THE MOENING OREGONIAN. SATUEDAY, NOVEMBEE' 28, 1903. to Z2g$nicax ater at tkt PestoSlce at Portland, Oregon, as recsnd-cl&ss matter. HEVXSBD SUBSCRIPTION RATES. TT suUt Uestare prepaid In advance) XVaUy, unite SuBfiay. per month $0.85 Daly, ufci excepted, per year 7.50 r y with Swa4ay, per year fl.OO SuniAj-. jw yrar 2.00 The Weekly. pr year 1.50 Tfee Weekly. 3 raeaths 50 Xa. T ,ht ?eek, delivered. Sunday excepted.. 15c 2a. t pr -week. delivered. Sunday lncluded..20c POSTAGE RATES. X"rl'ed States. Canada and Mexico 3 i 14-page )apcr 1c 16 tv 30-pxf paper 2c 25 to 44 pace paper .........................3c r.-eicn rates dMe. 2ew lor Aseuaaten Intended for publication la The OrecMrtas fhuld be addressed lnvarl fcjr Editor Tfce Oregoalan," not to the name oT any .ndlvt4&L Letters relating to ad er icas rubecriittton, er to any business matter, bed fee act til clntply, "The Oregonlan." 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That there will be any serious effort t3 rush Mr. Roos$velt into the back Enund And to work up the nomination t .aiother for the Presidency The Ore ircr in deems improbable. Yet It is alto gether TeJI enough for the supporters T the PresWent to be prepared to meet ru h powtble effort. During months past "feelers" have been thrown out in many directions, but without encour && response; yet the project seems r.ot to have been given up wholly, and ir.Il yet be pushed, undoubtedly, if there shouid appear to be a chance for its success. The chief opponents of President Roosevelt are certain great capitalistic &rd plutocratic interests, which have rtsented Ms action in Important mat-t-rs, like the great coal strike and the rrc-gr cases. They were obliged to j.'.d, but they yielded gtumbllngly; a'd it has been understood all along tvj.f they were biding their time, in the i. z if aocomplishing his undoing in th- Republican National Convention. "Wiat is known as "Wall Street" Is cgjuast Theodore Roosevelt. But it is r t confident of its power to turn him cs, though that is the dearest object cf ts desire. Falling in this, as it is sure to do, it will address itself to the k i?rk vf patting up for the Democratic jarty a. candidate of Its own liking. In t .s. it may succeed, or It may not. resides the capitalistic combinations 4tzl -would like to defeat Mr. Roose tc t m almost every state there are disgruntled Republican politicians who tkc d quickly manifest the same incli-rat.-r, if they should see any move r l that way. There are such In Ore gor, as eteewhere. It Is proper, there iv?c for the supporters of the President f be on their guard against machina t. rs through which hostile delegates 2t,.ght be sltiHed into the National Con-vc-tirtn. Organization of Roosevelt .-bs throughout Oregon, begun already w.ih igor to Portland, as announced In TV Oregouian of yesterday, is a meas r.'e both of precaution and of aggres e. ", on the part of the President's sup-r-rttrs There may be no great need, but .t is just as well to be vigilant, and r-.oreoer to have the organization ef fctd through which any demonstra t,oi or effort like that threatened dur ing some time past in news reports Irom various' parts of the country may be rr.-t and foiled. The Oregonian's own belief is that the President will be nominated without r.r nal opposition in convention. But there are elements of opposition that would defeat him if it were possible. They may not appear in the convention st all, but they might and probably would be & force there, if no precau ticary measures were taken against them. Plutocratic influences are always fcu:,d to be powerful among irrespon s.b delegates from states that never can be depended on for a Republican electoral vote; and there are great bunches of delegates from such 'States. The Oregonlan approves the project of forming Roosevelt clubs throughout the Pacific States, even though the senti ment here is so solidly for Roosevelt, and from this point of view such action zr.ight seem unnecessary. Nevertheless, push the Roosevelt clubs! Question has arisen whether the or gar Ization of the two houses of the Leg islature is to be the organization for the special session, or whether a new or ganization is necessary. It is a need less question. Each house may do its own will. That is, each may retain its former and present officers or elect oth ers. Each house is a law unto itself, and Its acts are subject to-no review, except through the high court of public opinion, to be manifest through future elections. Each house may change its officers at any time it sees fit. But it is not likely to make any change, and cer tainly will make none, except for good reason. The President of the Senate and Speaker of the House are merely th& voice or organ through which each body speaks; as Speaker Lenthall said to Charles I when commanded to sur render the five members: "I have neither eye to see nor voice to utter, except as this house commands." Each house may do what it wills to do, subjectnly v naoae opinion, wnicn, with us, has definite constitutional forms to which ltmayappeaL It may be supposed that the officers of the regular session will be continued through the special ses sion. Resolutions to that effect may be adopted, if the houses think it proper; but such action is not at all necessary. EVEBY MAN LEND A HAND. The action of the Secretary -otJVar In requiring free right of way for the dalles canal, as a preliminary to any work upon the project, seems to be with out precedent It Is therefore disquiet ing to all who understand the immense importance of this undertaking to the great Northwest. To inquire Into the motives of the Secretary would be use less, however, perhaps impertinent and possibly unwise. It is the plainest of facts that the War Department, since Mr. Root's Incumbency, has lost no op portunity to injure the Columbia River and to discriminate injuripusly against the City of Portland. So far as we know nothing else has ever been pre tended. But it does not necessarily follow that the dalles order is to be properly con nected with that policy of discrimina tion. It is our understanding that the special board which, examined the river with the Harts project In view made the suggestion About the right of way at the instance of its own members; that General Gillespie in his turn (and the General has always been a good friend to Portland) repeated the recommenda tion, so that Secretary Root's approval may have been only a natural concur rence In the advice of his engineer corps. In one way, however, the prerequisite condition, while technically unprece dented, does find a sort of precedent In the fact that the people of Seattle ob tained and presented to the United States Government the right of way necessary for the Lake Washington Canal. It is distinctly possible, also, that the special board of engineers did what they did in order to bring the cost of the canal within the cpst of the Harts canal, so that the project might be made secure without reference back to Congress for authorization. The En gineer Corps has always been friendly to Columbia River projects, and the course of the special dalles board in other respects deserves all possible ap proval and gratitude from the people of Oregon and Washington. With hem, as with Symons, Jones, Harts and Lang fitt, the aid of commerce here has been a labor of love. All these things aside, however, as incidentalsand negligible, and as belong ing to the irrevocable past, the situa tion that confronts us is the fact of the condition Imposed by Secretary Root and the absolute necessity of our com pliance with It. Before a spade is struck -Into the ground at Celilo, the Govern ment must have been tendered a right of way. The regularity or the theoret ical Justice of the demand does not now concern us. What e are up against is the fact; and It now becomes of the highest and most imperative necessity that the right of way be provided as soon as possible. We should say that if is well worth the state's while to buy the right of way. It is well worth the while of riparian owners to donate such land as they can and limit their de mands where reimbursement Is neces sary to the lowest possible figure. There ought to be public spirit enough along the route of the canal to insure an easy negotiation for the right of way. It is Incredible that the O. R. & N. should so adroitly court popular execration and legislative reprisal as to stand in the way of so great and beneficent an un dertaking. The expense of moving tracks now in the way may be great, and should be made up to the railroad; but the management of the road must be given credit for prescience enough to foresee the inevitable result of thwarting the popular will. Every business man and property owner in the Columbia Basin owes sup port and encouragement to Governor Chamberlain and every member of the Legislature who has expressed a de termination to stand faSt In this crisis for the public welfare. The proposal to repeal the portage road appropriation without any proviso for the diversion of the fund toward the right of way is one of utter folly and danger. The great ness of an Oregon is bound up in a most intimate way with the opening of the Columbia River. The Western Ore gon man who thinks to advance his section by striking out this appropria tion as a blow to the Inland"EmpIre would be inconceivably short-sighted. Senator Mitchell is reported as actively interested in the right of way enter prise, and it Is earnestly to be hoped that he will stand fast. Oregon will never have Its limbs free for a fair fight in the commercial strug gles before It until It has -secured the advantage of an open river from Lew Iston to the sea and the consequent lowering of freight rates. Puget Sound draws Eastern Oregon and Washington trade from us now. and "Washington surpasses us in population and gains on us in business because rates from the Inland Empire to tidewater are so high as to enable the Northern Pacific and Great Northern to haul wheat over the mountain grades to Puget Sound. Every man who gets at the bottom of the com mercial and industrial situation in the Pacific Northwest understands this matter clearly. The river must be opened. The right of way must be se cured. It is the duty of all with any power or Influence at all to lend a hand. HANGER IN THE TISTOL 1CABIT. Alexander Garnett, who on Wednes day night in San Francisco fatally shot Major J. W. McClung, will be placed on trial for murder. Garnett in a fit of drunken rage drew a pistol and at tempted to shoot Mrs. Lillie Hitchcock Colt, in her rooms at the Palace Hotel. Major McClung lost his life by throwing himself between Mrs. Colt and Garnett. It Is the old story of drink and the "gun habit." Garnett is a victim of alcoholism and has always been In the habit of carry ing a "gun." Such fellows, drunk or sober, are prone to pull a weapon on slight provocation; but as a rule few men, North or South, attempt to arbi trate a quarrel with a woman by a pis tol. Unless Garnett was insane with drink, it is probable that Major Mc Clung resented his language to Mrs. Coit and that a quarrel ensued. In the course of which Garnett shot McClung. Garnett is the name of a distinguished Virginia family, two Confederate Gen erals of that name, graduates of West Point, having been killed in the Civil War; and McClung is a name of great distinction In the annals of Mississippi. All the parties to the tragedy are mem bers of the so-called "Southern Colony" bf San Francisco. It was a distinguished son of the South and an ex-Confederate who once said I that the greatest curse of the South was I "whisky and the pistol habit." The re mark was just. There are quite as many whisky drinker's at the North as at the South, but the habit of "carry ing a gun" is not so universal; 0 there are not so many murders among well bred people at the North as at the South. At the South the drink-crazed man always has "a gun" handy and in nine times out of ten commits murder qnder the influence of passion and real or fancied provocation. If he did not always carry a gun he mJght not com mit murder. He might regain his san ity or might be put under restraint, but so long as the "pistol habit" prevails among Southern men there will be mur ders in high circles like" that in which Garnett and his victim were conspic uous. The pistol habit makes every quarrel likely to end in murder. LET THE INDIAN WORK OB STARVE. At last a report has been issued from the Indian Bureau at Washington in which a plain and -practical solution of the Indian question is suggested. "Let the Indian be taught the rudi ments of the English language," says Commissioner of Indian Affairs Jones; "protect him only to the extent that he may gain confidence in himself, and leave nature and civilization to do the rest" Thus equipped for self-help, it is further urged that the Indian be given to understand that he "must work or starve." Discarding sentiment, yet instinct with the principle of justice and the logic of kindness which seeks to equip the individual for life's battle, leave him to fight it and Insist that he must fight it or perish, is this tardy official presentment of a solution of the Indian question. By contrast with the policy so long pursued by the Government toward its Indian wards, It is startling. It discards as useless Indian education that runs Into the sciences, pFaces a sharp and speedy limitation upon the .practice of issuing rations to Indians wjfo occupy fertile lands, have been supplied with agricultural Implements and seed arid Instructed In, the elements of Industry, and decrees that the Indian must make use of the knowledge of farming or other handicraft that he has gained for his own preservation, or drop out of existence. There is real humanity In this plain and simple proposition, though at first it may seem harsh. It Is clearly no kindness to the Indian, as a race or an individual, to keep him or permit him to hang upon the outskirts of civili zationa strong, able-bodied vagabond satisfied with the assurance, drawn from the past, that if he does not feed, house and clothe himself the Govern ment will, when a time of stress comes, supply him with food, shelter and ap parel. A fair sample of the lives that reser vation Indians live, and of the death that they not infrequently die, under the mistaken policy that the Govern ment has long pursued toward them, has been presented to the public before the United States Court in this city within the week. Idle, thriftless, vi cious; without thought of the morrow except to wonder whether they can manage to elude the law and procure whisky; nursing bitter feuds and laying plans for vengeance and plots for mur der; filthy beyond description in their homes and lives, the mass of reserva tion Indians mock by their daily exist ence the methods that have long been pursued for their civilization. Against these methods and utterly discarding them as inefficient and pernicious comes at last a voice from the Indian Bureau saying: "Let the Indian be taught that he must work or starve." Supplement ing this, Commissioner Jones expresses the opinion that this policy would in a generation or more work the regenera tion of the race. It would certainly re generate the race or cause it to become extinct. In either event the require ments of humanity would be met by the policy recommended. AN UNDAUNTED ENEMY. The Oregonlan Is in receipt from the Navy Department of Volume 16, Series 1, of the "Official Records of the Union andConfederate Navies in the War nf the Rebellion." These records relate to the operations of the South Atlantic blockading squadron from October 1, lS64to August 8, 1865, and of the Gulf blockading squadron from June 7 to December 15, 1S6L These official Union and Confederate documents are most valuable historical material, for they were purely business papers written at the time, not intended lor the public, and are utterly without any rhetorical rot or fustian. Nevertheless these dry dispatches shed a flood of light on the naval situation of the Confederates, and extort admiration for the energy and courage with which they strove to cre ate a navy that would help to defend the ports of the South and In time per haps break the blockade at Charleston and Savannah. tThe audacity of the Confederates may be gathered from the fact that as early as October 12, 1861, a Confederate steam ram drove the steam gunboat Richmond and the sailing gunboat Vln cennes from the head of the passes of the Mississippi River. The Richmond had three planks stove In below the water Ifne, and the Vincennes only es caped by throwing overboard all her guns but four. The Confederates fired With rifled guns, and nothing but the arrival of the United States steam gun boat McClellan, armed with rifled guns, saved the Union vessels from destruc tion. The stupidity of the Navy De partment in sending two sailing vessels to guard against the attack of a steam ram and in arming them with inferior guns was, of course, inexcusable. . The report of Admiral Dahlgren con cerning the defenses of Savannah and Charleston after their evacuation shows that Beauregard had made these ports absolutely Impregnable to attack from the sea. In the judgment of Admiral Dahlgren, save by Sherman's advance from the rear, Savannah's and Charles ton's defenses could not have been turned. Of course. If they had been as strongly fortified in the rear, the prob lem of Sherman and Dahlgren would have been the same as that presented to Grant and Porter at VIcksDurg. The remarkable thinglshown by the Confed erate dispatches Is the undying pluck shown by the military and naval au thorities at Savannah on the eve of evacuation, with Sherman's army of 60, 000 men at their gates. It was serious ly proposed for the Confederate gun boats at Savannah to put to sea and fight their way Into Charleston or Wil mington through the large blockading fleet This was found impracticable, so the gunboats .were destroyed, but if the torpedoes could have been removed these gunboats would nave gone to sea. So late as May 1, 1865, the Confederate authority seems to have prevailed in Augusta, Ga., although "the civil au thorities apprehended a riot that night" Admiral Dahlgren in his report recites the fact that eleven fine Union Iron clads were destroyed by the Confeder ate torpedoes during the Civil War, be sides seventeen unarmored gunboats. The energy and daring ofthe Confeder ates were so remarkable that if they had been better equipped with engineering resources or had been able to obtain the help of a European navy the Con federacy would probably have survived the conflict The South at first had the advantage of Interior lines, but it lost that advantage with the loss of the Mississippi and its tributaries and the close blockade of Its coasts. When we remember that the South was not peo pled by a very large population of trained mechanics, as was the "North, the energy and skill manifested was wonderful. To be sure, the Rebellion carried over to the South the flower of the old Army and Navy, but that could not make up for the absence of mechan ics, of manufacturers, or break the blockade which cut off the South from procuring military supplies from abroad and cut it off also from the market for its cotton, which alone could provide the sinews of war. Further evidence of the efficacy of modern transportation methods in the promotion of temperance is formulated by the order of the Northern Pacific Railway managers, to take effect on the first of the coming year, which requires all employes of the company to abstain from liquor as a condition necessary to a continuance In Its service. Not only is drinking to excess interdicted, but the social glass, the forerunner of excess in thousands of instances, is forbidden upon pain of dismissal. This is a plain business proposition, devoid of a single element of what is called "temperance reform." It will, no doubt, be more efficacious In promoting temperance, which In the case of a vast multitude of men means total abstinence, than all of the temperance lectures that emo tional reformers have delivered in half a century. Men unable to observe its requirements are already too far gone In Intemperance to be safe handlers of a traffic that is carried on at a high rate of speed, while those who have not reached that point In the Indulgence of appetite will be saved to themselves, their families an'd the requirements of business betore (as the orthodox preach ers of a past generation were wont to declare) "It is everlastingly too late." Operating officials of the Northern Pa cific are justified in the opinion that the order will result In great good to the company and its operatives, while It will certainly relieve the traveling pub lic from a long-standing menace of dis aster. As before said, there is no sen timent in this order, It Is purely a .matter of business, and for that reason Is likely to be effective. The Bureau of Statistics gives the latest data as to the tonnage movement of thegreat seaports of the world. At the head of the list stands London, where the total tonnage entering and leaving port in 1902 was 17,504,108. The tonnage of New York last year was 17,398,058, only 166,050 tons less than that of London. Antwerp's tonnage In 1902 was 16,721,011, while that of Hamburg was 15,853,489. The tonnage of Hong Kong was 14,724,269, and that of Liver pool was 13,157,714. Cardiff is seventh on the list with a tonnage of 12,556,694. Rotterdam had a tonnage last year of 11.6S4.20S. Singapore Is ninth in rank with a tonnage of 10,913,031. Marseilles had a tonnage of 9,463,872. Next comes the Tyne ports of England, with a movement of S,369,347, nearly double that of any of our ports excepting New York. The Army and Navy Journal extols the DOwer and Inflnermp nf tho imcrl. "can Navy as illustrated in recent events on the Isthmus. The presence of our fleet in Central American waters has Insured the amplest protection for the lives and property of all foreigners. To what extent violence and bloodshed might have followed the disturbance in Central America but for the presence of our warships at Colon and Panama can only be judged from past experi ence, but that the consequences would have been serious but for the silent menace of those vessels cannot be "doubted. The alertness of naval offi cers, together with the readiness and efficiency of their ships and crews, have won for the Navy the highest praise as a peace-compeller. Contributions to the Conservative' cause are pouring in from British work Ingmen who refer feelingly to "Old Joe" and scout in enthusiastic terms all fear of a dear loaf with "Chamberlain our friend and champion' Ah, how griev ously do they err who set up the game of politics without regard to the emo tions and enthusiasms bf unlettered hearts! These workingmen could not argue with Devonshire or Rosebery, but Chamberlain's grit and charm lure them on. So it was with Caesar, so with Napoleon. The gift of leadership rises superior to Cobden and Adam Smith. JLove me, love my platform. There are 25,000 Italians In the City of New Orleans and 60,000 In the State of Louisiana. They are rapidly crowding tire- negroes out of the sugar districts in the southern part of the state, as the Sicilian peasants save money from wages the negroes can barely live on. The Italian immigrants go to the coun try and work on farms, and there Is not a single pauper among them. The transcontinental railway gangs that switched us off from Nicaragua to Panama, are now trying to switch us back to Nicaragua. See-saw. Any thing to prevent construction of the canal, either at Panama or Nicaragua. Here we are, to swear in both scales against either scale. Anything for de lay; anything for defeat of the canal. After announcing that Mr. Bryan's speech teemed with wit and humor, the London correspondents go on to cable a succession of dull commonplaces. Either the bright things were lost In transmission or else, the occasion must have been enlivened by the proverbial British humtfr or the juice of the grape. The Philadelphia Press thinks the Democrats ought to hurry up and hold their National Convention before Bryan gets back. The suggestion Is one of prudence and harmony, two elements that the Democrats surely need in their business. The Wisconsin Legislature has sent to Washington a resolution in favor of electing United States Senators by pop ular vote. The Pennsylvania Legisla ture did the same thing a few years ago, and that was the end of It To play Panama against Nicaragua and Nicaragua against Panama Is the policy of those who want no canal 1 either at Nicaragua or Panama. WARRANT OUT FOR CLEVELAND? New York Sun. The rainbow mathematician of the 19th and 20th Centuries, General Charles Henry Grosvenor, has already canvassed the. electoral vote of 1901. He announced the' result on Wednesday to the House of Representatives. His result Is the elec tion of the Republican candidate, with out the vote of New York. This Is the process of the interesting old cipherer's arithmetic: Total electoral vote 476 Necessary to elect 239 Surely Democratic States 151 Doubtful States 62 Surely Republican States 263 New York's 32 electoral votes are mag nanimously assigned by General Gros venor to the doubtful column. His arith metic doesn't need them next year. The General Is dead sure of these 25 states, with theit 263 electoral votes, for the Republican candidate next year: California lffiNorth Dakota .... 4 Colorado .. oOhio 25 Connecticut TJOregon 4 Illinois 271 Pennsylvania .... 34 Indiana .-... 15'Rhode Island .... 4 Iowa lSSouth Dakota ... 4 Kansas lOjVermont 4 Maine 6JWashlngton 5 Massachusetts .... ldWest Virginia ... 7 Michigan 14 Wisconsin 13 Minnesota U Wyoming 12 Nebraska Si New Hampshire .. 4 Total 263 New Jersey 12 That, of course, easily elects the Re publican candidate, without New York, Delaware, Maryland, Montana, Idaho, Nevada and Utah, and with 24 votes to spare. Applause greeted General Gros venors demonstration from the Repub lican side of the House; amazement and dismay were pictured on the features of the more Impressionable Democrats as the General mercilessly pointed out the figures of 1301. Yet let us look a moment at Gros venors table of certainties. He has made that table impressive and potentially effective by including not less than seven states, now possessing 91 elec toral votes, which can be carried, and have been carried, by a Democrat com manding the confidence of the people. Here they are: California 101 Connecticut 7 West Virginia ... 7 Wisconsin 13 Illinois Indiana 15) Total 91 llsew Jersey 12 When we say that these seven states' hav,e been carried by a Democratic can didate for President we are referring no further back into the past than the very last Presidential election, at which a Democratic candidate, standing on a Democratic platform, appealed to the suffrages of his fellow citizens. The year was 1S92, and the man was Grover Cleveland. He carried California by 470 plurality, Connecticut by 5367, Illi nois by 26,993,1 Indiana by 64S2, New Jersey by 14,974, West Virginia by 552 and Wis consin by 6470. Grover Cleveland as a candidate not only did this, but he also carried all of General Grosvenor's doubtful states, ex cept Utah, which was not then in state hood; Montanawhere Weaver got enough votes to defeat the Democrats, and Ne vada, which went, not Republican, but Populist Mr. Cleveland carried New York by 45,518. Delaware by 504, Mary land by 21,130 and Idaho by 19S0. And these Cleveland majorities or pluralities were rendered by the voters In the four "doubtful" and seven "surely Re publican" states of General Grosvenor's classification, In full knowledge of the Democratic candidate, for he then already had served thecountry for four years as ita President. Lifting the seven Cleveland states of 1S92- from their unwarranted place in General's Grosvenor's list of securities, and adding them to the admittedly Demo cratic states, together with the four "doubtful" states which Mr. Cleveland did carry, we have a result somewhat different from that which the Ohio math ematician ciphered out in the House on Wednesday: Total electoral vote 476 Necessary to choice "239 Surely Democratic States !!!"lol Other States carried by Cleveland in 1S92 91 lsov'iork' Delaware, Maryland and Idaho r 53 "235 Surely Republican States 172 Doubtful States 9 "476 We read somewhere in a newspaper headline yesterday: "A Warrant Onh fnr Grover Cleveland." ORIGINAL OF MAJOR PENDENN1S The Story That Suggested the Open ing Chapters. Mrs. Richmond Ritchie writes in Corn hill Magazine: Miss Horace Smith once told me a story. It was long and complicated, but she as sured me she had told It to my father, the late W. M. Thackeray, just before he wrote "Pendennls," and that it had partly suggested the opening chapters. It con cerned a family living in Brighton, some where near Kemp Town. There was a somewhat autocratic father and a ro mantic young son who had lost his heart to the housemaid and determined to marry her. The father made the young man give his word of honor that he would not marry clandestinely, and then having dismissed him, rang the bell for the but ler. To the butler this Major Pendennls said: "Morgan," (or whatever his name was), "I wish you to retire from my service, but I will give you 200 in bank notes if you will marry the housemaid be fore 12 o'clock tomorrow." The butler said, "Certainly, sir," and the young man next morning was told of the event which had occurred. As far as I remember a mel ancholy and sensational event immediate ly followed, for the poor young fellow was so overwhelmed that he rushed out and distractedly blew1" his braln3 out on the downs behind the house, and the butler, meanwhile, having changed his 200, sent a message to say that he had omitted' to mention that he had a wife already,- ahd that this would doubtless Invalidate the ceremony he had just gone through with the housemaid. Earthly Paradise. Boston Herald. , What's this we hear about the formation of a woman's anti-foo'tball league, to work for the abolition of the strenuous game of football, and what sweeter boon does the average young woman crave than to -be Invited by her best young man to a foot ball match? Beyond the Hills. Chicago Tribune. "I can hear the drums as the array comes From beyond the hills," he said. And he leaned and smiled like a happy child As he shook his snowy head. And he clutched his cane while the far refrain Came In murmurs to nls cars. But they whispered low: "He has dreamed it so. And It Is no drum he hears." "I can hear the life as It leaps with life. And the drums roll madly, too," Was the old man's sigh as with kindling eye He would hum the war songs through. "It Is Jimmy Shea that Is how he'd play When the road was hard and long; And It's Billy's drum that 13 calling, ,'Come'" As It keeps time with the song." And his fingers slim beat a tattoo grim On the stout arm of the chair. While his lips grew stern and his eyes would burn With the fire that once was there. "Oh. the bugle call, and the drums and alll" He would say. "Their music fills All the night and day; I can hear them play In the march beyond the hills." "I can hear the drums, and the army comes From beyond the hills, " he said. With his eyes aglow he saluted slow And he touched his snowy head. Then his eyes were closed as If he but dozed. And his day of days had dawned; 3pr the low drum beat had allured his feet To the hllla and far beyond. WAS JESUS A CARPENTER? Chicago Inter Ocean. That Jesus of Nazareth was a carpen ter by trade before he began his min istry Is generally assumed. Painters and poets have represented him as working beside Joseph at tlfe carpenter's bench. The assumption rests, however, upon a single sentence In St Mark's gospel. In the parallel passage in St. Matthew he Is spoken of, not as a carpenter, but as "the carpenter's son." There is no other mention In the gospels or elsewhere in the New Testament , That Jesus was a woodworker of some kind was-a tradition early current, and yet evidently received with some doubt. Justin Martyr, one of the earliest Chris tians after the apostles whose writings have come down to us, says that Jesus "was deemed .a carpenter, for he was in the habit of making plows and yokes." As will be shown later, this probably means only that Jesus had enough knowledge of woodworking to make certain agricul tural Implements. In fact, the recorded sayings of Jesus, according to the careful analysis of them in the current Crafts man, tend to show that his regular earth ly vocation was quite other than the car penter's. Jesus in his sayings shows familiarity with domestic, commercial, professional, and agricultural life. The grinding of grain, the making of bread, the mending of clothes, the washing of dishes, are used by him as illustrations. He knows the ways of the banker and the money lender, of Judges, lawyers, policemen, criminals and physicians. He quotes the current prices of articles of trade. He has ob served children at play and the professed ly devout at prayer. He knows the de tails of feasts and weddings, even to the order of the guests at table and the proper kind of garments. But the refer ence to these things are rather those of an observer from the outside than of an expert from the Inside. But when we come to the farmer's, fruitgrower's, and shepherd's life we have details that show the expert The works of sowing and harvesting are described with minuteness. So is the work of the vineyard. So Is especially the work of the shepherd. No particularref erences to these passages are necessary. They will occur at once to every reader of the gospels. Furthermore, he knows the signs of the weather. In fact, everything indicates that Jesus in his early life had kept sheep and worked on a grain-growing farm, and also in the vineyards and about fruit trees, especially the fig. On the other hand, allusions to build ing operations of any kind are almost en tirely wanting. In only one place does he offer any comment upon a work of architecture. That is when he goes forth from the magnificent Temple of Herod at Jerusalem arid replies to Invitations to admire it with a prediction of its over throw. He tells of the buildlng( of a tower, but only to point the moral bf counting the cost in advance, lest it be left unfin ished. In the parable of the houses built on the rock and oa,the sand no details are given of the work of man. Attention is fixed upon the forces of nature which pre served one house and destroyed the other. Even if he did make plows and yokes, as Justin Martyr says. It would seem to have been as a part of farm work rather than as a carpenter. That a preacher and teacher should have neglected to draw il lustrations from his own trade, or from the trade which he had seen his father practice when he was a boy, Is incredible. The only conclusion seems to be that the passage In St Mark's gospel is based on a misunderstanding of the fact stated in St Matthew's, that Joseph had ceased to ply his trade before Jesus was old enough to be Interested in It. and that Jesus him self was not a carpenter, but a shepherd and farmer. SUPPORTED IN THE SOUTH. The Panama Policy of the Adminis tration Is Approved. Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution. Two things are accomplished. Panama is an established and recognized nation. This country has entered into treaty re lations with it over the Panama Canal question. The ratifications are yet to be made, but they will be made and the con struction of the canal begun promptly. There is nothing now to make a fuss about. . The Tree discussion of the question since Panama revolted has cleared away many confused Ideas and shown that the act of the United States Government in recognizing the new republic at once and effectively has violated no obligation of treaty or any duty of morality between nations. Colombia's protest Is that of the wolf with its leg in the trap Itself had set for Uncle Sam. President Marroquin ful minates like a sleepy man, Ignoring the facts that Panama's delegates notified him two months ago that the failure of the Hay-Herran treaty would be the sig nal for them to reassert their reserved right of independence and that his own appointee as Governor of Panama, Gen eral Obaldla, said to him that in case Panama should take such a step, he him self would cease to be a Colombian and become a Panaman solely, as he has since done. The plea of surprise will not hold In this case and we doubt if Colombia will find one whit of sympathy for the plight she has brought upon herself by her policy of stubbornness and greed. An overhauling of the documents of our past dealings with Colombia under the treaty of 1S46 plainly shows that our action in this case Is fully in line with our rights and that we owe no apology to anybody for recognizing the assertion and creation by Panama of her inalienable right to set up an independent govern ment capable of self-maintenance. We rejoice particularly that the ques tion is now to proceed upon diplomatic principles to its conclusion. In the end Panama will be an independent nation with world-wide recognition and the United States will possess by purchase from Panama and the French Canal Company all the property and rights be longing to the Interoceanic canal and necessary for Its perpetual operation and ownership. The Constitution instantly' recognized the situation and Its development and threw Its voice and influence in favor of the nonpartisan support of the Panaman position and the American opportunity created thereby, offering to this country the ope thing which Is of more vital Im portance to the South than to any other section of the Union. Faint Heart Never Won Fair Appro priation. The management of the Lewis and Clark Exposition to be held In Portland Is asking Congress to assist by a Gov ernment appropriation of $2,125,000. With St. Louis setting the record mark at 55,000,000, Portland sees no good reason for being bashful in its demands. A Legitimate Inquiry. Philadelphia Record. The price of crude oil has been ad vanced 5 cents a gallon. Is the University of Chicago In need of money, or is it some churches that are to be endowed this time? To Stella. Sir Philip Sidney. Stella, think not that I by verse seek fame. Who seek, who hope, who love, who live but thee; Thine eyes my pride, thy lips mine history; if thou praise not, all other praise Is shame. Nor so ambitious am I as to frame A nest for my young pralso In laurel tree; In truth. I swear, I wish not there should be Graved In my epitaph a poet's name. Nor, If I would, could I just title make. That any land thereof to me should grow. Without my plumes from others' wings I take; For nothing from my wit or will doth flow. Since all my words thy beauty doth endlte. And "Love ", ',1 ov hand and make3 me - wrltA. NOTE AND COMMENT. Made in Heaven. Married, at the residence of- the bride, Tuesday evening, November 24, Mr. Rob ert Bonnet and Miss Dora Coles. For future needs they've no concern, And lifo Is but a sonnet; For Robert now has Cole3 to burn. And Dora a new Bonnet. S. P. There are no bricks in the ."Hole in the Wall." Colombia does jiot speak .softly, does she carry much of a stick. Nor The Tabasco Central Railway Company is being floated. Warm proposition! Oberlin Carter, whose sentence expires today, will find that his punishment is just beginning. Six couples were married at Hood River on Thanksgiving day, but the general re joicing was not spoiled. There appears to have been some sub terranean work in connection with the plans of the submarine boat. The gun does its best to discourage the habit of dragging it by the muzzle, but the fool crop is perennial. Austria, reviled by Hungary on one side and by Italy on the other. Is like the ham In a very mustardy sandwich. If something must be done to accelerate the canal, what's the matter with a dec laration of Independence from Wasco? Infringement of trademark Is the sln cerest form of flattery, but it Is one that Columbia River salmon packers strongly dislike. Wos y Gil, lately President of Santo Do mingo. Is on his way to Cuba, where his name should add new luster to the pearl of the Antilles. Run, jack rabbit, run like sin. Echo ha3 a cannery, and she'll pop you In; Run, jack rabbit, run like the devil. Hit only high spots, never touch the level. The New York Commercial Advertiser announces that the Middle West Is dis covering Ibsen with its wonted whole heartedness. Bad news. Wo shall soon be backed off into the Pacific. When a detective induces men to Join in a train wrecking plot, as one did in Colorado, it is a question whether his power of suasion or the men's wickedness should be most considered by the jury. Dr. Bedloe, ex-Consul at Amoy, says the Japanese are strengthening their navy by converting mail steamers Into armored cruisers. It would be almost as sensible to talk of converting bathtubs into bat tleships. The Countess Isabella Kwllecki, who has been released after 10 months' Imprison ment, says that the worst feature of life in jail was the deprivation of her mirror. And yet the majority of prisoners dread most their reflections. "Ironquill" Ware is styled the Don Quixote of the Administration. Even so the lean knight-errant was as much of a rough-rider as the power of Rosinante would allow. And we are not informed who is cast for the windmill. Chorus by Republican Committee: O Mark Hanna, won't you please speak out. We all want to know what the deuce you're about; O Mossa Hanna, won't you please speak out. More and more the courts of the United States are becoming instruments of op pression. A recent decision prevents Neely from obtaining the $20,000 bail he put up, on the flimsy pretext that he has less right to the money than the people from whom, he stole it Various plans to decrease the number of immigrants have been suggested. One Is to have Indians whooping on the docks and another to have students greet in coming steamers with their college yells. A better plan would be to show the new comers the rush for a quick-lunch counter. Bryan Is In the Insidious atmosphere of monarchial institutions. He tucks his legs under the same mahogany with men of title and robber statesmen. He exchanges jests with fanatical devotees of gold. Such Influences are stealthy in their action, and ultimately deadly. It may be that Want age shall shelter two exiles, or that an other estate shall be walled off opposite Cliveden. Mr. Sparks, of the Baker City Postof fice, Is a little ahead of the age. There is no doubt that most of the circulars that burden the mail clerks and annoy the re cipients, should be thrown into the fur nace, but the regulations of the Postoflice Department unfortunately prevent the clerks from exercising their discretion. "Man Is born to trouble as the Sparks fly upward," says the Bible, only in this case the flying upward Is checked by the cage of departmental custom. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. Silas Zeke got an economical wife, all right. Cyrus That so? Slias Yes, she actually col lected the rice that was thrown at the wedding and made a rice pudding. Chicago News. The Fiancee But I can't believe that I am the only girl he ever loved. Her Friend Oh, I wouldn't mind that. It doesn't pay to give too much attention to past performances. Judge. She She's really too young to go shopping alone. He Yes, she is rather impressionable. She How do you mean? He She's liable to get excited and buy something. Philadelphia Press. Playwright By the way, I'd like to have you tell me what you think about my new play. Critic I suppose you mean ou would like to have me tell you vhat I tioirt think about it. Boston Transcript. "Father, why do they make such long speeches In Congress?" "My son. If you knew how much trouble It Is to get the floor you wouldn't be surprised at this reluctance to give It up." Washington Star. "You must have had an awful time with the smallpox In your house." "There were com pensations. The police maintained a quaran tine, and my wife didn't have to get a servant for seven weeks." Judge. "How many wives did you say you have had?" she asked. "Ten. And how many hus bands have jou had?" "Seven. May I ask where you are from?" "Salt Lake City. ,And jou?" "The Rlalto." Life. Slmkins Your wife strikes mo as being a very thoughtful woman. Timklns And she Is. Why, you couldn't imagine half the thlng3 she thinks If 1 happen to be detained at the office till after midnight. Chicago News. "What were those blood-curdling shrieks I heard last night" "That was Jamison trying to quiet his new baby. You see he can't sing a note, and so he gives his college yells as a substitute." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Sometimes," said the poet, "I almost get to thinking I would rtUher have been born rich than a genius." "Oh, dear," his wife replied, "I don't go to such extravagant extremes. If you'd only been born with a longing to go out and get a job somewhere I'd be 'satisfied." Chlcaxo Record-Herald.