TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 29. 1911. PRINCE JOURNEYS IN SEARCH OF TRADE India Welcomes Eoyal Commercial Traveler. Lord Roberts Helps Dedicate Monument to Wolfe. England Keeps Ahead in Constrn ction of Monster Battleships. . 'V-- ( .-- MS' 1 - 'aips .1.. I W v.. b ' ' ' 1'v v ' '-" -.v.; Tr:"' jj If '' ft .-jr x -' - '"".. -- -v r f If II s-f AM'Vt ' s f..,-- :-,i;-r-4 fl II . T-"---- II .... . , ; , ; " . . . . - . " f hiTh ii i itfjm NEXT TORK. fan. IS. (Special. - The Crown Prince of Germany U pictured here on hi arrival In India. He waa welcomed by the UrltUh athorttlc. The Crown Prloce im Jonr. Dfjlnii around the' world. It la re ported that he got a a royal rom merclal traveler for the purpose of developing German trade In forelcn countries. Lord Roberta recently officiated at the dedication of a monument to Gen eral Wolfe on the village green of hta native village of Weaterham ' in Eng land. The BUhop of Chlcheater offi ciated and Earl Stanhope commanded a body of aoldtera which took part in the ceremony. England built the flrat Dreadnought and gave it name to that type of crulser-battleahlpa. All the remaining nations of the world promptly began building dreadnoughts. But Great Britain Is always a little ahead. AS the United States was launching Its biggest battleship, the Arkansas, Eng land waa getting ready for active serv ice the Lion, which has 300 tons greater displacement ' than the Arkansas. The American ship, however, will have heavier armor. The Arkansas is 554 feet long. She was christened by Miss Mary L Macon, daughter of Repre sentative Macon, with the usual cere monies. Hot Springs water was not used in place of champagne. YOUNG. AGED AND MARRIED TEACHERS ALL WAGING WAR ON SCHOOL BOARD Unhappy New York Officials. Who Serve Withont Pay. Have Troubles Almost Without End Tax Board Engag ing in Annual Joke of Making Personal Property Assessment. BT LLOTD r. LONERGA.V. NEW YORK. Jan. (Special.) The Board of Education baa. during the past weok. been busler than Roosevelt." to use a popular slang phrase. The unhappy members, who serve with out salary, have been engaged In con stant warfare, and as a result have tamed the bitter enmity of the follow ing classes of citizens: The married teachers, their husbands sad chiidrec; The aged teachers, their friends and yelstlvee: Pupil teachers, would-bs teachers and officials of training schools. To csnslder the trouble of the flret rlaset Only single women are eligible fir appointment as teacrers. But after appointment, many of thm marry- Pome resign, become bappy wives and mothers and ceaie from troubling the Board of duceuon. Other, whoee husbands like tfcSj Idea of an extra monthly pay check. remain in harness. And Iheee are the ones who have caused all the trouble. Formerlv the Board solved the prob lem by "firing the blushing brides; however, one of them went to law. and the courts decided that matrimony did not spell dismissal, and the teacher was reinstated with back pay. Now the schoola are full of teachers who admit that they help to support their husbands. ' The Board of Education then took the ground t-at while they might be compelled to retain married teachers, there waa no power that could de cree their promotion. One. airs. Kinkeldy. who on the face of things waa entitled to promotion, cams along and asked to be made a principal. There were many heated discussions, and finally her request waa denied by a vote of 27 to 10. It is Interesting to note that two of the three women members voted against the teacher. 8ome of the women's clubs of the city are terribly excited over what they call "ses discrimination." and they threaten to appeal to the Legisla ture. But as some of the Board's members point out. this particular teacher has a husband who draws $1500 a year as teacher In a college, and If he Is unable to support his wife, he should do extrav work of some kind. The second row was caused by the adoption of a resolution ordering the retirement on half pay of all teachers who have reached the age of 70. Most persons would be glsd to take life easy when they are that old. but seem ingly teachers are an exception. There has been a prolonged howl from the veterans, while former pupils have added to the excitement. Old Pupils Rally to Aid. It Is a peculiar school that has not an "Old Boys' " or an Old Girls' " so ciety, and some of these former schol ars are now persons of standing and Influence. They cannot understand why any one should want to-dlsturb "Dear old Dr. Strsp." or whatever his name may be. and they have taken up the fight manfully. The result Is that the Board of Education has made many new enemies. Still it has not helped the old teachers, who are now offi cially on the shelf. In an effort to economise, tile Board ha reduced the Dtr of ouDil-teachers j from 11.50 to 75 cents a day. The idea of the Board of Estimate, wmcn re duced the appropriation some $60,000. was that the educators would econo mise -,n come of the fancy branches. Up to date, however, there Is no sign that this Is even contemplated, the only sign of retrenchment being this move against the poor little, half starved, underpaid pupil-teachers. The Tax Board is engaged in Its usual annual Joke over personal assess ment. Each year the Commissioners notify large numbers of Indigent clti sens that It is "up to them" .to pay on from S5000 to $10,000 in personalty As a general thing, the ones selected are car conductors, carpet-layers and barbers who are out of work. A fond ness Is also shown for recently landed immigrants who are lacking In knowl edge of the English language and cus toms. Many of these unfortunate! take the official notification to be news of a legacy and Joyfully hie themselves to the Municipal building, later depart ing sadly. . President Purdy. of the Board, ad mlts that the law is foolish and prac tlcally lmposelble to enforce. The prin cipal object obtained Is causing many poor men each to lose a day's work while they go down town to "swear off." Mere Man Suffers at Law. Since the Domestic Relations Court came Into existence. It has been prac finally Impossible for a mere man to obtain Justice. Simon Manhelm is the latest person to And this out. He went to the so-called family tribunal ana asked for a summons for his wife. - It seems that the woman, according to his story, not only refuses to cook meals for him, but whenever she sees Simon. Invariably hurls the first thing In sight at him. As a result. Simon has very few unmarred features ana prac tically no scalp. At the first court he was told that the only cases considered were those of husbands who failed to support their wives. The Judge sent him to an or dinary police court, and there he was torn mat ne was in ijio wrong juris diction, too. "I suppose the only thing for me to do," said Simon, sadly. "Is to go home and thrash Rachel good. Then when she has me arrested I can get the sym pathy from the Judge, maybe. The New York City' Federation of Women's Clubs, which is always spec tacularly Interesting around the time of the biennial elections, is preparing for the fray, the said fray being set for next Friday. Heretofore the meetings hare been held In comparatively small rooms, but this year some particularly "good sport" arranged for a meeting in the ballroom of the Hotel Astor. which Is large enough for a 40-round prize fight. And from present Indications, the space will be needed. As. usual, Mrs. Belle de Rivera is camped on the centerof the battlefield. The organization Is composed of the representatives of some 200 clubs, and two years ago Mrs. De Rivera remained in office by the narrow margin of 17 votes, although all her running mates were defeated. Clow Fight Promised. The president Is not a candidate this time, but Is grooming Mrs. Harry Has tings as her successor. Mrs. William Orant Brown, who went down to de feat in 1909. Is again a candidate for the chief office and the fight promises to be close. As an added cause for excitement. Mrs. de Rivera's friends have offered sn amendment to the bylaws, reciting that owing to "her long services, the said Mrs. Belle de Rivera shall be made founder and also honorary president for life with the right to vote." Her enemies say emphatically that they do not want Mrs. de Rivera as a perpetual officer, and they make other remarks which her supporters do not relish. Poor Mrs. Hastings, who Is said to be a most estimable woman. Is quite lost sight of in the shuffle, the contest rapidly developing into a de Rivera battle royal. Both sides claim victory of course, but the electioneer ing Is proceeding with ivlgor day and night. As soon as the contractors can finish their work, Broadway, opposite the Postofflce will be adorned with the tall est office building In the world. The revised plans call for a structure 6$ stories high. Frank W. Woolworth, the S and 10-cent store man. is the owner, and ,he owns 161 feet on Broad way, 192 feet on Barclay street, and 197 feet on Park Place. The building wilt be 30 full stories high, with a tower of 28 stories more. mi -it iSF ; : ffBy Axminster Carpets 95c a Yard Sewed, lined and laid. This fabric makes one of the most serviceable and comfortable floor coverings that has been'devised. The patterns are of the very latest design and coloring. This is the lowest quoted price for this class of goods in the city today : Brussels Carpets, 65c and Upwards Sewed, lined and laid. v ' v Axminster Rugs 9x12, $16.00 This price includes the latest output of the famous Smith and the Kohrassan brands, known the length and breadth of the United States as the only "first-class" fabrics of the kind. Anglo-Persian Rugs 9x12, $45.00 Another large shipment of this famous and superior velvet Rug received. These rugs are too well known to need a detailed description. Sold everywhere else at $65 and upwards. SWEEPING REDUCTIONS throughout our entire carpet department. . Furniture, Stoves and Ranges Our buyer, who is now in the East, has just consummated some of the largest purchases that have ever been made for a house in the Northwest. He made these immense deals in order to secure rock-bottom prices and the largest dis3ounts. With our present stock it is not a ques tion of profits, simply quick sales to make room for the new goods, as it has never been our policy to carry over stock from one season to the other. Come and see what we are offering and you will be convinced that we are underselling all competitors by a wide margin. We have always done it and will continue to do it. Compare our prices with any other furniture sale before buying. . v DONT OVERLOOK OUR WINDOW DISPLAY HENRY JENNING & SONS One Year Ahead of Competitors COR. MORRISON and SECOND The Home of Good Furniture It will measure In all "50 feet, 140 feet above the Singer building tower, and 60 feet higher than the Metropolitan. The Investment represents the tidy little Investment of $12,000,000, the site costing 14,500,000, while the structure itself will represent an outlay of $7, 500.000. Ancient Market Remodeled. Washington Market, which has not even been painted since iosj. i w u remodeled and modernized by the city at a cost of 145,000. Contract have al ready been let, and the work will start in a few days. During the reigns of the uammany borough presidents, the structure was allowed to go to ruin. The sidewalks have been appropriated by merchants who left only a foot or two for pedes trians, and the Interior was dark and gloomy, while high in the air was a system of cold storage pipes, installed 15 years ago, but abandoned ana or late only the home of offensive rats. ' The sidewalk merchants are to do thrown out, while the side of the build- . Ing will be rebuilt with glass: Othpl drastic improvements are planned which are badly needed. A sign of the present hard times Is furnished by the report of Superintend ent William Torke. of the Municipal Lodging Ilouee, city institution which supplies shelter for the homeless poor. "In my 15 years of experience," says Mr. Vorke, "I have never seen so many men come here with, clean shirts and collars and with neat clothes working' men who hava been laid off. "During the past fortnight nearly three times as many have been accom modated as during the same period last year." Superintendent Yorke says that many of his guests are clothed, only in rags, and that any person who may send him articles of apparel can be assured that they will be put to good use. One evening recently there were 1000 unfortunate men who applied for nlght'f shelter. This broke all records. The Municipal Lodging House Is not popular with hoboes, owing to the fact that a close watch Is kept on tne pat rons, and "regulars" are speedily spotted, locked up and sent to Black- wells Island. SING A MAN Of I TEACHING HIM TO STAND UP FOR HIMSELF HI BOY. - "H BLLO: Hello!" cried the Colo nel as he entered the room and found Mrs. Rollins In tears. "What's the matter now?" "Willie's been fighting," sobbed his daughter. 'You don't say so!" exclaimed the old gentleman. "Which whipped?" I don't know. I didn't ask him. His nose Is all bloody. It's Just awful!" What waa it all about? Did you ask him that?" Willie said the other boy called him names and struck him." "He did. did her snorted the Colonel. And what did William do to him?" "He said he said he plugged him one n the the coco. Think of It! My WlUie!" The old gentleman chuckled. "Well. now. . honey," he said, "let's consider this calmly. What do you think Wil liam ought to have done? Turn the other cheek r He should have come straight home and told his father," retorted Mrs. Rollins, with a flash of her eyes. "Exactly." said the Colonel. "That would'a' fixed his position In boy so ciety for some time to come. I can see his play-mates clappln him for their leader by a big majority. That Is to say. I could see 'era If I shut one eye and put my hand over the other. Now, looky here, my dear girl, you've got the wrong point o' view In this mat tsr. You're lookln" at It through the wrong end o' your, opery glasses an' makln' a tragedy out of a vaudeville sketch. I don't mean to say that a boy's fight Is funny; not a bit of It. But ' If noth'n' worse than a bloody nose comes out of it. It ain't a very serious matter, and in this case It seems to me that Instead of crytn about It you ought to slap him on the back an' say, 'Bully for you. my ooy; I glory in your spunk!'" "Why. father!" cried nis norrined daughter. "You don t mean that? "Yes. slr-ee; I mean exactly mat- it he told the truth he did nothln' more han stand up for his rights, and if he d dons anything different I'd been might- ly disappointed, when ne tyt BacK ne showed that' he had the right stuff in him, and I've got to admit that I'm a teeny little bit prouder of him today than I was yesterday. For you might as well understand, my daughter, that this is a fightin' world, and no man ever wins his way in It without fight in'. He may not use his fists or any other physical weapons men nowadays seldom get to that point but all the same, he has to fight ami fight hard. He's got to stand up for himself; he's srot to battle for his rignts or ne won i get 'em. Thgt's the word with the bark on, my dear. Maybe it don't sound very nice, but It's the fact. "Some of these days, I've no doubt, neonle will get to be so good an' gen erous an' charitable with one another that life will be as nice as apple pie. Everybody, will be glvln all their time to helpln" everybody else and. it'll be a case of 'After you. sir.' all along the line. But you and me, honey, and even little Bill, von't live to see it. It's a long ways off, and I m sort o giao it is, for it teems to me that kind of a world would be a little dull. But, how ever that may be. It's a mighty sure thing that it isn't that way now and we ve got to take the world as it is, which includes, as I said before, con siderable fightin' from first to last. "Now, It won't do to bring. a boy up in the notion that Hvin' is to be a per petual tea party with nothin' But sweetness and soft words in it. It's an old sayln' that soft words butter no parsnips, and this boy of ours will have to spread butter over a whole 'lot o' parsnips before he gets through, which Is but another way o' sayin1 that he'll have to use good, strong hammerous words once in a while, and now and then he'll have to hit some, thing hit It with both fists. He can't avoid It, my dear. Why, you can't get to heaven without fightin more or less. I remember an old hymn they used to' sing at camp meetln' when I was a boy, which started out like this; Mutt I be carried to the sklea On flowery beds of ease. While others fought to win the prize Or sailed through bloody seas? "You see, it's recognized even in re ligion. It ain't wrong to fight when It's right to fight, and if standin' up for yourself or your family or your friends, even to the point of hittin' something or somebody If that ain't right then John Sneed don't know right from wrong." "But, father," protested Mrs. Rollins, that doesn't mean fighting with fists." "My dear girl," explained the Colonel patiently, "it's a mere matter of de gree. A fight's a fight, whether you use your tongue or your pen or your fist or a club. It's opposln' your power to somebody else's in order to get the best of the other fellow or to protect your interests. And It don't make a bit of difference whether you use a mental or a physical weapon, the principle's the same. And, again, no matter what kind of a weapon you use, it takes courage. There are as brave fights goin' on downtown rigltt now. without any let- tin of blood or breakln of bones, as ever were fought In the days of hel mets and shields. And the boy who stands up for himself, with his fists If necessary, is the one who stands tne best chance o' -wlnnln' U th bigger fight he'll have to make when he be gins to buckle up against the world. "Now, don't understand me to say that I approve of boys fightin' Just to be fightin'. I never said that, and I don't. The sight of a couple of little rascals pummelin' each other don't look good to me any more than it does to you, although well, anyhow, I don't believe in encouragln' the use of phy sical force in man or boy except as a last resort But the last resort comes pretty frequent in boy life. They haven't learned yet to control their tempers nor their tongues, and they say things and do things that in many cases can only be answered In one way with the fist. A boy's honor is a real thing, just as mu h so cs that of a man or woman, and he has the same right and duty to defend it. If he doesn't he's bound to lose caste in boy society where the coward is placed a little lower down than the thief. The good opinion of his friends is of as much Importance to your boy as the good opinion of your friends is to you, and if he had failed in the test put up to him today he would have lost not only their respect but his own self-esteem. You can't always apply feminine ideas of ethics to the situations that come up in a boy's life. You've got to recog nize the fact that boys have, and al ways have had, a system of ethics of their own. It may seem rather a rough one to you, my dear, but it bears the same sort of relation to the code of manhood that tha framework does to the finished house. Don't you cry about little Bill. He's all right. His father might caution him about promiscuous fightin", but he shouldn't paddle the boy for standin' up for himself." (Copyright. 1911, by C. S. Post.) Kinship of Strangers. John D. Wells, In Buffalo News. It Just happened so that we both wandered In The opry one night, an' my law, it was grand! With people all rigged In their open-facs clothos. An" twice as much Addles as horns in tha band! An' both of us fellers in everyday clothes Was plum out of place as two fellers could be. An' he felt It, too, I am certain, because When 1 looked at him he was lookln' at me. There's somethln". about him that told m he was A country raised man of my style an' my size. Perhaps It was only the way that he had Or maybe the faraway iook in nis eyes That was used-er to distances, maybe, like mine. An' gauged for " a place where there's more for t' see. An' he felt our kinship. I reckln, became When I looked at him he was lookln at me. The opry was difTurnt from any I've saw Just slngin' ana aancin- an- singin- agin. Till fln'lly a feller come out on the stage An tucKed up a naaie in-unaer nis enm An' soft as the drip of a dewdrop he played The "Mockin- Bird" song an- you a ono o' see The man settln" next settle down In his seat An' I looked at him an' he looked at me. The notes seemed t' coax like the voice of a child A cross betwixt mournln- an' laughln', it seemed. f hey led me away fords the valley oft there An' spots where the best of my dreams have been dreamed; Twas Evagine's faver-ite song 'fore she diea. So 1 al us liked It oncommon, y' see. But somehow it alius brings tears t' my eyes. So I just looked at him 'an' he looked at me. I don't recollect that I've seen him before And probably won t never run on mm agin. But somethln' about him his looks or his ways Has give me an' idee we're some sort o' kin That maybe he once had a Evagine, too. An' the song brought her back to his mind, for I sJb His head sort o' bow an' his eyes fill with tears When I looked at Mm "' he looked at me.