El -PORTLANDy OREGON- THE. OREGON DAILY JIN 0 S. JACKSOg Published every evening (except Sunday) and every Sunday morn Inf. at , .", . !'; i :'. nU streets, Portland, Oregon. ' THOSE MOST TO "r" I HE Queen steamed awayTXapfaTriCousiia says, '. - a - ,i ;n puri-uaucc ti iinperaiivc orcr, on nuiui ol ilie Topeka, not trying in the meantime to do " anything. The Queen, left the. rescue job to the Topeka, which did nothing because it considered it to oe me iiSSST)U giti JIM iHHy ''f ll - - fft tug apparently did not de.iire to be forward or officious and rush hi where bigger ships had feared to operate, and z fully -sacrificed. over 100 live were a it sccnif ncedlci-Ty and shamc- Captain Ceuift-plea4-4hat ha had -4ey orders and '"-rrfiste ion, but it v. ill not be the" opinion of humaHityr 1 here '.-., are; times when the. command of God and mankind is paramount to that of one's coldblooded and callous em . - ployers. 'Yet if such were Captain'Cousin's orders, his - - employers 7eatizing "the" situation, a .large part of the .""' blame falling on his shoulders must be shifted to theirs. ' " Captain Van Schaick, who commanded the steamer " Slocum on Lodg Island sound when it caught fire and , . many hundreds of women and children were burned to death or drowned, was recently sentenced to, imprison - - mcnt for 10 years for not having complied with pro visions for protecting his passengers, and the 'punish . ' meut is just, as to hint. - But what of the rich owners of the vessel, what of Van Schaick's superiors, what of the . government and city inspectors whose duty it was to see that such , terrible calamity could not thus occur? A lot of them ought to be keeping the captain company. So in this case, if the Valencia Was ordered to steam ahead regardless of sure bearings in order to make the Irip on time, or if Captain Cousins was ordered merely to look on and steam away, risking nothing to save thqse lives, it is the superiors of the captains who. are most to t" b'ame, and wh deserve the heavier punishment TiTT -Representa'tive Sibleyof Pennsylvania, formerly, a radical Bryan Democrktr but-nbw llcan, objects to granting the power tu fix rates to a political commission-rather-thaaa judicial determina tion by the courts. But the proposed commission is no more political than the courts, and the people are becom ing dissatisfied not to say disgusted with most of the rulings of the courts on suchquefinr ' ' ' r , 'LA BELLE FRANCE AND DON CIPRIANOT 1. .-, RANCE has probably not abandoned its intention JT to compel Castro to make another apology if not t Pav me of his alleged debts, but is taking time to consider the case further, especially as the out come of the Algeciras conference is a more" important matter, and if France gets into a fight with Germany it will have no powder . to waste for awhile on Castro. France announced its intention, according to reports, to send a fleet from Caribbean waters down to blockade Venezuelan ports,' but. either did riot intend to do so or else changed its mind, .and audacious and pugnacious Castro ts still crowing on his Andean Thtlmsff trii'h T1 Trmrrrl-s ment. France claims -that Don Cipriano s conduct ta sev eral particulars has been outrageous and intolerable, jus tifying the conversion of himself and his government and - country into Latin-American hash awhile Castro declares in substance that France's claims are as false as a chords . girl's complexion, and that Uncle Sam has flourished the big stick in France's favor because Castro and the Vene- auelan6urlswoutdTiorbritndled tyiheasphalt Trust: .. There are indications, to say the least, that Castro". good deal bf a blusterer and swashbuckler, a sort of inter national bad boy, and wants it Supposed that he would rather fight than' eat, yet. there is much ground for sus- " picion that he has been imposed upon a good deal on the - theory that when it came to a pinch he neither would nor could fight avaihngly. If everything were known, an im- partial arbiter might find Don Cipriano mostly if not al togetherxrlthin liis-nghts as practically thtwhole thing in the government of Venezuela. ' 1 ; " . Of course Senator iTom Carter is in favor of a ship : subsidy bill -He can invariably be depended upon to be c . on the wrong side of any proposition. . ' REFORMING TIMBER LAND LAW. I HAT THE LAND LAWS have fert J 11.4 until eeemtly.-ery ' ruptly administered everybody session of congress the prevailing if not the unanimous opinion is that the laws should somehow be changed or some of them repealed, but congress can agree on noth- ' ing and ends by doing nothing, as will probably he the case again. The contention now, as heretofore, centers . upon the proposal to repeal the timber and stone act, to which Senator Fulton objects because it would leave great tracts i5ftimrer unavailable- foe-ptirchsse-and -usef and the objectify seems to be , well taken. .The thing lhat ought to be done is not to prevent the sale of these lands, except as homesteads, and the manufacture of the timber .into lumber, but to devise a means whereby the ' government would get a fair purchase' price and the states and counties a fair revenue from the timbered .. lands. This seems to be an impossibility, however, and ibe people will probably be swindled and plundered by special interests and syndicates and corporations and ;, land grabbers to" lhe6nd-of the chapter. -Congress either hasn't brains enough to reform the business on practical lines, or else doesn t -want to do so. An ef ficient lock for "the MabTe "dooF wnt D-dcvtse only'-when the. animals Jiavejall been lost, as mostof them have vbeea already. Some of the biggest" timber land thieves' ' . and highly 'protected lumber manufacturers are in' con - gress.; The man who can make the most money in this ' ay is thebne. best qualified to be a senator; and yet there isgabb1e about reforming the timber land laws. . It's the same as giving Satan a commission to put a stop ;o sin.-' : - .'- Mrs. Roosevelt Thoughtful. STmia tha Indlananolls Morning; Star. . -. Mrs, Theodora Roosevelt is one of . ' tha- moaL thoughtful . of women. She doe many, llltle grnrloun and kindly 7 act. i of aWcrTTVliuTIWent' " knows. Utvaslonally the wives ot for taer -Wahln"ston officials come to the . rlty. but bersnae Of the pastnr from tubllo view of thrlr hurbands they are . TmrtiraHy;Jowt to eight. It la MrfT Itooaewlt'a c-uaion when aha knows of - these airlvaJs to order flowers aant in her name to the vicltois. thus lettrrig them, know that they, have not passed from tha memory at the oocupants Of the White House. . '" ' ' ,j 'f Hiyu Skookura Time. ; v - From the Arlington Reoords . '. The flrat of this week TbeROPk Crek Indiana, some 3 strong, a few miles from Arlington in Klickitat county, rlnned their big pbw-Wow and feast, which xvurs eaeh yaar. There were rrent Indians from Vmatllla. Yakima .and Warm Hprlngs. The festivities have n ranulng alnoe January "1. The 4arn wrro pnt In gambling. hom racing and barter. The nights ware apeat. Uk aJl kinds 9I Haoolng, suta aa ..INPEPSNDINT NIWlfAPEIt PUBLISHED . BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. BLAME. - Hrr,mnTrlfK4nff The !cameI-thatrTrhTra'rr--and settlers and other tain range and - be chance with one bune. that suDoorts to the extensive flockmasters who so that the reserve ilization has been ished temporary stances too far and an ixtfemeRepnl- andinttmperate. Some entirely perch fttffiv tilt ftf ascertain-1 vastly beneficial to or 10 eome. - RAILWAYS been verylmpeF- lr-ely pot'COT- knows. At every possible. They now rather than war dances, spirit dances, skull dances, etc. Every few days a lai'ge bullock would bs killed and ratd.- The In dians are inveleifafe rambTera. an Is stated that one young burk from Umatilla went home with five ' new anna wsi ait-won-w4th the eardsr In talking to a aubchlef who was present he said: "HI yu skookum time, HI y tnooaa moo. HI yu monte. Ill yu coley. Heap big time. "Innocent! Abroad" Stil Alive. terby?onn. - IMapatchllaJJeirTork , ; , Tribune. . , ' One of Mark ' Twain's "Innocents Abroad" is living quietly at Deep River at the .age of 71 years. , He Is Captain William A. Pratt, who was for many i-eare one of the baat-knawn aaltlng-mastera- of ths New York Yacht club. Captain Pratt was turtertaaster Of ths Steamship Quaker City- when that ves sel made ths trip to the Holy Lnd that Mr. Clemens haa immortalised in his fa mous work. ' f - f r Captain Pratt received a letter last week from Blood good H. Cuttor, anolhe 'of the "innocents."- Mr. Cutter . writes that h la II years eld. nd that he is bcdrlddea zrsffl fueumausia, . JOURNAL -7T no. f. CABKOU The Journal Building. Fifth and Yam- . ''!' FOREST RESERVES IN THE NORTHWEST. THERE IS NOT so 7 much - objection-m-the-far '"' west to. the government's forest reserve policy . ' as there was a few' years ago or even more' re cently. It is better understood, and it has been learned that the government would and the "government has bona, hde claimants in their jighttf The stockmen, particularly the . sheepmen, have under tha learning system hffonie reconciled in large measure t the reserve nnlicv. for thev.hatl rather pay for cer sure of -itthan- to. take, haphazard another. Indeed, the Lewi-ton Iri- ISwnaTorlncytuTBtrw- Idaho reserves, says that it is the sheep have exerted the necessary influence! to "shape- the forest reserve villainy. -ASrthe country filled ud with settlers the sheep range kept , narrowing. policy "came to their relief; and civ set back m order that sheep might have undisturbed range." The sheepmen, the Tribune declares, arc all-powerful in southern Idaho, and they have become "unexpected allies of the miserable bureau crats in Washington who merely desire to magnify their own power and prerogative. r-----, 'The forest reserve policyadmittedly by the govern ment that in a -number f cases has canceled or dimin reserves has been carried in some in planned on too colossal a scale, and it has been the source of or . opportunity for great wrongs and frauds and much so-called "villainy;" yet it does not follow that therefore the policy, should be abandoned, but only carefully and systematically pnr-sued-along and within reasgjiabelines, and with an in telligent and conscientious intent to accomplish "the greatest good for the greatest number. -Almost every body is now in favor of such a policy, and the ..Tri bune's criticisms and charges are manifestly extravagant unnecessary and Very lnappropnate-reM serves were temporarily withdrawn m Oregon, which in whole or in part have been restored to the public do main, as very likely considerable portions of, present reerve pnght tn b ?nd thi i prntinhly the ee in IdafTo; but while selfish men and interests will always crowd Mi, to take all.possibleadvantages of the Inaugu ration of such a policy,, that cannot beTielJarTaffictent reason for its' abandonment, or the radical alteration of its general intent and scope. It cannot be helped, that one class of .men are more benefited at first than an other; the ultimate benefit of the great -majority is the thing to be considered. It looks on the map as if withdrawals' of land for' forest reserves in Idaho and other pa rtspMheJPacific northwest had" been overdone; that is for competent and unprejudiced experts to say; settlement and cultivation of all agricultural lands should be encouraged, of courses but the preservation or for ests, and of forest streams that may be utilized for irri gation and power purposes, is the government's very-important duty, the right performance" of which will be millions of American citizens in years ,Little Japan is' becoming very self-important, and has semi-officially hinted tat its ally,.England, that the British army is incompetent and not tip to. data and,-needs-reforming." Great Britain knows this well enough, but doesn't like to be told so by outsiders even by an ally. AND RATE REGULATION. - - HE Railway Age of Chicago, an exponent and ad viser of railway interests, frankly declares that it would consider the failure Of railway rate leg- i"siation"by conh7esi at its present session as "most oia fdrtunate for the railways," and give the following rea sons for this opinion: Asid&JromJj!emeritsjcf the case, it would be a po litical misfortune if the 1 presehtantl-Tairway-sentiment in the country should be aggravated by a growth m the belief that the railways are all-powerful and can do as they pleaserSuch would be the most likely consequence of the entire failure of congress to do anything, after all that has been said during the last year or two, on the question, of railways and their regulation. It is true that it would be better to do nothing than to put on the statute"I)ookspf6vtslonssp-dical-as the-extremists have demanded. The difficulty is that if congress, in consequence oi the stubbornness of the extieniists, should do nothing, it would be the railways and not the extrem ists who would suffer." - " What the Railway Age considers as too radical, and who are the extremists, it does not in this article state, but probably it would class as such the president and his recommendations, and the Hepburn bill and its sup porters. It may be gathered from the paragraph quoted thst-what-the Railway Age-desires- is .rate regulation sufficient on its face to pacify the people but that would amount to little or nothing in practice. , .Yet it admits lhat there are merits in the proposition and that the rail roads would make a bad blunder in defeating rate legis lation. -- - -The comments of the Chicago periodical were called out by the opinion of its Washington correspondent that while a rate bill would pass the house easily it. would be defeated in the senate. . This is- still to be expected unless the bir trailroad men shall instruct their senators to pass a rate-control bitCATready Presidents" Stickney of the .Chicago Great Western, Cassatt of the Tennsyl-rani-adliJellen.ofthe New Haven & Hartford have come out decidedly in favor of such leisTation,arid other - . - - . I ' - ---- ---. f-- 'tt.it ,T- f -1 poweriui men in me railway worta may ioiiow ineir ex ample; bnt it is to be expected that if they advise the senate that it may pass a bill, they' will order that the house bill be amended and rendered nugatory as far at are willing to accept something mild something more radical hereafter caused byfailoreto legislate-on- thir subject- at allnpw: r A New One From Champ Clark. . 1. . Yesterday'a Debate In. the, HousaT" Mr. Clsik; fontlnulng,1 eald: "One of mypredeccssarsrnhrsoTfgeTtefif hark In the sixties, was a man of splen did -renhta.-Cohmei Oeerge VfAndevmn1. While he was running for congress the second time he was opposed by a very able man. Colonel F. 8wltler, the Nes tor of the editorial profesalon in Mis souri. In the debate Bwltiler took an entire hour to prove that Anderson was inconsistent. ' When ' Anderson's time cama thepnly reply he made was: 'Fallow eltlaens, consistency be damned."' (Laughter.) . . 1 1 ", Tha Chaplain's Prayer. . Prom the Kanaas City Journal. They are telling In Washington of s Kanaan who, with his little boy, visited tha senate gallery while in. the capital recently. Among the persons the boy wss Interested in was Edward JHrerett Hale, a magnificent looking old man. His father told hlm that was the chap plaJn. "Oh,, he prays for. the senate, doesn't heranked the lad. "No." re plied the- Kansas man, "he ante up and takes a look- st the- senate and then 'arrays tot U country." , ...... :, J--.'-.,. .-.,.,-A;. SMALL CHANGE 1 After this some people wilt be inclined to choose Oreon rather than California as winter resort, - v .': .-.'' If Fonny'keep on taking En a out rM ing' in automobiles the auaplclon will strengthen that ha Is deipnrately de terminrd to do oraethlhg- to avoid tha contracted marriage 1 It la raoorted that - Senator Deoew's eratwhlla oily and, Ray boy am He la "nlck- ueu oer wun 100 pais cm 111 inouui. Balfour'a - auocaaaXuLcompetltor fpr a . In parllQmnl h nffcrfj (Q r'ff" In the ex-premier's favor, an act which In this country would be something new ieftsMfBjvlfi Feace Is a good deal better for a country than. ever ao many war heroes. a It iruri''?p"(r5t0T-'orrtfnmo wlli b the prlQclpal thenis of debate In the eounoil tliroughout tb year.- , ' . . Tha mayor 'a reasons for vetoing por tions of tha appropriations ordinance, are sufficient and convincing to verybody except the councllmen. - . Ivwkhart. tha Pittsburg BUndard Oil magnate, left an estate- ot nearly 1300,- 000.0UO. Tha wonder la that J. D. Jv. al lowed him go big a pile. ; ; Wbo should know better than herself whether Mrs.,. Yerkea ta , married again or notT But some'peopla will claim that there Is occasionally a woman who woa 1 always tell the truth about herself. , The doctors Ilka a dry eaat wind better than ayiybody else. Belnr a. veeetarlan. Senator Larollette Is suspected of aome sympathy With the beef trust. A dispatch tells about the man's skin turning to silver. It will not te quite so difficult for him to dodge kidnappers and for his family to prevent ghouls were turning to gold. ; : ' - ... . e e . This Is the most audacious mereman yet telling Portland women how to be baauUtut, A woman U suing. for Jdlvoree,bacatiee her husband reads novels. But he might do worse read some J?tJhe divorce trial reports, for instance. . e e ! Down In Alabama a wlfebeater is not whipped, but he haa to work in a chuin gang ha the streets or with -onvlcts in a coal mlns. At Decatur, In that atata, a well-to-do Jeweler and prominent elti sen was fined ISO and SO days on the atreetfor assaulting his wife, and 126 and 0 days more--for "oursIngTm "her presence, and Is working on the streets In company with white and negro city convicts, with shackles riveted on his ankles and sleeping in- a ilngy cell the same as a hobo prisoner. This punish ment may be goodie a whipping fA BerMYnan Bundaysaw six deer at the foot of Sugar Ivoar outte. xney were very tame, leisurely walked away aiuf-ihanturned around and looked at him. It is presumed IfiafTTtie ' heavy snow in the country above ban driven the deer to that vicinity td seek food. e e t Building operations are quite exten sive in the country around Bend. '.;-'. e ve TtevrvaT meetings- In the Lakevtew Baptist church resulted In fl professsd conversions. -j . ' Divide np the large farms. Is- the Salem Statesman's good advice. . . .-, e e ' - " . . . Snow two feet deeci"ln"Bye-aUey. and. jnore-XaUlng. every day. e e Many Roseburg and Coos bay people consider a railroad between those points a certainty la the near future, e e Roeeburg-reel.eaUts dealers predict lively, businesa , X inft-.i-mp mill will ha Installed at the Gold Coin mine near Durkee in the near future. ... e e A Umatilla county sheepman haa lust sheared 4.600 sheep, which apparently suffered little in consequence. e . e Wallowa postofflee reeelpts Increased jj l-l per cent In 1I0 over 1101. : . : Hay getting scarce, with prospect of being very high. In Elgin. Hug, Hearing and Wlgglesworth are namea of Wallowa county people. '-1 ' ' ' This curious advertisement appears in The Dalles Chronicle: "A woman desires work by the day." Curious, because lady" Instead of "woman" waa not used. , e e . . - . . ""Grant county $Iacf"Tntnenr are happy because of deep snows and prospective "chuck." e e ' -ClAUop--ountyBepubJlcarie are going to make another effort at rehabilitation, ' Myrtle Creek Correspondence of TJm'p qua Vallcv News P, a. Buell Is back from Portland and haa about given up 'trying to have the appendicitis. He underwent another examination by two surgeonaand-they-bottf aay t he ,fia no more appendicitis than a Jackrabbit haa. " .- -. -. - Much stock being shipped . from . Jo- seph and Enterprise. . . .' A" mi mberbf "farmers-near-Sci-are going to raise hemp. A company will fumish-ehO' seed -and- yay-a-a-4oa- for the product and it Is thought four or Ave tons per acre can be raised... , .. . . e - , . . ' A Liberty -men's - strawberry plants have large berries on , them perhaps not very sweet, however. t. a e v.- , ' . The Albany Democrat wants Port land's "Aeglan slables" strorled-mr- e e , In reporting a dance a Klamath Falls paper remarke: , "Of course there wsa a right" . . . ',:.', "",;.:.,;. ' The Cottage drove Woman's Civic Im provement, tlub will work for the plant ing of many more yoae bushes, ."r.". Cottage Jrove Nugget: Game Warden Baker Is getting a Ane lot of fancy: birds and Is thinking of starting a tnyre bird enclosure for them. His last addition is, that rff three -.Reeves .phrHants from New Jersey. These birds are very' rare Mad cost 109. . OREGON SIDELIGHTS "Z THE SUNDAY SCHOOL 'LESSON ' - Bv H. D JenklnS. D. D. Tople; "The Temptation of JesusM aiaitnaw lvu-11. v- s - Oolden. text 'la all points tempted Ilka aa we are. yet without sin." Heb. iv:ie. ' , Introduction. ' It is truly said that the temptation of Jesus la a great mystery! such it is; but let us not forget that every tempta tion Is a great mystery. Men say, ''If Jesus could sin-be was not divine, and If he could not sin there waa no real mptotton. MucU-tha asms might he sTnrmoomr every saint. we tan mvw In any victory over sin- pick out one thing' ak us and something else as of gi aceT"ThehlIdr6aIS--Tievr-TI(J conscious of gratefu emotion aa-wnen veil in victory over iui ilai iuii, ti la JdlaL.to say lhat. Jfaod. gaval1l1nL.U1e victory he exhibited no virtue, and if tJd-id;-wot--evla-. ttsvlclory owes no gratitude. Such reasonings are always futile. We know that no one ill ever bo able to pluck ua out of Qod'g band (John x:t8), and we know that -in. every., assault of sin we tight the devil personally. , Every life of grace. Is a, mystery. : Tbe life ot. our Savior cannot , be picked to pieces any more than our own. He was tempted and we are tempted; and perhaps it would not be too much to say that the beat souls . are Invariably , tbe most tempted. : . r-1 - - . --- One thing la certain, temptations ar rive whenever critical issues are to be decided. -' When tbe devil goes -out of any man he goes tearing hint (Mark lx:ZS).. Many a lad knows that as some critical period arrived In his life, when he must say "lea" or say No with decision, all the powers of hell seem to be let loose upon him. Many a minis ter can testify that when he was about to enter upon his theological studies. every great truth of the gospel seemed to .vanish. We do not reach new heights but by risking a fall. . It Is a good sign when we are assailed, because it Is a sign that we are getting out ot the grip of our enemy. The hunter's servant put It In a sentence when be saldthat"thmanwho is shooting rnng- riitniripoirthe-wonnged-du;ks but never troubles himself about the dead ones." In the biographies of . great saints. those who have never attained marked ulrltual elevations find to th l-inenrfhat their heroes "came lip out of great tribulation" of mind and soul. It Is the normal experlonoe. Explahp it by "natural'' or by "preternatural" causes as you will, the fact remains that Mes siansnip and .temptation go together. He who would rise will be tried, not, in the same measure as Jesus was, but in bis own measure Just as certainly, . . The tessom. , Verse 1. ' After his public assumption of a mission through baptism. Jesus retired f the open eountris the unln- hablted mountainous . region between the Jordan and Jerusalem. In tha east people crowd clqse together for protec tion, so , that. every city waa formerly surrounded by aa - unpeopled district spoken of uuallyas "the wilderness" (Lev. xvl:10h Borne ot our modern oc cidental cities have, aa haa still Jerusa lem, a natural-environment of heights that-esn never be cultivated.!. Within two boura' iide of New York-are dis tricts which for loneliness are scarcely tar be equaled by the mountains of Colo rado. Jesus, under some strong Im pulse,, retired to.ibis.desolata region "to fight It out,'' as we would say "to be tempted, of the devil," as Matthew puts It." We may be uncertain with whom we L-"flghV,bU--Matthewwaa not. We think It more modern, more enlightened,' td fight "it" ' Verse t. Orientals are far more ab stemious than we. , They are accus tomed to going for days with but little or ao food. In an emergency they seem capable of going without food for In credible periods. The aame Is true of our American Indians and of native Africans. It was 'a custom ef the Jews to express their profoundest sor row or spiritual trouble by refraining from nourishment. 1 The phrase "forty days" 4s used so frequently that It seems-necessary to consider It conven tional. Pepya In bis diary, 1S A. D., asea It la this way;, simply te express a Urge number or a long time. After Christ's period .of abstention he wss conscious at an overwhelming desire for food. 1 ' - -t . . , Verse t. .During this period of Iso lation tha Savior appears to have been contemplatlngwhatbewasalledto do. He could easily see that aa the preaching of Joha excited the hostility ot theuTrnsTCIMsei own preaching would exoite still greater antagonism. What prophet bad escaped stoning (Matt. xxili:(7)T By preaching a spiritual gospel he would embitter the, poor, who wished a gospel of mate rial prosperity. By preaching purity of life, humility ef soul and unselfishness of conduct be would alienate most ot the wealthy and all the ruling families, lie did not flatter himself with peace ful "walk over" the contested ground. The sword would leap from its scab bard as soon as be should begin to de liver his -mesagelMatt."x:J 4. But now comes the suggestion, "If ao be you have this divine power committed unto you, save yourself from perishing right here and now. Put forth your miracu lous gifts. 004. seems to have forgot ten you. Take care of you reel f.. Save yourself, end do It quickly." It wss the same ' demand which his enemies put In another form when they Insisted thatlieeome-dowBfroea-tha woes (Matt. xxvil:40). . Verse 4. Jesus had come to take upon himself our Infirmities. - If the eon of the emperor goes Into service profes- tjr a cnmmun soldier." yet hae a special commissary stationed behind his tent to see that he does not suffer any of the hardships of the camp, he Is not a real soldier, but a "play" soldier. Je sus would not Imitate the role of a Messiah. He would not .make a farce of his mission at the outset. ' He was here T6 obey-orders;- not te look-out for his own comfort. . Verse . It is Idle to speculate whether the devil appeared or whether Jesus waa transported bodily to aome ST:vaTTow. The-temptatlon lie In none of -thee details. But the people had been taught to believe . the Messiah ewMi sudflenly-appea. .ln-, ths-lampla (Mai. 111:1). No man would know from whence he had eome (John vil:J7-ll). Now to drop down from the lofty plnna clep of the temple, towering hundreds of feet above the emi rts ef tbe holy house, and to do this without harm to himself, would win the battle at the outset. "Drop downt that will be found easier than to win by service and Instruction." It was a sabtle-temptaMon.- Bnt Jeeue had' not rome to spare himself.. He would work ae his disciples must work after him. He later buttressed his claims sometimes by signs, ' but" he never relieved the mission of its natu ral burdens. He did not ssll on wings while requiring his disciples to. plod al&nf Ton foot. Verse - "All will be accomplished at one bold stroke If you will have It so," aaya Satan. "No harm can eome to you. Will not God bear you up If you trust' wholly In hlmT Cast yourself oft and he will look out for you. H is la the Bible that he .will do thatr yerse J. . Bat Jesoa replied, K man ,1 . , . , -s-a-ass-ge- j. n . j has any right to put God to a teat which God has not himself laid down." What folly the teaching that we "honor God by demanding of bim the euro of our in surable dlaeaaea, or the repairing of our squandered fortunes, or the filling of pur empty pews, instanter, without - refer ence to his wtll but only with referenpe to our need and our "faith." Children do not honor but dishonor their fathere by drawing on them at sight for money that has never been promised tham. We have no right. to present en order on heaven without heaven a distinct author isation. That la what Jeaus taught; and It s more rational thsn many schemes of faith taught in bis name. Verse I. Then comes a last tempta tion. What external form It had la of no consequence. , But the suggestion was this: "Yoi have come to save men from eaten? Tbe devil will withdraw If you Will sacrifice yourself. Ssve the world hv danrn1n-Jvotrrseifr----erill- let-men alone if vyou wtlt cohfeiaTTiarnjf liyour master. """jy .,,A " question of saving men by losing my self. -it la a. ! pie -question of. obey Inar Clad " No man haa any rlaht to sin tn order to putother eitn n-thaatha t virtue. No man may ateai in oruer to prepare- h t bey fas the mlnlsUy- Na woman may prostitute nersen in oraex to fit her daughter for the life of a nun or a missionary. Wo put the problem in its baldest way becauee that Is the onry-way t realise Its enormity. Many a man has sought to exeusa his specu lations bv pleading he did It "for tus family."; Jesus would not do It for a world 1 We have no -right to make a bargain with the wrong. We may not remove difficulties bv Sin. ws muai take, our atand where God places US and serve him there. We cannot bargain our damnation asainst somebody else s beav en. It Is a mighty truth, and we ought to remember that Jesus taught u clear ly, emphatically, for all time. - . Verse 11. Then came triumph, rest. remuneration. Nothing had shaken - the Integrity of his purpose or toe purity of his lire. "And angeis came ana minis tered unto him." But he could not sink down into restful security.' Luke adds a pregnant phrase the respite was put "for a sesson." THE BIG WOODS OF OREGON T. S. Van Dyke tn the Outing Magaalne for February. ' v tupendoussllenco greeted on the greater part ot thla dense forest. For hours at a Tlme"there waenot even the falnteat peep of a bird, the flash of a squirrel or thihamP-r an insect through the vast somber halls, formed by the serried ranks Of tree trunks. But In almost every ravine tha sweet twitter of the mountain quail waa quite certain to Welcome us Jrom tha green of the 14 1i ne tha noddlnsr arms of tha scarlet uckleberry. And in , the more open gdai we . sometimes. . round a aosen flocka scudding among the broad, green leaves of the salmon berry, or nestled under tbe dark clusters of fruit that still nung from the shsdbush. Bo. too, with the dusky grouse. Often he bustled from tbe ferns and lupins on the high ridges,' but whenever we came Into a shady glen we -were sure to eee some leave tbe deep shade of the vine maple or chinquapin and tower away on throb bing wing into tbe taller trees, where they were almost Invisible to tbe keen est eye. . That pretty little enipmuna tne Douglas squirrel sometimes trailed his tswny tall up a huge trunk or showed his striped aides along a fallen log; but sometimes a whole day would passaway without sight or sound of any squlrrel'brrbirdrbr anylbmt That could fairly be called an Insect. . No such impressive solitude can be Tountf upon - the sea or desert as in these great shsdes where you are every min ute expecting to meet life. Why they should be to silent la difficult to imag- lne -there is plenty or food, water and room with no man to trouble. Yet thla is so In tbe greater portion of the Sierra Nevada, still more eo In the Cascades,, while both of them are noisy compared with the vest foreeta on the headwaters of the Coqulllf river, that are ao little traversed that tbe trail of one party disappears before, the hoefprlnts ot the next one mar tbe soil. ' A Historic O. R. ft N. Engine. ' From the Pendleton East Oregonlan. O. R. 4k N. passenger 'engine No. U4, which pnlle the Spokane passenger train In and out of this city-daily, boasts of one of the moat exciting and remarkable itories of any locomotive on the entire system, and perbapa on ths coast. .. Back in ths 'ids, when tne union pacins had the O. R. N. leased, engine 14 waa numbered 1,498 and waa stationed atvKamela as a helper, where shs was drives by Pete BL-Cyr, or "Halr-OII Pete," as he waa more familiarly known. On this engine fete mane nia wua aaan down the Bhie mountains in the spring of 188. to prevent a collision between a freight and "passenger tramwhich had been given a lap order. Engine 1.4SS was standing in tne yam at Kamela with steam up, when It was discovered that the lap order had been aiven and the two trains were approach ing each other on the mountain side. The freight train had Just left ivamela, going eastward, and the passenger train was tolling up ths mountain from the eaet and a horrible collision seemed Inevitable. Graaplng the situation . In an instant ''Halr-OII Pete" leaped into the cab of 1.4M and dashed out of the yards to catch the freight train beore the eraab came. Out of Kamelp. la a t per cent grade, with- sharp -eurveer-deep rock aula and high mountain-, and the daring feat et catching -this strain was extremely perilous, since the curves were Sharp and the train, could not be seen any great distance ahead. ' 'With whistle screaming ana tne engine rocking and reeling around the curves, St. Cyr made five miles In lees than four minutes and succseded In Stopping ' the fralafht train about a mile away from the approaching passenger, nelthelr train be ing aware ot the mistake until after the freight bad been etopped. - St. Cyr is now in tne Boise peniten- ttarv. where- ne is serving" sentence for killing a man named Em mons at Meadows, Idaho, two years ago, tn, a.,dlfflculty ver a team. of. horaea... His' feet stands alone In tbe annals Of railroading on the O. R. N. . Women Hear Smoot'i First Speech. ""From the'WashlnttonPost." Ssnator . Reed Bmoot. made his first speech In the eenate yesterday. It waa brief, oeeepylng about five mlnutee. it waa an arcument In favor of a bill te extend the limit of time for homeatead entry within the limits of the Uintah Indian reservation from February If to May II. Close attention was given to Mr. Bmoot. ' The female occupants of the galleries were especially on the qui viva v Necks were hraned and whisper ings .exchanged.. Indicating tbe popular turloelty of the- man whom more than a million women want to exolude from the senate. Senator Smoot developed a clear, res onant voice that was heard in every pert of the chamber. At the conclusion of Me speech the bill waa passed by a unantmoua votv -v DANIELS DEFENDED; BY i ROOSEVELT : ? Washington Special to New York World. President Roosevelt haa , scolded the senate judiciary committee because it is a trifle alewv in approving the appointment of Ben Daniels . te- be United States marshal for Arisona. Ths cpmralttee lias deferred a report on Dan iels alnce December, because he has a penitentiary record, and also has killed two men. - ; The president explained these flaws in a personal letter- to the committee. The letter admitted that Mr. Daulels had served a penitentiary aentence for ataallng a. mule, sod .that he had killed two ment. Hut there-wera-extehtmting-circumstances. . . . As to stealing the mule, the letter ' TPOThtariSurthRlhI-Ts wsde6eTSr- ant Of the-Vikings. " The Inference Is obvloua thar7mch anftne should tiobe held down to rules thst-governBieu without piratical ancestors. l.-rurtirao. tha lettae-aaplal) mule was stolen In a nsw, raw country,' where primal conditions and primal pas sions and needs governed.. It wan no. paltry theft. Moreover, the youthful, Viking took tbe mule "vl et armle." Which la lAtiq for eaylng "llefp your self.'?. Nor was the mule atolen fronr- some poor wretch who could not afford . to lose IC Thee young Viking-stormed the very corral of tbe government Itself. And, laat of all, he needed the mule. Tbla Is the substance of, not -an exact' quotation from, the letter, to tha com mittee. As to the two men killed, one met hla end la a quarrel over a townslte. and. . Daniels waa net even indicted. . Daniels wss indicted for killing his second man, ' but his fellow cltlsens aoqultted htm. - Finally, the president pointed out that Daniels waa a rough rider, and "repeat- edly in, battle," eo the letter ran. the writer had occgalon to -station Danlela in extrg-hasardous plaoea, where he ao qultted himself with "conspicuous gat-, lantry."- -- t -. -- . Tbe president appointed Daniels to of fice once before, only to withdraw -the appolntment on learning of the peniten tiary record, although he had known of -the two killings. - At that time he called 1 In Daniels to reproach him with having concealedthajrttenllarrBartigfit: Senator Knox, who was preeent at thst Interview, told the senate Judiciary com mittee about It. - Daniels, according to Benatos Kuua, earnestly Insisted lhafha had not Intended to conceal anything from the president, but he bad "clean forgotten" the penitentiary, bunlnese. The president then forgave Daniels. on the ground that he had told the truth, and again nominated him for the office. LEWIS AND CLARK "At Fort Olarsop. -- February 1 There la ne occurrence to note today. - All are pleased' that one month of the dreary time that sepa ratee ve from borne1 and friends, aijd blnds us to Fort Clatsop, baa now elapsed.-- -y :-- ----- DictinaVy of Misinformation. 'Wex-Jones, Lexicographer. . BINGHAM To emphasise, . Hla speech was blnghamed with lemmeaV-N. T. Evening Bun. ,. MISSOURI A state "of mind. : I'm from Missouri; you'll have to show me. Attorney-General Had ley. ' That cheeky-MJBsourt puts us all in a - furv.--Htandard nil Pallida . PLAGIARISM 'The uae of an original Idea to greater advantage than attained by aome dead 'un. "' " , - If Shakespeare were aiive toaay no would be accused ef gross plagiarism by Bernard Shaw. George Meredith on "Cashln Byron's Profeaslon." . - PRIZEFIGHTER One who acts; an actor. SNOW (1) Feathera cast by molt- '. Ing angela "" "". T7 ' " (I) Froaen aighs. -t- r (1) The snow clothed the world In a - mantle of white, - - - And the kids of the country went wild , with delight Old Song. (1) Alone In a great city and the snow failing bitter fast Theodore Kra mer. ' 1 f SNOWBALL A pale pellet af perdi tion. "Ha act it In the neck - Whatr A snowball." Dippy Dialogues. Aa much chance ae a snowball In Ber nard Shaw's whiskers. Popular Saying. t f. C. A. Society for the Proven tion of Cruelty to Agents. . Is this the 8. P. C A.T YssT There's an Injured horse here at Broadway and Canal street. Can't do' anything? Weather -loo bad to send out an agentf He might get bis feet wetT Telephone -Twaddle. y r ' WATER WAGON The Juggernaut ef goodfellowahlp. Take away tne nagon, I am on the water wagon, - . And t dare not get a Jag on Till the rosea bloom again.' ; -Unpopular Song. . - WHITE HOUSE A house .Wean In r ton. D. C. noted becauae It's mighty bard to get Into. "" " , Have those people been: in a train wreck?" . ' , Nope: they Just tried to gel into "tng- Wbl te House." PI ppy Dialogues. t . . WITNESS One who doesn't know Of remember anything. "What Is youY nameT" "I forget," replied the witneaa , . f , "Is ft Ha Ha Rogers" ' "b advlca of counsel. I have forgot ten." answered the wltneea Report of Standard Oirinveetlgatlon. 7 Potentialities ol Salt. : ma Evening Post Another alarm clock haa been Set of! by the medical profession- Dr. Tracy of New York saysf ' "If you want to avoid Bright'. 7 dlaea -us -very-time sal." Thl is inaeea maruing, ins mora so as we see tha contempt with which animals In general have treated this wsmlng. Deer and other ignorant oreatures have been known -to wander-? scores of miles for the mere pleasure of Uoklng up a salt opring ana acquir ing a large case of Brlgbt's disease, and any farmer will tell youhow the cows hang about me in uuur ar 10 . take Into their systems that which will play havob with their internals. Salt is , a dreadful thing. Only a few months ago a learned physician declared that a man who wishes to attain extreme old age-must sat great quantltiee of salt -though eventually, of course he will die ' of Bright' s disease. Think of a man de vouring salt and dragging hla existence along ta St or 10 years only to fall at laat a miserable vlotlia to Brlght's dls- ' eaae! How much better to renounce salt and all Its pleasure and shuffle off comfortably of eome other. edmplalnl , along aneus a eg so. ''If.