6 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND. APRIL 8, .1906. Entered at the Fostoffic at Portland. Or e Second-Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION" BATES. C7" -INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. "C3 (By Mall or Express.) DAILY. SUNDAY INCLUDED. Twelve months $5.00 Fir months 4.25 Three months 2.23 One month .73 Delivered by carrier, per rear.......... 8.00 Delivered by carrier, jer month........ .73 Lets time, per week.................... -20 Sunday, one year.. 2.30 Weekly, one year (issued Thursday)... 1.30 Sunday ar.d IVekly. one year 150 HOW TO REMIT Send postofflce money crder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency at the sender's risk. EASItliN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 8. C. Beckwith Special Areacy New York, rooms 43-50, Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON BALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, FostofXic News Co., 176 Dearborn street. St. Paul, Mian. N. St. Marie Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton & Kendrlck. 806-812 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, 1214 Fifteenth street; L Welnsteln. Goldfield, Nrr. Guy Marsh. Kansas City, Ho. Illclcsecker Cigar Co Ninth and Walnut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, CO South Third. Cleveland. O. James Fushaw, 907 Su perlor street. New Xork City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, CaL TV. H, Johnston. Four teenth and Franklin streets, Ogden D. L. Boyle Omaha Barkalow Bros 1C12 Farnarat Maceath Stationery Co., 130S ?arnam: 24S Couth Fourteenth. Sacramento, CaL Sacramento News Co., D K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second street South: Miss L. Levin. 24 Church' street. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven etreet wagons; Berl News Co.. 328 South Broadway. San Diego B. E. Amos. Santa Barbara, Cal. B. E. Amos. Pasadena, Cal. Berl News Co. Saa Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co 746 Market street: Goldsmith Bros 236 Sutter and Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand; Frank Scott. SO Ellis: N. Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Market and Kearney streets; Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania avenue. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, APRIL 8. 1906. PASSIVE RESISTANCE. In a world like this, where most things -worth having seem to be got by strenuous combat or not at all, the doctrine of "passive resistance" has never found much open favor among Ith-e friends of progress. It had a great vogue In England 4n the days of the Stuart Kings, who were mean and tyrannical monarchs, but were sup posed by many to have been expressly chosen by the Almighty to rule over Great Britain. Why the Lord should have made such a choice was never explained, nor was any attempt made to reconcile it with his supposed Intel ligence. The fact that a Stuart was on the throne was taken for proof that the Lord had put him there. The much more likely hypothesis that the devil had done It was never entertained: and it was preached from royalist pul pits and believed by the royalist party that active resistance to the King, no matter what he did, was wicked. One might as well defy the Lord himself as his anointed vicegerent. Still there was a refuge for tender consciences. Although it was sinful to resist the King, it was permissible to disobey him when his commands were wrong. It was conceded that a sub ject might decline to execute an ille gal or Immoral order -without calling down the wrath of God upon his head; but if It brought the wrath of the King upon him he must patiently sub- ; mil. This was the famous doctrine of j passive resistance. It was scouted by ! the English people, who cut off the head of one Stuart and banished an other. Its validity depends upon a falsehood, for the Lord never made any man a King. It Is absurd, since It makes one man. often a very wicked and foolish man, more Important than a whole nation: and it Is Immoral, since Its acceptance would . seem to put an end to all liberty of thought or action. Still, there is something to be said for the doctrine of passive resist ance. Imagine a King as -wicked as ou please: what harm could he do If nobody -would obey him? He could not Klay many people with his own hands. He could not collect unjust taxes with out agents to execute his orders. No matter what laws he made, they would fall flat: people would do exactly as they did before. (He could not wage war without officers and soldiers. He would be utterly helpless. In fact, al though the English rejected the doc trine of passive resistance in the time of Cromwell, they have since em bodied It In their constitution, and it is now the actual principle of their dealing with the phantom they call their King. Nobody resists him, but, on the other hand, nobody obeys him. Edward VII might Issue bloody com mands till he was black in the face without doing the slightest harm, for none of his subjects -would pay any at tention to them. The English theory that the King can do no wrong is thus made correct in practice by taking away his power to do anything at all. The doctrine of passive resistance has been adopted now and then by dif ferent religious sects, but, though It was plainly taught by Jesu6, it has necr been popular among his follow ers, who have for the most part been famous fighters. No sect was ever more bitterly persecuted by their fellow-Christians than the Quakers, -whose most conspicuous principle Is that of passive resistance to evil. Their num bers do not Increase very rapidly, but their worldly prosperity is proverbial, ard they have obtained modifications ?n the laws both of England and Amer ica to suit their consciences. No Quaker need fight or take an oath. If sue h a victory for peace can be won by a small sect against the whole world, what would happen If all the professed followers of Christ wore to unite as ' -solutely in the same cause? It Is -it likely that they will do so very sojn. but. If they should. It is diffi cult to see how there could ever be another war. Passive resistance would be the most efficient of all agencies for abating In justice and wrong if only enough pco p could be persuaded to apply it. Just now the labor unions make more use of it than the churches. A strike Is nothing moro nor less than the old orthodox Christian practice of overcom ing evil by suffering, and. in propor tion as strikes have been peaceful, they have been successful. If the -whole body of workmen could be taught to apply the prlnclplo consist ently they would always be successful. If no man would accept low wages, high wages would necessarily be paid. Strikes are broken by laboring men al- of the matter Is an undcviatlng and unanimous loyalty to the principle of passive resistance which workmen are slowly acquiring, though In Its practice they are still far from perfect. The strategy of almost every strike Is marred by violence, and their purpose Is too often thwarted by -workmen who value a temporary personal advantage above the permanent good of their class. Applied In strikes, the principle of passive resistance has proved Itself to be a powerful constructive agency. It is quite as efficient to promote positive good as to destroy evil. There is some reason to think that it Is the Instru mentality by which special privilege will ultimately be abolished every where and the world reconstructed upon democratic principles. In Russia the peaceful strike has accomplished more than violent revolution for po litical liberty. Popular-leaders In Ger many and France suggest that a gen eral strike of the soldiers would para lyze militarism. If two hostile armies facing each other should suddenly re fuse to shoot, It might be bad for the schemes of such a monarch as William of Germany, but who else, they ask, would be the worse for It? What could do more to promote that universal peaco which the Czar so ardently de sires? The doctrine of passive resistance taught by Jesus as one of the funda mental principles of reform has been repudiated for ages by his followers. Now It reappears In the world with a validity seemingly almost universal, a great reformative and constructive dogma of victorious democracy. The stone which the builders rejected has become the corner of the temple. Pos sibly we shall rear upon it not only a new social structure, but also a new and better Christianity. THE FIREMAN AS A LIFESAVEK. A terrific blaze which involved the entire top floor of Portland's largest office building and imperiled human beings was an object-lesson in the work of firemen as llfesavers. Occur ring in the heart of the business dis trict in mid-afternoon of a beautiful day, -when streets were thronged, the Chamber of Commerce fire presented to the thousands of spectators a thrill ing drama never to be forgotten. A tragedy was averted by the skill, the coolness and the intrepidity of a trained band of brave .men. With the modern skyscraper came new duties to men -who fight fire; a more strongly Intrenched enemy must be overcome. Old apparatus was In adequate. Practical men contrived to unite several ordinary streams into a hydraulic giant, ladders were made longer, men -were drilled to meet not only the ordinary, but the extraordi nary, crises incident to their vocation. Greater physical strength than ever before was required, and greater power of endurance, together with intelli gence, steadiness of nerve and high purpose. But saving property Is now only a part of the fireman's work. First and foremost, when the exigency arises, he must rescue men, women and children whose lives are menaced by smoke and flame. To this end he is drilled like a recruit in the regular Army and the men in marine llfesavlng service, but with one distinction that raises him above them; he is taught to think and act for himself In emergencies. Grop ing his -way through blinding smoke in furnace-like heat, he can't hear orders from an officer. In such moments he is a Jaw unto himself. Proficiency .the Portland Fire De partment has attained since it became fully paid was amply demonstrated In last Friday's fire. Ever man knew exactly -what to do. and did at well. Putting up the extension ladders, sup plementing them with scaling ladders, spreading the nets, carrying ropes and securing them, climbing dizzy heights, releasing terrified prisoners whose es cape depended on the strength of limb, coolness and skill of their rescuers, themselves facing no light danger the helmeted men in blue proved stout hearted heroes. Theirs was not chance success. They learned at periodical drills how to win it. Not for exhibition purposes have new men, elbow to elbow with veterans, been required at stated times to perform the feats that were put to intensely practical use when grave danger threatened. They have become experts in what in athletics is known as "team work." They are un der good leadership and carry out with zeal the instructions of a chief who came up from the ranks on his merits as a firefighter and a disciplinarian. That Portland's firemen are actually as well as nominally in the civil service is cause for congratulation. We should never again permit their serv ice as llfesavers and property-savers to be Impaired by the good wishes or the ill will of a political boss.' While it is unreasonable to expect always such successful results as at tended Portland's last spectacular Are. we may be certain of the department's best effort. The best of armies occa sionally meet defeat, but the fighting spirit cannot be quenched. A good fireman Is of the same stout stuff as a good soldier. WOOL AND SALMON. Since Portland attained the proud distinction of sawing more lumber than is turned out by any other port in the world, that great industry has to a de gree eclipsed all others in which we .are Interested, although we are still shipping flour and grain to the value of millions of dollars overs year, and have a wealth of other industries and resources of minor Importance. The annual "harvest" of two of our best crops, exclusive of wheat and lumber. Is about to begin. All along the Lower Columbia River an army of fishermen is making preparation for the annual harvest of the royal chlnook salmon, an eplcureau dainty with, scarcely a peer. The value of the salmon pack. Including the cold-storage fish, approxi mates J3.000.000 per annum, and It is all taken out of the waters of the Co lumbia within a period of about four months. The actual value of the output, how ever, only faintly represents the true Importance of the Industry to all other lines of trade. Nearly every dollar paid out to the fisherman for the raw material is turned over many times, and. in the course of Its wanderings, pays debts or purchases commodities which in the aggregate would reach a total several times as great as the original sum. Another especially val uable feature of the salmon Industry lies in the fact that, aside from the comparatively small expense attached to hatchery operations, the raw ma terial Is obtained .by tie fisherman able for any man who cares to engage in the work. A close second In importance to the salmon Industry is the wool and sheep business In Eastern Oregon; In fact, with the present high prices for both wool and sheep, it is probable that the aggregate value of the output for the present season is In excess of that of the salmon fisheries. While these great Industries flourish In different parts of this great state, and are pre-eminent in their respective fields, both are flanked by other interests which make liberal contributions to the wealth of the state. Along the Lower Columbia, logging, lumbering and dairying aid In the prosperity of the people at a time when the close season for fishing Is in effect. East of the mountains. In the wool districts, there is an Increasing amount of diversified farming, and the general stock "business is a contributing factor to the country's prosperity the year round. It Is this ever-Increasing production of new wealth that is making this country Immune from the hard times which so often threaten older and more thickly settled commonwealths. The wool clip is good, and prices are high. Prices for salmon are satisfactory, and the outlook Is favorable for a good run. This money, coming In at a time when our grain business is over for the season, and the movement of stock is light, win be appreciably felt as a rein forcement of our mighty timber Indus try, which has now reached a stage where it knows no seasons. THE RETIRED LIST. Now and then announcement of the death, at the home of a son or daugh ter, of an aged father or mother, or in his own home of a soldier who won his epaulettes in a past generation, re minds us of the fact that there is among us still a small army of men and women who, having completed the active duties of life, linger yet for a time on the "retired list," awaiting In serenity the call that all must answer. We know that there are a large num ber of men fine, well-disciplined, thor oughly taught men who have given what is termed their effective years to military or naval service, living In re tirement throughout the country. Look ing at some of them as they pass along the streets, erect, active, shoulders straight and true of line, we cannot concede that their retirement was made necessary through disability. We know, indeed, that they have simply stepped out of the ranks to make pro motions possible to their younger, but still not 'young, comrades, weary of long detention in the lower grades of the service. We know, moreover, that many men Just stepping out of active service carry in thejr well-furnished brains that which is not learned in schools, but comes from the tutelage of long experience, and- that In an emer gency they could and would give to their country service not second in ef fectiveness to that which won them honor in their earlier years. Just now, however, they are on the "retired list." Touching this matter, a recent writer in the New Tork Post said: It Is melt that the old make way. and that they who are most In touch with the marvrlous revelations of modern science should brine; them to the proof, but he who cnrrJcn In his silvered head a brain which has digested the knowledge and experience of that which Is Ineontrovertlbly preved.has no nd to Irl that he cumbers the ground, and that he has to walk humbly as among those for whom his country has no use. He rather has reason to be proud that he has earned a rest alike honorable and honored. Keeping -himself abreast of the times, he will find that he Is able to solve many a so called new problem already worked out tin der old conditions, and his Judgment will strengthen many a doubtful decision. It lies In the man himself how far retirement means uselessness. This much for the official retired list. But there is another and a larger one. less conspicuous, but not less deserv ing, the members of which, sad to say. are not always regarded with the honor to which their past endeavor entitles them. This list Is made up from do mestic life, through those Inevitable revolutions which arise In our homes that are the products of nature and of growth. Upon this list are the names of women early widowed, whose chil dren have gone, one by one. out Into the great world to homes and- occupa tions of their own: of men similarly situated, who can no longer maintain among men the active business Inter ests of life. These are placed by Na ture on the retired list the waiting list and, as the years go on and the call Is delayed for many of them, they form a pathetic contingent of an army that has fought the battles of life bravely and Is now resting upon Its arms. The change that placed these upon the retired list was a gradual one not abrupt, as In military life. One child after another goes out from the old home; one year after another saps the strength and diminishes the ability of father and mother to care for them selves; and finally one drops out of the well-worn harness and the other shifts perforce to another home, clinging to the last faded mementoes of former years the child's cap. the broken toy. the old cradle, the little shoe, the out dated school books and the thousand other things that accumulate in the home in which children have been brought up. "She has a home with her daughter," Is the verdict of the community when a funeral - pyre has been made of the little belongings of the old home that held no significance to any one but "mother"; and there, in seeming con tentment, dutifully ministered unto, but with tender yearnings, the gentle woman remains upon the "retired list" until she passes to -the realm of the unseen. Sympathy, tender participa tion In the Joys and sorrows of the new home; counsel, when sought, in perplexity; open, arms and a loving heart these are the attributes which father or mother, who has ceased to control, brings to lives that are tolling along the upward way. These symbols of love, emblematic of well-6pent lives, are found under every roof that shelters aging lives. They tell of mothers on the "retired list," who strengthen their daughters hearts to bear the burdens of responsibility; who fold their grandchildren's hands In prayer: whose example of patience and cheerfulness far outlast their lives. They tell of fathers who. having borne untarnished names from youth to hoary age. bequeath them In honor to their sons, and of men and women grown old. who, having, from choice or circumstances, missed the bustling, re sponsible way ef family life, have from their broad sympathies and helpfulness In wider way become eligible to a place on this grand honor roll. Men and women who are able to sympathize and to console; who can tell of storms safely weathered and sorrows bravrty 'ftflfiri IP Itm ?PT iminnrr to inexperience and comforts te hearts In stress of disappointment or anxiety, and with the name of these the retired-list of humanity is illuminated on every page and In every commu nity. All honor to soldiers on the retired list, whether military and naval heroes who have reached the "age limit" and settled down in our midst, wearing the Insignia, of their long service and an swering to well-earned titles, or men and women, without other Insignia of service than that which nature be stows In a crown of gray hair and fea tures and bodies that attest the touch of time, the "retired list" commands the unstinted respect and consideration of the larger army yet In active service. GIBSON'S SECOND ILVKYEST. It might not ' take a tremendous stretch of the Imagination to picture the Gibson female head as the im perial emblem of North America. When we see a New Tork newspaper which relies for Its strength almost wholly on Its numerical appeal pro ducing old Gibson pictures as a fea ture In Its serio-comic and weirdly bi zarre supplement, the thinking person who reveres art and loves his fellow man may well pause and look about to find the whys and wherefores. What ever else the publishers of Journals of Immense distribution may be. they "are assuredly astute, and may be credited with a keen sense of what the masses want- A well nigh supernatural divina tion of the felt but unexpressed mental needs or desires of ol polloU and an unerring equipment of antennae nos ing out available material best calcu lated to feed the Insatiable maw of this boundless multitude of easily In fluenced readers with these, and more, the yellow press is bountifully supplied. A move on its part so unique and radi cal as reverting to the Neo phytic pen clllngs of Charles Dana Gibson those characteristic specimens of partly per fect draughtsmanship that first charmed the "upper ten" in the East Is Interesting, and makes wise men, as well as fools, ask questions. Are we really returning to nature? Are we really going back to simpler things? Are 'Any and 'Arrlctt so con ditioned now in the United States that they are In line to assimilate the artis tic pabulum that pleases the palate of the cultured? "What is there about this famous Gibson, this coddled and spec tacular vogulst, that satisfies the cook as well as her mistress, the shop girl as well as the society butterfly, the coalheayer as well as the mlneowner, the mechanic as well as the corpora tion president, the clerk as well as the man of leisure or the millionaire? He has forsaken the pencil for the brush, but his early work is now giving him a second life that may become even more luxuriant and widespread than all his successes hitherto. Why has Gibson been selected out of the splendid host that supplies the glorious pictorial press of this country? Hutfs character Is more vivid; Pierce Is lovelier; Christy Is more finished: O'Neill Cheatham Is more effective, with her dark masses and contrasts; As pell, of the Sun, Is stronger; Ehrhardt, If rigid, is more particular as to ensembles. The list Is long that rises up in -the mind's eye. of men and women who have won their spurs with resounding victory, who seem to display In their work more of the ordinary elements of popularity than Gibson does. Although Gibson has not a wide gamut, and he'tins confined himself to drawing types of the high- class female of social eminence, with her surrounding men. habitations and scenic environment: although he lacks the piercing humor, the broad force of the born cartoonist: although he I not a good draughtsman, and although he Is slovenly, it is easier to gain a true estimate of his power and ralson d'etre through positive affirmations as to what he is than through cataloguing his Im perfections. In a way Gibson stands by himself alone. The beauty of his women and men. the cleanliness suggested by plenty of white space, the excessive health of his types, the-utter simplicity of his results, are perhaps the essential foundations of bis vast vogue. His "Retribution." for example, shows a beautiful girl on the left: a senile mon eybags on the right: a bony, degener ate youngster (their offspring) in the center. That picture would Jar a well bred damsel of the precincts of plenty, and it would also shout to a toiling salesgirl that marrying money Is not life's sole desideratum. Gibson has grown more and more, during the dozen years of his increasing success, to dis regard details, after the expression and possibly the sartorial perfections of near-face attachments were looked after. At first he burdened himself with accessories and settings, but of late he has merely Indicated them, and his pictures have been widely carped at for their exaggerated, brush-heap scrawlings. Some dilettanti professed to see an ultra-artistic clan in bis very disregard of finish, always launched Into Insincere transports at the one direction shading, which was strength ened at desired points by cross-lines, and indulged in attenuated ecstasies over some of Gibson's worst work. His earlier drawings are unquestionably his best, although later on his mind developed many more mature and forceful subjects, which made people who appreciated and valued his con tributions to the joy and Instruction of the world hope even great things for him. As we musingly and contentedly peer along the corridors of time, we note the various types that have stood the test of the centuries, and live as the representatives of the successively reigning schools. From Raphael to Gibson, from Dctallle to Davenport, from Murillo to Murphy, we may con sider and understand the multi-sided forms of shape, and line, and Idea, and ideal, that have caught the people's eoul and lived to tell their essence to unborn generations. It Is not so much the amount of reason each type has for Its current and subsequent apprecia tion as It is Its fundamental genuine ness. Inasmuch as a Davenport In New Jersey, or a Routledge or a Murphy here in Portland, are earnest, and rep resent truth In art, they need not bother themselves with classic canons or venerable tenets of any period, ex cept to enlarge and perfect their cul ture by extracting"wbat Is best from the myriad luscious types, contorted types, awful types, lurid types, what ever -typical creations that have ema nated from the leading artistic brains of the years that are past and'gone. But is it not a cause for rejoicing that our American Gibson, after his triumphal conquering of the people who have "money, by a process of rein carnation or second advent, as It were, is now regenerating and sanctifying the ranks of American breaswtaaers? Te rajpyhqa4t M9mMM( the over-muscled vigor, the purity, the well-groomed, modishly appareled sleekness of Gibson's girls and grown up youths are to become the Ideals to which the masses are aspiring. They represent the ideal American In his. and her, pristine optimism and bloom ing, matchless health. Their beauty is idealized, but to win our hearts and our soaring, day-after-tomorrow spir its, this idealization Is Indispensable. As China dreaded, then worshiped, the Dragon, and afterward adopted it as Its governmental symbol, so. In a meas ure, yet by a more beneficent and salu brious metamorphosis, the limitless brotherhood and sisterhood of laboring Americans, through love of cleanliness, hopeful outlook, bodily vigor, comely at tire, a sound soul In a sweet body, may coe to hold aloft on the housetops the Ideal types of Gibson as our National emblem. 1 WHAT IMS HAPPENED IN ZIOX. It Is only a question of time when credulity that leads to the blind fol lowing of a self-proclaimed prophet or revelator In religion gives place to a public, scandal caused by the awak ening of his dupes. This time has come for Zion Alexander Dowle's Zlon and. with all his hosts In arms against him. his, wife broken in health and spirit, and his son estranged, this latter day saint bellows his rage Impotently from afar, and then starts back to possess his own, hinting darkly of "bloodshed" If his erstwhile dupes do not yield to his demand for reinstate ment. If Dowie had been a meek, mild mannered prophet, ruling through as sumed humbleness and gentle persua siveness, the revolt would not have come so soon. The assumption that Is encased In velvet and makes merit of seclusion; that takes refuge In the "soft answer" when Its dogmas are questioned', and quickly withdraws from the firing line when assailed. Is relatively much harder to meet and dislodge than is the bold assumption that carries on its schemes with noise and posturing and takes no pains to conceal the fact that Its rule is abso luteIts word law. Dowle's assumption was of this lat ter nature. He was a self-proclaimed prophet, religious dictator, domestic tyrant, financial boss. -He said to his followers, do this, and they did It; or, failing after their best endeavor to obey, they crawled humbly to his feet craving pardon, which was loftily withheld until after due penance was done. A band of zealots may stumble along blindly after a leader In this fashion for a time, but not for long. They censure themselves for a while bircause they find the burden galling, and for a while renew their efforts at self-abnegation in the name of the Lord and the prophet. But. being hu man, they grow tired. Religious devo tion does not Irk them. but. when this Is yoked with heavy financial demands that promise no returns except to the prophet: when they look around their lowly dwellings bare of all but the meager comforts of life and see their children coming up to add to the great volume of toll, self-abnegation and Ig norance with which they are bidden to encompass them. and. lifting up their eyes, behold the prophet living in lux ury, traveling abroad, establishing a Summer residence for himself and a favored few In a semi-tropical cli mate; and finally when, delving Into the community purse, they find It empty, then Indignation speedily out runs their zeal, and common sense comes out of Its unnatural eclipse. This Is what has happened In Zlon within the last few days. Dowle. de throned, discrowned. Is heralded from Its very walls as the lecherous, de signing, dishonorable creature that the world has long known him to be: bel lowing anathemas and denials from his retreat In Mexico, he has begun his return to reassert his "rights" and re establish his power in the holy city. All of this is sound and fury, signify ing nothing. His aggressiveness serves but to render him more vulnerable. A woman apostle would know better. The humble air of Injured Innocence becomes both sword and shield to the religious pretender when .asked for an accounting. When he. In a moment of unrcgenerate anger, admits that he himself, and not the Lord, is ruler In Zion. his anathemas are shorn of their terror. Rolling up their sleeves like schoolboys who find they have been tricked, his followers square themselves for the conflict and bid him "come on.' It now looks as if Dowie will get all that is coming to him. If such measure of retribution Is possible.- He may browbeat his sick and broken-down wife, after the manner of the bully of his type. Into recanting the statements of his brutality and immorality that have been wrung from her through pressure of suffering. But 'the scepter has passed from his hands. This is what has happened In Zlon. Plans for sending a reinforcement of teachers to the Philippines have been completed by the Bureau of Insular Affairs, and the first Installment of forty will sail from Seattle on April 23 on the Minnesota. Tw:cnty will sail from San Francisco on the steamer China May 2. and forty, completing the balance of one hundred that have been engaged, will sail from the last named post on a transport May 6. While women are much more success ful as teachers in the Philippines than are men, the hardships encountered In the new provinces h-ft'e proved too much for them, and so many have broken down In the service that few are being employed at present, and none are sent where they have not relatives or friends to care for them. It thus happens that of the one hun dred to sail within a month, but twelve are women, and these are wives, sis ters or fiancees of men who are of the teachers' corps In or en route for the Islands. The man who sits around his wife's boarding-house, eager to boss the Job. while she makes the living, has plenty of time In which to brew mischief. Usually. It may be added, he employs this time, with a devotion to the busi ness In hand which, if directed to the duties of an honest vocation, would speedily put the boarding-house out of commission by destroying the, neces sity for Its existence. The case of one J. H. Bode, of Heppner. is no excep tion to this rule- He recently ex pressed his disapprobation of the boarding-house business in which his wife with her sister was engaged, by surreptitiously entering the kitchen daring their absence and putting poison in the teakettle. Two of the boarders becoming violently III, an investiga tion was made, which iscloed the manlier in which he attempted to "ran. oC the fcoXvrs." As a result, he wMl probably become a guest at the state's big boarding-house at Salem, and an example. 'It may be hoped, to men of his class a class despised by manly men. but too often coddled and sup ported by energetic women. A man of Newcastle. Pensylvanla. has paid the penalty of deserting his wife and family for a period of four teen years, ho having been declared legally dead by the court at the ex piration of that period. An adminis trator was appointed," and his estate was settled. Later the truant re turned to find himself dead In law. but not in fact. He now occupies a peculiar position, it being doubtful whether he could contract an obliga tion of any sort, since he ha3 no legal existence. This seems to be a very proper way to deal with a man who Ignores or repudiates all manly obliga tions. Half the period of this man's absence should suffice to blot him le gally out of existence, providing, of course, that he abandoned a wife and young children to the struggle for self support during the period of his disap pearance. The fellow who goes away leaving no trace of himself, stays until he gets tired, and returns suddenly to make trouble for the family that has lived and, perhaps, managed to ac cumulate something without him. should be checkmated. All world's records for pigiron pro duction were broken by the four blast furnaces of the Carnegie Steel Com pany at Duquesne during March. The four .furnaces produced 78.12S tons, against the record of 77,142 tons, held by the Edgar Thompson blast furnaces of the same company. Thus does the wealth, of Carnegie pile up faster through demands of a prosperous era in construction and transportation than he can dispense it, through libra ries. Really, it looks as If. notwith standing all of his efforts, and his pro claimed desire to the contrary. Andrew Carnegie Is doomed to die a Tich man. Funds lor the construction of the Panama Canal will be provided, until Congress convenes next December, by the sale of 2 per cent bonds aggregat ing in the next three or four months about $42,000,000. The denominations of the bonds will be $20 and multiples thereof, redeemable in ten years and payable in thirty years. The Immen sity of the canal undertaking is indi cated by the sum that will be necessary to carry the work forward for less than hair a year. The Immense ad vantages of the canal will be demon strated long before the present bond Issue Is payable. Names given out in connection with the proposed interurban railway cen tering at Walla Walla carry evidence of ample financial strength. The re gion which the system Intends to serve Is admirably adapted to such an enter prise. For a successful future, there need be no misgivings. Therefore, it Is incumbent on the towns and cities to provide for some little share of the profits. Let no franchises be given In perpetuity. New railways should be encouraged, yet so restricted that they cannot become tyrannous. The "wash ladles" of New Brighton. Pa., went on a strike the first of April for $1.50 a day, against the old rate of $1. The housekeepers stood firm the Wash Ladles' Union weakened, and the old rates prevail, if there Is a Just demand In the whole realm of labor, it Is that represented by the de mand for $1.50 for a day's toll at the washtub. Housekeepers need reform ing on the basis of equity and human ity when they resist this demand. It may Jje superstition, yet it is one of the things learned In youth and not forgotten nor lightly disregarded. Tomorrow being the full of the moon. it is best to plant peas, beans, cabbage and all that develop above the earth at once, saving potatoes and the like for the 'crease which begins tomorrow night. There is nc$ a man over 60 who cannot prove this. Let young scoffers beware. Japan again denies any purpose or desire to purchase the PhllioDlnes Judging from the appeals for help for Its starving subjects, the Island Em pire has use for all the spare cash that the Government can control, with out Investing in some thousands of malcontents, fitly, characterized by Klpllng as Our new-found sullen people Half devil and half child. Because a railroad dislikes to pay a tax until compelled, the Toads In Mich igan are this month putting money Into the school treasury. An ad valorem tax law passed In 1901 was disputed, but the highest court sustained it. and one railway company has Just paid over $600,000. The Detroit public school fund will receive over $500,000. The Baker City man who shot his brother-in-law last Thursday says It was an acciuenw ne is sorry, ana per haps will be more sorry If he should be the victim of a rope accident at the penitentiary a few months hence. Such accidents will happen once In a while. though perhaps not as often as they should. Between preachers who theorize and Circuit Court Judges who practice by dissolving the bonds, although occa sionally withholding a decree, one turns with pleasure to the statistics column to read of the licenses taken out. And In the proportion that the one exceeds the other lies the hope of the world. The Oregonlan prints today the re spective platforms of Hon. E. L. Smith and Son. Stephen A. Lowell, Republi can candidates for the United States Senate. It invites to each the careful and considerate attention of all voters. They do things differently across the line. In Winnipeg, where there has been a street-car strike for a week, the possible Importation of strike-breakers from the United States Is met by threat of invoking the alien labor law.. Every genuine sportsman m Oregon will rejoice over the conviction and punishment of three Umatilla, pothunt ers who corraled and butchered a band of deer. This la a good season for other game wardens, to get busy. Solomon succeeded because his or ganization was perfect. Brigham Young died in time to 'escape. But Dowie Is a cheap, senile Imitator. In the length and breadth of Oregon lie opportunities awaiting brainy de velopment. Think, what the- corncob has dea for. Missouri! THE PtSSIMIST: ' .. What we save- In coal bills Is spent in Ice cream sodas, and the deficiency in gas consumption Is evened up by the.' . beneficent protestations of the candidates -for office. It speaks well for the culture -and Christian forbearance of the people of the Northwest that no one has been rude enough to suggest that the preacher who contended that marriage was a failure took up .that position because he knew from personal experience what he was talking about. Of course, the debate on marriage be tween two of our worthy ministers .was Intended as a Joke and a good joke It was. too yet they touched upon a serious matter, a matter serious to young peo ple who are about to be married, and one that Is more serious still, after they are married. However, at the White Temple. 'Friday evening, it was cnthusl- astlcally decided that marriage is a sue-. cess. Nevertheless, almost any day. one of the Judges of our Circuit Court, un der circumstances totally devoid of the elements of humor. Is called upon' to de cide that marriage is a frost. And there we have It. Is marriage a failure, or is It a success? The Solution. (With apologies to Schopenhauer and the San Francisco Examiner.) If. instead of asking. Is marriage a failure? some one should inquire. What Is the purpose of marriage? a great light would begin to dawn on this problem of the ages. A great philosopher has answered the question, and gently Inti mates that by marriage the coming gen eration achieves Its existence. No doubt that view is wholly unpopular "with the dispensers of the Word. yet. looking; at It In that way. marriage is a success. If the purpose of marriage Is to make us happy, marriage Is a failure. Of course, some married couples aro happy. They are not happy because they aro married;, they are happy In splto of that fact. Soma people are happy when their house Is burning up. The ladles of the first families In the East are objecting to the vulgar red color of our two-cent stamp. They want a color. It seems, that will harmonize with the tint of their stationery. Al though they could use two green one- cent stamps, they do not want to do that because the picture of Franklin on a one-cent stamp Is vulgar and common: and. besides. It is too expensive to use a stamp of a higher denomination on a two-cent letter. It Is to be hoped that they will get what they want, and I will help the matter along by suggesting that the Government regulate the amount of postage and the color of the stamp in accordance with the value of the con tents of the letter. The ladles could then send three letters for a cent and pick their own color, as any color would be good enough. The candidate whose election card was tacked on the posts of the entrance to Lone Fir Cemetery probably tore It down because he did not want to be classed with the dead ones. Did anyone ever notice the aristocratic Mrs. Thompson? Mrs. Thompson Is not an Individual; she Is a type. Mrs; Thompson Is the supercilious creature who calls on people who live in . large ana costly mansions. It is on account of Mrs. Thompson that we have real lace curtains in our-front windows Instead of ones that wc can afford. Mrs. Thompson Is long on ancestors, but short on brains. Nevertheless, when Mrs. Thompson drives up with her footman and her coachman, on. the day which Is our day at home, we are all In a flutter, and wonder If our clothes and our house furnishings will merit the ap proval of the hypercritical Mrs. Thomp son. When we invite Mrs. Thompson to din ner we set before her costly viands, instead of feeding her face with the kind of grub that we are used to when wc are alone. When we go to the theater we buy ex pensive scats, so that Mrs. Thompson will see us there. Taking it all in all, the aristocratic Mrs. Thompson Is an expensive luxury. But for her we could live the .simple. She is. a nuisance. To Seattle with Mrs. Thompson! . . ' I hate to see a big fire, but when there is one I like to be around to see It. Architectural Terms. Architect A cold, heartless individual who scorns your most cherished Ideas. Contractor The one who gets the most of your money. Architect's Commission The rest of it. Lien A sworn statement that the con tractor is a liar. Bondman One who knows that he Is a liar. Frieze A decoration on your wife's face when you insinuate that the stairs and a fireplace cannot occupy the same space. Den A place for sofa pillows and women. Parlor Where we sit when we have on our good clothes. Reception-Room Same as parlor, only more expensive. Drawing-Room Where we can't smoke. Inexpensive The architect's estimate. Outrageous The lowest bid. Hardwood Floors An antidote for tears when you would not have leaded-glass windows In the basement. Wood Hoist A thing that is In one cor ner of the basement, and the woodpile In the opposite corner. M. B. WELLS. WHERE DEPUTIES ABOUND. John D. Rockefeller, at Lakewood In a "Low Voice. (Apologies to Herbert Johnson.) I know not now how soon 'twill be When I shall leave these parts un known; I cannot see how he'll get me. Unless by some one. here I'm thrown. Alas, alack, 'tis better so. For oil moves up with rapid pace; But this I know, if I must go, I'll hate to meet him face to face. I'll hate to meet him face to face. And leave all these I love so well. I do not like this fearsome pace I wish that he would, go to blazes. For sheriffs come and marshals go, ' In Time's fast pace the fee bills grow; And tho the Joy have much alloy While thinking of the new-born boy. It matters not. a few days more. It matters not how slow the race, i For this I fear, on Erie's shore I'll meet a deputy face to face. Tea. I shall see him face to face And be with those whom I can't buy;, Yes. I shall see hlra face to face," .,v- Aad I'll not wis, the' hard I try.