THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1903. He regotttcttt Entered at the rostcfnee at Portland. Oregon as second-class matter. REVISED SUDSCIIIPTION HATES. By Hall (peltate prepaid. In advance) Dally, -with Sunday, per month 1 S3 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year......... 90 Daily, Tith Sunday, per year............ 8 00 Sunday, per yrar JO The Weekly, per year 1 JO The Weekly. 3 month! 60 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted.130 Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday Included.:) POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: JO to 14-page paper ' It to 2S-page paper .......30 Foreign rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In The Ortgonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Ortgonlan." net to the came of ay Individual. Letters relaUng to adver tlslrg. rubscrlptlon or to any business matter should be addressed simply 'The Oregonlan." The Oreconlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts seat to it without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Once. 43. 44. 45. 4T. 48. 43 Tribune building, New Tork City: B10-1I-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Fal ce Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 38 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1003 MarLet street; 3. K. Cooper Co., 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand: Frank Scott, SO Ellis street, and N. WheaUey. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. S50 South Spring street, and Oliver Haines. SOS South Spring street. For sale In Kansas City. Mo., by P.Icksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For tale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. SIT Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. 13 Washington" street. For nie In Omaha by Barkalow BrosL. 1613 Famam street; Megeath Stationery Co, 1303 Famam street. For eale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second South street. For tale In Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. For tale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton Kendrlck. 000-913 Seventeenth street: Louthan & Jackeon Book and Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence streets: A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER-Falr. with no marked change In temperature: east to southeast winds. TESTERDATS WEATI I ER Maximum tem perature. 40; minimum temperature, IS; pre cipitation, none. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY C. THE NEW TAXATION. Powers of taxation, possessed by our State and Federal Governments, are to a large extent concurrent; and yet the fact is Indisputable, whatever the causes that have led to It, that while the several states have been stripped of productive and little burdensome sources of revenue, by. the growing di sbands of National life, proceeding from the changed conditions and circum stances of the country since the Con stitution was established in 17S9, they have also been yet further restricted in available subjects of taxation by the operation of causes wholly beyond statue control, until polls and direct property valuations have almost alone remained to them, without some check or hin drance, as sources of their revenue. The first real effort in our own state to reach and to define new objects of taxation have appeared in the present "Legislature. The corporation taxes pro posed may not afford the best means of reaching one of the objects sought; but since the effort is mainly tentative and experimental, changes may be made as experience shall teach or warrant. The same may be said of the tax on inheri tances, which now only awaits the Gov ernor's signature to make it law. "With the single exception of duties on Imports, the right of taxation is co equal and concurrent In the Federal end State Governments; but through the constantly increasing demands of the Federal Government the equilibrium of these coequal and concurrent righta has been lost or destroyed. Ia other words, the Federal power has monopo lized most If not all the best sources of revenue. Yet protection of the rights of person and property and the vast de tails of local administration must de pend on the activity end vigor of the states. This duty has been so far com mitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of the states that the Federal authority may -not touch any of the primary and essential elements- of it. Tet the Fed' eral Government has taken possession .of all, or nearly all, of the most fruit ful sources of taxation. "W&en the Constitution was estab- llshed the extent of the United States was but a fringe along the Atlantic Coast, nowhero more than three hun dred miles wide. Commercial Inter course was hardly known. There was neither steamboat nor canal nor rail road nor telegraph In existence; and with hardly an exception, river naviga tion did not extend beyond the limits of a single state. Lands and polls were the principal subjects of taxation for -state purposes, and the highly product ive and little burdensome subjects of excise taxation, which make the chief sources of revenue for expenses of the civil administration the world over to day, had not then been developed. As fast as they have developed In later times they have been appropriated by the Federal Government. This came about largely through conditions cre ated by the Civil "War and its conse quences. In the early time there were no pub lic funds in which investments could be made, and in fact there was little or no money for such investment If opportu nity for making It had existed. Invest ments of money In government securi ties, even in Europe, was then of but recent existence, and was practically unknown in the United States. There were no such public funds as our vari ous bonded debta, in which capital, ac cumulated in one state, could find In vestment in another and avoid taxation at home. There were no railroad, man ufacturing, mining, telegraph and the lke Incorporated stock companies, to absorb the capital produced by the com mon industry and shelter it from taxes for state and local purposes. Such i thing as share capital in private cor porations created by the laws of one state and carrying on business In yet another, or in most. If not all, the other states, was wholly unknown. In the early time whoever might be tempted to conceal part of his taxable property in order to avoid being taxed on it was In danger of losing caste with his neigh- bora, if he yielded to -the temptation, It would not then have been deemed good citizenship, nor commendable busi ness sagacity, to evade payment of taxes by Investments outside the state juris diction, even If opportunity allowed. And as all operations of government then were on a small scale and expenses low, the burden on land though It fell chiefly on land was not great. Land could bear it. But the change has come. Operations of government are vastly extended public -servants share the luxurious Ideas of the times; state and local gov ernments must have money In great 6Uma for objects formerly not dreamed of, yet the state has opened no new sources of revenue. Hence visible prop erty land especially suffers; and it be comes the duty of the state to device means of relieving it, from such sources as may still remain in Its hands. This is the justification of the new schemes of taxation now nuder consideration In our Legislature. Since the Federal Gov ernment has taken possession, appar ently, for good and all, of the best of the mighty sources of revenue known as Internal." the states must find other m carta. Land values cannot stand the ever-Increasing strain. BISMARCK REVERSED. Finance and poetry occasionally find a common devotee in the same man; but the occasion is rare. Equally unusual la the combination of the man of thought with the man of action. Think ers are seldom doers, and vice versa. All our great Presidents of force In af fairs have been the source of grief to their scholarly adherents. Give the mil itary or political or financial genius an Imperfect plan, and he will nevertheless achieve great things with it. "Wrong in theory, he will be Invincible In practice. Inadeqaute measures he will compel to success by sheer force of his indomita ble will. Comparatively worthless raw material, obedient to his magic touch, becomes the finished product of perfec tion, grace and power. A man may achieve pretty much everything that he sets his heart on, and surpass the high est expectations of his followers. He may conquer the world and create an empire, and yet be ignorant and wrong in whole realms of Intellectual knowl edge. The rroverb which tells of the final rlss of truth nevertheless frankly contemplates its being crushed to earth; and error in the hands of the strong may obtain an indefinite title to the throne. What we are coming to is Bismarck Bismarck and the Kulturkampf. In the thirty years that have passed since the ' hold of the Catholics was perforce re laxed In Prussia, the lines of this bat tle have entirely changed. The, question now is not the old one of church and state. It Ida question of civil and relig ious freedom. The enlightened mind was against the Jesuits then, now It can only rejoice at the promised dissipation of religious proscription. Tet we need not misconceive the spirit of Bismarck's policy. He was not so much concerned to relieve the masses from ecclesiastical domination as he was to extend the domination of the civil government which he himself controlled. It was not that the church stood in the way of lib erty, but that It stood In the way of Bismarck. His great conflict with the Vatican formed a consistent part of his Imperial policy, which also included, as well as united, Germany, his protective tariff, the colonization of dependencies and the socialistic measures which he employed as the antidote for socialism all in one mighty enterprise of pater nalism, microscopic in detail and ruth less In execution. In the study of religious toleration Germany undoubtedly stands, not at the head of the class; yet Intolerance, as Poe said of terror, is not of Germany but of the soul. The Jesuits will presumably be permitted to do In Germany as they do elsewhere among self-governing Northern, nations. Bismarck' was not the only governmental force in mod ern times impervious to the truth that the only thing to do with religious sects is to let them alone. The only concern the state has with them is to bring their overt acts into conformity with the civil law. The state must punish murder and bigamy and tax evasions and of fenses against the ballot and the courts. But it has no cognizance to take of a man's religious faith, whether he is a Catholic or a Presbyterian, a Buddhist or a Jew, a Mormon or a Christian Sci entist. In the eye of the law, one faith Is as good as another equally condu cive to good government, equally enti tled to respect for Its vagaries, symbols. rites and supernatural traditions. A good deal of the unreason prevails today which persecuted the Quakers 250 years ago. Sometimes the most Inoffensive sects seem to incur the greatest popular aversion. The man of action is apt to be intol erant of the man of thought; of the man of sensibility; of any man whose com bative and destructive qualities are lees developed than his own. "When Napo-y leon saw Louis XVI appear with his red cap In the palace window at Versailles, alt-he thought was "the poor driveller!" and that If the King had come out at the head of the Swiss Guards and ridden down the besiegers; with a few cannon to help, the. monarchy might have been saved. It Is a type of the masterful mind's contempt. It Interested Bis marck very little what the truth was concerning the proper treatment of re ligious orders. "What he thought was that he had the power to establish his theories, and that nothing could prevail against them. "We cannot belittle the power of thei great man Alfred, Napo leon, Bismarck. Perhaps the-strongest testimony to his greatness is found in his temporary triumphs over truth. "We can only be sure that In the long run his work will only abide where he col laborated with right. The mills of God grind slowly, but they grind exceeding fine. . UNDERPAID OFFICIALS, MAYBE. Pity the sorrows of the poor office seeker. He works night and day to get his place, spends money, levies on the time and good" offices of his friends, makes promises he knows he can't keep. and then when he gets it he finds that his salary Is too small and must be raised. All of which is vanity and vex ation of spirit. "Why does a man strive so hard for a Job at the City Hall or the Courthouse If the salary Is so small that he can't afford to work for It? If he can make more In business, why doesn't he do it? "Where Is the mysterious power that compels these poor- wretches to work on for -J100 a month, for example, when vacancies in commercial life are yawn ing for them at $150? No, gentle reader. It Is all a fallacy. The strenuous life undertaken by these amiable and accomplished public ser vants to get Into office Is abundant evi dence that they earn more there, di rectly or Indirectly, than they can earn outside. Suppose one of these over worked and underpaid gentlemen were to resign wouldn't there be. a dozen eager claimants for his place? "Wouldn't every man of political Influence In town be Importuned to "go down the line" for several persistent applicants? Certainly yes. Then why should the salaries be raised? Oh. but the cost of living has Increased. Maybe It has, but that Is not the question. The question is whether the work done is commensurate with the pay, and the only test of this Is the volume of oupply answering the de mand. Nor docs It appear that these officials are indispensable. Every time we get one of them out and a new one in we are speedily informed of the tre mendous reforms the new Incumbent has Instituted In the conduct of his of fice. Think how Smith reformed upecj Jones an8 Jones upon Robinson. Then what must have been the lndlspcnsa. blllty of each of these successive prede cessors! It Is a most palpable absurdity that the men who fight for these places at every election can earn more In private pursuits. If they could they wouldn't s?ck office. If they could they would get out instantly. Nobody need be agi tated with the fear that the places couldn't all be satisfactorily filled with out delay If the entire population of the City Hall and Courthouse should move out this very morning. They won't leave. You can't drive 'em out. OLD AMD XDW JETTY. The Government's plans for the mouth of the Columbia River are readily dis cernible from the full report brought by wire from "Washington In yesterday's Issue. On the whole, the prompt con clusions of the Engineer Corps and the faithful adherence to the approved plans will give more satisfaction than we had ' the right to expect. Interference has been active if unwise and futile. It is doubtless as beneficial to commerce as it is pleasant for the engineers that the undertaking is to go ahead without the peril of having the whole thing thrown back on Congress For one thing, the new enterprise will be assured of more rapid progress than was possible with the original jetty under spasmodic attention at Washing ton. The old Jetty was authorized In 18S4. but it was not till 1893 that it re sulted In the desired thirty feet cn the-bar-. This time work Is not likely to stop till It Is completed. The original depth on the bar was 19 to 20 feet. This was Increased by the Jetty to 31. and since has decreased again to 23. The old Jetty Is m miles long, the new one is to be 2 miles. Perhaps it is not too much to say that this new- Jetty was In a way contem plated in the original project, to this ex tent, that If the 4 miles or AM built should not prove adequate it would have to be extended. Be this as it may, the Langfitt extension Is in perfect con sonance with the present Jetty, In theory and practice. Tho present Jetty has moved the bar some miles seaward; but there It has accumulated again, and the expectation Is that the extent-ion will carry the bar on out into deep water, where it will be dissipated by the cur rents of the ocean. The expectation Is Justified by the experience of jetties In every civilized country. The Danube has been deepened from 9 to 12 feet; the Mississippi from S to 30, the Oder from to 25. It Is not too much to expect that the construction -on the new jetty will begin some time between April and- August of this year, and that In two years at least Its beneficent results will begin to ap pear. Meanwhile all Is clear for the employment of the sea dredge on the bar, which should. If the scheme works out In practice, give ample depth at the mouth of the river by next Fall or Win ter at the latest. Funds are available for both these undertakings without far ther recourse to Congress for a long time. PASSENGER SPEED XOT THE MA1X THING. For some time it has been eeriously questioned by railroad men whether too much attention is not given to showy features of passenger traffic. Only about 25 per cent of railroad revenue Is de rived from passenger business, but the proportion of expenditure for that ser vice Is much greater. This has been excused on the ground- that the passen ger department is the advertising end of the railroad, the assumption being that benefit accrues to the freight de partment from money Invested In pop ularizing the passenger service. How ever this may be, there is a growing disposition to limit the display and to put money Into solid improvements. The action of the Pennsylvania Railroad In sacrificing Its fast train between New York and Chicago for the benefit of its freight service is a notable Instance of the prevailing tendency. The increasing frequency of disastrous wrecks is another thing that brings into question the wisdom of consuming so much vitality for the showy limited trains. Accidents will happen on the very best regulated of railroads, and we shall never be exempt from them while safety depends on human vigilance, but it cannot escape observation that appal ling lists of corpses have been piled up recently by such trains as the Owl, the Sunset Limited, the Jersey Fast Ex press, and others of that class, whoso characteristic was special swiftness. They plowed mercilessly Into slower trains, earning , death to scores and maiming more. The statement of the dying Jersey engineer "I saw the red light, but expected It to turn to white" tells volumes of the desperate chances taken by the locomotive drivers who get the swift trains through on time. It is not uncommon, apparently, to run In the -very teeth of the danger signal and see it, turned to "safe" barely 'In time to avert accident. These chances must be taken or the limited falls behind and gets a bad reputation. But once the red light did not change as it had so often done before, and there was carnage and ruin in an Instant. High-pressure operation Is responsible for accidents of this- class. A limited passenger train may rush over the road with comparatively little danger when there is nothing to conflict with it, when it must take only its own chances. But running the same train over the same route when every siding Is blocked and the main line Is alive with other traffic Is quite a different, matter. So great has become the stress of transportation on the great railroads of the country that every express must thread a maze of trains from one end of the line to the other, all crowded to their limit. That disaster is so infrequent under these conditions is the great wonder. Safety demands reduction of the speed of the fast trains or Increase of the number of tracks" for their use. If there is to be further increase of traffic. The Pennsylvania Is adding two more tracks to the four it already has between New- York and Chicago, and yet deems It wise to discontinue Its twenty-jiour train for the good of the other business of the road. The New Tork Central having an equal number of tracks. Is able to hold Its-fast train, and it Is to be assumed that conditions there are such as to hold the hazard at a low point. The tunnel' accident of that road must have taught it the evil of over pressure. It Is reassuring, however, to see the railroads willing to sacrifice their showy advertising for the benefit of the more, substantial business and the safety of their patrons, and it is by no means an evidence of bad Judgment that such step is taken before harm Is done. Tho American public Is nervous ly anxious to "get there" when It starts on a Journey, but it would rather arrive a little later in good condition than com plete the passage under the Coroner s certificate. Economy and safety are considerations that must weigh with railroad managers as well as with their patrons. The Inheritance tax law Is likely to have to run the gauntlet of the Supreme Court of the United States, as well as that of our own Supremo Court. The Illinois law Is the latest to be tested. An heir to millions challenged its con stitutionality under the fourteenth amendment because it discriminated among the persons of the same class. The ordinary discrimination of a graded inheritance tax has been upheld before. The discrimination relied on In this case Is made between two heirs to a life suc cession, with the remainder In one case to lineal heirs and in the other to collat eral heirs or strangers in blood. The distinction seems unintelligibly techni cal; but It appears that the contest turned somehow on the taxation of in heritance under the "right of dower. The lower court held In effect that the right to inherit, whether by direct or collat eral heirs or "by- strangers in blood, is not a natural right, but a creature of the law, subject to taxation In such way as the law may direct. This decision was upheld throughout, up to the Su preme Court of the United States. The dropping of the old. loner since disused"1 roadway on East Washington street into the slough a few days ago would betgood riddance to bad rubbish if riddance were thereby accomplished. This meiancholy thoroughfare, which has for many months been "no thor oughfare," was In the palmy flays of old East Portland and the Stark-street ferry the scene of mucji activity. With a past so near that is is fresh in the memory of our young people, the old roadway has been for a number of years in a state that has given It the appear ance of antiquity. It is hoped that its collapse will be the signal for Its reju venation, though the street that it spans cannot for many years, if ever. regain what It lost In the failure of the owners of the Stark-street ferry to throw a bridge across the river when it became evident that the ferry was out dated. The isolation of country life is pass ing. In fact. In many sections it has passed. What with railway stations at frequent Intervals throughout the farm ing regions, free mall delivery pushing Its way out into the rural districts, elec tric cars.slnging along on trolleys and telephone lines extending far and near, loneliness has been banished from'thou sands of farmhouses within the past year. If under the old regime the farm er's life was the most independent of all. It Is now the most enviable in another direction, since it combines the quiet and beauty of the country with the touch of urban life that, brings the world, divested of strife and noise, to its doors. The fruitgrowers of Eastern Multno mah are trying to devise ways and means through organization whereby they may secure more certain and sub stantial profits from their business. This is commendable. Every man-Js entitled to reap the benefits of his endeavor, and fruitgrowers have been too often count ed out when the returns from sales came In. Former efforts in this line have failed to accomplish the end sought, but with the experience that they have had the fruitgrowers that supply the Portland market ought to be able to protect themselves from unjust exactions on the part of those known In the granger's vocabulary as the "mid dlemen." Perhaps we should, not wonder that boys brought up on the streets con sider it "fun" to terrify, beat and in other ways maltreat Chinamen who are passing along attending to their own business, when -we are told that the lookers-on at such an outrage the other day "shouted with laughter." This is clearly not the way to impress the thoughtless or untutored boy with the fact that It is mean, cruel and cowardly to the last degree to terrify and Inflict pain upon protesting helplessness. Lake Superior iron ore shipments last year reached the enormous total of 27. 571,121 tons, an Increase of 33 per cent over the ehlpmcnt3 of the previous twelve months. In the one season of 1902 nearly as much ore was sent out of that region as was mined there in the first 'seventeen years of the Indus try, up to 1SS7. The total production to January 1, 1903, was 219.5S3.612 tons. With such a source of supply It Is no wonder our Iron Industries are prosper ous. Sound Advice for the. South. New York Commercial Advertiser. A Louisiana Judge sitting in Now Or leans has given tho white people of the whole -South an admonition which, they will do well to take to heart. In charging a grand Jury he called for the indictment or Impeachment of all Justices of tho Peace and other officials who have failed to suppress mob vlolenco within their jurisdictions in connection with recent lynching of negroes, and said: The whits people of this state now exercise all of the powers of Government. Our llwi are made by white men and administered by white men. To say that the courts and the laws are Inadequate to the punishment of the negro when be deserves punishment, and to his pro tection when he Is entitled to protection la to confess that our race is Incapable of adminis tering; the government, we cannot turn these helpless people over to the tender mercies of Irresponsible mobs without Incurring- the con tempt of all enlightened people and the wrath ox a righteous God. This is a far more -Important question for the South to bend its mind upon than the danger of "social equality" involved In the appointment of three or four ne- groea to Federal office. Too Bluch Luxury In Living;. Milwaukee Journal. There is a great tendency in the present time toward eager pursuit of luxurl ous living. Ever man seems straining every nerve to outdo some one else in moro imposing appearance. He builds his house, not for comfort and convenience, but to have It cost more and make more Imposing ap pearance than his neighbor. Dress, fur- msmng, equipages, styic or. uving or giv ing of entertainments are all based upon how they will strike other people rather than what will gratify one a own personal tastes. If we would have a more real foundation to our prosperity as a Nation wo need to seek greater simplicity in our lives. Harrison's Uard-IIearted Creditor. Kansas City Journal. Carter Harrison says he owes It to him self to run again for Mayor of Chicago. As the creditor is disposed to be obdurate. air. Harrison feels that there Is nothing to do but settle the score SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS One "Way to Do It. Spokane Spokesman-Review. If Oregon wishes to prevent the circula tion of stories of crime, it will have to look after its penitentiary prisoners more closely. Something In This. Tacoma Ledger. Oregon's Legislature is trying to curtail the Tracy style of literature and drama. The plan is a good one, but It would be better not to furnish the raw material for that style. Don't Yet Need Child-Labor Dili. Fossil Journal. The Journal believes that the child-labor bill which has passed the Senate is pro mature in Oregon, and will result in more harm than good should it become a law under present conditions. Klnjr County' Bitter Lesson. Whatcom Reveille. Judging from the wail In the political columns of the Seattle Tiroes, the Seattle hog doesn't wear its courtplaster and arnica without complaint. In the future the City of Seattle will be careful hot to job Van de Vanter and John Wooding as it has done in the past. Not So Dad to De a Clam. Eugene Guard. Occasionally some person who thinks little settles his controversy with an op ponent with the gratuitous advice. "Don't be a clam." Let us consider. In the first place, the clam minds his own business, keeps his mouth shut and grows to be the biggest of his kind and this is all that any one can do." Ho owns his own house and does not have to pay rent; he asks no favors and attends strictly to business. So it Is well to be a clam In some particulars. Clackamas County Interested. Oregon City Courier. No county in Oregon should profit moro by the Lewis and Clark Oriental Exposi tion than Clackamas County. Our terri tory will run right to the doors of the great Exposition. We do not have to hunt the opportunity: the opportunity is brought right to our door. Every ma terial resource of this great county should be brought to the attention of tho public and thoroughly advertised to the world. We have the best county In Oregon one of the best counties In the world. Let us tell about It and demonstrate It, so all may know what Clackamas County is and what her resources are. A good story cannot bo top well told or too often told. Extenuating Circumstances. Canyon City News. There -are few indeed who have not ex perienced a feeling of irritation at the lack of Portland enterprise. Let the ques tions be asked. What capital developed this mine, or where is the ore shipped? To what point are you shipping your cat tle, horses, sheep or wool? Where do you send your surplus fruit and hay and dairy products? So far as the answers are con cerned, there had as well be no 1'ortiana. The state seems orphaned of Us mother city. But it is named when the traveling salesmen want to sell large bills of goods, and it Is the best news center on the Pa cific Coast. Best of all. It is moving in the direction of railway communication with Southeastern Oregon. The Chamber of Commerce recently denounced Its own neglect as almost criminal. Now let Grant County show equal magnanimity and present Its Inducements in such form that the road will be built along its ncn est valleys and through its best towns. What Can He Gain Spokane Chronicle. When a creat nation begins to bully a littlo country It should at least study the probable effect before it starts its game. It Is dlfncult to seo now uermany is likely to gain anything by its present eon duct in the Venezuelan affair. The Kai ser need not expect to secure a foot of land by murdering the South Americans unless he is also prepared to whip the United States. As to the money which la In dispute, that will be paid sooner or later, without resorting to extreme measures., England Is becoming uneasy, growling about the alliance and accusing him of trickery. He is destroying friend ship Venezuelans may have had for Ger man traders and arousing the distrust and hatred of other South American peoples. Finally, ho is alienating tho regard and respect of the people of the United States and is in a fair way to do more diraago to the friendly relations between these two great nations than 10 Jollying trips by Prince Henry and 50 yacht christen ings will overcome. It Is difficult to seo where the Kaiser ex pects to make his :aln. roll tics and State Institutions. Lewiston Tribune. If the present Legislature does nothing other than to pass the bill. providing for tho permanent support of the stato educa tional institutions it will still have done good work. As to the terms of the pending bill, the proper apportionment or the ac cruing revenues and other details the Tribune knows nothing and expresses no opinion. But as to the general purpose ot the bill there ought not to be any two opinions. If properly constructed the tax will not amount to 51 more than the sum the state would have to appropriate for the same purpose anyhow, but the merit all- lies In the method by which the un certainty Is removed from these institu tions and they do not have to logroll every session for their very lives. At present each Institution through its friends In the Legis lature must trade It votes on other meas ures in order to be euro of support when its appropriation bill comes up. There Is no telling how many worthless measures have been Imposed on the state and how many moro will be Imposed on the state by reason of subjecting these institutions to biennial legislative whims and caprices. Wo talk of taking these institutions out of politics or keeping them out of politics, but there can bo no such thing as long as they must depend on politicians even pol iticians in a worthy sense lor their sup port. It is absolutely necessary for the best interests of all concerned that some thing of the sort should be done. It Is also a protection the taxpayer is entitled to have. Over-zealous friends or too eager trafficking at any time are apt to run these appropriations up beyond all reason and once they are up there is no such thing as coming down again. Statue of Lee at Gettysburg Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Wh-t more appropriate place could bo named than the battlefield of Gettysburg for a statue or the Confederate command er In that memorable collision of creat armies? Robert E. Lee's name can never be dissociated from that field. He belongs to It as much as Napoleon belongs to Waterloo. The historical fitness of the idea of a Lee memorial on Seminary hi!!. overlooking the battle ground from the Confederate side, is much more Impressive than Mr. Adams' suggestion of a Lee statue In the National capital, since the equestrian effigy on the scene of General Lee's supreme failure would, in the na lionaust sense. De saved from the pos sible Implication that the military nero of the Confederacy had fought for a cause which, though lost, w,as still worthy to do gionueo. Two Men Needed on Engines, Savannah (Ga.) News. There is no division of responsibility in an engine's cab. Sudden Illness, a faint ing fit, mental aberration, an accident to the engineer unseen by the fireman, who ha his own duties-to attend to, leaves the train and its passengers at the mercy of chance. It is probably safe to say that if there had been two competent men In tho cab of that fast express on the Cen tral of New Jersey thre would have been no collision. The second man would not have permitted the train to run past tho red light, thinking U,iouIdL lain. shits. THE REAL THING IX DRAMA. New York 'Sun. None but a dramatic playwright enam ored of pessimistic themes could with stand the responsiveness of an American Theater audience. This wcck the house is crowded twice every II hours, and Lem B. Parker's "For Home and Honor" sim ply thrills. One rather envies Mr. Par ker. He never angles for a laugh It meets his text two-thirds of the way. Does he wish to sound the tragic note? at once there Is heard the rustle of In terest. A situation tense calls forth cheers", while his villain and villainies need only walk across the stage and their progress Is saluted with groans. This Is success; this is the real thing; this is playing on that harp of a thousand strings called the human heart. let It looks quite simple. Like the late Matthew Arnold. Mr. Parker has recog nized the efficacy of repetition. He does not. tear saying or doing a thing twice, nay. a dozen times. If perchance and the mere doubt is an insult to an American Theater audience his point la too subtly made. Its constant reiteration drives It home triumphantly. For example, he sent his jokes across the stage In pairs, at times in threes. Gussy Love Phoebus! what a name! a very blond, young man with the traditional make-up of Brother Sam. never said anything but "Aw, beg pardon! Awfully sorry, don't you know." These tallsmanlc words unlocked from the breasts of Gussy's auditors consuming laughter At the most unexpected and in opportune momenta Gussy appeared and always with the inevitable phrases. It was to scream! Now fancy the cumulative effect of this Sardou trick. Fancy to it superadded a deaf old woman who always Insists on telling the same story and a Commodore whb is bursting to relate one anecdote. To the three add a fourth, a Captain of the German navy who limps In accent and leg Is it any wonder that the walls of the theater vibrato with uncontrollable laughter! To form a human background, sombre and sympathetic, for these gay come dians Mr. Parker creates a wife who Is married before the curtain rises to a bad man with one wife already. The heroine's most characteristic speech is All will be well If my early marriage is not discov ered. She has rcmarrietf she Is a bigamist without intent, tier good nusDana is a naval Captain: her bad one turns up like a counterfeit penny. Of course, it happens at a ball. But there Is a still more dan gerous snake in the grass an adven turess, formerly a lady's maid, Nansette Leduc a Joy of a name. Nancette imper sonated by handsome Lillian Bayer, was received with groans -yesterday afternoon. When Margaret Mordaunt humbled her self at the unworthy feet of tho daric, sinister, gypsy-looking Nancette murmurs of disapproval were heard: when the ta bles were turned and Nancette fell upon her knees a roar of Joy went up to the roof. Now, wo contend that this is worth, a trousand psychological plays, a thousand dramas of souls perplexed. You are never in doubt for a moment about the motives or the morals of these men and women. Right Is right, wrong Is wrong. It Is not subtle. It is healthy, and about It all hovers the delicate odor of peanuts and German cologne. Of the exciting fire episode, of the Man hattan Beach doings, wo purposely avoid making a reference. "For Home and Honor" is strong enough without sensa tional scenic effects. The clash of human wills Is heard above the excitements of conflagration and hair-breadth fire es capes. And tho stock company of the American does not fail to accord full Jus tice to Mr. Parker's lines. Disguise them selves as they would, the audience recog nized tho old favorites; the action almost came to a halt when Paul Scott appeared as Captain Weber, with a cane and a dia lect. As for Bert LyteL the Gussy Love, there were shrieks only. An ordinary thea tergoer on Broadway cannot realize the Intensity with whlchbese audiences listen to a play. But Lem B. Parker does and has mastered the enviable technique the art of writing emotional melodrama. Jessallne Rodgers, ever opulent in per son and acting; Lillian Bayer, Laura Al- mosnlno, Julia Blanc the amusing Aunt Sarah Frank Jameson. Robert Cum mfngs. a dangerous man. and Maurice Freeman, the popular leading than, partic ipate in "For Home and Honor." Life is Indeed worth while at tho American. Germany Decomlnsr Store Free. Louisville Courier-Journal. Let us hope that Germany has ad vanced in liberalism and has developed a deeper longing for free institutions since Bismarck's day. It has a broader conception of Individual Independence and duty and a more general knowledge of'our own po litical maxims and Institutions. Its masses are learning that government was Insti tuted for the benefit of the people, not pampered and polluted Princes and war lords, and that when It falls In the objects for which It was instituted it becomes worthless and costly incubus and its form should be changed. The principles of Thomas Jefferson are fermenting every where and will ultimately fill the world with republics, not with despotisms. An It Should De. Baltimore American. The greetings exchanged between Pres ident Roosevelt and King Edward are not only remarkable for tho wireless com munication of the Old and New Worlds; but also for the simplicity of their lan guage. They aro not the verbose and grandiose messages of "great and good friends" to each others "Majesty" and "excellency," but the felicitations of two nationally representative men addressing each other and each other's nation In terms of courteous and simple equality. Not All of One Mind. Springfield Republican. Southern Democrats In Congress who are planning to oppose the Cuban reci procity treaty are beginning to hear that the cane sugar Interest or the tobacco in terest is not the only Southern interest having' any relation to the matter. The larger Southern cotton mill Interest sees a good market for Its manufactures in Cuba under reciprocity, and is beginning to make Its Influence felt at Washington. Plnchbaclc Knows Het. Boston Herald. Senator Tillman says Dr. Crum was sent as a Harrison delegate to the Re publican National convention and sold out to Blaine. Ex-Governor Plnchbick, of Louisiana, says Dr. "Crum did no euctt thing. Pinchback ought to know. He is the colored gentleman who generally does most of the negotiating of this sort at Republican National conventions. Senator Quay's Iron Rale. Peoria Journal. We all know now who is the real ruler In this great and wonderful country. It Is Senator Quay. He holds the Senate in' the hollow of his hand, and it is his to say whether legislation shill be enacted or not. The great Republican boss of Pennsylvania Is now complete master of the Upper House in Congress. He is stern and remorseless; deaf to cries for mercy from the distressed Republicans who are asking him on bended knees to give up his fell purpose. Where the Illume Belongs. Omaha Bee. It Is slid that enforcing the law for tho removal of fences Illegally erected on the public domain in the cattle-raising district would wor. a nardsnlp dispropor tionate to the benefits that would accrue to the public. The nonenforcement of the law to which the illegal fencing of the lands Is due Is what his worked the hard ship. ' Preachers and Problem Plays. Boston Transcript. Truly it is hard for a conscientious dora Ineo when a presumably immoral day strikes town. If he ignores it-Hhe wisest course he still finds himself partlcens crimlnls: If he denounces it h5 glves.U the jnmreLjnm punnrf-nir'ing. NOTE AXD COMMENT Yes, it was a nlco day yesterday. Of course we saw the sunshine. We're not blind. Frank L. Stanton is organizing a so- clety of newspaper wits. What a melanr choly company this. will be! Lightning clouds are seldom more than roo yards from the earth. And still none of the anxious Senatorial candidates at Salem havo thought of raising their rods that high. A subscriber writes to The Oregonlan insisting that spelling Is not a good test of mental ability, and that It should not be made a part of any school examina tion. Judging from many ot the letters' received at this office. It Isn't. Wind In a great storm blowing at 60 to '0 miles an hour travels about 6000 feet a minute and exerts a force of 24 pounds to the square fodH We wonder how the Speaker of tho House withstood the pres sure when Jim Ham Lewis was in Con gress. "The rectifiers are drrainr fln whl.vu, ti the level of a chean and nauseous ffnmnflnBd." declares Colonel E. II. Taylor. Jr.. a Louisville. jr., uisuuer. m a statement attacking the re port of the chairman ot the whisky committee of the Board of Trade. Chicago Chronlcja. .me aunemenr. wcim incomplete without a" footnoto advising the thirsty to try uoogieDerry's .Maryland Rye. George S. Boutwell, the oldest ex-Governor of Massachusetts, has been cele brating his &th birthday at his homo in Groton. Mr. Boutwell was only 32 years old when elected Governor of tho old Bay State and was the youngest man ever called to the office. In an. Interview on his birthday he gave this advico to young men: "Find out what vou have n. right to do and do it." Ono of tho most interesting matters which occupied the attention of tho Man About Town during tho past week was a piece of direct Information in re gard to tho present whereabouts of an old-time citizen who died several years ago. The receipt of messages or informa tion from thoso who have gono ahead of us. out of sight and hearing, is no so common In theso degenerate days cs It used to be, or a3 It probably will be when long-dlstanco wireless telephoning and telegraphing has been perfected and brought Into general use It is not, therefore, to be wondered at that a great deal of interest has been, taken In a piece of information lately received by a circle of somo kind of 'osophists in this city in regard to a departed brother who wa3 a well-known and; wealthy citizen only a few years ago. Just how the Information was transmitted Is known only to the members of the cir cle, and It is doubtful if any proof of its genuineness can be produced which would induce a court of Justice to accept it a3 legal testimony. This should not cast a doubt on its truthfulness, as such is tho general rulo In regard to all the Informa tion the world has in regard to thlng3 beyond mortal ken. The fact that the Information in regard to the departed tal lies so exactly with what bl3 brethren would havb expected of him. is sufficient evidence of its truthfulness to satisfy them. The departed brother was; creat ly at- - tached to a group of old cronies, who, like himself, were fond of a quiet game of draw poker, merely "to pass the time, and as the Infirmities of old age grew on him. he spent moro of tho leisure which dragged so heavily on him In their com pany. He continued to derive increasing pleasure from the simple game at cards till after bis sight had become so weak that he was unablo to distinguish the face cards one from another, and was obliged to havo plain marks painted on them. Some of these cronies preceded him to the unknown, and others followed him. but nothing had been heard from any of them, until tho arrival of the informa tion In regard to him, in which they are mentioned. As briefly told as possible, the story Is that tho broker did not find his cronies in the sphere to which he passed, and that in time. If this word can be used in connection with an existence in which time has no piace, he became lonesome, and craved their company. Ho Inquired for them of the party In charge of his sphere, and was told that they wero all In another place on a lower leveu He expressed such an earnest desire to seo them and associate with them again that the custodian gave him a round-trip ticket to go down where they were. Ha found thetrf all enjoying a quiet game of poker, as he expected, and ho expressed a desire for a hand. When asked If too had any money, tho broker had to confess that ho had not, as he had left every cent ho owned on earth. He wa3 told that they always played for a stako to make tho game moro interesting. Ho was accordingly artvlsea to go out and rustic up somo money, as none of the party had any to spare. He went out and In a short time returned with a truck load of tho legal currency of the place. He was asked where "in hades" he had procured so much money. I sold my return trip ticket." said the lonesome spirit. "This place la good. enough for me." PLEASANTRIES OF FARAGttAFHKBS Why does Mr. Bruin hibernate every Wln- terT" "I suppose he nads It too cold out or doors In his bear skin." Harvard Lampoon. This." declared tho eminent orator. "Is tha very key to tho whole question." "But." In terrupted a small man In a rear seat, "whera Is the keyhole?"-Cudee. Mrs. A When I was engaged to my husband he was the very light of my existence. Miss D. And now? Mrs. A. Tho light goes out every night. Brooklyn Life. Mrs. Joy It I do say it. my husband Is worth .millions of money to me. Mrs. Blunt How lucky of you to snap him up when he was go ing cheap! Boston Transcript. Mother Johnny, how Is It yoa stand so much lower In your studies In January than you did In December? Son Oh! Everything Is marked down after the holidays, you know, mother! Puck. He Aro Miss SImson and Miss Tlmklns good friends? She I should say not. Why, they couldn't be more bitter enemies If they sang together In the. same church choir. Chicago Dally News. "He never says anything new." "It's mora convenient so," answered Miss Cayenne. "Peo ple who are disposed to be considerate are al ways sure of being able to laugh In the right place." Washington Star. "Dcyou know Mr. Fresco Mr. Albert Fres co?" Inquired Mrs. Nurltch. "No." said her husband. 'Why?" "I've got an Invite to Mrs. Blugore's garden party, and she says they're going to dine Al Fresco." Philadelphia Press. Shopkeeper (whoso patience Is completely ex hausted) Snippers, call the porter to kick this fellow out. Importunate Commercial Traveler (undaunted) Now. while we're waiting for the porter. I'll show you an entirely new line best thing you ever laid eyes on. Glasgow Evening Times. The door of the drug store opened and a wild-eyed man entered. "Have you," he whis pered hoarsely to the druggist, "an antidote for the breakfasttrtood habit?" On being answered In the negative, he turned on his heel, opened .the door again, and fled shrieking maniacally lata tha rtarHa-CUgaga.TrtpiiTift,