rr cWrvav tnTTPMAT. PORTLAND. ." SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 1, 1911. THE JOURNAL fJL . IACKSON ,. i . .. . . ftnntarl lad AuhUt at TH Jr?al Bulla-., j, - TUXh ,m of the Ontario Agricultural College, who has "district representatives as assistants, and under, their efforts rwmunni wmditioM nave been Ill Uvu 'lUlJ-'lViwu . . "An office for each dismcijrepre ha ut Action. One confessed its branches Is denied entrance., jn- a T-.-. rtmo Min farm, that ha sold his vote to the Republl- terest In and work for every variety Andover" ' - - -cans for J20, then to the Democrats 0: social service is. refused on ape- rarm butter. Fresh three times for iz, ana imauy goi a cious yieas, earnal Build-. ... ,j1 ,, reading trt; PoriUM. or. ibeuiauTo ,o rctui, - i i. -w,ir..wtth h best farm lit- - . iniui cu uiuuvu . . .... Pnfiiain. ur.. - " - . l.r" W--u erature, and -instruments rormaxing jmmt. . . . - Mpmnngf rations, testa, etc Here the i.rnoNKS-- nim. nri; Hon, farmer may come and bring his prob- a ! r?r? "'.J7 V.t. lcma for solution, special euorc u - Sell tlM open, tor bnen advietisiso JE.!" ...bIb Kenaor 'To.. BronwlHk Bolldlnf, Imii uw. New lork; Mw- Buyc nut forth -to devote the energy of the establishment to the needs of the community and solve the problems nonllnr in it local itv. The district ta3SliV. jreprescnUtive Is in constant touch who me agricultural cuwcso, uvu ' M which he receives continual encour .$ .a I agement and assistance. He frequently undertakes an-ex- Yet now, on the cross a week Price per pound. Prize $3 from some-other source, making ing of the line jbetween the old year taken af the county; fair. " Address a .totaj'of 3tf received for the exei-1 and the new, the' quiet, Question Henry Hart, Clover farm; Aylesbury.!, else of a sovereign citizen's franchise. COmes to him too, la my present - "v-a.z.fohin. - Tiwh daiiv ' Prices And a in Adams county,; the Adams life worth living? ' ,.' -'v' moderate. titles . ' needed. Name ainas ana quau coumy yvvv1 ucvi t William of thn counties of Ohio. - Address Grimes, Ouildford road, uorKing." And so oiL ? ' The city dweller reads these ad- Life to be worth living must be Can any self centered life year. .fB.on I Otm moath. SUKDAT. Out jreM.....'...i.60 I Oo DAltT AND SOKflat. On fir.. ...... T.60 I Omtmopta. .$ .65 THE NEW YEAJR. a cursion through the remote parts of I the county to consider the diversified 18011 requirements, stock and seed rE OF OREGON swing off Into judging, and fruit growing. In this the new year with abounding ; way the individual problems of the anticipation. No evu omens are in the sky a'nd no hostile ; home place. Special- endeavor is fleets menace our shores. Our fields ,.maae to gam me iBieyi.-i and orchards are comparatively free; young men and the boys., Tlie or from the blights and pests that some- iglnal six offices have been added to i.. hnri nn rrona other- from time to time .and there are now V4AJ4V-0 in; j vertisements, enters into correspond- ty-in the pure Fallot and purified ence with the farmer, and tries his , processes in uregoui ,y goods. If satisfled.the arVangement; Oregon once had a corrupt leglsla lasts. If not pleased some other ad- ture and a eorrupt system of poU vertiseT is tried, and-theif name is! tics. Few states drank more deeply legion. i in the putrid pool of boss govern- The function and cost of the mid- ment. 1 Few states brought, on ,a die man or commission bouse dlsap-j brood of shadier politicians and suf pear,.so far as the two Immediately ! fered more in shame and scandal ito,.eM aM Mnramgit Fresh from their performances. Few states is it in such dejsradations of the deserve, the word? , . Contrariwise citizen that our critics see j safety, the, avenues for contact with the, while seeing catastrophe and calami- - worlds of. family life," of social ser vice, of literature and art,, and of beauty within' and outside ot . the home must be kept wide open .and unobstructed.; It has been said that who has. the 'widest,"tthe most num erous, Interests, each In its balanced place and ratio, he maces most out of the life hev leads. . . : ," V Every reader 'can meet these sug gested thoughts as to his own self country produce reaches the table of had legislatures more debauched and seems best. Self Inspection, or. rath- . .... 1 J1 .! frHMA InlnnUnna 1 . 1 A I L M ' 1 1 ' J where, and our people, as is denoted t fifteen Jbf the low death rate, are more ireo from dipoaiio than almoot any other - locality in the world. 4 We have material wealth almost eyond'that of any other region, one Agricultural county boasting, a per aplta holding of more than $2000, and the state as a whole standing at $1250 per capita. We have mountain "jieaks and ranges, whose grandeur of scenery mingling with the Inter vening stretches of valley lift men's thoughts to higher ideals and1 make jtbem stronger and better, broader nd nobler citizens. ' . We have forest areas on which stand one-fifth of the timber of the Ration, and orchards with apples and pears tbat are the premiers of the markets and sought for their excel lence throughout the world. We have rivers, more of them than almost any other state, on whose bosoms there Is room for. a whole nation's commerce, and from whose "we"lake In fish an annual i revenue ot several nlHlontuWe have If Canada, after four years of trial still pursues It, there must be virtue In the policy. v It shows how the na tions recognize the soil as the begin ning of all, and are striving to con serve and" renew It The process is by putting experts among those who till. To teach tbem the best and most tbat is known to scientific tillage.- . The United States government through agricultural colleges and the department of agriculture is "working in the same endeavor. Its experi ment stations are an agency in the same behalf, but from this consular report, It appears that Canada Is a long way In advance of us in spread ing the gospel of scientific farming. THfi SHEEP-HERDER. HE SHEEP, in all aspects, is the topic of the coming week in this city of Portland. There will be added to our continuing Interest In one of the main products T tf f h o raniraA anI 9n vm a r9 Cvarrrry ftHAturfl lands nn which hv fortiinata ' T" r j j , . ithe opportun ty ox gathering wisdom combination of foods and skies, roam r; ..' . L iu liic uii vuuf; ii vip ui eA)fl l 111 lilt) j the finest forms ofllveatock, yielding the best wools, mohairs, mutton and - beef that reach, the markets. ' We have in our mountains a poten tial force In water power capable of Jnovlng all the wheels of an indus v trial mplre, and . of incomparable "'value. in producing vealth and furth- - erlng- "clyfllzatlon. We have a cli mate In which we do not have to wrap the thermometer in a blanket ( ' in winter or keep it in the refriger- - ator in summer. In all the essentials ihat make for , tinman comfort and happiness we are blessed beyond compare. There are , excellent elementary schools for all of the more than 2000 districts, and - "churches in every ; neighborhood. ' Tttara (a nrAKaKlw a mam Annal fhft r.onsnmer: at nrices satisfactory i legislation more iniquitous t0 Dotn, " But, from all that, Oregon isree. The postofflce may possibly need! Nowhere are" elections more orderly,, more help. But In many cases the and voting less, the' subject .of inter rural delivery cart bridges the gap ference. In his Journey to the polls between the farm and the railroad no Oregon voter is halted or hailed station without any additional ex- and besought for his vote. A cor- pense. Irupt practices act rejected by a leg- Many farmers will naturally pre-' Mature and enacted by direct legis fer to join their neighbors in coop- lation makes the Oregon voter the erative ownership of a distributing fmtht nuvumlgu ln therexerclse of house or agency in a neighboring ie irancnise in me wormr city. But others , will be more than satisfied with the independent, rela tions with the individual consumer. ASIATIC TRADE FOR TnE ORIENTALS. A- JH ORGANIZATION, called the "Pan Aalntlr-. Association ' was announced In the papers of December 30th to have been formed In Tokyo, for the avowed ob ject of securing a monopoly of Asi atic trade for the Orientals. This is the expression of a grow ing Impulse In one Oriental nation after another to exclude Occidental nations, without "exception, from trade with Japan, China, India and other Orientals, so far as coopera tion between poweriul organizations of native merchants inthe Eastern lands can effect It. This Jealousy has been long In ev idence. A direct primary law rejected by the legislature and enacted by direct legislation enables the citizen to elect to the legislature- representa tives who represent, and in whose collective aetion, made virtuous by fear of the referendum, the people have real representative government. er Introspection, "Is an alluring and dangerous habit,' If Indulged; But once a year, at; any rate, it may be excused. One may convince oneself that the life " we lead need not be ' l v - J i i j j ooiiuudi cuuugeu, - lek it ia uuueuia- ble that for many of ua the new year should call ug to less selfish,; more considerate, more wholesome lives; And so endeth thli iirst lejsoa. ' - -. . There are people in Massachusetts whevthlnlr thoyernor-elect Poss should have been named Fuss. TRUST CRIMINALS TO JAIL. - You will-have to bd ''an obserrant person to notice tKiT' lengthening of the days. . w possible for her jopl ta corroct any rrors they may find, and to direct their government. She has also adopted the recall, which make it possible for her to turn out thoee officials who betray their constituents. She is keeping pace with the time. She baa inserted other good provision in the constitution, but above all and beyond all, she has re served' control and can mak,e her gov ernment wht she.wanu.it to db ana can coerce ; her public servants into obedience to those whom they serve.. ' V Little Boy Blue, the little toy do Is covered' with dust, But sturdy and Stanch he stands; And the HtUa toy soldier , is red With rust- ' - ""And his-musket' moulds in his hands. Tims wsjkWhen the UtUs toy ?of was new; - ' . v- And the soldIer,,was passlnr fair; And that Was the Urn when our Little v v' Boy BlU -A - f- ' ; A Kissed them .and put them there. "Now,1 aen'rrc ( till I cotnO he said.. "And don't you make any noise!; -So. toddling off, to his trundle bed, He dreamt of the pretty toys r ' And, as he was dreaming, an angel song Awakened our Little Boy Blue t Qhl the years are many, the years are Butithe iittis toy friends are true. ' Xy faithful to UtUe Boy Blue theyj . alarm, -. ' Each in the same old plaee' , Awaiting the touch of a little hand. The smile of , a, little face;. . And they wonder, as waiting the long years through . In the dust of that . little chair. What has become of our Little Boy Blue . . . . Since he kissed them and put them tilers ( ' , . -Eugene- Field Different From. Any-Bridge Ever 'i s Built Before. , ; f-Tnm Collier's Weekly. 6ns hundred and fifty feet 'above a rushins stream whose depth rendered the usual central supports impossible, News, Forecast of i , : ' Coming JWecl It is the gods, not the men,' who make the years and seasons. DME past criticisms of Attorney- General Wickersham may have to be held unjustified if, as la reported, he is insisting on send ing some of the convicted trust crim inals to Jail. A Washington dispatch reports that In the case of the bath tub trust offenders the attorney-general would not consent to punishment by tines only, but insisted on the law's penalty of Imprisonment also. The effectiveness of a promised term" in the penitentiary or Jail is '; There was never a finer time for a good resolution. Progressive Arizona. From the Commoner. Arieona is progressive. She has not allowed herself to, be terrorized by the threats of the Republican' leaders. She has gone along with her constitution making with an eye single to her own Interests. She has adopted the Initia tive, and referendum the most funda mental of all reforms. This makes It -Washington, DSv 1. The reass bllng of congress and the reconver of the. supreme court, both of wt. bodies are now enjoying the jcustom holiday recess, together with the mt ing of numerous state legislatures i the Inauguration of new governors i combine to make the first week of n nrolific in news ot wide interest importance! ; Congress ,wiu meet Tnursaay to sume its business and the expectation tat the real work of the session be taken up and disposed of with t the (-rapidity . that circumstances permit Evening sessions "of the h.oi srs likely -to be held with a View s facilitating the administration's .js lauve program. t. . ( With Chief Justice White presiffu for the i first time ; and with . the t; new appointees on the bench, the i preme court of the United States convene Tuesday for what, proralne be a highly momentous session. ; Dpc eted for reargumeht at the earliest ( Bible dates are the' all-Important eo, modify clause cases, . the standard ( and tobacco , corporation dissolut suits, and the corporation tax case I .. Following years of agitation and d cusslon, postal . savings - banks ' will come an accomplished fact la thlscoiu try on Tuesday, the first working flu of the year, when the . system ; will Introduced for trial. On that day tti experimental office will be opened i each sUte and territory of the unlc; The offices selected for the trials t all of the second class and In localltit, where conditions , are favorable for postal savings business. During the week the legislatures the following states will meet for the: regular- sessions: California, ColoraAj Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Illinois a steel bridge, differing in construction Indiana, Maine. Massachusetts, Mlds, from any built in the past. Is i T.TI ... .v. .. . rj.hn braska. New Hampshire, Ne..' Tori completion for the use of the Idaho & Washington Northern railroad. It Is located near Box Canon, Wasn and will extend from-cliff to cliff across the Pend O'Reille river. At this Tomt the water is known to be more than 230 feet deep, and In places bottom has never been reached. The bridge is being built entirely without the aid of false work or side supports. So far it has been balanced by weighting the shore span with 600 tons of steel rails. Wh9n finally completed the bridge will weigh more than one thousand tona,' and, it ti said, will be the longest Span In the world constructed In tbis manner, The Chinese boycotts Of,m. J.,., ,C . XlTaetam tv.Hv r, u" Uja"" UCICUUOUUB 1U a ii vnici u uiauu ci aim iiiq tuui Industry In all Its many forms, from every western sheep raising state. Also the sheep will be in politics. And the speeches will deal not only with the opportunities and troubles of the Individual flock owner, but with the rights and wrongs of the' buyer and manufacturer of wool as affected by the tariff that most ex citing bone of contention. Meanwhile, the pathetic side of the sheepherder's life Is most vividly shown In the card bearing on its inner pages the very telling poem by Charles B. Clark, Jr., Jnst Issued by the Pacific Monthly. As we read it do we not get the whiff of the scent of the flock, and hear its everlasting ba-a? Do we not trlbution of wealth among the Deo-isee tne sheepherder's little tent. Its " pie than in almost any other state in occupant sitting on a rock near by the Union.- The exceedingly poor are fewer, and - the heaviest share of property Is well disposed among the great middle classes. If we have Our unemployed, they are In a smaller percentage than the great bodies of the enforced Idle in many a distressed commonwealth, i We are so firmly entrenched In material welfare that even the 1907 , panic scarcely retarded our progress or spread Its blighting pall over our business operations. So free were we and the dogs grouped near his feet? Are not the wide spaces of the unin habited wilderness brought before our eyes and the solitariness of the herder, longing for the sound of a friendly human voice? In no occupation does the mixture of enforced idleness with continu ous responsibility earn as large but better deserved pay, Sofar as Oregon Is concerned the dawn of the passing of the sheep herder and his far ranging flock Is the financial maelstrom that held the country In Its embrace. Best of all, we have a citizenship that Is conservative, stable, lntelli- frora its effects as a result of our , seen In the invasion of the ranees bv own financial Btrength, that the rest ! the wire fences of tne farmer, dalry of the country contemplated with man, and ofchardlst. The miles con- amazemeni our ease m the midst oficeaiea by the ever moving herd will ere long be divided Into the modest areas of the .homesteader. Experts will tell us If the change i will n,6t mean also the substitution gent, and of rare civic virtue. It is for the range merino of the Shrop the product of the old pioneer stock shires and Cotswolds of the fenced whose struggle with nature and the farm. Indian in taming the wild produced a I Whether the chanee will fn-roiw militant race. Schooled by hardship ithe reduction of the number of Ore and by contact with nature in the 1 gon sheep, a fessened yield of wool, 'great fundamentals of honest life. ! and a less profit to the owner ct t hi this early blood mingled with the ! flock in proportion to numbers bent new arrivals has yielded a body pol-1 we shall also, doubtless, hear, ltlc of rare powers of mind and! Meanwhile alk Pomanders wm bjd heart- " jthe sheepmen welcome to the best It Is such a people that under such ,our city can afford. environments swing off with the rest recent general movement In India for the substitution of Indian made articles for British manufactures of all kinds and grades, were indica tions of readiness among these im- mense populations to go all lengths to accomplish these ends. The rapid extension In Japan of factories rival ing those ot America and England to importance, and the training of thou sands of her Ingenious workers in the new industries, have laid on Japan the pressing need to find new mar kets for her output. Where could this ambitious people find means better calculated' to help them on towards the headshlptof the East than by, add ing the actual, physical bonds of a common commerce ,to the prestige gained by successful war? So the mixed motives of ambition, of pride ot race, of jealousy of for eigners, of .money getting, of reck lessness under foreign domination or control are, and have long been, at work. The Beeds have been sown In soils ready to receive them. The auguries of the times all portend a rapid growth. Oriental astuteness has long ago mastered ' the art "divide and gov ern." We may expect the fostering by these new organizations of all dif ferences, great and small, between the white races Interested bo largely in this. Far Eastern trade. The stake at issue is the mainte nance and full1 use of the "open door," and Its importance cannot be overstated. visit to the United States department of justice Friday. They offered to consent to the permanent injunction the government asks in the civil suit for dissolution of the trust on condl WILLIAM TRUFANT FOSTER Revic-w oi Brilliant Career of Man Chosen at Head of Reed Institute fl ....In the American Magazine for Janu ary, William De Witt. Hyde gives an es timate of Professor William Trufant Foster, who has been selected as presi dent of Reed Institute, to be estab- tion that the government would be;Ushed m Portland, in the following satisfied to impose fines and not jail Sentences In the criminal action. That Lis to say, the moment the' officials of the prlce-flxlng combination see jail doors about to swing open for them, they quickly become obedient to the law, and propose voluntary and immediate dissolution of their trust Human nature is everywhere the same. We are all anxious to stay out of prlsop. If prison is to be the penalty of a .violated statute, a trust official will be as obedient to the law as anybody else. The present spectacle of the bathtub defendants prostrating themselves at the feet pf government officials and begging for fines instead of Jail, Is all the evi dence the government needs of how to end the present reign trust law-lessness," A PRINCETON PROFESSOR A or the world today into the year 1911, to meet its responsibilities and claim a share of its rewards. They are not subservients, petitioning a . King John for a Magna Charta. They are not aesperate fugitives" fleeing from an Alarlc for their lives. They are not helpless prisoners of a war . or conquest standing by while a Gen ghis Khan strikes off their compan ions heads and their own. Thev FARMERS AND CITIZENS THE PARCELS POST AND s OME ASPECTS of the Parcels Post, as affecting the cost of living In th! cities, and th opeartie to the farmer nf A now outlet ffff the daily products of the farm, have not received the atten tion they deserve. PRINCETON professor, now in Portland, is quoted by the Or- egonlan as displeased with Or egon's direct legislation. The paper makes him say that "we are odd, curious and unique," and that we shall have "to pay for it." Also that we "have run wild," and adds, "when we speak of freak legislation we think of Switzerland and New IF THE PEOPLE ELECT M' ARK SULLIVAN, In Collier's Weekly, p61ntedly asks: "If senators ' were elected by direct vote of the people. 1 would James Smith Jr. be the next sonator from New Jersey? 'Would Lodge be the next senator from Massachusetts? Would William Lorlmer be the present senator from Illinois? "Would William F. Sheehan be the next senator from New York? "Would Oliver come back to the senate from Pennsylvania in Jan uary?" ..No; and Galllnger, and Bulkeley, and Penrose; and DlllinKtiam, Clark of Wyoming, Sutherland of Utah, nd others that might be mentioned, terms; William Trufant Foster combines three qualities which, taken together. invre the success of any man In any thing he reasonably undertakoa first, perfectly clear vision of the end at which he alms and the means essential to bring it to pass; second, enormous Industry In. doing his part In supplying thoee means; third, infinite tact In In ducing other persons to supply suoh of the means as he cannot contribute him self. When told at the beginning of a snm mer vacation that he could go to Har vard college If he could pass the en trance examinations, he did. In' that summer vacation the work 'in Latin which ordinarily requires three years, and prepared in two or three other sub jects besides.- One. college vacation he went to York beach and advertised as a tutor. Bis first student wished to be tutored iu trigonometry. Mr. Foster postponed the first lesson for three days, during which he bought the text nook ana prepared nimseu to luior tne boy in a subject he had never studied before, and in which the boy passed the, Harvard entrance examination, in Sep tember. 1 ' When our dormitories hers at Bow doln college were In disorder, under faculty and graduate proctors, he de veloped a system of proctorlng by the most popular seniors, which proved a complete success, transforming the de spised service Into a coveted honor no student has since declined. When the Christian association was a feeble, minority ot the . student body he transformed It into a majority, In cluding much more than a majority of the best fellows, by shifting the em phasis from a "negative sentlmentallsm to positive good fellowship In service and enlisting men in recruiting ' the membership who had never before dreamed of being members themselves. Two years ago, just before com mencement, he asked mp whether I had any objection to having a big class the following year. I told him there, was no objection. He spent sthe summer with a stenographer in Brunswick, and. sure enough, the class he had predicted The people will demand men for the senate who will serve the masses, as well as the classes. A MOTTO FOR THE KEW YEAR. The suggestion thit the adontlon are not martyrs stoned and burned ,of the Partels Post is of vital interest to death for conscience sake. They! kta t0 tne producer and the con .are not poor peasants in the glav!Bumer Kalrs weight by the exper- emplro, trembling under the lash and ,ence" of otYat countries where the .ground under the iron heel of a czar. inew mbods have been for a long On the contrary, they are a frpe, eov-: UmG io dailv practice. erelgn, militant, unconquered and I Discussion has turned In this coun- ttncenquerable people, rich in all the ' on the Probable supply from the gifts of the world, and aa such step icltles to. the farms of both necessities Zealand, but Oregon outclasses wonid re-elect them, with all their them." As he is quotea, tne proiessor . ability, has a lofty contempt Tor our system, and displays himself In a fine fore knowledge that It cannot do any thing else but miserably fall. An interview with Professor Ford in the Journal credits . him with a widely different view of direct legis lation. Instead of a critic, he is quoted as seeing many excellent fea tures in the system. But what plan ot government is it that should be substituted for that in vogue in Ore gon? Is the Illinois system the one that would disappear from that .body. 50 per cent larger than any previous t-oage ana uoot are men of a higher type, yet it la doubtful It the people . of New York" and Massachusetts j class was clamoring for admission in, September. At one time he had a rec ord of some 20 consecutive victories for debating teams which he had coached. William Trufant Foster was bora in Boston. Mass., January 18, 1S7. He was educated at tho Roxbury (Mass) high school and Harvard college, where ha graduated In- 101. -Front 1801 to 1903 he taught English at Bates col lege. The year 1903-04 he spent in the study of English, argumentation and education at Harvard, receiving the de gree of A. ML In 1804 he came to BoV doin college as instructor In English and argumentation, and became profes sor in 1906. At Bowdoln he also gave courses in education, and in June, 1910, his title waschanged from Professor of English and Argumentation to Professor of Education. Tho year 1909-10 he had a leave of absence from Bowdoln, which bo spent at Teachers' college, Columbia university, in the study of the college curriculum. During that year and the past summer he filled a position In Co lumbia university as lecturer in educa tional administration and. completed the residence requirements to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Education and Sociology. He taught the course in the principles of education at the Harvard university summer school in 1909. ' .Such, in brief, are the outward facts substantial achievement for a man under S2. A thorough scholar, an accomplished writer, an efficient speaker, a success ful author, a skillful teacher, a master ful administrator, a diligent student of educational problems, with a wide ac quaintance la university circles and a genial personality? be has all the quali ties that promise a brilliant career in what Dr. Wallace Buttrick of the gen eral education board has called the best educational opportunity In the country. In these days of self-seeking, wire pulling and favoritism, his. election to the presidency of Reed college a com plete surprise to hlra is a reassuring evidence that opportunity and capacity still meet provided the trustees of op portunity turn down all self -constituted candidates and seek oyer the whole length and breadth of the continent for the best capacity'; and the possessor of capacity turns a fleaf ear to all merelv lucrative calls out of his own distinctive line ana waits patiently and works un ceaslngly to fit himself for the largest opportunity in hla distinctive line which the country .affords.. " North f Carolina, North Dakota, ' OVk Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Islau( south Dakota- ana Tennessee, in mar of .these states the legislatures St.. proceed within the next week or rt to the election of United States senators In New York, Massachusetts, N Hampshire, Connecticut, and a. numkti of other states new governors will k Inducted into of floe during the week.) Other events and happenings that wtf figure more or less prominently in tH news of the week will Include tt President's New . Tear reception at ttJ White House, the local option election to be held throughout Ontario, tw I meeting- of the Quebec legislature, to j convention of Progreaalvs Republican. , to be held in Minnesota, the annual can ( ventlon of the National Woolgrowen association in Portland. Or- the openicr of the National Automobile show Id Maaison Square Garden, New Tork, aa: the trial of James J, Gallagher, who at tempted to assassinate. Mayor Garoor. which Is scheduled to begin Tuesday a jersey aty. SEVEN FAMOUS BEAUTIES Helen of. Troy. T With confidence and tharfltsirtvinir-nn the threshold of the new year. EDUCATING THE FARMERS and luxuries of life chiefly as af- iecung the merchants ot cities and country towns. The other aspect, me supplies or city, dwellers, direct- 1 V in tha rnrtfltirnA fonm . . i i- i 'td w. wuu wwuu u .u;a a. a uiii n 1 r- m uru A r UNITED STATES consul at! has been very largely lost sieht of' 11 t , expresses the Yet this is of aneast equal lmport- 1 opinion in a consular report ance. n 8faJe80fi8 Coun- The ,lmlt ot weight carried In I? ;nt take a hint from England by the" Parcels Post is the what t.hA nrnvinra rvr.,t. , . . . . i. muuu, no eiuTcn pounos. uoiumn after col- eaya has been done by organising so- umn ft the English papers is filled v" v.i6u5u w reawaaen inter- with the advertisements of the farm. HE WISE ROMANS had a prov erb whlcn, translated freely, runs; Beware lest for the sake of barely living you lose those things Jhat make life worth having. Sinco the advent of the first day of a new year sets the hardiest and least thoughtful man to thinking it a critic of direct legislation would; mat be worth while to see what recommend tor Oregon? Is Lorlmer with the votes bought for him, the grand Jury investigations, the trials and the five months of senatorial deadlock Incident to the Lorlmer election a better method for Oregon? Does liny critic think "Jackpot" leg islation better than direct legislation: Does he recommend to us, the New The- legend" of Helen of Troy - has Men i traced oi nciraiin inrouKn many turf association spending $300,000 in jit, return to it by habit which has! 'cms in the languages and literatures an admirable 'book on the subject which may be profitably, consulted by those who are fascinated by the personality York style of legislation with the! of success, and when directed from mri .w:iaj.iuu oyeuuinK duu,uoo in j it, return to it by habit which has the legislature to defeat the Hughes j grown to nature, then let us beware. anu-gamoung dui, proot ot which ap-a But mere money, making is not est la agriculture and make life on ; the farm more attractive: Four years , . ago. 'Consul Slater ,, relates, the On tario government fjrat eattbijshed six "branch offices of the department of agriculture! and located them In an w,JajvyAgriwttilOTti - off teei are la charge of a graduate ers, something after this fashion Clotted cream. The undersigned can furnish up to ten pounds dally. u uuc puuuu cans, rnce per can. Address Joseph Perrott bii Hacon and hams. Wiltshire farm bacon, cents per pound; hams - truth there U in words which hav survived the lapse of centuries. To whom then do these words appeal?-Obviously, to him who sets the fitlrag up of money as the aim of Mep All- admit this,, and yet most ot jii to' more or less extent, must plead guilty to the accusation. As a man thlnketh 60- is he. It our thoughts run steadily on this variety The most famous of all- the beauti ful women of ancient or modern times is surely Helen of Troy. For S00O years she has been "the world's de sire." Hers was "The face that launched a thousand; 'ships. And burned the topless towers of Ilium." Tennyson's praise. of her in "A'Dream of Fair Women," has furnished th language with one of its most familiar quotations. The poet described her as: ""A daughter of the gods, divinely tall. And most divinely fair. . Her loveliness with, shame and with surprise : Froze jny swtft speech; , she taming on my face The star-like sorrows of immortal eyes. Spoke slowly in her place. , "I had great beauty; ask.thou not my oanti' . 1 ji. 1 1 . No one can be more wise than destiny. Many draw sworda and died, efe'er ... .1 came . I brought calamity." peared on the association's books produced in court? - Does anybody think it saf er the idol to which many of us. and those the brightest, bow downy the 1 of the beautiful woman who caused the educated man has ambition 'winnt. . . . - for to employ that system of leg-1 wbrthy-and yet he lets them 'tfZ-Tt&S loiauuu iu wuiun .rcuooia wrote to ' down all else in his scheme of life iCastor and Pollux.- Twice was she ab- j goiiui, cuuiumus cuecKs ana ior tne sage ot success in his B"w amra aggregating I45.000and request; chosen-, iaai cerwunojiis unirienaiy to ub7 ture are dwarfed and atrophied. Is . brothers undertook aa expedition to lib be defeated? : he too not sacrificing what makea ' erat her- -They captured, Athens In Or,, better still, is it Suggested to life worth living? - jthe absence of Theseus 'and Returned us thai we adopt the methods of ii.nothecia8a.x nUUi0 vuw, wuv-v.. msixiw iiuu uorauuy ana consciously arranged, voters there have .been; indicted and. of what makes life real and full of Priam, ktor of Troy, while living as a shepherd on Mt Ida, was chosen to award the golden apple as the prize ot beauty, judging between Juno, Venus and Minerva. The goddesses according ly appeared before- hint, in their un adorned beauty and each offered ' him a bribe. Juno promised him the sov ereignty of Asia; Minerva promised re nown lw war and Venus' promised the most beautiful of women for his wife. Paris decldedviif? favor of Venus and gave her the golden apple. The result was that Juno and Minerva developed Intense hatred of- Troy, while Paris, un der" the protection-of Venus, sailed for Greece and succeeded In carrying off Helen from Sparta to Troy. Hence arose the confederation of the Greeks and the Trojan war;. T So many are the tradithma concerning her history after the destruction ot Troy that they cannot be reconciled. Paris was kllledr4urrng th slegTin-tieln married his brother. But after the fall V y .ane oecame reconcile to Meher . Accoramg to the Egyptian leg ends, as recorded by Herodotus, Helen m .xroy, out'. remained' In Egypt, while--the woman known aa ien or xroy ,ws a simulacrum, due to the enmity of the goddess who had singled out Troy for destruction. Thus nearly five centuries before our era an attempt had been made to relieve Helen flhr??lnta J15 bt,n unfaithful wife. . It Is worthy of mention v. German scholarship has applied itself to the chronology of Helen's life, with the result of showing that shT must hav been 110 years old when she re turned to Sparta With .. her h' spa after the Troian war.- w'oaBa A"er Menelau death the -women of iaio nave muraered Helen. It (Copyright by R. Kipling Amerleat lfagasine. It you can keep your head when 111 SDont you Are losing theirs and blaming ft w you: If you can trust yourself when all mw doubt you But make allowance for their doubt ' Ida- too: If yoncftwait and not be tired pi Or belnv lied about dont deal la lies. Or beina bated don't crive war to bating And yet don't look too good, nor tali, too wise. . r, . If you can dream and not make dreanu your master: - If you can think and not make thought your aim: If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster . " And beat those two impostors Just tit - same? ' If you can bear to hear the truth you'vr spoaen Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools: Or watch the things you gave your life to, Droaen And stoop and bulldV'om up with wort- out ioois. - If you can talk with crowds and keep your- virtue Or walk with kings nor loss the com rnon touch If neither foe nor loving friends can hurt you If all men count with yon but non too much: . ' Tf von run fill thn linf rtro-iVIn mtniftft W lth sixty seconds worth of distance run Yours is the Earth and everything in it ana wnicn is more--youn be a Man, my son! Be Efficient, From the Beattle Pqst-InteUigeneer Efficiency is economy. - - It is use without waste," the use of capital' labor, the use of talent and time, the use of the splendid qualities which go to make character in the- Jeweled meaning of the word. . - The maximum of - individual effi ciency is attained only When we t the best there is la us In the best way. ? :- Inefficiency, whether tndlvidual or collective, whether, in ' the case of man or a machine, la extravagance. - It is a sheer loss of capital, of en ergy of talent and time. , . Efficiency in law means to-do what the law requires, or not. to 4o what the law prohibits. In contractors! -relations, efficiency means specific performance, the doing of the thing the man Is pledged to do in the time and in the way he contracted to do it But only mental and . moral bank rupts look In law books for a full statement of their social and eivle obllgatlona 1 Y V No big man can nv between the lids of a law took. There are services to render, obliga tions and v responsibilities to meet, and dUtleB to perform not taken ' into tha reckoning of our wisest lawgivers. ' The citizen rises to the full measure of his efficiency only when - he ex tends his efforts and his energies Into a sphere much broader than the law's Greece sought her hand in .marriage. Vine atfe, MkXuA mM. It. ' w " T disfranchised for selling their vte Books are butrarely read art in aifitb,,t. rt,h0B Meneikua as her husband. . - v 4u uij According to the legend Paris. th o : mv ohtr hi:;.-r,,:.? "u'u" :." "as madeHie ' - - - u. variB Ui 1 inn int AUvif tkr-Twm . . Ing into . his poem - a mass of frankl ' VnmI Z X, ,f ppeninga. --. TPinorrow-,''NolI' Gwyn." Two Kinds of Art,- v , FroroMhe Christian Herald, Are our, cities retrorradln in rellir lous senUmeat and in their aonreciv tlon of the rorjrietielaimMan.. 4go"New" York was shocked at the propo sition to produce the "Passion Plaj'i ana. in oneaiencs to general protest 11 was aoanaoneo. Baiome. that frightful idealisation of the degenerate mind oj WUde, was also stamped as an offense against metropolitan decency, That the bars have been '-t lowered since then t evidenced from the fact that a play ha oean - proaucea- in ew .. xorlc m, whlcn the Saviour is shown In conversatiert with a' French actress, who one daf plays the part of a modern wanton, the next that of a Biblical . character.- T complete the travesty, the pretense i man tnat ins piece is -specially suitable to -the, Chrlatsifts season, tor ' rellgloua propaganda! We hear-' occasionally -of an effort to purify the stage, and tier are no-' doubt, managers who. would p glad to help any. real reform! bnt con scienceless mercenaries snoll thair. wlll i 1 m!?i?i5rort,L4 T.hre M J art-thaUl 1 4fllvlnrTand n"Vt tliat u dlahoUi and the akin ot the sensationalist frequenting succeeds la confusinr the public In It j cnoice oeiween tne two. The mercenary manager makes his .harvest quickly be fore the people's eyes are opened, and laughs at them afterward , V