcharging you for what ha furnlnhea. It la hardly considered discreditable any mora for a 'Rah for tha weather, whatever It is. a e Look mora for tha good, leas for the bad. man to beat tha city on hla taxea. The government la tha legitimate victim of anybody who can get the beat of It. Lewd book a are banished from our bomea. but we oend our children to pack the theatr for a matinee of 'Iris, aoma men paae tha plate on Sunday and sell ahort weight the reat of tha week. Marsuerlte In tha opera la lovely; In Ufa we wouldn't let bar come to the I i accept olearing-houae certificates. back door. A anee-iengtn oau r"" santa llaua. " Now woo aaya Bryan la a calamity, howlar? . ' . , . e a - There might be worae boaaea than Vncie joe. 4 would be aa lmmodeat aa a decollete r-athlag ault. We would never rpb a blind man. but let him ba careful If. ha baa two eyea. We profnaa to deafflne the ward heeler, while wa make no ae oret of the fact that wa are buying votea just aa clearly aa If we bargained for one vote, one dollar. Tha drunkard In the gutter la dlaguatlng; tha drunk ard In the dining-room la our honored friend and aaeociate. The petty crim inal of tha police court la an outcaat. the woman of tha atieet la unapeakabln; but our doora are wlda open for the fHihlonable beauty whoee name la a by word, and for the moneyed man whoao Ufa la a atlnk In the noatrlla of ao- clety. We Introduce them to our wivee and watch our youngeat daughter go out to dinner on nia arm. we miarepre- aent. Indulge, compromise, am, ron, cheat and lie and we do. all of them without nermlttlna- ouraelvea to ac knowledge that we do them at all. . When you ail aione. in quiet, ano meaaure your morality, nieaaure n fairly. Vr llkelv von ran't uae a ralr of acalea or a quart cup or- a yard atick. Hvt.any of theae would be better than a rubber band. Who haa mora trouble than a nrofaa. alonal funmaker? a The uaual number read tha mcsaage. of people won't any up lH-mocrata and Republicans hat aua- Aiier experimenting ror some months with a morning edition, the Seattle Times will give it up and confine itself to its evening edition which has always been' a great suc cess. The evening paper, particu larly in this far western part of the country, is what most people want and they prefer, besides, one that is not a mere afternoon edition of morning paper. An alienist decided that Mrs Bradley was some years ago an ab normal woman and therefore insane because she took an. Interest in poli tics. But we hope that it is not to be concluded that all female woman suffragists are Insane. Says the Philadelphia Telegraph: "It is said that President Roosevelt deposits his salary in a bank as soon as he receives it. You can't blame Teddy when you look at some of the people that hang around the White House." Why the Kleinschmldt case should be compared or likened to the Dur- rant case is not apparent. There Is no similarity whatever between the two. I ALIENISTS' TESTIMONY. N THE TRlAh, of Mrs. Bradley, the alienist answering a hypo thetical question of 15,000 words,! is to the fore again. Without denying or doubting that men wbo have made a study of mental diseases and have had much experience in j diagnosing them, are better qualified Again the land fraud and other federal cases are to be tried right away, according to report. We shall see. A Fancy From Fontenelle. The Rose In the garden slipped her bud. And she laughed In th pride of her vouthful blooa. And she thought of the Gardener stand ing by "He is old no old! and ho soon must die." The full Rose waxed In the warm Juno air, And she spread and spread till her heart lay bare; And she laughed once more aa she heard his tread "He is older now! He will aoon be dead!" But the breeze of tho morning blew, and found That the - leaves of tho blown Hose strewed the ground; And he came at noon, that Gardener old. And he raked them gently tinder the mold. both tain. The detectlvea were removed Illegally and without cause, which latter ract waa admitted by the mayor anil waa made a matter of Judicial record by the declalon of Judge tieara, from which no appeal haa ever been taken. I called uoon my Republican brethren In the council to auataln the charter and do that wh ch Mayor Lane and hla caninet of legal advlaora In the chamber of com merce were unable or too atiorisigmeu to do. In rullinv out the aentencee which vou uae aa a text to vour editorial, you adopt he ancient aubterfuge and one aided argumfnt by culling from a per aon'a remarka aentencea which build up straw man In order to knock him down by argument. Preliminary to tha atatementa whlcn I actunlly did atate, le. me review rhe torically that in the early part or iu. Mayor iJtne. without authority of law. discharged, without warrant or author ity, aome five or six detectlvea of this city. No charcee wera Drougni againsi them aa nrovlded bv the organic munic ipal law, and no action waa taken be fore any Doara or iriDunai no even m executive board appointed and subject to removal by the mayor) nd nothing waa done even after Judge Stars, aa circuit Judge, decided that the action of the mayor and hla attorney-general, ThomHg O- Greene, waa absolutely void and without any pretence of being legal. From thla decision no appeal waa taken by the said authorities, and In effect decided that the detectives were entitled to their aalarica. Every grand iloquent outburst of authority on the part of Thomaa O. Greene, or Council man Vaughn, or his honor, the mayor, with reference to the Incompetency of the detectlvea. only makca the procea- ure with reference to tho attempted re moval more reprehensible, for the rea son that the blacker the record of the detective the mora 'pertinent la the Inoulrv why the mayor and Greene aid not prefer chargea against them. It la a nara case oi proving ioo mucn, The chargea against the detectlvea are even now and have been for the past two months pending bcrore the execu tive board for decision, and after over nearly a year and a htlf the first tribu nal who should have tried tho casea of the detectives haa it under advisement nnd la apparently unable to reach a con-clualon. The civil service laws of thla city clearly and briefly provide the ways and means to remove all employee in tha subordinate administrative aervlce of the city. Mayor Lane and his cabinet have been vociferous champions of civil service when It has aulted their pur poses to prevent appointments by the council, or to either keep or discharge various employes. In the detectlvea' case the civil aerv lce laws and rules have been thrown to the winds by the mayor and hla ad visors, and it was not until the past few months that he finally resorted to the civil aervlce regulations to .sustain his discharge of the detective force. Mv remarks were addressed In sup port of the civil service rules and called upon the Republicans to do that which the Democratic mayor waa not only re fusing to do. but was adopting illegal and high handed methods to circumvent. Respectfully. GEO. L. BAKER. (U ! e-ratlfvina- to find in Council man Baker mich an ardent champion of the civil service provisions of the char ter. But he does not deny that his re marks on this topic were followed by the appeal quoted In yesterday's edito rial, to-wlt: "Every Republican In the city council should vote to pay this money. These men were appointed un der a Republican administration, and as Republicans we owe It to ourselves to see that this money Js paid." It was to this lans-UHB-e that The Journal took exception, and still takes exception. The Injection of Dsrty polities' into the de liberations of the citv council, and par ticulars Into a ouestion involving the expenditure of the taxpayers' money is unwarrantable and inexcusable. If Councilman Baker wishes to avoid the suspicion of "playing politics" In the disbursement of city funds he must re frain from such partisan appeals as that quoted. The Palsy of Congestion Issued by the Dubllcltr department the National Rivera and Harbors congreaa. It I J not alone freight rates tha bring palsied condltlona to trade and commerce. The freight congeatlon brlnga tha greater and the longer en during palsy and the railway Interests no leaa than commercial and manufae turlng Intereata, are now appreciative or the ract. Great and beneficial thouah the est en Ion of railway far II It lea may be. and are, they have been phyalcally and ab- aoluteiy unable to comply witn tne ae manas or tne wonaerrul oeveiopmeni o all Interests In the United States. Tne! officials frankly admit the fact, and are turning to tne inland waterway as m means of rellaf from freight conges tlona than which there could be nothing more completely detrimental to trade ana commerce. The fact that Prealdent James J. Hill of the Northern Pacific, and Prealdent Flnley, of the Southern Railway, have accepted Invitations to addreaa the Na tlonal Rivera and tiarbora congress, a its meet In ir at the New Wlllard. Wash Ington, on December 4. 6 and and will aid In the work of the congreaa In bringing about a fixed national policy of Inland waterway and harbor improve menta. la in Itself one of the strongest possible arguments In favor of the adoption of that policy by the congreaa or tne united Biaiea. xne two ginne- men recognise the existence or a con dltlon which the rallwaye cannot meet, but which can only be met by the can allsatlon of the Inland waterways. It Is a condition which tba whole country haa long appreciated, but a condition which can be made to pass away for all time by aystematlc work of inland wat erway and harbor Improvement, with annual aprpoprlatlona In amounts that will Insure continuous prosecution of the work, speedy completion and full re- Iter irom tne paisy wnicn ireigui con gestlona have brought about. The Errand He was neatly dreased, but bis clotnes were patched, the kid that I mot In the street, Aa I hurried home at midday to the annual Thanksgiving eat. And the wind waa blowing like elxty, with a kind of a frosty sting: The sort of a day you button your coat and walk with a brisker awing. I thought of the Thankaglving daya on tne iarm, wnen i waa a young ater. too. And what they all meant, and looked at the kid and aaid, "This 11 never do: Coma along, old man (I called him) and have' a good aquare with me." But the kid shook his head and kept walking, hair acared, it waa eaay to see. "Coma along now" I caught hia ahoul der "you needn't go shaking your neaa, And "spite of saying 'I dassent," right into the house he was led. Where the women folks fixed up a plate 'a id popped him into a chair. And he, with occasional "dassents," went after his turkey ror fair. When he'd polished his plate ha looked nervoua and clearly wanted to fly. But we choked the youngster'a objec tions with about an acre of pie; He cleaned that pie like a good 'un 'twas pumpkin, tha Old-fashioned kind. , That tastes like a benediction and leaves a rapture behind--And again the kid got restless and said that he dassent stay The child wasn't used to kindness-, I guess; hard words came more in hla way. A Memory of a Lost Delight. From Outing Magazine. A fireplace anyone may have, and to, me the wonder la tnat our civilization has abolished the very soul from our northern homes. Fire Is no longer the Joy of the household, out the slave. lmpriSOn3a in ins ceiiar. jn, out it was delicious, when the old-fashioned family sat together In the great kitchen Hiviimd the huge fireplace. All the evening ve told stories, ato doughnuts, drank elder, all the time paring apples, and hanging the long festoons of quar ters from the beams. Bnt the dear little mother, she it was who told the best stories, whilo she was knitting mufflers and socks, or mending our well worn clothing. There were no farlors at all in those days, and aa for hrummed pinnos, we had not yet heard of them. At 9 o'clock, honest nnd drowsy, we knelt and thanked God for life and love and home. Our bunks and beds and trundle beds were all in close proximity, and from every one of them wo coma see tno names, sun 1timrlng up the chimney while the big firclog was slowly eaten through. There waa not one millionaire In all the world, nd indeed we were not worried over the affair. Here's to the Farmer. By C. H. Carpenter. (Suggested by reading a clearing house certificate or "Wneat Money" Ciiva us your hand, Mr. Farmer, we - nrnhd to know you. We called to you in our distress and right nobly have prosecution In Oregon. The great record But we shut him up In a Jiffy and si lenced all of hla "buts," And fixed him up in an armchair with a lapful of apples and nuts. We kept him snug for an hour and then ha began to cry. And It took us near thirty mlnutea to find out the reaaon why. He said he'd be licked by his father, the poor little trembling wair. And ho ked on crying and crying, though we told him we'd keep him saie Wa pitied the poor little fellow, with such an Inhuman dad, And asked him why he'd be beaten, and he said because tie d been bad. Tha eyes of the women grew tearful as tney sootnea tne poor nine Kia, And I said, "Come on, what's tho mat , ter? Tell us Just what you did." And he sobbed, "The whole family's waltln' and thlnkln' how long I take They'd aent me out when you grabbed me to buy the TUanksgiiin' steak." C. B. Qulncy. t Punish the Land Grabbers. From tho Washington Post. Doubtless the government knows ex actly what It is doing. Perhaps tho puri fication of California politics may be more Important Just now than the pros ecution of alleged land grabbers. It is true that Mr. Heney cannot be every where. He is an admirable man, yet it Is not fair to work him to death. Yet lf he cannot be spared from the political proaecution of Harrlman, It ought to be possible to find some one capable of carrying on the good work of graft Literary Notes By Wox Jones. "Maltbya Millions" la a thrilling story of mystery. Tha central figure, miserly old John Matlby, baa aaved up $1,000,000 from the proflta of hla peanut atand. Hla wealth la all In gold, and Maltby keepa It hidden In a aock under hla chair. Bam Slight la tempted by tba atorlea of Maltby'a wealth and entera the houae In the miser's abaence. After a long aearch he flnda the board on tho floor, but la unable to force the aock. and he la detected by Matlby, who had aold out hlewtock and returned for an other peanut. Then but It would not be fair to the author to tell how 8am reforma and marrlea old Maltby'a beau tiful daughter, who had been entirely forgotten by the miser until Sam drew his attention to her one day In Brook lyn, wnera ane had gone to be alone. Sylvester Souffle, wrfoae lateat book. Topay Turvy," la selling In aome atorea aa fast aa Donteata Blscuita. doesn't like to work In tha morning, and never thlnka of doing anything In the afternoon. Work in tha evening he diallkte very much, and work at night la. of course, out of the queatlon. As a result Mr. Souffle takea a long time to write a long novel. i The Commercial Aspect of tha North Pole" la published by the Yarvard Ro- ciety for Sclentlflo Research. Aa the north pole haa no coanmerclal aapect, tha author haa done better than might have been expected. 'The Advcnturea of Arthur" la a novel of 260 pages, encloaed In blue covers. The currency will be reformed by Ita frlenda of couran. a a Wa tuppoaa Judge Lowell would not consider tha vlca-prealdency. a a A man doean't need to have money to Know all about It. a Lome, Iad Knickerbocker, ehoi your bund and loascn up tha pot. a But ahouldn't an actor have a right to marry aa often aa an act rasa T a "Tha election paaaed off quietly" la a number of Oregon towna yesterday. , ( It's rvrcmber. but there are rosea Itt bloom In Portlund, aa uaual at thla time of year. a a John Hot Air la a prominent Okla homa Indian. Why waan't he aent to the senate? Booka of travel are always Interest ing. Some of the best published thla season are: "Tiffin In Tibet." bv Anglo-Indian: "Through Patagonia In a Wheelbarrow," oy Loon Attic; "Flatbush ttSWIirk Row," bv Explorer: "Bv Alrshln t8tha Pole." by W. W.; "Three Daya In a Broadway vjar, vy Anyone. Booka afford a fine field for the dis criminating selection of Christmas pres ents, iney can De nad to match almost any furniture. Boya wilt ie fascinated bv "Around the Globe." It is a thrilling story of adventures In many lands nnd seas. Kiva boys build an airship which, by the ejection of gaa and by loading with load, can be converted Into a submarine Thev ly to the north pole, dive to the bottom or tno ocean and catch a whale, which tney tram to rouow them bv feed n a It with cans of sardines. When the boys are chased by robbera in the Sahara desert the whale kills the bandits with blow of Its tall. There are manv other realistic Incidents that will stir the blood of any boy so that he will go out and break the neighbor's windows. "Helen Adair" la a novelette of 15. 000 worda. Moat of them have been usea before. And I wove the thing to a random rhvme: For the Rose is Beauty; the Gardener, Time. Austin Dobson. Humane Suggestion. From the New York Sun.' Knicker-My son, thla hurts me more than you. Johnny Well, pa, why don't you take chloroform before you begin? -i'" '-):.'-. .: V-'.'. v , vnu resnonded. Its you, wttn your bumper crops, who have brought the ships from "The Chalk White Cliffs of Albion," to Port land's harbor, who will leave gold for vour produce. We are proudly exhibit ing your world famous apples. Here's to you, Mr. Farmer, your faithful wife, your sturdy sons and rosv cheeked daughters. Long may you live to en Joy the reward of your labor for you have aaved the day theacredlt of Ore gon you've made good. 1 Our Standard of Values. , Richard Baxter. Our estimation of things will be seen In the diligence of our endeavors. That which we hlghliest value, we shall think no paina too great to obtain. I made by Secretary Hitchcock should not be followed by a policy of mere idleness ana oonvion Reflections of a Bachelor. From tho New York Preas. Men do all their writing of love let ters before they are married; a woman can keep it up forevejn,, -The most lmportantthlng about' woman's eyea is they can say so much without meaning a bit of It. ' When a girl's hair is nice and ourly sheanever haa any religious doubts. The harder It is raining tha aUrer a girl who haa to be out In It is it won't hurt her best atockings. A woman doesn't have to bo Very good to ba better, than the beat man that Uvea. Three tone sold In two daya. "Troy Tenor, the Cowboy." Order It now with your winter coal. Second edition of 10 tons now ready. "Troy Tenor Is a character that grins the reader like a door closing on your inumo. cook weeaiy. "There are no flies on 'Trov Tenor. the Cowboy.' ' Henry James In the Evening Ghost. order a hundred weight for vour fam. lly. Advt. Josef Lhevlnne's Birthday. Josef Lhevlnne. tho celebrated nt. nist, was born in Moscow on December is, nis xatner Delng then a mu clan In the imperial orchestra of Ma native city. From his father the lad received his first musical instruction. At the age of 6 he began to take les sons from Krlsander, a Swede, remain ing with him five years, durlnar whU-h period he made his first public appear ance in Moscow. At 11 ho begun his tudies In tho Imperial Conservatory receiving at his graduation In 1892 a gold medal and the hlchest hnnnr rne next tnroe summers ho sp&nt In the Caucasus, chiefly for the benefit of his health, but continuing his studies at the same time. In his fourteenth year he waa invited by Rubinstein to play at one of hla orchestral concerts in Moscow. At Berlin, In 1895, ha was victorious in tne nrst competition for ine ftuuinsiein prize, wnicn is offered every five years. Since then he hns given concerts in all parts of Europe mm Auirui aim iur live years ne has been a professor In the Imperial Con servatory at Moscow. This Date in History. 1512 Tho British admiralty office es tablished by Henry VIII. 1751 George Cabot, who was presi dent of the Hartford convention born In Salem Mass. Died April 18, 1823 1777 New Jersey's first newspaper Issued at Burlington. 1810 Mauritius taken by the English 1839 Frederick VI, of Denmark died succeeded by Christian VIII. ' 1865 Railway communication opened between Hamilton and Toronto, Ontario 1863 -Genoral Longstreet raised the siege of Knoxville. 1866 Great reform demonstrations by London trades unions. 1881 Electric street liarhts lnfrn duced In Philadelphia. 1894 Leon Abbott, ex-governor of New Jersey, died. 1897 German marines .took nnuKi. sion of Kiao Chan, China. Real Estate News. j From the Toledo Blade. A man in Newcastle. Indiana, sold some real estate and waa paid $1,100 In casM. He was a smart man. He would not truat the banka. He hid th bills In bis wife's- atocking and hid the stocking under the bureau. Then he felt safe. There waa a boarder In the house. The boarder needed money, Ho found the stocking, likewise tho money. Now the man of the house cannot find the money. Ho Is also out a boarder. The boarder, likewise. Is out . Germs for Ours. We'd rather risk the danger When we fool around a miss. Tot there's nothing any stranger Than a disinfected kiss , ' i- ,. : ; ; . .. ' Per nape we Will learn that wa enuM get along without ao many courta and ao much lawlng. a What aeema to be needed In New York Is a divorce of tha banka from Wall street speculation. a a The Republican nartv Isn't roallv mm bad aa aome people might Imagine from the Oregonlan leaving 1L The baby king of Spain haa been made a military officer, lie haa been up In arms nearly ever since he waa born. a What the Ktigene Guard doean't knew about "the financial altuatlon" would make. In quantity, a preaidentlal mea aage. Future generations. If they read about preaent-day trials in our oourta, will wonder that we called ouraelvaa civil ised. a Perhaps Secretary Taft la hurrying home to find out what Is the matter with Cleveland and Toledo. Why couldn't they be good, like Cincinnati? And Is this J. I'. Morgan, whom tha f resident consults, the same to whom 'resident Cleveland aold the bonds? Yea but ho waa a Democrat then and la a xiepuuucan now. a a It waa long ago that a man named Eplctetus said what la Juat aa true today: "None, therefore, who feare or grlevea, or worries, or who Is anxious 1 free; but whoever la released from grlefa and fears and anxieties Is by that very thing released from alavery' Oregon Sidelights Myrtle creek now haa an electric light plant In operation. ... , Fine English walnuts are alsOralsed around Myrtle Point. y. A Cottage Grove man will set out a pear orchard of 35 acres. Good beef Is obtained from the range tho year round In Curry county. A 00-acre ranch near Jacksonville la to be cut up and sold In small tracts. For the first time the attendance at the La Grande public schools exceeda 1,000. a There have been at least 15 people in town this week looking for houses to r,ent. says the Jacksonville Post. a A Payette man raised over 600 tur keys, herding them like sheep. They averaged, when dressed, 20 pounds each. Clatsop county, cluims an Astoria pa per, has fuel oil, Illuminating gas, pot ters' clay, and Iron sand. In endless quantities. . w A couple named McBrlde, living near Weston, have eight sons living, and 56 grandchildren, who assembled at Thiinkagivlng, according to a Walla Walla paper. Daisy Dell correspondence of Toledo Leader: Salmon are ao plentiful now in the small streams that empty Into the ocean, that the school children catch them with their hands. Toledo Leader: We hereby offer an apology for the blank look which tha Leader hns this week, but owing to yes terday's holiday and the editor In chief eating too much turkey, he Is alck abed today. . It la most gratifying news to tho people of Grants Pass, and particularly those interested in mining In Josephine county that the American Gold Fields company will sqpn resume operations on Its big Grantte Hill mines of Louse creek district, says the Courier. Hood River News Letter: Mosler de serves all that may be said of her ad vantages ns a fruit aectlon and haa so rfamAtiBtrotail rn mnr. than nntk ni. casion. And now that they have a com- J merclal club organization, with wide- I awake and progressive men at ita head, we may reasonably look for Others to take note of her resources. a a There are no further developments regarding the recently discovered out flow of xule Lake, although there are many stories afloat concerning the same. They range from a spouting stream' 100 feet high down at the head of Fall River to a slight overflow at Scorpion Point, says the Klamath Falls Herald. Probably the report that tho lake would go dry was mostly based on imagination. The Myrtle Creek prune will be eaten by more people this year than ever be fore, and throughout a wider scope of old earth's area, says the Hall. One car went to London, England, by way of New York, five went to New York, four to Chicago, two .$ St. Louis, 1 to Milwaukee, ono to Pittsburg ono to Portland, Maine, and four to Albany, and ono to Roseburg. Of the first dry Sunday In Condon the Globe says: Although 'the wind blew, the rain descended and the floods came' it was hard to realize at that mo ment the town was "dry." Scores of ' men promeijaded the streets all day with tho hooe that some miracle mltrht open a welcoming door wherein a solo f ame might break the monotony , and hua end that awful feeling of loneli ness. The only tning to do was for tha homeless' wanderers to gather in groups and talk over the situation ona of a lost home. Towards evening the unen became 'more composed, tho gathertaiga broke up and ono by ono these wander ers wended their way to seek; rest and slumber. - . Encouraging. From the New- York Sun. The cftmel regarded the eye of tha needle. "Go on," encouraged the rich man. "Suppose you had to get through a re volving door." -V Thus indeed do we see that hope springs eternal. ( a