XJms.31UK.VIXi OKEtiOVlAX, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1907. erBSCRTPTlON RATES. IT INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. tS (Br MmtL) ally, Sunday included, on year. .3.. .$8.00 Dally, Sunday Included, alx months.... 4 Rally, Sunday included, three months. . 2 5 ljaliy, Sunday Included, one month, 75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 0-00 rjsllv. without Sunday, six tnontha 3.-5 Xa!Iy. -without Simdav. thra. months.. Dally, without Sunday, one month...' Funday, one year Weekly, on year (Issued Thursday). Sunday and Weekly, on year ' B CABKIEK. Dally. Sunday Included, on year..... Dally, ftundss Included, one month... .60 t 50 1.00 8.30 8.00 HOW TO REMIT Send postoffico money rder, express order or perirenal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency r at th sender's risk. Give pontofflc a dreaa la lull, includlnr county and state. POSTAGE BATES. Entered at Portland, Oregon. Postoffiee a fieeond-Claea atattr. JO to 14 Pace 1 1 to 28 Pace! 5 ""?! 0 to 44 Paes cnt to 60 pagee c,nM , Foreign Postage, double ratea. i IMPORTANT Th postal law ar strict. Xewspapers on which postage la not fully prepaid are not forwarded to destination. CASTER BI-S1NKS8 OFFICE. Th 8. C. BeefcwItD Hpeelul Agency New Tork, room 43-50 Tribune building, cni caao. rooms eiO-512 Tribune building KEPT ON BALE. Chlcngo Auditorium Annex, postonice Kea-s Co.. ITS Dearborn straet. St. Paul, Minn. N. St. llarlo. Commercial Elation. , Denver Hamilton & Hendrlck. 906-012 'Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 111 Fifteenth atreet; I. Welnstein; H. P. Ban sen.' Kansas City, Mo Ricksecker Clear Co., Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; Eagle News Co.. corner Tenth and Eleventh; Toma News Co. Cleveland, O James Pusbaw. SOT Su perior street. Washington, D. C Ebbltt House. Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia. Ta. Ryan's Theater Ticket office; Kemble. A. P., 3735 Lancaster ave nue; Penn News Co. New York City U Jonei, & Co., Astor House;; Broadway Theater Newa Stand. Murrain, jr. y. Walter Freer. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnson. Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; Hale Newa Co. Oedrn D. U Boyle, W. G. Kind. Ill Twenty-fifth street. Omaha. Harkalow Bros., Union station; Msireath Stationery Co. Sacramento. Cal. Sacramento Newa Co., 13 K atreet. - - . Salt lake ?.Ior.n Book & Stationery Co.: Rosenfeid & Hansen. l,oa Angeles B. iC. Arrroa. manager seven Itieet wagons. Han Diego B. B. Anton. Long Beach, Cal. B. K. Amos. I'apHrrienih, Cal A. F. Horning. Yort Worth. Tex. Fort Worth Star. rin Francisco Foster A Orear. Ferry Newa Stand; Hotel St. Francis Newa Stand; i I-arlnt; N. Wheatley. l.olcllWld, v. Louie Polltn. Kureks, Cal Call-Chronicle Agency. Norfolk, Va K.1U8K & Gould. Pine Beach, Va. W. A. Cosgrove. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, MARCH 516, 1907, POBIKDONOSTSEFF. It was the unenviable lot of the late Mr. Pobiedonostseff, as it is of most theologians who acquire great political power, that his sincerity made him a ?ruel ruler and his inflexible integrity in enemy of the h-umah race. It would ae an error to look upon Pcfblodonost stff as a monster of cruelty; so far as can be learned, his disposition was kindly and he was distinguished toy his leal for the welfare of his fellow-men. It woultl 'bo a mistake to believe that his character is singular or that Russia alone could produce a -man at once ,-so. virtuous and so sinister. 'He was of a type which has- bad many exemplars, and almost every nation has at some time in the course of Its history experi enced the baneful effects of intrusting political power to men of ecclesiastical training and instincts. Occasionally a prelate, liko Cardinal Richelieu, in France, has -been able to lay aside the rigorous mathematics of his creed and adapt his rules of conduct to the com promises and approximations which , mark the course of human affairs; but such have been exceedingly rare. Much more frequently the ecclesiastic in ex alted secular power more resembles I'hilip II of Spain, who. devastated two hemispheres for what he sincerely thought was the glory of God- and ruined a world-wide empire to enforce a code of metaphysics. Philip was not himself a prelate, but his mind was essentially of the type of Pobiedonost .seff's. Physical science differs from pure mathematics in that it professedly pro ceeds upon assumptions which are con trary to theory. For tho mathemati cian the sum of the Interior angles of every plane triangle is exactly equal to the half of pi; the straRlht line has length, but no breadth, and the circle has area, but no thickness, for tho physicist, on the other hand, no trian gle is perfectly true to the prescription of Euclid; every line has a certain width and every surface a degree of thickness. In all directions he departs front the j-igor of theory and makes concessions to facts. All his results are approxima te, his processes meander through a world of continuous compro mise. ditlv trcn lue uicuitriiiiu nunu in trie mathematician and the reaf world of physical science there exists the same difference as between the condition which the ecclesiastical mind seeks to realize on earth and the incalculable complexities of actual life. In practice right and wrong are not often deduc tions from pure theory. Much more fre quently they are to be determined in . particular cases by the possible and the expedient. What is right in one cmer- nency is wronr in another; what is mercy in one slate of circumstances is gross cruelty when the circumstances alter. The training of the ecclesiastic, looking as It does entirely to the ideal where exact formulas Invariably con trol, necessarily unfits him for the con duct of affairs of state. His concept is of another world, where all error is eliminated and all uncertainties abol ished. In endeavoring to conform mankind to the conditions of' heaven lie ignores the distinction which Kant drew between the theoretical and the practical reason and introduces. a reign rf insanity which he mistakes for right eousness." All this happens even when we con cede that the scheme of tho theologian Is abstractly desirable; but when It is essentially wrong, as was that of Po biedonostseff. then if he trains political power he becomes indeed a grewsome figure-, for. he is just as sincere in his mistakes as he would- be were his con clusions sound; and he endeavors to Institute the rule of tyranny with the same unbending rigor as he might use In another case to establish liberty. There is not the least doubt in the world that Pobiedonostseft beileved the absolute rule of the Czar Nicholas to be right, not only as a matter of polit ical' expediency., but also as the decree of the Almighty. Therefore to disobey the commands of the Czar was. to his mind, a breach- of. the divine law as well as of human statutes, and a pro posed charge in the constitution of. Russia was. an insult -to God. Knowing: what the constitution or Russia is, what misery it has-wrought to those who must live under it and how it' has depraved the characters of the men who exercise the almost superhuman power it gives to the Czar and his fam ily, we may well wonder how any one could sincerely and unselfishly believe that it has the approval of a just God. Still, that Pobledonostseft was. both sincere arid unselfish does not admit of the slightest doubt. He has never been charged with unworthy personal' mo1 fives. So far as his private character was concerned, nobody ever accused him of greed or hinted that his conduct was directed by fear or favoritism. But ill spite of his virtues, largely be cause of. them' indeed, Pobledonostseft was the evil genius of the Czar and the angel of 'destruction to tils country. More than any other one man he must be held accountable for the miseries which have long rioted in Russia and which in all human probability must grow Indefinitely -blacker before the dawn of peace and prosperity breaks over that unhappy land. He was be loved by Nicholas and enjoyed more of his fickle and superstitious confidence than any other man. Neither of them naturally bad or cruel, they formed a pair at whom history will shudder for all time. The massacres of the Jews, the savage slaughters of the peasantry, the famines mhich desolate the fertile domains of Russia, the interminable civil war which spreads death through all her provinces and the probable dis solution of society with the unimagin able horrors that must ensue, will be charged up in the final accounting more largely to Pobledonostseft than to any other person. WHEX THE MILJLESXirM COMES. Under the head of "Political Tenden cies," the Salem Statesman ventures the prediction "that before ten years the people will sicken of the initiative and of the primary system." If there is any evidence of that tendency. The Oregonian does not now see it. While it is to be hoped that political changes in the next ten years -will be such that-the peonle will, feel free to repeal the initiative, there is no reason at present to belleve: that' such a trans formation, will. ta.ke place.. .The people will- repeal the : initiative whenever they are satisfied that they will get a square-deal from the , Legislature, and not before. None-will more, gladly wel come the coming of that day. than The Oregon ian. . - It has -been said in' these, columns many times and may well be repeated now that the. people of this state did not want the initiative and referen dum, but it was forced, upon them by men who misrepresented -the people in the Legislature. ,-"-The .people did not want the direct primary until political bosses controlling conventions and manipulating Senatorial elections made the adoption of some such law seem the only relief from an unsatisfactory system. The people of this state did not want a railroad commission, but the railroads forced trie creation of such a tribunal. The people will hail with delight the day when railroad management -will be such' that the railroad commission can 'be abolished. A holiday will be proclaimed for re joicing and thanksgiving when the people rise up and say, "Away, inlti ative, we know that the Legislature will give us the laws .we' want; away. referendum, we know that what the Legislature shall enact will meet our approval." With, .the qualifications here Indicated there will toe general Indorse ment of the prediction quoted above. ' But in this same connection a word must be said relative i to a sly mis statement or something' The Oregonlan had to offer a few days ago upon the subject of leadership.- Says the States man: "The Oregonian demands the rearing of some man who will so dom inate in either hrahch of the Legis lature that he will be able to force the other branch to terms upon any ques tion of legislation." Forcing the Leg islature to terms upon "any" question of legislation is vastly different from what The Oregonian proposed when it said that "the people of Oregon are looking for men -whose abilities mark them as leaders of public movements- men who are in full sympathy with the people and who will at all times and in all places fight faithfully and intelligently and to the last ditch for public interests." The Oregonian said that, one such man with the voice of the people "back of mm is a majority. The trouble is that we have had too many men who -were willing to fight for "any" legislation, and not merely for the legislation the people want. The lack, of men willing to fight for the people's interests is what makes the initiative necessary and what delays the time when the fulfillment of the Statesman's prediction may be real ized. WHEN APriX-GROWEBS DIFFER. It will toe surprising to many to read that at a meeting of Hood River apple- growers there was the widest difference of opinion as to the advantages of irri gation. There were those who asserted most emphatically that irrigation is of no advantage, for, though it may in crease the yield a little, it does ao at the sacrifice of flavor and keeping qual ities. Others, also experienced in apple- growing, were just as positive in the declaration that irrigation does not 'af fect either the flavor; or the keeping qualities. In a region where apples are grown with and without irrigation, and where particular attention is given to the industry, it would seem that this would be a question long ago settled beyond dispute. T To the inhabitant: of Oregon who gets most. of his knowledge of apples through his mouth, and who, being dis interested, can take, a calm and un biased view of the question, it seems likely that the Hood River debaters were .all right and all wrong in other words, that each was partly right and partly wrong. When well-informed men disagree so radically on a simple problem, it is safe to assume that a little yielding on each side would have brought them pretty close to the truth Thus, in an attempt at a long-distance guess, it is The Oregonian's opinion that irrigation sometimes injures the flavor and keeping quaiity of apples and sometimes it docs not. Such a con elusion is reasonable. It has been many times asserted that Oregon irrt gationists use too much water, and the assertion is not limited to growers of alfalfa or grain. If. some of the apple- growers use too much water and give the roots of their trees .more moisture than they need for production of sound fruit of perfect texture and flavor, It i not unreasonable to believe that injury will be done thereby. Forcing any ag ricultural product to" an abnormal size is likely to be at theexpense of qual ity. Then, too, the use of water, both as to time and quantity, must vary with the'season and the condition of cultiva tion. Irrigation once undertaken must be kept 'up, for, it a tree has adapted itself to ' abundance of water, it will suffer very seriously f the supply be cut off for a single season, while a tree that has not been 'irrigated would go through a dry season -without harm. tree accustomed to irrigation will have its roots most numerous where the water supply is best, usually near the surface of the ground. For that reason suspension of irrigation subjects the tree to Injury that would not be suffered by a tree whose roots had struck - deeper into ;-the soil and had spread out uniformly in all directions. There, is no branch of agriculture that requires so high a degree of intelli gence, care and skill as fruitgrowing. Pruning, spraying, thinning, picking and packing must be done in the right manner or the best results will not 'be attained. The- grain farmer may plow and sow and then wait for the harvest. The apple-grower must be alert and active all the time to keep his trees good condition. In those districts where irrigation is a feature of fruit growing the producer has one more problem to which to give attention. He who assumes that any one can make a success of irrigation who can open a headgate has something to learn, and he will probably learn it by dear ex perience. To put on enough . water, at the right time, and distribute it in the most effective manner requires thought, care and labor. While this subject of fruitgrowing Is under consideration, it may not be amiss to call particular attention to a matter of particular importance dis cussed by Horticultural Commissioner W. K. Newell, at Dallas, a few days ago. Mr. Newell said that he 'believes more Summer pruning of fruit trees should be the rule. It Is now the al most universal practice to prune in the Winter, while the trees are dormant. There is an old saying, "Prune in the Winter for . wood; in the Summer for fruit." Winter pruning causes the tree to send out new shoots, forming new branches. Bummer pruning does not hav-e this, effect, but causes the fruit to reach a larger size. Young trees sho-uld doubtless be pruned in the Winter, but mature trees will be better for Summer pruning, though, of course. some of the branches will need trim ming in the Winter as well. Mr. New ell's .presentation of this subject, shows -that it will not do to assume that methods ;,once adopted are the ' best and -should be blindly followed. Prac tically all pruning of fruit trees is now done In the Winter, but it w ill not be -surprising if In a few years more than half of it should be done In the Summer. GRAB BACK THE FRANCHISE, QUICK. Grabbed from tho city April 6, 1305, by -franchise speculators, the street railway franchise of the Oregon Trac tion Company (Hillsboro line) is about to revert to the city for failure of the grabbers to 'keep faith, by building the tracks and operating the cars within two years. The city should grab back the franchise without wasting any time. and thus end a get-rich-quick scheme of moneyless promoters. The present possessor of. the franchise, the United Railways, has had long enough time to build the line. It has possessed the franchise a year or more, and, while not. responsible for the bad faith of the men who sold the franchise to. it still has -had abundant opportunity to redeem' the pledges made to the city. Now the city's interest should be looked to first. - ... - The franchise covers Stark street. Twelfth,. Twenty-eighth, and Quimby and Macleay Park. The Oregon Trac tion Company was to keep the streets in good repair between its rails and outside them for a specified distance. For use of the streets the city was to receive, during the twenty-five-year life of the franchise, the small sum of $35,- 000. To hold the franchise and to guar antee good faith, the company was re quired to begin work within a certain time, and to spend a stipulated mini mum sum of money in that period. The company carried out the letter of the franchise in these two respects, but not the spirit It laid about half a mile of double track. . It then quit," and has done nothing since, nor has its suc cessor, the United Railways. It tore up the streets to lay the rails and never put them back in good condition. The people along the route wanted the tracks taken up, since they were not used and were a nuisance and an ob stacle to use of the streets by the pub lie, but could not get rid of them nor compel improvement of the space be tween and outside the rails. Meanwhile the holders of - the fran chise, unable to build, were hawking it about, trying to sell it and line their pockets -with gold, as did their pluto cratic rivals in the local first-family aristocracy, when by selling .blanket streetcar franchises, in the Spring of 1905, the rivals thrust the $4,000,000 proceeds into their pockets and through their newspaper organ boasted of their achievement in thus enriching them selves at the expense of the public. The lesser magnates of the Oregon Traction Company, having this golden picture of wealth before them, tried to sell, too, but their mightier rivals shut them out of purchasers and their franchise was knocked about on the bargain counter until the United Railways took it up. ' The Oregon Traction Company fran chise imposed no penalty for the benefit Of the city and required jno bond. It was one of those "easy" propositions which , have victimized the public of Portland out of millions of dollars. Luckily for the city, and also strangely, the speculators have not been able to "realize", from their high finance. The franchise appears to be ; within the clutches of the city. The people's serv ants in the City Hall should'grab it back quick and declare it forfeit. BETTERING THE COMMON SCHOOLS. Amendments to the educational laws af Oregon made by the last Legislature were framed toy educators in the Inter est of thoroughness and comprehen siveness along practical - .lines. 'Inci dentally or sequentially, they will lead to an increase In the wages of teachers, and, it may be hoped, to greater at tention to . the practical education of the many rather than undue expendi ture of energy upon the higher educa tion of the few. - Governor Folk, of Missouri, noting the tendency to make our system- of public education topheavy. says in his straightforward way: "It is of more eonsequence that all the people should have some education than that a few should be highly educated," and when he adds, "Every state needs more com mon sehoolhouses. better equipment, better-paid teachers and better teach ers, no school being better than Its teacher," ...he. says - that which every friend of the public schools will indorse. The conditions that -disturb society cannot be' dealt with in a remedial way from -the top. down ward. Like the fes tering sore, they must 'be treated from the bottom upward "healed from the bottom," as the surgeons say. In many states, says Governor Folk, ten dollars are spent for higher education .where one goes to lay the foundation of an education in the common schools. This refers more especially to the states whose educational institutions have been reached by the opulence of Rocke feller and Carnegie and Stanford, but the tendency is the same in many states less munificently endowed. Wherever such effort exists It is "like putting a million-dollar dome on a thousand-dollar -house." Again quot ing Governor Folk: It is well enough for men of wealth to en dow great universities to give uncommon edu cation to a few, but it would be better it they would, give some of their millions tor a com mon education to the many. The donation of large libraries to cities and towns is a commendable thing, but if the millions these libraries cost were given to the cause of education of the massea through the com mon schools, the public benefit would be greater. We need universities and we need libraries, but these should not cause the neg lect of the common schools. The effort made by our educational workers to take Oregoh out of the list of the states thus characterized as maintaining a system of topheavy edu cation is a commendable one. That it will result in the betterment of our common -schools, the -more adequate pay of teachers who make teaching a profession instead of a stepping-stone to some other vocation, and the general increase of knowledge among the masses through the village or traveling library, and the suburban or district high school, is confidently believed. iFrom -Spokane to The Dalles in 36 hours Is a reasonably quick down-hill haul. On the morning of March 19 the Spokane Spokesman-Review printed an editorial on "Statesmen UelDed by Their Wives." On the afternoon of March 20 the same article appeared word for word on the editorial page of The Dalles Chronicle. On March 22 it appeared in the Salem Capital Journal, but credited to The Dalles Chronicle. It must be a good thing. Just about this time look for an original discovery in the editorial rooms of the local pluto cratic organ about "Statesmen Helped by Their Wives," and the due appear ance of an able editorial on that sub ject, the first four words of which or perhaps five will be "made in Port land:" ,.'.. The history of graft In San Francisco shows that the success or failure of a graft administration depends upon the character of the man who occupies the office of Prosecuting Attorney. Graft cannot be carried on to a very consider able extent without there being evi dence of it sufficient to arouse the sus picions of an alert Prosecuting Attor ney. San Franciseo has had grafting bosses almost continuously Since it had municipal business that afforded oppor tunity for graft. The election of an honest man to the office of District At torney was what led to the prosecutions now occupying tho attention of the whole civilized world. Where extensive graft prevails the District Attorney must be stupid, indifferent or dishonest. iTate wives of irascible husbands should take warning by the fate that has oefallen Mrs. Loftus, now in the city jail, and confine themselves strict ly to the broomstick and the rolling pin as weapons of marital warfare. The lapse of prudence which, permitted this woman to seize and wield a knife as an implement of discipline and slash the arm of her unruly spouse is .likely to result much more seriously than she intended. No doubt the man needed to be disciplined. He admits as much himself. Where the woman made her mistake was in not sticking to a truly feminine weapon of domestic warfare. The question of smoking on street cars could be settled promptly, with out Inconvenience tp any one and with out loss to the company. All that is necessary is the announcement by those in authority that smoking will not be allowed on the streetcars or on any part of them. The public must and will ride. The streetcar company is in a position to dictate terms in this mat ter. It can- do so without pecuniary los and to its great gain in the re spect of a large proportion of its patrons. Favor is deceitful and protest is vain;- it is authority that counts when a public nuisance is to be abated. Mrs. W. C. Chattin, well known in this city a third of a century ago, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Smith, of Irvington, 3ast Sunday, of pneumonia. 'Her husband Rev. W. C Chattin, was engaged in missionary work on the Yakima Indian reservation in I860 and later In T. M. "C. A. work in this city. A quiet, womanly woman Mrs. Chattin lived a simple, useful life and passed on full of years, best be loved by those who knew her best. "Indian information" is all that is crafty in conception, sly in communica tion and intangible as regards proof. It is the kind of information that bosses convey by significant indirection, that henchmen and satellites absorb toy in tuition. Conveyed perhaps by a look, a wink or a tip, it is Intelligible only to those who are read in the subtleties of graft and greed and corruption. That Senator Spooner may have had his eyes upon a salary of $50,000 a year when he left the Senate is suggested by the Courier-Journal. He would certain ly make a better run than some of the distinguished gentlemen who have no quit the Senate. . It is reported that a barrel of salts was used in treating the 900 veterans at Fort Leavenworth Soldiers'. Home who were, poisoned by eating tainted hash. All the men were saved. There is nothing that excels the old family remedies. - The railroads declare that they can not carry passengers- In the Rocky Mountain States at 2 centB a mile be cause grades are heavy and local travel light. But none of. the Rocky Moun tain States have enacted 2-cent rate laws. The railroads say they Will be com pelled to discontinue the special excur sion rates -because of the 2-cent rate laws. Here's guessing that excursion rates will be as numerous as ever. Our proper elation over the news as to the nd' of the Nlcaraguan-Hondur-lan war is greatly minimized by dark misgivings as to what became of the mule. They say the Nicaraguan war is ended, but stories of bloody ' fighting continue to' pour in. A.nother . war, doubtless. SAN KRAXCISCO ASiD HER LOOTERS 3iewepape?r Comment on Peculiar Con dition Faring be Bay City. .' New York American. -In San Francisco,- as in other, cities. the public service corporations had long been accustomed to debauch the local government and secure by bribery the llegitimate privileges that enable the corporations to plunder the public- In San Francisco they put through meas- re after measure by buying the needed votes exactly as they would buy grind stones or nails. It is time we estab lished once for all the principle that the rich, respectable man that bribes a pub lic officer is at least as detestable and at least as much to be punished as the public officer that accepts ' his dirty bribe. End of Sehmlta Labor Vnlon Party. New York Kvening Post. Nowhere else has there been quit such a combination .of grafters, corrupt corporations and labor-union . rascals working hand and glove to defraud the public. And it is this same Schmltz- Ruef labor-union gang which has- eet tself up as censors of the habits and morals of the Japanese! No wonder that he Sun reports that the end of the Schmitz Ibor-Union party is in sight. t is far more important that It should be destroyed, than that the city should be rebuilt. llry'a Rlarhta Hawked Far -lrnft. Chicago Chronicle. v Nothing could be more enjoyable to honest people than the &prlrtg house cleaning now in progress in San Fran cisco. . . . One source of vice in city governments is that city officials hold certain powers and propertv in their hands in trust for the good Of the people, and they peddle them out for graft to any one who wants them, to the injury in stead of the benefit of 'the people. That is what ails San Francisco, and that Is what ails Chicago. Place Blame Higher I p. New Tork Tribune. The prosecutor is right in making every effort to bring home the charge of brib ery to the heads of tlie franchise-buying corporations. The capitalists who preyed upon San ..Francisco in the hour of her prostration, corrupted her officials and bought rights and franchises against the city's interests should not be allowed to escape scot free while cheap labor lead ers, whose heads were turned by their sudden exaltation, pay the penalty for their corruption. Jail the "Respectable (irnftera. Chicago Record-Herald. Perhaps the corporations had to do business with the politicians to get a start. They are expansionists and pre fer finally to deal with rogues rather than with honest men. Moreover, they are a permanent while Ruef is a pass- ng phenomenon. It is to be hoped that if he is punished they will not remain unscathed. , Better almost to let Ruel go and to put a -few substantial citizens in the public" institution at San Quentin. I.abnr OriEnnlaAtiona Clean Honsc. New - York Globe, The exposure Is the worst known in America since the days of Tweed. The corrupt "combine" among the Aldermen of St. Louis uncovered by Governor Folk was not one-quarter- so bad. The supreme object should be to put business criminals, and not merely the politicians. in the penitentiary. It is time for working- men's organizations to clean house to repudiate practically all of present day labor politicians. Heney With Tllden and Folk. St.. Paul Pioneer-Press. Should Prosecutor Heney succeed in placing Abe Ruef and flls official abet tors behind the bars, he will well de serve the high place in public esteem won by Samuel J. Tilden in his encounter with Tweed, and by Folk In his battle with the Butler crowd. Bear Hero Save rrrorrning Mate. New York World. Thousands of visitors at the Bronx Zoological Park one recent afternoon wit nessed a thrilling rescue from drowning by one" Alaskan brown 'bear of its play mate. , , Spectators In front of the bear cage had been watching Admiral and Bob, two bears from the .-Admiralty Islands, frisk ing around for several hours in the bear tank. During one of these playful "duckingn" Admiral, after holding Bob under the water for a while, climbed out of the tank. With the passing of time and ithe failure of Bob to emerge. Admiral, peering into the tank, saw -that, his playmate was slowly drowning. He dived into the water. with a. splash. Slowly he managed to pull the drown Ing bear to one end of the tank, where there are two steps that lead up to the floor of the cage. Pushing .with all his energy. Admiral succeeded in rolling Bob up over these stairs and on the stone floor. With the water atreamlng from Bob's mouth. Admiral quickly rolled the oear on -his back and then rolled him around on the floor in an effort to get the water out of his system. By this time Thomas Mulvihill. a keeper, had arrived on the scene with a barrel. With this he quickly entered the cage and placing the bear across it. began moving it from side to side. Slowly the work of resuscitation progressed until finally the bear who had so nearly lost his life was brought back to lite. I'. S. Government-Built Shlpa Beat. Rear-Admiral Coghlan . in Leslie's Weekly. .t The Government builds . the best ships that float. That is certain. The Connecticut Is the finest vessel of her rate and size in the world, and she was built in a Government Navy Yard. Government money is spent honestly. There are no fights and squabbles to get what the contracts call for. If it does cost . a little more money It is worth it. !-In the progress -oi building up our Navy for the last twenty-one years we are gradually getting to what is the nucleus of a very fair navy. We who are interested, in the upbuilding of the Navy want mora ships. We are today endeavoring, to get what we have been quietly working - for the last fif teen years that is. large ships with heavy batteries- and great speed. But the sea-going classes and the mer chants are conservative. It takes a long time to change them. Take, for instance, the case of the flrat monitor. It took the Government a long time to adopt the plans. These monitors were intended for smooth water and not to go to sea. In -the early days we were occupied in getting this type of vessel made into a battleship. We didn't want the monitors because they were unstable. It is only when we get the big battleships, whose movements are so slow -and steady, that we get the best results for warfare. Free Seeds. Minneapolis Tribune. Straight down the aisle he bravely bore A banner they had seen before; A llac; that his constituents Had brought him when he Journeyed hence; And on the breathe that rose and fell Boone forth the words he loved ao well: "Free seeds!" "They don't come up." the knocker aald; The farmer member shook his head; "That cuta no Ice at all with me. The main thing la they're given free, And my Seedan 'twould surely be If. this bill falls to give to me Free seeds!" Some Crooks. ! Catholic Standard ami-Times. Some people pride themselves that they - Succeed where others fail. By which they merely mean to say They've never been In jail., PORTLAXD'S. CAPACITY FOR TEARS The Limit by No Means Reached Whew "BnttrTfly" Was Here. Chicago Inter-Ocean. It is said by no less an authority than The Portland Oregonian that at a recent performance of "Madam Butterfly" In Portland the audience shed two gallons of tears. .' In view of the facts and .figures pre sented with this statement, it does not seem like an exaggeration. In the first place. It is stated as a fact that there were 2000 In the audience, and that evcry rnan woman and child wept when they saw . Butterfly with her baby waiting at the.-window for the American husband and father who neglected 'to return as he faithfully promised to do in the first act. In the next place, say that -each per son in the audience shed on ao average a teaspoonful of tears. TlreVe are 1024 teaspoonfuls to a gallon.. One thousand persons, therefore, would shed approxi mately one gallon of tears, and 210 per sons two gallons. So there you have it. But this is really not the most serious side of the Portland case. Two gallons of tears shed in teaspoonfuls through out a large theater woukl be. no more than a sprinkle here- and there. Very true. It would hardly be noticed by the house cleaners. ' Very true. But suppose tluit some evening "Ca- mille'' should be produced in Portland by Mme. Sarah, "or that Portland should turn out to witness "11 Trovatore," and should become hysterical during the Tower scene, or that the Clybourn Ave nue Thespian stock company should go out there, and produce "East Lynnc," or that the -Seattle Amateur Dramatic company should come down there and the Portland audience should burst Into tears at Pauline's passionate farewell forever to Claude Melnotte, should we not again be called upon to read the aeartrending particulars of more dis astrous floods in the Puget Sound dis trict? We rather think so. Nobody will, or can, -object to a bucket or two, more or less, 'but the weeping habit is one that grows on a community. It used to be so bad In Omaha at one time that all stock actors and actresses ' appearing in meioorama insisted upon appearing on the stage out there in rubber shoes and mackintoshes on account of the all-per vading dampness of the theater interiors. Klf il RECOUXT FOR MR. HEARST Rerord Showa Persistent Absenteeism From Congress. New York Sun.-. In strict Justice to the gentleman who has recently represented the Eleventh District of New York in the House of Representatives at Washington, we have gone carefully over his record of attend ance and public service during the session mat closed on March 4. We have done this in a spirit of fairness, in order to see ! whether the concluding mouths of Mr- Hearst's term-of office afforded any indication of -belated reform in his habit of persistent absenteeism, or any evi dence of a new conceutjon of the mihlln duties and responsibilities be had not only voluntarily assumea -Dut Had also ear nestly besought from his fellnw-citlioris If we had found such evidence we should nava hastened to publish the discovery: and the publication would have given us inucn pleasure. The record of the Hon. William R. Hearst for the second session of the Fifty-ninth Congress probably his last opportunity to prove his worthiness for legislative off ice is here presented: Days In session to March 4 '. . . 71 Pays when Mr. Hearst may have been present ; I-j Days when he seems to have been absent 6H Total of rollcalls to March 4 a:l Reprenentatlve Hearst recorded as voting 0 Recorded as not voting an BIIIk introduced by Representative Hearst S Petitions- presented by Representative Herst w o speeches-by Representative Hearst 0 Inrtdf.utaJ remarks by Representative Hearsti fj ThW closes a chapter most discreditable to a young man whose personal ambition to be a statesman was in itself praise- wormy, most disgusting to the citizens who At his solicitation permitted him to become their Representative, most an noying to the taxpayers whose money he has taken without rendering equivalent service and most instructive to all per sons who are asked to contemplate the possibility of his entrance into any other putJllo onice requiring fidelity to trust and a reasonable attention to business. And there is no going behind these re turn!, . Where Editor I-yon Got It. - Albany Herald. Across the top of the front -page of the Salem -Journal last Wednesday appeared the following- motto: "Look up, not down: look out, not In; forward, not back; move ahead.'.' Thursday morning the Albany Her ald placed the same motto at the top of Its ' first page. Plagiarism, plagiarism: Oregonian. "Tis false, 'tis false? The motto re ferred to first appeared in the Herald and three days after was appropriated by the Journal. The Herald however, does not make any special claim to originality for the moto, as the thought was suggested by a convict in the penitentiary. An unfortunate printer once got side-tracked and landed in the Oregon penitentiary. While there he was . permitted to print a paper. "'Look out, not in; up, not down," was constantly Impressed upon- the readers o'the prison paper. SPRING ; sjj . From the New Tork Press, THE I.II.IK8 WEXT-. SOON BE BLOOMING ON" MR. CRAVEN'S MICK HEAPS. MRS. W(iJORTH'S RECEPTIONS An Viewed -''by An Ohio Republican " ' evrapnper. Cleveland Leader. Word comes from Washington - that Mrs. Nicholas Longworth. Jr., is rapid- ' ly taking her place as a leading. host esfi and that her Tuesdays at home . . are brilliant social features. Ordinar-. By such an announcement would at tract scant attention. The sight of matrons, young and old. going in heav- ily for entertaining is too common at the Capital to be spectacular. Every one big enough to get into the social register is either host or guest. Tho social action is so swift and constant that, according to the cynical observer, only the corpse stays home in Wash ington at time of death. Sack of Mrs. Longworth's conspicu ous hospitality is the shrewd plan of a devoted and ambitious wife. She is easter-for her husband to succeed in politics and so' she is grafting a for eign custom on American society. Sho) is aiming to start a political salon. ThHt flourishes In London, where thy petticoat influence is wide and strong in politics. . - A wise, bright, tactful wife is one ' of tho best asst-ts of the budding Brit ish statesm-in. She makes his nom at tractive to tho men in power, whii-h is- a ' big st-p. She brings his best qualities to th-'ir friendly notice. She keeps him at his tasks when he is lazy; curbs him wht-n he gets unduly Im patient: guides him skillfully in tick lish places and jockeys him along un der the wire when, if left to his own running, he would nave been distanced, in all probability. All thwse wonders are achieved. : mark you, by women who are more kindergartners In the school of life, while the American matron is a grad uate with the highest honors. Our women, whatever their social stand ing, are quick-witted, energetic, re sourceful, convincing, cajoling and al together fascinating. They have beau ty and good taste; all the decorative qualities. They - have adaptability. They are at home anywhere and every where. New honors develop new graces, au tomatleally. A shop girl marries iv multi-millionaire and has the breed ing of a duchess at once. A morn schoolgirl becomes the first lady of the land and her grace, her dignity, her self-poise are immediate and phe nomenal. We send our American girls hap hazard to the courts of Europe, and they win all eyes by t'-ieir beauty, their grace, their breeding, their frankness and their brilliancy. The President's daughter made a. striking impression: so did a handsome Cleveland girl many years ago, and it is still vivid. We score all along the line. The American girl Is the best help meet of man because she is the hrst all-around girl in the world. She do s everything nnd does it well. If she starts a aalon it will succeed in nil ways. It will "entertain and reward IIS guTSl, It will ,uuvai Lie pet irtu i its hostess. THEY THRIVE UNDER PERSECTTTIOX Railroada Show Increase -Ylth Rebates) and Passes Eliminated. MinneaioIis Tribune. It is amazing to see how the railroad of the . "United States thrive under per secution. For the past five years they have' been "under the harrow. The Presi dent has been after them continually in the courts and through the Interstat Commerce -Commission. Cringress !m been interfering in their business wit1 restrictive legislation. The State T?gipJ Iatures have been doing their part nK passing bills to reduce rates and in crease taxation. " One would naturally expect to see som marks of this continual persecution in the business of the railroads. Yet nrtthin seems to be the' matter with them ' excer over-prosperity and tlte common affli' tion of a restricted money market. The; cannot buy equipment or build track fa enough to handle the increased busine; that is offered. They cannot horro enough .to make the improvements cail for by their enormous traffic This is the only complaint they mak of the persecution ithey -have suffere1 but they seem to be no worse off tha others. When a railroad and some oth borrower compete in the money marke the railroad is apt to get the bett terms. The Japanese government is pay ing higher interest on its refunding boni than, tlie Pennsylvania Railroad, pays o: its foreign loan. There is no evidence of suffering froi persecution in the report of railron earnings for 1906, just made public. O the contrary tn gain of earnings without' parallel in the history of an year in any country. The American ral roads have earned $250,000,000 gross an ISo.OOO.OOO net more in 1906 than In 190 The increase -in ten years from 1896 i tl.335,000,000 gross and J424.000.000 net, Onl once in the ten years was the gross in crease over 1200.000,000 and then the ne increase was only 50,000.000. . Of course much of the astonishing 1n crease of the last year is due to th growth of traffic that lias glutted line and congested terminals. But is not som part of it due to the increase of ne earnings by cutting off freight rebate and free passes? Have not tho railroad received directly a larger profit from th same expenditure by the very persecu tion against which four leading presi dents are going to the White House v protest? SIGNS