TITE SUNDAY OHEGOMAX. . TORTLAXD, APRIL 7. 1913. (Dr xruntnw rOKTI-AND. 0RE60S. Lateral at foreland. Oregon. PoatoSIca .-cwn4 aaa jtaiivr. tuoatriptioa itatea lararlably la Aflaaea, BT MAIL.) Ial'r. wn4my tnetiHl. ana year I I'll jr. Sunday ln-iud-d. a' moaiha ... rar Sunday lnciu-id. ona month. ... t-a i i y. wtthoat Sunday, ona yar...... at y. without Sunday, at momhf. .... I'ai:y. without Sunday. thraa inoatha.. -l ary. without Sunday, oaa month. ...... W'aali'M. na yar i auniay. ana y-ar - LjBit.. iBi vLa.btw . - vr a-.ee BT CARRIER.! Patlr. jn5y Inrlndad. oaa year...... Lai:y. aoeday Inoixlad, ona month ma .. i. . .. ivia mAae- i far. tig.m erdar ar paraonal cSw leeal bank. biiun. cola or rurrnr.', ai in. ..h..-. -i- r.u ooatofTica a4lraa la ru.l. mcludJns county and atata. raataca Kataa 10 to 14 pa. . 1" ... to S pa (.a. J canta: o to P to pun. canta. romo poata. wvw.v i a t - Eaitrm Brnlana (TW V.rr. A Co" l'n .Saw Torlt Hrnnawlctt OttUdlO. caj-o. atar auildia. EaraaMa Oglra No. 3 Rrarat ?. a W.. London. TIIR II. M.NDAV. ATRIl. 7. ! WH4.T ARE THE ROOSEVELT POUCIKS? What r? the Roosevelt policies? TV know what they were a few years ago. bit what are they now? They have changed o much that. If they continue to change, we shall need a j early or monthly, perhaps weekly butltln to keep us pouted on the lat est revision. Four years ago we all knew what they were: Prosecution or tne Daa trusts regulation of railroad", con- rvatlon. anti-race suicide, revival of rountry life, the square deal. Taft has been prosecuting the trusts, regulating; the railroad, conserving the re sources. Riving the square deal though not getting It. but not worrying about the output of babies or paying close attention to the life of the farmer. His conduct In neglecting these last two policies may be reprehensible, but really there were so many Roosevelt policies and he has continued the other, so faithfully that he may fairly be forgiven for thesi minor tins of neglect. But now we are offered a new 'set of Roosevelt policies and if we do not subscribe to them we are condemned to outer darkness as reactionaries. There Is the recall of Judges when their decisions are at variance with the Hoosevelt conception of what the law onght lo bo; there Is the recall of judicial decisions when they conflict with the Roosevelt Idea of what the constitution ought to mean: there are the initiative and referendum. AH 'aVse new Ideas Roosevelt says should V applied to state affairs only, so . n hat they can have M do with a residential campaign Is not easy to comprehend. Then there la the rule ef the people, as distinguished from the rule of 15.000.000 voters, whom Taft describe as a representative part of the people, but; whom Roosevelt escribes with many lurid adjectives . the bosses. These are the Roosevelt policies of 'HI!, but who can tell what will be the Rooa-evelt policies of 1S1 J and suc ceeding years? Their kaleidoscopic rhancea keep ti In one continuous thrill of suspense, hope or dread. WHO BLOCKS TARUT WIHON? The present Democratic position on the wool tariff la as Indcfenaible as the pres-ent duties of schedule K. What ever excu.-e for the Underwood bill riftei during the speclul session of Congress has been removed by the re port of the tariff board. Any plea which might then have been made that any reduced duties were better than the rates of the Payne-Aldrich law and that therefore It was better to make a reduction slightly too great or slightly too small than to make none at all was deprived of Its force a soon as the board reported. Con gress from that time had accurate ln lormation on which to base Its action. . This report proved the I'nderwood hilt unscientific, whether Judged from the protection or revenue-only stand point. To pass the same bill again was to persist stubltornly In a course proved to be wrong. Nor can the Democrats escape by the plea that they had disapproved of the tariff board and had never given any cause to expect that they would W guided by its reports. They had agitated for the tariff board and had oted for Its creation. Their whole tourse for several years has bound them to follow the policy to which President Taft stanns committed. Their refusal to follow that policy brands them as partisan seekers of political advantage and bereft of re gard for the people's interest. The Democrats need not hope to bamboozle the voters Into the belief that they will get any relief from the tactions of the present Indefensible schedule K by the passage of the Un lerwood bllL They know, as every man knows who has watched events for the last year, that that bill will never become law. Cince Taft -etoed It before the tariff board's report fur nlfhed material for an equitable, sci entific wool tariff, how much more surely will he veto It after the board has proved It to be both inequitable snd unscientific? The net result of . the Ieniocrats' action Is to saddle upon the country for at least another ear the exorbitant duties of the pres. ert law and to keep the wool Indus try in a state of doubt and demorali sation when the way lay open for thrm to reductions as would command the approval of the President and give Immediate relief. It ls the Democrats who now ob rtrnct tariff revision. The only pos sible hopo of securing It at this ses sion lie In the passage of the bill re ported by the Republican minority of the wars and means committee. That bill Is drawn In strict conformity with the findings of fact and recommenda tions of the tariff board. It reduces the duty on raw wool from about 58 per cent to an average of 3S.I1 per cent, based on scoured wool Instead of wool In the grease. It reduces to less than 1 per cent the duty on carpet v on!, when actually used In making i a r pots by providing a rebate of 99 per cent. The duty on carpets Is cut from Hi to 30 per cent, while the ltemocratlc bill provides duties rang ing from !5 to 50 percent. The duties on cloth and other .manufactures of ool are reduced by a provision limit ing the compensatory duty to the actual wool contents, while the j.reeent law Imposes duty on the .entire weight. The duties are thus reduced to the difference between American and Torelgn cost. All the Jokers are cut out. Including the dis crimination aghlnst carded wool In favor of worsted. The Republicans ty this bill have proved their readiness to revise down ward to an enormous degree the Inde fensible schedule K. Their bill Is based on facts ascertained by the method approved by the Democrats prior to the extra session of 1911. By allowing it to become law the Demo crats would give the consumers the relief which they profesi such deep anxiety to give. By rejecting It the Democrats will prove that the only ratlonat hope of securing tariff revi sion lies In the re-election of Taft and In the election, of a t'ongTess which will work hand-ln-hand with him In carrying" out his policy of scientific revision. NOTHING NEW. The sun rises In the east and sets In the west every day. The day fol lows the night and the night the day. History repeats Itself. The lory of man man's life, msn's love, man's ambition, man's disappointment la the same In all aces and among all civilisations. There ls nothing new. The , following passage from the "Life and Times of Cavour" by Wil liam Roscoe Thayer, has a peculiar pertinence In Its significant relation to a momentous current event: A sraat atataaman In actlpaa Is too oftan either a danaar to hlo country or a d alroyer of hta own fama. Tha world will not n foraot tna an Try aprtacle of tha dethroned Rlamarca: tha Titan who had Itttrd the German emptra out of tha earth and noma it for yoara aloft on hla shoulders apendlns hla last years In euralns the jnera man who overthrow him. ery Hffrnt th dlanlty of his icreat forarun nr. stein: vary different tha fruitful retire ment of Jaff'raon and John Qulnry Adama. and tha not-le disdain- of Turot. happy Minbuu. haDDT I'ltt. whom prematura death apared tha supreme teat ahlch too often shows patriotism to bo subordlnata to aelf-lova. One vear ago or April 8. 1911 Theodore Roosevelt at Spokane. In his great swing around the circle, made a speech In which he made remarks that are fit to be quoted In connection with Historian Thayer's poignant com ment on great statesmen In the shadow. They were: I am not an aspirant for ttnythlng berauaa I hava had everything. I am ahead of the rtme. Po man ailva naa nan aa noon a run for hla money aa I hava had. Ba- cauaa of my llfo In tho West. I waa not only able to becoma Prealdent of tha I'nlted Statra. but to do tha thlnsa whlf-h In my mind mado it worth while belna; Prealdent. When I left the Prealdaney I made up my mind that when tha opportunity offered. after my return from Africa. 1 ahould try to viait each aectlon. and aa nearly aa poaaioie avery atate In tna lnlon. to irt.i wi people, to endeavor to show tnam my w lief, that t'.ia man who had been a Prealdent of the I'nlted htatea la forerer after tha debtor of the American people. Colonel Roosevelt thus wrote finis to his own career. But there is a sequel. 1119 Tt'BLIC RECORD. "Why." asks a persistent critic of The Oregonlan. "why does not The Oregonlan try to beat Mr. Bourne-on hi public record?" The Intimation Is. of course, that The Oregonlan ha Invaded the forbidden field of Senator Bourne's private life In Its search for material to be used against him. The Oregonlan Invites this captious and sneering fault-flndcr to scan The Ore gonlan's columns diligently for any thing in the way of censure this paper hus to say, or may have said, that has to do with Bourne's private record, or even his public record prior to his election to the Senate In 1906. The Issue as to Bourne now is not the events of his career in Oregon before his Senatorial term began. The Ore gonlan has resumed that the people of the state condoned rhem . or at least agreed to Ignore them by their election of Mr. Bourne to the Senate when they had full knowledge of all the facts about him. But It Js pitiful to say that tho pres. ent ow nership by Mr. Bourne In whole o- In part of certain New Kngland cot ton mills has no proper place In any discussion of his campaign for re election: or If It has that Mr. Bourne ls merely the president of the cotton mills and does not control their opera tion. It Is fair, and It ls even neces sary, to consider the relation of any public man In his public capacity to his own private Interest. Mr. Bourne us Senator, professing benevolent senti ments toward the common people and a whole-hearted Interest In thoir wel fare, and Mr. Bourne, the cotton-mill owner, employing In tl.elr operation the cheapest, most miserable and most degraded labor to be found anywhere, are not separate entitles. Mr. Bourne a.-, Senator, voting for a high tariff on cotton fabrics, and Mr. Bourne as cotton-mill owner deriving a large revenue from a factory directly ben efited by the tariff he as Senator up holds, are not 'different persons. If Mr. Bourne cjt president of the cotton mills, has no voice In their op pressive policy toward labor, he ought to resign and decline to take his fat dividends from them If the many people and the numer ous newspapers of Oregon who think Mr. Bourne ought to be retired from office are to be confined to considera tion of Mr. Bourne on hla merits as Senator and they cheerfully and even enthusiastically accept the lim itation the supporters cf Mr. Bourne ought also to appeal to the public on the basis of service rendered and re sults accomplished, first, for the state whlch'he represents, and second, for the political party which directly and solely brought about his election. FAIL! RK OF PROPORTION' AI. PLAN. The partial disfranchising of voters In the election of delegates to the Na tional convention aa inflicted by the Oregon Presidential primary law Is supposed to have been the idea of Mr. W. S. ITRen. It ls a form of "propor tional representation." In a somewhat different way, but carrjlng out the same theory. Mr. ITRen would apply the proportional plan In electing leg islators In the proposed cabinet form of Government. "Proportional rep resentation" In theory Rives the minor, ity representation In elected councils in exact proportion to the minority's voting strength. In practice, as will be revealed by a glance at tho official nominating ballot, the plan as applied to selecting delegates Is a total failure. There are eighteen aspirants for the ten positions as delegates to the Re publican National convention. Kach elector may vote for one of the eigh teen and only one. The successful delegate will have been Instructed by the preferential vote to support Taft, La Kollette or Roosevelt as the case may be. Kach delegate will make oath that he will "to the best of his Judgment and ability faithfully carry out the wishes of his political party as expressed by its voters." But it was the theory of the framers of the law that the. choice of the Ore gon voters for President might! find his candidacy In the National conven tion hopeless. When released by him, or deserted in the exercise of the dele gate's "judgment." the delegate would then express his personal preference for President. Here was where "pro portional representation" was to exert It beneficent influence. The Oregon voters were supposed to know what were the personal preferences of the delegates. In theory it ought to result in such a way that if fifty per cent of the voters favored Taft. thirty per cent La Follette and twenty per cent Roosevelt, five Taft delegates, three La Kollette and two Roosevelt dele gates would be elected. But. alas for proportional represen tation! The candidates for delegates have failed, with but few exceptions, to Indicate their personal preferences. af the eighteen candidates twelve give no Intimation whatever as to whom they will support In the event Oregon's choice for President 1s defeated; two declare themselves for Taft; two are for Roosevelt: two Indicate Indecision between Roosevelt and La Kollette which ought to be highly satisfactory to the Insurgent element which ls now quarreMng over the Identity of the real, dyed-ln-the-wool Insurgent can didate. , With ten to elect and twelve out of the eighteen candidates for delegate possessing preferences unknown to the voters the "proportional" scheme can only result In disfranchisement of the voters nothing more. Really It waa unkind of the dele gates not to enter Into the spirit of Mr. ITRen's experiment, yet it was not a surprise. " The wide-open primary has resulted in a subordination of po litical principles and party politics. Men seekTifnce on the strength of per sonal popularity. There are no Is-sues except those offered by Individual rep utations, characteristics or affiliations. Good character and intelligence, it ls true, are prime essentials but they are Vt the only constituent principles of fitness for ofllce. We shall elect John Doe delegate to the National convention because he ls John Doe and for no other reason. Mr. ITRen's more elaborate scheme of proportional rep resentation In the Legislature would work out the same w-ay. THE RISEN 8AV10R. In the end of the Sabbath as It be gan to dawn toward the first day. of the week. Mary Magdeleno came to the sepulcher with Mary, tha mother of Jesus, and Salome, to anoint the Savior's body with sweet spices. Weep ing with helpless love at the foot of the cross they had seen him die. They had followed his broken body to the tomb and now when they thought the Roman guards might have gone and the hatred of his enemies left his wasted form in peace, they came with tireless fidelity to shed their last tears In the eepulcher and mingle the fra grance of precious spices with the sweeter fragrance of their love. But Jesus was not there. In the gloom of the sepulcher Mary, bending down to enter, saw a youug man sitting on the right side, the side where the sol dier's spear had pierced the Savior's body, clothed In a long white gar ment. The women were afraid, but the young man comforted them. "Fear not." he said, "for I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified. He ls not there, for he has risen, as he said." and he showed them the place where the Lord had lain. Departing from the sepulcher "with fear and great Joy," to tell the disciples what they had seen and heard, the women were met on the way by the risen Lord, who gave them a message to his disciples. "Go tell my breth ren that they go into Galilee and there they shall see me." The eleven disciples went away Into Galilee and there Jesus appeared to them on the mountain and gave them his final message. "Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature." Kver since that day the followers of Jesus have been doing their best to obey his command, the last one he ut tered befor he vanished from mortal eyes. What he meant by "the gospel" he did not eay, nor was It necessary that he should, for they- knew per fectly welL It was the story of his life and teachings, the story of hla death and above all else, the wonder of his faith In the coming of the kingdom. The glory of his vision of the kingdom shed light and Joy over the Savior's earthly life. In the still night watches he formed impassioned dreams of its unlmagined beauty. Withdrawn from the disciples to desert solitudes, he talked to them of the slew time and new life. . One day as ho traveled through Galilee the multitudes gathered about him so numerously that he went up Into a mountain In order that hla voice might reach them all and told them how human society would be ordered In the kingdom. It shall belong to the poor In spirit, he told them. He meant that its rulers should be the plain people of the earth, not the am bitious, the proud, the arrogant. Lin coln caught the Savior's thought bet ter than any other modern and ex pressed It In his care for the welfare of the "common man." This was the man whom Jesus loved and who, as he taught the multitude, was to pos sess the kingdom. Then he went on to depict a little of Its Joy. They that mourn shall be comforted in the kingdom. There shall be no more needless sorrow. Untimely death, sickness that need not have been, cruelty. Injustice, all the woeful cir cumstances which drove Burns to sing pathetically that "man was made to mourn." there shall be none of these things In the kingdom, for the former things will have passed away and eyes dim with weeping shall at last be dry. Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted. And blessed are the meek for when the kingdom comes they shall inherit the earth. It shall not be the cun ning then, the voracious, the preda tory and heartless who will seize and enjoy the good things which the labor of mankind produces, but even the meek shall have their share. The world will be so changed that virtue shall lead to happiness instead of misery. It will not be a reproach in the kingdom to call a man "Innocent." for innocence will not Imply poverty and failure. The greatest of all in tho new time will bo the servants of all. to borrow the Lord's own words, and the tone of life will be that of lit tle children. All will be peaceful, sim ple, confiding. "Suffer the little chil dren to come unto me. for of such." said he, "Is the kingdom." What need will there be of statute books and jails when love ls the fulfilling of the law. as Paul told us It should be? What need of lawyers when he that Is sued for his coat makes haste to give his c'oak also? What need of banks and iron safes when men have ceased to lay up treasures on earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and think only of laying- up heavenly treasure, the gold and Jewels of brotherly kindness, which are incor ruptible and fade not away and which no thief can steal? In the kingdom righteousness shHll flow like rivers, the merciful shall obtain mercy, not betrayal. The pure in heart shall see God, the peace makers shall be called his children, the highest of all titles of honor, and they which have been persecuted for righteousness' sake shall come into their own and reign with the meek and the poor in spirit. Then Jesua went on to tell the multitude what they miut do to bring the kingdom to pass. They must resist not evil. Smitten on the right cheek they must turn the other also. "Ixrve your enemies. Bless them that curse yon. Take no thought for the morrow, for the mor row shall take thought for the things of Itself. Judge not that ye be not Judged. Beware of false prophets which como to you In sheep's clothing but Inwardly they are . ravening wolves." And It came to pass that when JeMis had ended these sayings the people were astonished at his doc trines, and no wonder for the like never had been heard in this world before. He spoke as never man had spoken in all history. Like a grain fallen into the ground his teaching has slowly germinated. Sometimes it ljas seemed dead but the life never has quite foryaken It. Se cretly it has taken root and put forth branches. Even more Justly we may liken it to the little leaven, as Paul does, which, only give it time enough, leaveneth the whole lump. Today we see Jesus' concept of the kingdom working In the world as it never has worked before. Precepts of his which men once looked at askance as coun sels of Impossible perfection are be ing preached as rules for us all to live and trade by. His Ideal of human society is at last coming1 Into its own. It is the only possible, the only suc cessful ideal. All others fail as fast as they are tried. His alone remains imperishable. It grows, it expands. It conquers. It Is permeating the whole world and -subjecting all na tions to the law of love. THE DODKFAI.L OF SOCIETV. No doubt there are circumstances which justify the rather depressing prospects which the Rev. E. H. Ben nett sees for the future of the country. With the strikes Which are raging here, there and everywhere, the nu merous murders which are committed and seldom punished, and the wild language which one hears on -the streets, certainly a clergyman Is excus. able for thinking that the downfall of our institutions is at hand. Mr. Bennett expresses this apprehension in strong language. "A deluge of crime, anarchy and dissipation will sweep over the country' before half a century has passed," he said at the ministers' meeting on Monday, "unless something be done to check the oncoming' tide of sensuality, licentiousness, appetite, disregard for the .word of God, the church of God and the Sabbath of God, and before this century ls passed we shall face a condition which will mean the destruction of our institu tions." That there Is a substantial basis for Mr. Bennett's fears nobody can deny. Perhaps he colors the picture a little more darkly than the facts really re quire, but that ls a mere detail. Moral conditions are bad. and a remedy is re quired. Thus much is admitted and we shall not quarrel over the exact de gree of the badness. The remedy which Mr. Bennett pro poses Is Interesting. He says that things will go from bad to worse un less "the. Bible be taught In the public schools and ministers be allowed to give moral Instruction In the public schools." The first thought which oc curs to one on reading- this ls that In former times the Bible was taught in the schools by ministers and that in those days ther Jeremiahs said even worse things than Mr. Bennett does about moral conditions. The speedy downfall of society has always been predicted unless each particular doc tor's remedy was applied to it, but it Is singular to observe how ineffectual these remedies have usually been. Poor old society goes on falling cen tury after century, but after all It manages to get higher and higher. Who will explain this mystery? Ministers who talk about teaching the Bible In the public schools overlook many obvious difficulties. What ver sion of the Bible shall be selected? What shall be done with the children of men who do not believe In the Bible? Have they no rights? If It is to be taught by clergymen, what de nomination shall have the preference? Which creed shall be taken for the true one? These are a few of the questions which must be answered be fore we shall be able to teach the Bible In the public schools In peace and love. Would It not be better on the whole to seek to teach morals by some other means? RIDDING THE LAND OF DISEASE. Dr. Rupert Blue will always be known on the Pacific Coast as the man who forestalled bubonic plague in San Francisco by killing the rats. In his new office of Surgeon-General of the United States he proposes to continue this campaign by making war on all rodents and insects that are great carriers of disease. The strongest testimony to the ef ficacy of Dr. Blue's methods is the contrast between the reception accord ed him in San Francisco on his two visits to that city to fight the plague. When he was first sent there in 1899 the people and the officials opposed his measures and only after Pardee became Governor could he secure co operation. The plague then prevailed In Chinatown, all except eight of 121 cases having been Chinamen. He made Chinatown rat-proof by cutting out all woodwork In basements and substituting concrete and by wiring all openings near tho ground. By killing the rats and shutting them out of tho buildings he had killed the plague by Februarj-, 1904. The dis ease broke out again In September, 1907. Then the Mayor and officials sent for him and gave him hearty co operation. The soundness of his the ory that the epidemic could be stopped only by rat-proofing- the buildings was proved by the fact that Chinatown was now Immune and that the plague was In other parts of the city. He rat proofed the whole city, trapped and poisoned the rats and cut off their food supply by securing severe penal ties against throwing garbage in al leys and elsewhere. By January, 1908, the plague had again disappeared. But two cases of bubonic plague were traced to infected ground squir rels In other parts of the state and he extended the work. As squirrels live in the ofien, concrete cannot be used against them, so he made a campaign in seventeen counties of California, exterminating the infected squirrels and warning people against handling or eating such animals. The danger of infection from squirrels is greater than that from rats, for they might carry the disease across the Sierras into the interior. . Dr. Blue killed yellow fever in New Orleans by destroying the mosquitoes. By his work in that city and San Francisco he justified this opinion he expressed in an interview in the Worlds Work: My grateat ambition is to clean up tha t'nlted. Ptatea. Were every building; rat proof, there would be no plasuea and much l.-sa dl-a.sc. I look forward to the day when the good housekeeper will feel that It Is aa much of a disgrace to have mos quitoes and fllea In the houfe a it la to have bedhuga. When that tlm coinen. dis ease In the United States will be reduced one-third. Dr. Blue ls making war on all forms of epidemic disease typhoid, tuber culosis, leprosy, pellagra, hookworm. He is studying pollution of rivers, dis posal of garbage and sewage, pure milk and all subjects bearing on the public health. He is hampered by restrictions on the Federal power, but he is working In co-operation with state and local officials with the end In view which he thus expresses: I ahould" like to feel that soon the wholo rountry will know that the greatest agents of dlaeaae in the world are rats, mice and rodenta of all description, aa well as flies and mosquHoea and other similar insect. My war will be upon all this tribe, and it will ba unrelenting. Til K 80l"NT SHIPPING POIJCV. At last CongTess is coming to its senses on our shipping policy. The House committee on merchant marine haj reported a bill admitting to Amer ican register foreign-built ships owned by Americans and engaged in foreign trade. The committee in its report frankly confesses the failure of the present policy of restriction, as shown by the facts that in fifty-one years the value of ships .under the American flag has decreased 44 per cent, while that of ships under foreign flags has Increased 1084 per cent, and that more than 91 per cent of our foreign commerce ls carried in foreign ships. As our shipbuilders admit that it costs 40 per cent more to build, ships at home than abroad and as the mail subsidies, which have amounted to more than ,25,000,000 since 1891, have Induced the building of vessels of but 103,749 gross tons, there are only two alternatives either to grant subsidies large enough to offset the 40 per cent additional cost or to buy for eign ships. The American people have ex pressed their opposition to subsidies so frequently and so positively that, aside from the merits of the question, it is impossible to secure even a small sub sidy, much less one large enough to offset a 40 per cent difference in cost. Then the only alternative, if we are to have a merchant marine equal to our needs, ls to buy foreign ships and admit them to American register. Our experience, like that of Britain and Germany, has confirmed the truth of the old saying: "Trade follows the flag." While the expansion of British and German foreign trade has been in close proportion to that of their mer chant marine, our foreign trade has been cramped by the annual shrinkage in our merchant marine. We have learned that we cannot hold our place in the world's markets unless our goods are carried in our own ships ships owned by Americans, whether built In America or not. This fact is borne in upon our minds at a time when two conditions im peratively demand that we act upon it and divest our minds of all idea that we can create a merchant marine by artificial means. One of these con ditions ls the expansion of our indus tries to the point where the home market ls insufficient to consume all their products and where we must overflow into foreign lands If our fac tories are to be kept In full operation. The other condition is that we are about to complete. In the Panama Canal, the greatest aid to commerce the world has seen. Unless we wish to become the laughing-stock of the world as a nation which has spent 1400,000.000 on a canal of which we shall be the smallest users, we must buy foreign ships and sail them under our flag. ALBERT SYDNEY JOHNSTON. It is believed by many that if Al bert Sydney Johnston had had an hour or two moro of daylight on the day of the battle of Shiloh he would have completed his victory and forced Grant to surrender. This may be true, for to make the best of it, the Union troops were in a dangerous situation at dark on April 6 and but little more would have been required to throw them into irreparable disorder. But we may concede all this without agree ing 4hat Johnston would have com pleted his victory the next morning If he had not been killed on the field of Shiloh. Before the dawn of April 7 Grant had been heavily reinforced by Lew Wallace and a large contingent from Buell. so that he was able to out number the Confederates and, more Important still, perhaps, he wa3 ready for the combat. He had been taken by surprise on Sunday, but on Monday he was on the alert and fully intended to have resumed the battle whether Johnston survived or not. There is little doubt, that Grant, when he was really exercising his faculties, was as good a general as Johnston, and inas much as he had the advantage of num bers and position, we cannot rationally suppose that he would have been de feated. However that may be. it Is admitted by all writers that Johnston's death was an Immense loss to the Confeder acy. At the time of the " battle of Shiloh his reputation was somewhat clouded among the people of the South, but he retained the full confi dence of Jefferson Davis and had he lived he would very likely have been able to retrieve the past by balking Grant's efforts to penetrate to Vicks burg and complete the opening of the Mississippi. At any rate, he was the only Southern commander in the West who had the slightest chance of win ning against Grant and Sherman. Very soon after Shiloh tho timorous and indecisive Beauregard evacuated Cor inth and left the way open for Grant's advance. This Johnston would not have done. He was an unfortunate man toward the close of his life, but nobodj' has ever accused him of hesi tancy or bad Judgment at a critical moment. When the plan of attacking at Shiloh was under debate at Corinth, Beauregard counseled delay. The mo ment for surprising Grant had slipped away, he argued, and, therefore, noth ing should be done but to remain where they were and fortify their po sition. Johnston decided the matter by ordering an attack for the next morning. "I would do it," he said, "if Grant had a million men." Such was his anxiety to win a great, decisive battle and retrieve his clouded fame. The cause of Johnston's unpopularity at this time was his loss of the de fensive line in Kentucky at the be ginning of tho year. This was not his fault, but, as he wrote to Jefferson Davis, in warfare the only test of merit is success and he had not been success ful. Thomas had won at Mill Creek against superior numbers and, owing to the wretched incapacity of Floyd and Pillow, Grant had gained a com paratively easy victory at Fort Don elson. For all this, Johnston was blamed because he was the commander-in-chief and, therefore, tech nically responsible for whatever hap pened. Like a good many other Confederate Generals, Albert Sydney Johnston was a man of lofty character who fought against the Union because he loved his state better than his country. It was expected at Washington when the war broke out that he would remain loyal and'a high command was in readiness for htm. That he would choose the Union side was all the more probable since Texas, where he resided, was not his native state. It , was natural enough that Lee should set his fealty to Virginia above every other consid eration because he was born there and all his family and friends were asso ciated with Virginia soil. But since Johnston was born in Kentucky and was more than 30 years old when he finally migrated to Texas, the reasons for his determined loyalty to that state were not so apparent. Still there were reasons. In the Texan war for inde pendence. Johnston fought valiantly against Mexico, first as a volunteer and than as an officer of rank, so that his associations with the state and its people became numerous and dear. Again, in the Mexican war he com manded a regiment of Texas volun teers. We can understand, therefore, how it was that .when the moment came for decisive choice, he cast in his lot with the state where he lived. Jefferson Davis looked upon John ston as the most promising General of the Confederacy. The misfortunes which foHowed upon his collision with Grant in Kentucky did not impair Davis' faith in him. He stood by his chosen commander with the same in flexible confidence which Lincoln re posed in Grant and it mast be con fessed that, at that time, he had far better reasons. The faith wheh in Lincoln we must ascribe to something like despair, had in Davis substantial grounds. Grant had done little or nothing; for many years before the Civil War. Johnson's years were full of achievement. He had been entrust ed with many perilous duties and had more than met expectations in every instance. He was particularly success ful in settling the difficulties between the Government and the Mormons In 1857. These fanatics, after fleeing from intolerable persecution in Illinois and Iowa, had irrigated the Utah desert and built prosperous homes so far away from neighbors that they supposed they never would be molest ed again. But the discovery of gold in California set the tide of emigration flowing past their doors and naturally they tried to resist it. The result Was trouble, first with the nioneers and then with the Government, until some thing like open rebellion existed in Utah. Johnston was sent out to quiet the disturbance and he conducted his mission with judgment so unerring and courage so adequate that peace was restored without bloodshed. This shows the quality of the man Brave to excess in emergencies, a great master of military strategy, wi.se in council and self-sacrificing in misfor tune, he served the cause he had chosen up to the moment of his death and left it with no man to fill his place. The irrecoverable decline of the Confederate fortunes In the West dates from Johnston's death at Shiloh In declaring- war on old bachelors the Boston women are performing an obvious but long-neglected duty. They truly say of thi3 obnoxious creature that "ho dodges, squirms and evades his duties to society. That he is In competent to fill public office follows as a matter of course and the Boston Women intend hereafter to see to it that he is kept In his proper sphere. In addition to the many other fine qualities for which Francois Xavier Matthieu has been rewarded with 91 happy years of life is his apprecia tion of women. He- has believed In woman's suffrage for 70 years, he says, ever since he came to Oregon. A faith which can persist so long In such a man must have pretty solid foundations. "Results not words" appears on the ballot after the name of Calvin U. Gantenbein, candidate for Congress. Some of his opponents in the race could honestly use the same motto, by applying it backwards. Even if Suspect Roberts proves to be the wanton auto murderer he needn't fear speedy retribution. In deed, even if convictel, he might get about again in a year or so as an "honor man." According to press dispatches trains and ships are awaiting to transport immense armies to Texas or some place or other. These dispatches would be more easily credited If we had an army to transport. Down in Utah smallpox patients will nj longer be kept in quarantine. Since the Government has effectually done away with polygamy possibly the Mor mons don't care much what happens. If charges of exceeding: the speed limit are pressed against that rail road company the prosecuting- officer might do well to insist on a judge and jury that has not patronized the line. "Portland Leads the Coast" reads a headline. But a sense of disappoint ment follows when we read that it's only the bank clearings and not the ball team. Newspapermen treat Congress as a joke, complains Senator Heyburn. It's really a shame that those Washington correspondents have a sense of humor. It's a sad season for candidates. They are terribly interested in their campaign while the public is equally absorbed in ball scores. The name of Major Quevedo in the press reports from Mexican battles comes something a9 a shock. We thought they were all Generals. Even if it does rain today gratitude will be felt by at least a portion of the feminine populace. Oregon will be spieled to a finish during the fortnight. It would seem that Easter has gone to the ladies' heads. Registered T Scraps and Jingles Leone Caan Bae Motto for yesterday, "Hat, irink and be merry, for tomorrow ye may dye." a Every little Kaster lias eggs-cite-ment all its own. a "Actress says she wauls to ride ir an airship." yells V headline risins to the occasion as it were. a a Read of a wine called the "Katis Pearl." Suppose it's of tlie vintage Cleopatra. a yiy Dream. Unto tlie heights to climb, , A step another, . Day by day. And when I've gained the top To wear upon my brow Bright leaves of hay, And yet hold fast the bitter-sweet I've gathered on my way. a a Rose Bloch Bauer believes in hered ity to such an extent that one of her pupils whose pa is a grocer is watched very closely when she gets to the scales. a a a My One Wish, I do not envy others' fame. For clothes I io not pine. I do not want to chanse my name, And if circumstances do combine To any fate I'll quick resign And easy niakn the best of that. All 1 ask, oh, brightest sliine. Is an electric-lighted hat. Some souls crave paintings, others aim To collect jewels superfine. Rarest rugrs or volumes old. Music to otliers is divine. But I don't care, 1 still stand pat. The only thins on earth 1 want Is - an electric-liglited hut. a a a Tramp showed up at an advertised muslcale because the advertisements said that the music was intoxicating-, a a a Local judsc says that marriage stands for much. How much? And of what? a 0 I've got a scheme: When lovers writ. And tell me that "love grows apace." I save the slushy, mushy lines And file them in a nice safe place. I cultivate their ardent slop And beg for more with smiling grace. On beaux T lay no silent spell. But let them pen me all their fears, I catalogue the tender lines, Their rhapsodies of love and tears, I like new stuff, and up-to-date The erotic style of modern years. And lest one note should go astray I make two copies of each one. And neatly file them all away, (I'm making hay while shines ths sun), No matter who writes rot to mr. I cull anil prune and cast out none. L'envoi. Hear then ye mutts who write me notes About the "little love god blind," Write often and In mushiest vein. For I've a publisher in mind. a a a "I wouldn't wed the best man living.' cried a girl and her suitor said h didn't call that any obstacle to her marriage with liim. a a a It's a wise man who sends a woman 22 rosebuds on her 41st birthday, a a a Miss Calamity Step-and-fetch-it. the cultured, etc., lady poet from Kansas, writes of Her aspirations in a lit'ry way. She calls this ballad Terrible Ambitious. I have a series in my head. Of stories thrillinu to the core: Some are of the tear-soaked kind. Some your peace will quick restore. One will bring your smiles galore, So though my mood is dull or bright. Each day I sit and think up A lot of things on which to write. Oft my female spirit nnconrrneo Bows right 'at Ma Nature's door. The muses tie ine up with rope And poetry's vials into nie pour; To grand realms up high I soar. And when I reach a diazy height I can almost sing my head off. Thinking various things to write. I make countless poems in my head And love tales by the score, And plays, oh, my! I've wrote a bunch And musjc comedies 3 or 4. It's queer lny brain ain't quite out wort But my future's awful bright. Because I've got stored up in me Loads of things on which to write. a a a xTnt(, Not one joke about sackcloth and ashes, the devil br the Easter hat mars this column today. Four of a Kind By Dean Collins. It was before election day. We stood beside the polished bar. And he desired a silver fizz, And I desired a blacK cigar: l. , .,i at .flh with longing eve. And each one murmured: Who will buy?" We pondered o'er the problem deep. And thought upon the rolling dice; We thought of matching coins to see Irtblch one was stuc xo pay ine price, inri rinallv he looked at me And said "I have a bright idee." He in his pocket plunged his hand. Where he had nunareu cams or so. Given by gentle candidates. With friendly tip: "V oie inus, you know." He held up five in manner bland. And said: "Go on and bet your hand." I In my pocket plunged my hand, Where, I had cards the same as iifl. And in the draw perceived I held Two coroners and sheriffs three. I gave a low, triumphant cough, And said: "Bet on! The ro9t is off." Vain were the hopes I entertained That he was stuck for tno cigar. He smiled a broad, triumphant smile And laid four judges on tne Dar. Twa. thus a. cooilly use we found For cards the candidates pass round. Portland. April t. Flowers to Send, If Any. Cleveland Plain Dealer. r,ni. iipar old Uncle William is dead!" cried the niece-in-law, weeping racefully. "Yes the fine old scout has. passed ir, at last." "When do they read the will? Whv. not until after the funeral, ot course. Why do you ask?" "Because I think that s a silly cus om. The will should be read before the funeral." "But why?" "So the relatives can tell what sort of flowers to send. If any." Call for Mr. Van Winkle! New York Satire. Rip Van Winkle sat up and yawnrd. "What the deuce did yon fellow-i wake me for, anyhow?" he demanded. "We want you on the jury."