V THE MOBNIXG- - OBEGONIA2T, 'JjUMDaJ,.- APKITJ 4, 1905. fe fcpntatt Entered the Poetofflc t Portland. Or., as second-claes matter. BTJBSCIUTTION" BATES. IXVARIABI.Y IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Erpress.) Dallr and. Sunday, per year $9.00 Dally and Sunday, six months 5-00 Dally and Sunday, threa months.. 2.5 j Dallyand Sunday. pr month......... .85 Daily without Sunday, per year 7.30 Dally without Sunday, six months 3.B0 Dally without Sunday, three months .... 1.85 Dally without Sunday, per month .65 Sunday, per yar --00 Sunday, tlx months - 00 Sunday, three months ! BY CARRIER. Dally without Sunday, per week 15 Dally per week. Sunday Included .20 THE 'WEEKLY OREGONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) Weekly, per year 1.50 Weekly, six months .75 "Weekly, three months 50 HOW TO REMIT Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ar at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 6. C. Beckwifh Special Apency New Tcrk: Booms 3-50 Tribune building. Chi cago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune building. The Oregonian does not buy poems or rtorles from Individuals and cannot under take to return any manuscript cent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be laelOsedfor this purpose. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex: Postofflca News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex Globe News Depot. 260 Main street. Dearer Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend rlck. S06-OJ2 Seventeenth street, and Frue cu2 Bros.. C05 Sixteenth street. Des Moines, la. Moses Jacobs. 309 Fifth street. Goldnelg, Nctw C Malone. Kansas City, Mo. Rlckseckar Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. ' les Angele Harry Drapkln: B. E. Amos. bH "Wet Seventh atreet. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; L. Regelzburger, 217 First avenue South. New York City I. Jones & Co.. Aster House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston. Four teenth and Franklin street. Ogden F. R. Godard and Meyers & Har rop; D. I. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnham: Mageath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnham. McLaughlin Bros.. 246 S. 14th. Phoenix, Ariz. The Berryhill News Co. Sacramento. Cal. Sacramento News Co., 429 J street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second street South. Santa Barbara, Cal. S. Smith. Ban Diego, CaL J. Dlllard. 8an Francisco J. H. Cooper & Co., 746 Market street; Foster A Crear. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter; I. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market: Frank Scott. 80 Ellis; N. Wheatley. 85 Stevenson: Hotel St. Francis News Stand. St. Louis, Mo. E. T. Jett Book 1 News Company, SOS Olive street. Washington, D. C. Ebbit House News Stand. , PORTLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 4. 1&0S. ROOSEVELT TOR A THIRD TERM? The Democratic party has many queer mental crochets. First it's forBryan, then it's for Parker, and now It's for Roose velt, It wants him to be nominated and unanimously re-elected four years hence. The Democratic party, however, does not propose to move to make it unanimous, but It does intend that he shall be the People's Choice, with a large "P." The Democratic party has a monopoly 'of people's choices, and a very large and varied assortment to choose from. The only thing marring this very excellent programme is that the people never choose its candidates. But that is a minor detail. We Judge that Roosevelt is the pres ent Democratic programme from the very significant performances of some Democratic leaders and other Demo cratic newspapers. Mr. Hearst has re cently declared in his newspapers that ttfie President will be and should be nominated to succeed himself in 1908. The New York World echoed this ad mirable sentiment by saying: President Jloosovrlt wiH be renominated tor President of the United States In 190S, and be will Tor. re-elfKsted. He will be re-elected not merely because, he Is the Idel of the People, or on account ot his virtues, or by rea son of the mistakes that add to hla popu larity, but because there will be so real op position. The Democratic party is and will be hopelessly divided against Itself. All this is very edifying, in view of the repeated assaults on the President by the World during the last campaign. Since then it has devoted a great deal of space, energy and learing to its ex posure of the mistakes of Roosevelt However, the World surrenders four years In advance, but expects to con tinue the fight, all the same. Mr. Bryan in his Jefferson day speecfi intimated- that the Democratic party is "not so much in need of reorganization as it is of harmony. The truth of this state ment Mr. Bryan demonstrated twice for himself and once for Mr. Parker. Mr Bryan not long ago called at the White House and assured the President that he was with him heart and soul in his railroad rate fight and the beef trust Inquiry, and in all the "Democratic policies which Mr. Roosevelt avocated and sought to enforce. All this evinces a. studied and careful plan to place Mr. Roosevelt in a posi tion to be a candidate for re-election. It Is remembered not more by Demo crats than by the public at large that on the day following the November election President Roosevelt caused to be published throughout the United States the following announcement: On the Fourth of March next I shall have terved three and one-half years, and thia three and one-half years constitutes my first term. The wise custom which limit the President to two terms regards the substance and not the form, and under no circumstances will I br a candidate for or accept another nomination. The Democrats are merely seeking to put the President in a position of hav ing said what he does not mean. If he were to yield to any suggestion, or In timation, that he accept a unanimous renomlnation. these very Democrati newspapers would be the first to inquire what he meant by commiting himself so definitely and positively against a third term. As they have been his fiercest critics in all his policies hereto fore, so they would not hesitate to em phasize any inconsistency, real or ap parent, in his conduct. It is withal one of the most singular situations in our recent politics. Germany's implied threat to refuse recognition of French hegemony In Mo rocco is apparently an indication of in creasing German activity in the Africa Continent. An expedition of Germans is now in Abyssinia, and a syndicate of merchants is being formed to establish extensive business connections with that country. A new corporation, the German Bank for Bast Africa, has opened offices in the principal ports of Northeast and East Africa. Taken In conjunction with the Kaiser's present visit to the Levant, the significance of these facts Is not being lost upon Paris and London, as the latest dispatches in dicate. The Triple Alliance, with Great Britain as an energetic "rooter," and the Dual Alliance are no longer ranged individually against each other. "Scratch me and I'll scratch you," ap pears to be the mutual attitude of the Czar and the Kaiser. THE CHICAGO ELECTION. If Judge E. T. Dunne, Democratic candidate for Mayor, of Chicago, is elected today, it will Indicate the de termination of the people of that city to embark on the largest experiment in municipal ownership of lines of com munication that the United States has witnessed. One of the questions to be put to the voters, independently of the choice of the Mayor, reads, "Shall any franchise be granted to street-railways?" When the people say "No," the Republican policy of limited extension of existing franchises, on condition of modernized service and equipment, and with the right to buy out the owners at the end of a short term of years at actual valuation of tangible assets, will be definitely and permanently refused. Judge Dunne has baited his hook to the poor and ignorant voter with the promise of a two and a half-cent car fare. This means, in few words, the purchase of the property by the "haves" for the special benefit of the "have nots." To secure for a Democratic Mayor the votes of the latter class the city Is, with open eyes, to make a los ing investment of $100,000,000. Rather a high price. The Democratic programme involves purchase of the properties of the street railway companies (dealing with every line in the huge city, and including ac quisition of current franchises), on the basis of existing profits from the uni versal five-cent fare. But if. as is prob able. Judge Dunne is elected, and com plies with his' campaign promises, the earning powers of the lines will be cut in half In future. The equipment of many of the roads absolutely demands almost entire re newal now. How badly this Is required every recent visitor reports. The city's capital account will have therefore to be heavily loaded up, also, on this ac count. It is a spendthrift career on which Chicago will so embark. The funds for the purchase, development and equip ment will require issues of stock prob ably to the aggregate of $100,000,000. And under the glamour of the start the moriey will flow in. As the shrunken revenues will have to provide working expenses, dividends, betterments, and inking funds, the strictest economy and most experienced management will hardly avoid bankruptcy. The history of other cities which have taken this same road shows also that the public ppetite for municipal ownership grows by feeding. British municipal enter prises have secured investments of cap ital which have risen by 140 per cent in the last IS years. Up to 1902 the to tal sum so Invested was 51.778.9151966. At a similar rate of increase for the ears 1904 and 1905 the astounding sum of $2,042,400,000 is reached. But the no ticeable point is that these municipal investments are divided into two classes, productive and nonproductive. The productive absorbed 5841,899,350. leaving 5937,016,616 of capital yielding no returns on which the municipalities have to provide interest, and. also to lay up. oy sinKing funds, for the rainy day when payment of the principal for these costly undertakings comes round. Publication of these figures has caused such general astonishment that a prac tical stop has ensued. The most ex perienced writers predict that the high- water mark has been passed, and thai a recoil from further investments along tnese lines is already apparent. Chicago may have gone too fast and far to stop now. If so. other cities in the land will have the chance to profit by a dearly-bought experience. -MERITS OF THE LAND GRANT. The Grand Trunk Pacific is experi encing some difficulty in securing a land grant for the western end of the pro posed road. British Columbia has been asked to give a grant of 7,000,000 acres. and thecompany will not begin work from the Pacific terminus of the road until it receives assurance of some assistance in the form of a grant. Whether the assistance asked is forthcoming or not. the road will undoubtedly be pushed through to the Pacific from the eastern end. but it may be a matter of several years before it reaches the ocean, unless work is undertaken from this end. The land grant has played a most important part In the develop ment of the West, and it would seem a short-sighted policy on the part of the British Columbia government to with hold from the new line Che amount asked. The land, until a railroad is built. is or very little value. The coming of the road will of course increase Its value many fold. but. while the road is profiting by the increasing value of the grant, thousands of settlers and the country as a whole are also reaping rich rewards through its coming. The American Government has been very liberal In its treatment of the transcontinental roads, but the growth and development of this Western coun try would have been seriously retarded for many years had the Government failed to offer a most substantial grant as an inducement for capitalists to in vest in such an undertaking, the out come of which was a matter of grave doubt. The case of the Great Nnrthpm Railroad has frequently been cited as a reason why railroad grants are un necessary. That road, however, was built under entirely different conditions from those which confronted the build ers of the land-grant roads. The heav ily subsidized Canadian Pacific had al ready scattered settlers clear across the continent just north of Mr. Hill's line, while on the south the Northern Pacific had for a number of years engaged In similar work. Neither the Chicago, Mil waukee & SL Paul, the Northwestern nor any of the rest of the roads now headed for the Pacific Coast on this side of the line can secure anything in the way of a land grant or a subsidy, as they have nothing to offer in return. The new road through the wilds of British Columbia will for a considerable portion of its length tap a virgin field and by affording transportation facili ties will create vast wealth in districts now "almost as inaccessible and worth less as they were when Captain Cook was skirting the shores of Western British Columbia. The Grand Trunk Pacific was originally projected for the purpose of opening up the agricultural country tributary to the Atlantic sea board, and It could fulfill this mission without a western land grant. The lat ter will hasten its construction from the Pacific end many years, and It will prove a profitable investment ' for the province which is asked to make. the contribution of land that, until the com ing of the road, will be comparatively valueless. A WHOLESOME OPINION. Opinions differ in this community -in regard to some methods of the City Board of Charities in the pursuance of the work designated by the name of the organization. But when it comes to the views of the Board as expressed by Superintendent Walpole in regard to permitting maimed or blind musicians to ply their vocation upon the street corners for contributions from the pub lic, or allowing armless and legless peo ple, or persons with distorted limbs and bodlos to ask alms under pretense of peddling lead pencils, shoestrings', safety pins, etc., our citizens must generally and Indeed unanimously agree with the sentiment of the Board as expressed by Mr. Walpole in his address in the Uni tarian Chapel Sunday evening. "These people," said Mr. Walpole, "should, if unable to earn their own living, be cared for by the county." This is a simple and plain statement, and one supported by state law and city ordinance. Not only do such per sons by working upon the sympathies of passers-by, receive compensation out of all proportion to the effort made or to the service rendered; but they often shock the sensibilities of young chil dren, and of delicate women who for reasons that every physician under stands should be protected from such sights. To people of sturdier or stronger fiber mendicancy supported by physical mis fortune is nothing graver than an an noyance of the passing hour. Perhaps the strongest tendency of such a com bination of commercialism and deform ity 1s to make the general public care less of or Indifferent to human misfor tune as represented by a twisted hand holding out cheap lead pencils, an arm less trunk appealing to notice and seek ing trade by a garland of shoestrings draped about the neck, or a blind mu sician torturing an accordion until it wails out Its misery in the tiresome jingles of a past era In which love-lorn melodies were more popular than now. This Is certainly true In the case of those who attempt to induce pity for their misfortunes by making public dis play of them. Whether pity, disgusted, bestows an unwilling alms, shocked, turns aside shudderingly or. hardened, withdraws both glance and favor, the effect of the unseemly display is most undesirable and may Well be shunned. The law-givers of the state and city have done their part toward protecting the public from the unseemly exhibi tion that typical deformity Is prone too often to make of itself for gain. It is not more law that is needed in this line, but a strict and Impartial enforce ment of those that arc already here. THE vcE OF IDLENESS. Of all vices to which young men be come slaves. Idleness Is by no means the least. It is a vice easily contracted in youth and hard to throw off in manhood or old age. Unfortunately, It is not generally looked upon as an evil In the sense that drinking, gambling and de bauchery are evils, 3'et its Influence is no less certain in breaking down char acter and sapping physical and Intel lectual strength. Fathers and mothers who would be shocked at the suggestion that they would permit their boys to smoke cigarettes allow tbeir children to acquire from day to day habits of Idleness which no effort of after years is likely to overcome. It Is out of Idle ness," " largely, that other vices grow, and. this one avoided, there is small danger of the child becoming addicted to others. Idleness is a habit, and, like most evil habits, an unnatural one. Toung Chil dren are full of life and activity, and desire to be doing something. Their minds arc alert and observing; their muscles are full of pent-up energy seek ing every opportunity for escape. The child who was "born lazy" is as rare as the boy who was born with a hunch back, a crippled limb or a defective mind. It is lack of opportunity, incul cation of wrong ideas of work, and ab sence of reasonable encouragement in commendable effort, that takes the life out of a boy and makes him an idler, a saloon loafer or a tramp. The mother whose care of her four-year-old is lim ited to "don't do this and don't do that," the father who fails to provide work and play for the boy when he has passed from the mother's care, are not only encouraging but enforcing idle ness. The trouble is that we do not look upon idleness as a wrong as a sin. Re ligious teachers who Insist that no work should be done on the Sabbath day for get that the command, "Six days shalt thou labor," preceded the command to rest on the seventh day, and all the stress Is laid upon the command to rest. While it is true that to some extent public opinion censures the idle poor, it does not look with the same disapproval upon the idle rich. The young lady who insists upon high moral standards exclaims that "Hps that touch liquor shall never touch mine," but does not declare that "the hand that rests in idleness shall never hold mine." Too often the hand of the idler is given preference and honest labor Is looked upon with contempt. Men who contrl bute neither physical nor, intellectual effort toward supplying the wants of the world are too often made the pets of society. The idler is a dishonest debtor, be he rich or poor, for he re fuses to pay the obligation he owes to the world for the necessities, pleasures and comforts it affords him. RECRUITING FOR CHKMATVA. The Indian reservations of four states are being beaten for recruits to the student-body of the Indian training school at Chemawa. For reasons not difficult to. understand, Indian parents are not eager to close with the educa tional opportunities offered to their chll dren, especially their daughters. Even among white parents native-born Americans at that it is not unusual to find those who must be compelled by law to send their children to school. "They can get along without schoolln as well as I did," is the argument which is considered conclusive In such cases. What wonder, then, if "Poor Lo, wholly without ambition, lazy and feel ing absolute ownership in his children thinks the same? And then there is the distrust of the white man and his methods; the In stinctlve feeling that education will fix a great gulf between him and his chll dren, and the natural affection which makes Indian mothers, In common with other human mothers, cling to their offspring, that must he overcome-before the desired and- necessary consent of these parents can be obtained. AH things considered, the educational agents of the Government do well so far to overcome these obstacles as to keep the roster of the training school full or comparatively so. Whittlers word-picture of the Indian maiden Is after all the most natural one, . though contact with civilization has made it obsolete except in poetry. Singing of "Weetamor," daughter of the mighty "Bashaba," who Held his long unquestioned sway From the "White Hills far away To the greajt tea's sounding shore. The poet who touched both the tradi tions and the realities of New England with the subtle hand of a magician, said: Unknown to her the rigid rule. The dull restraint, the chiding frown, The weary torture of the school. . - The taming of wild Nature down. Her only lore the I'gendn told. Around the hunter's fire at night; Stars rose and set, and season rolled. Flowers bloomed and saowflakes fell unques tioned In her sight. Civilization, in attempting to substi tute the love of books and the menial commonplaces of housework, dishwash ing, scrubbing, washing, ironing, sew ing, etc, for this, setting of romance and Nature, naturally meets with many obstacles and produces In the main un satisfactory results. The other side of the Indian woman's life in . state of savagery has been said. but not sung. A wretched drudge, a despised burden-bearer, an abject class of people from the public gaze An object, ever pressing, dims the night. And hides behind Its ardor to be seen. This view of the subject should be suf ficient to retire through proper official authority, this 'beaten, servile, degrad- tt ' , ? ... , u"-1"1 "TK IOU uer on meee snores a century ago, ana her name was leerlon. Methods that have decimated nor ranlw thmic-h vere. have been In the end kindly. And the effort to lift those who remain out of the deeper degradation in which a half-civilized, half-savage environment has placed them, is praiseworthy as being the only thing left to do. The second expedition In search of Anthony Fields, the young Brooklyn ex plorer who has been lost in the white silence of the Far North for the past two years, will leave Tromsoe, Norway, for Cape Flora, Franz-Joseph Land, late In May. The year that does not send out one of these search expedl-' tions as an exceptional one. It can only be hoped that this quest, known as the William Zeigler expedition, will prove successful not only In returning the In trepid young American explorer alive and well to his country, but In enrich ing the chronicles of discovery and of science .by his findings. This hope is not quite as forlorn as that which at-, tended earlier relief expeditions of this character, but it Is still shadowed by the anxiety and doubt that waits on rave possibilities of danger in a re gion where Nature sets her forces re lentlessly against the presence of man. The action of the student-body of the University of Oregon in refusing a representative student of Pacific Uni- erslty the privilege of attending the late debate at Eugene between the TJni- ersity of Oregon and the University of Washington, is hotly resented by the student-body whose member and rep- I resentatlve was excluded. SO far as has been shown there was no reason that is worthy the student-body of the Unlver- elty of Oregon for the action that has aroused the indignation it the under graduates of Pacific University. An open debate. In the form of an enter- talnment, to which the public was In- vited. should certainly have been free to all well-conducted persons who de sired to attend. Times change, even in ancient China. Minister Conger has just met the Em peror and the Dowager Empress in farewell audience, and the Orientals felt so bad over his departure that they decorated him with the "first grade of the third-class Order of Double Drag on. There was a time not so very long ago that Minister Conger was very anxious to leave Pekin, and It was only the fear that the Dowager Empress had given the murderous Boxers authority to decorate him that prevented him from leaving. Whether the Order of Double Dragon will atone for the for mer indignities conferred by order of the she-dragon is a question which only Mlnlster Conger can answer. Reports of Impending famine in India have been sent out of late, and yet Consul Ridgley rejwrts that Indian wheat is now figuring in Spanish Im ports for the first time. Wheat from Bombay has been competing with that from the Danube and Black Sea coun- tries, and made up 20 per cent of the grain imports into Barcelona. Consul Ridgley further reports that Spanish millers are petitioning for a rebate of the duty on wheat ground for export. or. In other words, they are beginning to think seriously of exporting in large quantities flour ground from imported wheat. Chairman Payne, of the House ways and means committee, favors free trade with the Philippines in 1909. According to the old song, many things will hap pen In 1909. Meanwhile the Filipinos are learning much about the blessings of freedom, political, commercial and otherwise. Port Arthur's Russian civil Governor says that Stoessel was bribed to surren der the fortress, but the public will con tinue to believe that Stoessel yielded be cause the Japanese gave him more than he bargained for. President Roosevelt remarks that im left Secretary Taft sittinc- on thA-Urf r the Rtn FinmintrA offni- vn( i made Secretary Taft the 'ideal man to keep down anything that can be sat uPn From the ashes of defeat Mr. Merrill. he says himself, "rises like the phoe- nix." .Nay, nay; .Mr. Merrill Is a far more Iridescent and coruscating bird than was ever the phoenix. After tackling the gray wolves of Wall street every day or so for three years, the President will find the In dian Territory wolf-hunt a mild diver sion. The President has at last got his 5100,000 man in Theodore P. Shonts, chairman of the Canal Commission; but he gets him for 530,000. About this time the Colorado lions begin to wish they were just yellow dogs. More Excuse for It. Atchison Globe. Somehow a misspelled word in a love letter never looks so bad as one In a-lottcr written just before committing suicide. NOTE AND COMMENT. The smaller the auto, the more'noise it makes and the stronger it smells. "Is Chicago going insane?" asks the Chicago Tribune. Not exactly "going. Soattle retaliates upon the "Raffles" that made her famous by making him j stand trial. St. Johns can now settle back in Its armchair and watch Portland In the throes and throw-downs of ' an elec tion. "When Hay's away Loomis will play As much as Taft wiM let him. The man who 'invented the phrase about the "open door" has been the cause of more international guff than anyone else in this generation. Chiffon is the cirrus of the millinery sky. Tip to candidates for the Mayoralty: The phrase "A square deal for every man is about worn out. esiacs round dollar is more to the point. Evangelist Toy's life story wasn't s6 bad after all. Summed up In three words It was "ioo much booze," quite a commonplace talc. Chief Hunt now" has a vindication to hang on his watche'nain. Members of the' Australian cricket tcam which will soon pass through J British Columbia on its way to Eng- bnH nn h -.v 3A v., nr 7" a! T;' ul ' ; - w.,:: "-" . finU test match to a finish, instead of limiting It to a paltry three days, it looks as if the Australians will pass the Os?ler limit before the rubber Is Je- clded. When a pearl Is in an oyster and the oysters In a peach, does the girlie get the pearlie that Is thus within her reach? She does; according to the decision of a high and reverend German court. President Harper Is drinking deep draughts of liquid sunshine. He must feel "nil lit up." By" the way, what has become of the City Beautiful? Candidate Merrill's own platform: "A regulated open town, with the re quirement that those who dance must pay the fiddler." The fiddler being Girls are already worrying over the ef- feot of freckles: Fears for the prune crop. Summer comes sky-hootin. McCrcdie replaces Oyama in the popu lar mind. Some poetical cuss talks about proud- pied April. We suspect he referred to rhubarb pie, which now flourishes exceed ingly. . Now and then the barn-yard editor of some Eastern paper tries to boost the hens of his State by spinning yarns about the number or the sire of eggs they lay. Even one knows that Oregon hens lead the world in both respects, but that Is not all. The Oregon hen is an adaptable creature. Look at the poultry of Sardine Creek. They fill their gizzard with nug gets of gold to such an extent that each fowl yields tp a tidy sum In nddition to its market price for the table. All that Sardine Creek farmers need do to become I millionaires Is to buy enough chickens and put them to work as miners. Think of having the gold actually brought home to tho hen-house. Happy Sardlno Creokers; they don't even have to walk after their golden harvest. All that Is necessary when a farmer needs $5 is to cry "chlck- chlck-chlck-chick," and cut out a couple of gizzards. How it must grieve the new mothers to road of the Hans Christian Andersen celebrations. That a man who wrote a lot of most untruthful stories for chil dren should be honored thus is a disgrace to modern civilization. Had he done some thing useful compiled a volume of alge braic examples, for Instance there might be some reason for a celebration but sto ries, and fairy stories at that! Manchurian Benr to Colorado L.ion I know how it feels, old man. On to Har bin. GuBtav Anderson, who would like to be municipal judge, has a most alarming platform "Hew to the line, let the chips fall where they may." Office-seekers de sirous of appropriating famous sayings had better hurry; the supply is limited and the demand spirited. The hew-to-the- line platform is even fuller of possibility than the square-deal one. The Kennebec (Maine) Journal says 'the most unique honeymoon of the sea son was taken by that couple who were married at Bingham last Saturday morn ing and started at once for Portland, where the bride was operated upon for appendicitis." We hope the bridegroom was thrifty enough to hold out the par son's fee and give It to the surgeon. In a damage suit for alienation of wife's affections brought against a Lin coln County rancher, the plaintiff values his wife's services at $2000 and her love at 531.000. This must be highly flattering to her as a woman. If a little mortifying to her as a cook. WEX J. Description of General Bell. C'dcago Chronicle Judee Ben B. Lindsey. the Denver jurist, at a recent address to a civic body in this cltv. was trying to give a fitting desr-Hntlon of Adiutant-General Sherman Bell, tho head of the military govern- ment In the Cripple Creek district In ZL 1111 did not want to use any harsh terms. nr.il. besides, the subiect was a difficult - nno tn handle Rnd cive exactly the rieht shade tr the descrintion. So finally, after making some general comment, he said that he believed the incident ot a Scotchman he had met In "Victor one day would give his hearers a very clear Idea of the man. ' "I met this man on the street one day," said the Judge, "at the time of the mili tary control, and I asked him what he thought of General Bell. The man pulled my ear close to him and whispered 'this Interesting tale: " T was up yesterday morning at dawn. The sun was just coming up and the moon and stars were just getting dim. Over there on the peak of Straw Mountain I saw General Bell sitting. He had sword in hie hand 100 feet long. He watched the sun a while and looked over at the planets. " 'All of a sudden he waved his sword around his head and bellowed, so that the mountain rang and reverberated with the tones. He shouted: ' "Sun, moon and stars! Right about face! Forward, march!" ' "Then, the man said, he watched the jsun come up and the stars and moon go down, smiled to himself and went back to his quarters." REVIVALISTS AND THEIR METHODS Comment by The Orcpronlnn Is Taken Up by the State Preaa la the Pulpit to Be Exempt From Criticism f Candid Statement by a "VVallx Walla Preacher. Eugene Register. PORTLAND has been in the throes of agitation over editorial comment made by The Oregonian regarding the revival in-progress In that .city. One of the evangelists, who formerly was a sporting man, has been tailing how bad he was before conversion and The Oregonian suggested that no good could come from parading a man's past deeds. This question is subject to two points of view. Among a class of people who have given themselves over to vice and have completely lost their self respect, the possibility of reform ing as Rev. Toy has done- might be an encouragement to men 'of that class. But among those who have been rush ing through the world busy with Its affairs too busy to concern themselves with the hereafter yet have kept clear of the destructive vices that drag men down men of this class are not moved nor affected by the reformation of men like Rev. Mr. Toy for they have over steered their bark in an onward coursn without being drawn aside by every wind that blows. Men of strong char acter, vigorous thinking, and of cor rect habits, look with contempt upon the vices that cause men to stumble and fall, to riso today and fall tomor row, strong in manhood when tempta tion is not In the way, but suocumbing to its enticements at every approach, Men ofHov Mr. Toy's type do good n the world but it is questionable wheth- er he can do most good by preaching tne straight gospel rather than in hold Ing himself up as an, awful example of the ravages of sin. The world has come to recojrnize the power and efficacy of the Christian religion in making- men and women better, but it accepts the tenets of Christianity only that conform to the teachings of Christ. The world long since accepted the Bible as the Divine rule for human conduct which urges men to go out Into the world tolling the story of the cross and the sacrifice made for the human race, preaching the doctrines that exalt humanity, put ting behind the old man with all his Bin forever. For we arc taught that through conversion old things are done away with and all things become new. The man who holds himself up as a living example of what can be accom plished in the transition from sin to righteousness will not win as many souls into the kingdom as he who, no matter how bad his past life, makes his present existence a livinjr evidence that he has been with Christ and learned of him and that he is living the doctrine he preaches. Astoria Herald. A coterie of Eastern ministers are holding revival meetings in Portland and One of them announced as hte text. "From Sporting Life to Preaching." The Oregonian criticised the subject with the result that at a meeting reso lutions were adopted censuring- The Oregonian as an Immoral paper and for other theological discrepancies. There are some revivalists who come lnto a community who have formed an idea that they own the whole city, newspapers and all, and everyone must be subservient to their behests whether they believe in it or not. A newspaper has as much right to criticise a minis ters sermon as tho minister has to criticise the newspaper. One of tho fraternity. In speaking In advocacy of the adoption of the resolution, said he knew an instance of a similar kind where a newspaper criticised a minister and it lost 7500 subscribers. . If he had cut off the two ciphers, he might possi bly come nearer the truth. Religious revivals are all right and are often productive qf much good. People don't have to go to them unless they want to. Ail churches and re vivalists depend to a large extent upon the free advertising they get from the newspapers to secure audiences. They have no religious publications to sup ply the field, as there Is not a religious daily newspaper published in the Unit ed States. The ministers or the churches do not own. neither have they ar mortgage on a secular newspaper. although some of the shouting breth ren imagine they have. By antagoniz ing the press they injure their own cause. There are other people in the world who read newspapers besides professional revivalists, and general news and matters of public Importance A, DEMOCRATIC PREDICTION. New York World (Dem.) To its many valued contemporaries and to the political oracles of both parties The World presents its compliments and renews its prediction that Theodore Roosevelt will be renominated for Presi dent of the United States in 190S and elected. The World is well aware that in the bubbling enthusiasm of an unprecedented victory Mr. Roosevelt said that he would not again be ajcandidate. It is also well aware that Mr. Roosevelt's first Impulses ar frquen"y "versed by his sober sec- Villi VUUUb".. Mr. Roosevelt controls the Republican organization. The Southern delegates will favor his renomlnation. The Far West will be wildly enthusiastic for him. In New York and Pennsylvania the ma chine will be for him. Favorite sons may have friends In the next National Con vention, but Theodore Roosevelt will be the real choice of the delegates. "Thirty-six months is a long tIm- for anv candidate to keep the pre-convention enthusiasm of his followers at a white heat." observes our neighbor, the Sun. The enthusiasm of Mr. Roosevelt's fol lowers is always at a white heat. He is the radium of American politics. He will be renominated, and his elec tion will follow; as a matter of course. What candidate of a hopelessly divided Democratic party would stand one chance In a million against Theodore Roosevelt? For Health and Beauty. Cleveland World. Don't wear tight shoes; they make a voung "face look old and drawn and wrinkled in a few hours. Don't live to cat, but eat to live. Many of our ills arc due to oveneating. to eat- Ing the wrong tnmgs anu to irregular I eating. Form a habit of throwing oft Before ( going to Dea at mgni an me cia m anxieties of the day-cverything which can possibly cause mental wear and tear or deprive you ot rest. Don't go too long without food. Hun ger gives a strained look to the face, too. Now and then If one is fatigued a bite between meals will Invigorate tho whole system and give relaxation and repose to strained muscles and nerves. Don't worry, but If worry you must keep the forehead smooth don't wrinkle It. Worry Is called the American Na tional disease and Amerlcanltls is its distinctive name. The women of the Orient are wiser they never worry. Order. Life. The chairlady rapped sharply. "It ought not to be necessary for the chair to remind members," she said se verely, "that under our rules of order, to say nothing of common courtesy, only one member may be silent at a time- Any member who becomes silent at the same time that another member Is silent is distinctly out of order." The ladies of the club visibly cringed under this merited rebuke. Many of them flushed to the roots of their hair, and several there were who burst Into tears. arc published to satisfy all classes and conditions of society. One may read an article in a newspaper that he does not approve, and read a number of others that he does approve. His neighbor may approve the article that he condemns and condemn the article that he approves. It is impossible for any newspaper, either religious or sv ular. to please everyone. Even Christ when he was upon earth did not teach doctrines that met with the approval of everyone. A minister can not preach a sermon, no matter how eloquent and how honest and si near e he may b that will meet with the approval ot everyone. The criticisms in The Oregonian were just anh reflected the sentiment of . larger number of people than aitond the churches or revival meetings. .W cannot or will not be Chrhttat. All will not be Republicans or Democrat? Very fe"w men agree upon a certain or given proposition, but everyR in en titled to his opinion and his belief. Rev. Andreas Bond. Walla Walla Union. When Thp Oregonian and traveling re vivalists enter into a discussion of reli gion. It is certain that the public will re ceive more heat than light on the sub ject. One only needs to bear in mind th radical difference which exists btwert the viewpoint of the agnostic on the our hand and that of tho tn-anf-elfctk? prche on the other to realize how utterly impos sible it is to arrive by mean of words or reasoning at any sat'sfrfotory oencW sion. This is true, at least to a doRrf. in any religious controversy. We take It for granted that Robert InersolU Mr. Gladstone. Bishop Potter or Lyman Ab bott arc perfectly sincere in their pro fessions and yet in spite of il tbt ha- been said and done, the great iemne re mains unchanged by their differing argu ments. Logic does not seem to be tl-.e only factor in discussions ot this kind. or. If it is. it surely is a fluctuating ar ticle rather than an infallible bfis. It Is quite certain that when the evawli- tic extreme meets with the extreme o' agnosticism wc are witnessing a concus sion rather than a' discussion. The revi valist holds that without Christ tnre U no salvation, that this erth. if not a. purgatory following Paradise Lot. I at best a means to an end. a school pre paring for the "far-off divine ovent." The Oregonian, on the other hand, leaves heaven to the clouds, care nothing about any scheme of salvation and swoffs'at con versions. This being the cns what can revivals mean to Editor Scott? What will he think of thousands of strong men shed ding tears at the sight of the crosa and professing the ideals of the Nazareae m preference to those of their pasr lives? But if The Oregonian has erred by b Ing too authoritative in its claim, the re vivalists have positively blundered with their unreasonable and unehristtan atti tude toward the public press. The ditor of the great Portland dally simply ex pressed his view concerning preachers who tell of their past dehoucberk fn the purpose of deterring the young. A- cording to his idea, such preaching wiU J rather lead attention to than creat re- pulsion from th fleUs of vice. This 1 a matter of opinion. It is a question o" judgment and to forbid the public press from expressing its candid comment on such a topic would be dangerous Inter ference with liberty of thought. But it not also unchristian to pass resolutions against such freedom of opinion, to threaten a boycott? That a large num bor of Protestant clergymen of Portland should so far forget themselves must deplored by all who have the progress ! Christianity at heart. But even in this feature ot tho argu ment we can recognize two sides. Dr. Toy evolves from a sport into a revival ist? Does it not seem that this very fa -t gave him power to impross hl Audlftnc Would plain common sense have done a much? Would the word of a eonsena tlve clergyman who had kept close to tr straight path have counted so much f T the multitude? Has the religions com ment of The Oregonian reached any d graded character and turned his fa e toward the light? The fact most be a l mitten' that the pew likes sensations. If a man of unbroken good behavior a-I dresses his audience, there are a larg number who say: "He knows nothing c' our joys and temptation: if a man Hk" Dr. Toy talks. The Oregonian demand that he be silent on his past caroer. Whom shall we please? ODD BITS OF NORTHWEST LIFE. Keeping Tab on Joseph. Cleveland Cor. Bickloton News. Jos. Gaddeberg, from near Dot. is ;n town patronizing the blacksmith. His lady accompanied him. Otherwise All's Xve II In Freewater, Freewator Times. Marshal Campbell is kept quite busy cutting moat, feeding and tending an hundred odd chicks and catching th unlicensed dogs. Sad Mishap to a True Lover. Munkers Murmurs In Santiam News., Walter Fuller while cn route to vis.t his best girl last weak, fall into a slough near Mr. Kuthe's last Swndai hjiit after a hard struggle he managed to get out. Try Him Out on Some One Else's Sister. Beaver Corr. Tillamook Herald. A certain young man being ques tioned as to why he didn't visit h sister as frequently as usual said, "the, river is too high." We suspect he i? too tuckered to attompt the trip. Pernicious Curiosity of a Federal Official. Pilot Rock Record. Maud, daughter of "Columbia Joe." a resident of McKay Crcok. returned from the mountains Wednesday auri was interviewed by Postmaster Ma thews. "You look as if you had been up against old borcas," said the gallant postmaster, as he gently brushed a snowflake from Maud's shoulder. "Yes," said Maud. "Heap snow, high mountains. Good year huckleberry, me thinks.' and Maud smiled, exhibit ing a wealth of ivory. The postmaster returned the smile In a most gracious manner, and then said: "Maud, do you know I honestly believe you are the doggondest best looking squaw I have ever seen." With a Pocahontas smile Maud gave a twitch at her bright-colored blanket revealing a pair of pigeon-toed xaoc casined feet, and replied: "Heap snow mountains. Good year blackberries "Well, how deep is the snow?" asked Postmaster Mathews. "It Is It is up to my my knees. answered Maud. A brilliant thought then occurred in the postmaster. "Maudy, just wait a minute." pleaded the postmaster, while i he scurried across the street to bor row Owen Carnes tapemeasurc But Maudy didn't wait. Old, Old Story. Chicago News. She What arc you reading? He A novel entitled "One Woman s Love." She Is It Interesting? He Oh, it's interesting enough, but it lacks originality. Thero is one hero ine in it. and Ave consecutive heroes.