THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1900. Its jgamim Entered t the Poptomee a Portland, Oregon. aa wml otasi matter. TEUCPMOXBS. Editorial Rooms....miBsetaesa OSceM..6S7 RSVIBBD BOaecmSPTJOK RATHS. Br Mail (postage meaM). m Advaaee Daii wiUiSuaoar. per OBth. ...-.. ..$6 65 laiij. Sunday ousted, per year........... ? GO laj! with snuaar. per year 8 00 Sunday per year ............. 2 00 Tie Weekly, per year. .............. 1 50 Tn Weekly. g Months............ ...... SO TV CJty BUfaecrlfeers Daily, per week, delivered. Bandars exeeptea.l5o lUlj, per week. denvered. Sundays taehided.2ea The Oregontan does net buy poems or stories from Individuals, and eaaaet nadertake to re turn any mamtoortpts sent to K wtthaat sonctta lion, No stamp should be tectosed far thla purpose. Tsews or dtsoueetoa Intended for puhtteaUen In Tbe Oregoniaa should be addressed ievariably "Editor The OregoataB," sot to tbe same of any individual. Letters rotating t adverUetes. euuarrlpuo&s or to any buetaees matter should be adureesed s'mptr "Tbe Oregontan." Puget Sound Bureau-Captain A. Thompson, offioe at 1111 Pacific avenue, Taeeoa. Box 853. Tacoma poetofflee. Eastern Bueteeas Omce-The Tribune balM lng New Tork city: "Tbe Rookery." Chicago; theS C Beckwlth special agency. New Tork. For sale In San Fraocteoe by J. K. Cooper. 4& Market street, near the Pataee betel, and a. GoUstnlth Bros.. 238 Sutter street. For sale in Chicago by tbe P. O. News Co., 4 riearborn street. for by the insertion; of an item of $16, 000,608 In the sundry civil appropriation bill. There is, moreover, an unexpend ed balance available for this class of work of $30,000,000, so that the failure to pass a river and harbor bill at this session of congress will nowhere be seriously felt The amounts still avail able for work on the rivers and har bors of Oregon and "Washington have lately been published, and It is not nec essary to give them in detail at this time. Suffice it to say that the people of these sections can regard the situ ation with equanimity, since work will go forward without Interruption from Coos Bay north to Gray's Harbor, and at the several Intermediate points where channels and harbors are being Improved by the government, under the direction1 of its engineer corps. to the Pacific Coast, and it should command the attention of Portland's Chamber of Commerce and Board ol Trade. military IX SOUTH TODAY'S WUTHIGR.-CTalr, with northwest yui da. himng to southeast. PORTLAXP, SATURDAY, FBB. 24. TAXA-noar akd states REVEHnras. It is commonly asserted that the main reason why the Assessors do not make higher valuations of property is the desire of the people of each county t keep down their proportion of the Mate tax. The Oregonian is by no mean sure that this is the leading motive. First, there ie reasonable CiUostion what the actual cash value of n al property is. Undoubtedly it is far ho low what it was supposed, ten years ago. It may be doubted whether the li'perty valuations of any county In ll1' State, by the last assessment, could 1 realised in cash within the next 3 1 are Indeed, it is certain they could rot be. Again, the people desire low or moderate assessments as a means rift merely of keeping down the State tax, but more especially as a means of L( TJng down the county and local ex I rditure. They know that if the val uations were doubled there would be r uch more money raised and spent; r r officialdom never can get enough. Thfy believe, therefore, that the most f f t tive method of economy is to hold Of nn the revenue. This could not or vi-uld not be done upon high or full sessments. ome dosen years ago a commission .. ; pointed by the Legislature, consist ing of prominent citizens, among whom ftp the late Judge Strahan, Henry Tailing and Senator Hughes, to "ex cm me the matters of assessment and dxation in this State," made a report vhih embodied better suggestions than any made since. But the sugg&s- its received no attention from the 2?!lature. Among them were out . i s of a plan for doing away practl- aly -with the State tax collected "Lrough the agency of the counties, and f r ohtaimtient of State revenues by t tax on gross earnings of lnsur- ',,ff. express, telephone, railroad and f ring-car and other companies, to be I iid dictly into the State Treasury. "fidenoe was expressed by the com - iSMon that in- a little time, in Oregon, in other States, the direct taxes '- ti these sources would entirely pro i ir for the expenses of the State gov- n -ment. Thte, It was said, would at p put an end to the undervaluation r property, on the part of the counties, ' w resorted to for the purpose of ading their proportion of the State x ami would obviate the necessity f a State Board of Equalization. Would such method be constltu- -naP The commission reported that had been careful in its recommenda i ras and had gone only as far as it utd and still remain within the limi- tions prescribed by our fundamental I It reported that it had taken the 'TTxiitution, as interpreted by our 1 chst courts, and by courts of last resort in those States where similar ;- teions prevail, and had conformed - bill to such Interpretations. Upon r me of the matters discussed In the T i ort, Judge Strahan did not agree h the other six members of the mmisslon; but his dissent was not constitutional grounds. It was t sod chiefly on the doubt whether the ume of the business of the railway . d other corporations at that time " fS sufficient to produce, at the rate " ! taxation proposed money enough to r et the requirements of the State ernment. "'he Oregontan believes that the time come for a new study of this sub ! t on the lines pursued by the com ' s?ion appointed under the act of 1886. Z a. method can be devised of obtain- " the State revenues through lndi r t taxation, to supersede the lneffl- nt and unsatisfactory system of untary contribution by the counties - r this Is practically what the pree f system is a cause of complaint uld be removed, through better mUtation of the burdens of taxation. FUSION AST) CONFUSION". It would seem that the subcommittee appointed by the Populist State Com mittee to draft an address showing "thenecessityof continuing the People's party organization," strayed from its mission. Instead of recommending Populist candidates and Populist Issues as the best method of maintaining sep arate party organization, the address discusses national issues, condemns Republican policies, harps about im perialism and threatened militarism, and hints, like the bumpkin Macrum, at a secret alliance between this country and Great Britain. Not a word Is said In condemnation of Democratic treach ery in the alliance of 1898. No reason is shown why the Populists should stay out of the enemy's camp and keep in the path of duty for which the major ity of Populists think the party was organized. Fusion of the Populists and Demo crats of Oregon gives but slight hope of success, even if it shall be accom plished. There Is no certainty that the parties will fuse or can fuse. They formed a close alliance in 1898, and the result was confusion, treachery and stinging defeat. The Middle-of-the-Hoad element bolted and nominated a separate ticket. A large number of Populists, disgusted with fusion, and seeing no show for the Middle-of-the-Road ticket, stayed away from the polls. The fusion of the conventions did not extend to the voters. Demo crats slaughtered Populists and Popu lists slaughtered Democrats. The Re publican candidates gained many votes from Democrats who would not vote for a Populist, and from Populists who would not vote for a Democrat. The bitterness engendered would, It was thought, forever settle any future at tempt at fusion. In- spite of the fact that the Demo cratic State Committee adjourned last month without sending a message of peace, and that many of Its members are in favor of dropping silver and Bryan and of reconciliation with the gold wing of the party, the Populists have again shown a desire that amounts almost to anxiety to combine for 1900. They may be deluded enough to think they can win, but surface in dications are that they are cunningly seeking an opportunity to revenge the treachery for 1898. They may fuse the issues and the candidates, but they cannot fuse the rank and file. Neither expostulation, remonstrance, entreaty nor coercion can whip into line the votes represented by the five commit teemen who voted on Thursday against holding the Populist convention on the same day as the Democratic. These constitute one-third of the Populist strength in Oregon. Their disaSectlon will settle the fusion' business. Good times, hard money, the explo sion of the silver theory, enlarged busi ness and abundant employment have so weakened Democratic and Popullstic followings that no combination which is open to them will hold out prospect of success in June and November. On the Issues of 1895 and 1898 they are fore doomed to defeat, and attempts to make a fight against expansion, undei the tawdTy banner of "anti-imperialism," will but intensify disaster in Oregon. THE RIVBm AXD HARBOR BILL. '"hlle every section of the Coast- ng districts Is to a greater or less f rrt interested In the passing of a r and harbor bttl, the announce- r it that no such Wll will be presented i- mg the present session of Congress not cause dismay. The character he reasons that Induced the House iwittee on rivers and harbors to .er this decision can readily be con ured. though these reasons have not 'i given. The expediency, to say the t of keeping within a certain limit national expenses, abnormally In- isd by the cost of operations in the ippines and Puerto Rico, is readily gnixed. Those who have been moring for a reduction of the taxes n which the- national revenue is de- d may take the hint plainly given he suspension- of the river and har- approprlation and cease vexing the w lth their protests. If it is neoes- i or even prudent to withhold the r and harbor appropriation, It Is ious that the revenues of the gov- ment are not appreciably, if at all, excess of the national needs. may be well to understand, how--, that there will be no interruption be work which the government has "er contract under the general head v ' "lver and harbor Improvements. The c ipletlon of these contracts, or their tUtuanoe until a future appropria " n for that purpose is included in a I. er and harbor btll. win be provided coaianssioN ox oriental trade. The surest way to extend American trade In the Orient Is to know how to go about it. Experience has taught that the Orientals do not take to our system of drumming up orders through a glib tongue and a small line of sam ples. They have trade customs of their own to which we must conform before we can hope to put our goods on their shelves. A bill which aims to place this valuable knowledge at the disposal of American merchants Is that by Sen ator Gallinger, of New Hampshire, au thorizing the President to appoint a commission: to "study and make full report upon the commercial and indus trial conditions of China and Japan and for other purposes." There are to be five commissioners, one each from the Eastern, "Middle, Southern, "Western and Pacific Coast States. They will as certain which of the products of our farms, mills and workshops may be sold in China and Japan, how they should be manufactured, packed and shipped, and the proper means of trans acting business with the Orient. At the end of one year they are to return to the United States and report their in vestigations to the President. Commissions of this character have done more than any other agency to establish amicable trade relations be tween Great Britain, Germany and France and the Far East. Germany has made greater headway in this line than any other nation, and its mer chants know better than any other sell ers ,how to reach the Asiatic buyer. Germany guards these reports as it does Its state secrets. They are for German exporters, and German export ers reap the benefit of them. Russia proceeds on different lines. Its mer chants establish branch houses in China and the managers of these branches learn the Chinese language and keep constantly in touch with the Chinese tradesmen. Our best oppor tunity for trade expansion across the Pacific is by methods approved by Eu ropean experience. The here-today-and-there-tomoxTGW way of our com mercial men will not avail us in Asia. John Barrett, of Portland, ex Unlted States Minister to Slam, is men tioned as the possible Pacific Coast member of the commission. Thorough study of economic and commercial con ditions in the Orient has equipped him for the work. Few understand the situation as well as he, and no one has been more active in pointing out ways by which American trade could be en larged. HIb extended personal ac quaintance In China, Siam and Japan, and his Intimate knowledge of British, German, French and Russian methods, would make him a specially desirable member of the commission. Senator TRANSPORT AFRICA. General Sherman, in his "Memoirs," says that one of the chief reasons which impelled him to start from At lanta for the sea was the practical impossibility of keeping open his 'ex isting line of railway communications to Nashville, owing to the raids of the enemy upon his rear. He says that the Atlanta campaign would have been simply impossible without the use of the railroads from Louisville to Nash ville, 185 miles; from Nashville to Chat tanooga, 151 miles; from Chattanooga to Atlanta, 1S7 miles. To have deliv ered the amount of food and forage needed by his army of 100,000 men and 35,000 animals, without the aid of the railroad, Sherman sold "would have re quired 36,800 wagons of six mules each, allowing each wagon to have hauled two tons twenty miles each day, a simple Impossibility In roads such as then existed in that region of the coun try." Sherman admitted that, even with the railroads, his campaign would have been Impossible "unless we had had the means and the men to maintain them in addition to what were necessary to overcome the enemy," Yet Sherman had, besides the railroad, the Cumber land and Tennessee Rivers, that were to a considerable extent available for transportation. He held that his cam paigns had demonstrated that no con siderable army can subsist if it de pends upon the wagons and common country roads for more than a few miles from the railway depots. These facts will serve to Illustrate how difficult has been the solution of the question of military transport for the English in South Africa. There are no navigable rivers like the Tennessee or the Cumberland; the region south of the Transvaal frontier is very moun tainous, and contains but very few roads, and these are of a wretched character, running through continuous defiles, following nearly the line of the railroad. The elevation of the railroad not twenty miles from Durban Is 1125 feet; at thirty miles it is nearly 2500 feet, and near Majuba Hill the altitude of 5385 feet Is reached. A great many streams have to be crossed, and a sin gle man carrying a few sticks of dyna mite can quickly and thoroughly de stroy a bridge. That is, railway mili tary communications can be destroyed with the greatest ease, while the repair of track and the rebuilding of bridges is a slow and difficult task, as illus trated by the number of weeks it took Lord Methuen's army to rebuild the Modder River railway bridge, destroyed by the Boers. These are the kinds of great natural difficulties that confront the English army In Natal, where, even on the evacuation of Ladysmlth, It will take the British several weeks to rebuild) the railway bridge that has been destroyed at the Colenso crossing of the Tugela River. But, even in Lord Roberts' present field of, operations, the question of mili tary transport until the railway bridge across the Orange River at Norval's Pont shall be restored, is most difficult to meet. "Without that bridge rebuilt and the railway restored to Bloemfon tein, no great progress can be made. The country Is barren of food and for age, and roadless, compared with Eu rope or America. Nearly all the food and forage required by the British must be brought up on the railroad from the seaports of Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and East London. There is no agricul ture, and a hostile population will kill what cattle they cannot drive away. The Transvaal lives out of its gold mines; the product of which is bartered for imported supplies. The British forces will be obliged to live for the most part on supplies transported from the seaports or from Inland railway bases, like Kimberley, Mafeklng and De Aar Junction, until the railway bridges at Norval's Pont and Bethulie are rebuilt, and- then the march could be pushed along the rail way line to Bloemfontein, Kroonstad, Johannesburg and Pretoria; but until that time the question of land trans port for a great army of 50,000 men will be most difficult of solution, for there is no double track beyond the Orange River. "Wellington said war was a question of commissariat and commissariat a question of transport, and the highest military authorities today hold that Napoleon's Russian campaign of 1812 broke down more from the destruction of his transport than from the severity of the climate. The success of Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchener thus far In moving a large bojdy of infantry, cav alry and artillery away from the rail way and through a barren country, without forage or supplies of any sort, is a most remarkable achievement. dustry. The demands of the growing trade on the Pacific are being met In a business-like manner. Ships are pro vided as fast as business increases, and the fleet will continue to grow as the business grows. The wheatgrowers and lumbermen of the Pacific North west are anxious to have their prod ucts carried to market by the cheapest possible method, and as they are neither shipowners nor shipbuilders, they care nothing about the flag under which their freight-carriers sail. The lack of merit of the bill as a whole is enough to carry it, with the accom panying amendments, into hopeless ob livion, but the McBride amendment will still further weaken it. The millionaire owners of the American steamship lines on the Atlantic Coast might be satisfied with 90 per cent or 93 per cent of the graft, but with 70 per cent, never. Among many of the Pacific Coast people, the Payne-Hanna bill is regarded as a steal, and they will de cline to sanction any participation in the robbery, even though promised 30 per cent of the plunder. The Philadelphia Inquirer tersely sums up the reasons for ex-Consul Ma crum's attitude toward the Boers, the British and his own government, say ing: "As for the "Vice-Consul, he was a Dutchman, and naturally went along with his people." All of his "explana tions" cannot disguise the fact that Mr. Macrum wanted to aid the Boer government. His duties as American Consul would not permit him to do so, therefore he left, and, reaching "Wash ington, detailed a story which, if it had any foundation in fact, should have been given to the State Department by cable and mall weeks ago. He will fig ure hereafter in the matter as the cheap, bumptious fellow that he is. Only this and nothing more. Inquiry is made whether the pro posed amendment of the Constitution, on "initiative and referendum," so called, is to be voted on at the general election in June. It Is not. It has been adopted or proposed only once by the Legislative Assembly, and must come before the Assembly again and obtain favorable action there, before it can be submitted to the voters of the State. This concession doubtless will be made by the Legislature next winter to those who have so long insisted on submis sion to the people of Oregon the ques tion whether this feature or method of legislation shall be Introduced Into our system. If passed again, at the next session, it will be voted on two years hence. his kind to control the home market and 'charge what prices on his product he pleases. o THE INDIAN FAMINE. It "Will Slay Thousands Where War Kills Hundreds. Chicago Tribune. Three and four years ago there was a lack of rain throughout extensive regions In India. A shortage of crops and a fam ine followed. A population of 36,000,000 suffered from total drought. Notwith standing the unwearied labors of the au thorities, who had at tHelr command vast sums of money advanced by the Indian government and contributed by charitable people throughout the world, the mortality from starvation and from those diseases which lack of food brings with it, wa3 frightful. Until the rains came and the earth bore crops again, the dreadful state of affairs In India was a subject of gen eral Interest. There Is famine in India now. Its exis tence was declared official by Lord Curzon three months ago. At that time 30,000,000 people were Involved, and only 400,000 per sons were on the relief lists. At present 59,000,000 people are effected, of whom 22, 000,000 are In British territory, and 27,000, 000 In the native states. There are now about 3,200,000 people on the relief lists, and the coat of relief work to the end pf March will not be less than $13,000,000. Tho rains will not come until July, if they come then. Between now and then. In spite of all the authorities can do, there will be an immense mortality, especially among children and old people. It is safe to say that there will be more actual suffering and probably much great er loss of life in the famine regions of India than In South Africa because of tho war now raging there between Boers and British. Yet few outside of India are giv ing any thought to what is going on there, while nearly everybody is taking a deep In terest in events in South Africa, and Is af tected painfully by the continuing reports of men killed in battle which fill the dis patches. Pestilence and famine may slay their thousands where war slays Its hun dreds, but a greater measure of sympathy Is given the smaller number who die on the field of battle. During the last Indian famine hundreds of thousands of pounds were subscribed in England to relieve those affected by It. There are no subscriptions now. He who has any money to spare gives It to be ex pended in caring for the British soldier! In South Africa. So the British authorities in India have no resources save their own with which to make their fight against famine, an enemy as formidable as the Boers and ignorant of any of the ameni ties of modern warfare. If tho hoped-for July rains should not come the situation In India will be frightful, and may have more serious consequences for the British Empire than the Transvaal war can have. i e i Roger Q. Mills "Mills of Texas" announces that he is not only not a candidate for governor of that state, but would not take the job If every man, woman and child of the com--monwealth were to make personal ap peal to him to accept It. The truth probably Is that Mr. Mills has found business life far too congenial and lu crative to be abandoned for political place on a stated salary. Moreover, being busy making himself a million aire, with flattering prospects of suc cess, he cannot be much in sympathy with the party that declaims against wealth and inveighs against those who accumulate it as robbers.. One would think, from the slowness and seeming reluctance of voters to register as preliminary to the exercise of the highest duty of citizenship, that the franchise was the least prized of all the privileges guaranteed by a free government. The fallacy of such a view will be fully demonstrated later on, when, the opportunities for regis tration having passed unimproved, the great American citizen will be in evi dence at the polls by his loud clamor to be allowed to vote without having registered. A word to the wise Is suf ficient. In this case It is "now." The death of Mrs. John Myers closes the record of a useful, faithful, unob trusive life that enriched by womanly devotion to the duty that lay nearest the community life of which It was a part for more than half a century. A pioneer woman in the fullest sense, Mrs. Myers grew up from early child hood and was married in Clackamas County, where the greater part of her life was spent. In the possession of good health until a week ago, she sur vived her husband but little more than one month, passing out of life before the infirmities of age had come upon her her work done and herself ready to depart. Her life was not long as meas ured by the span of the aged, but it covered a period of wonderful develop ment in State and community life, and completed the work to which it set itself in youth. If it is true that "the life Is long which answers life's great end," then it may be said of Mrs. My ers that long life was given her. Eugene authorities have set five va grant boys, of ages ranging from 15 to 17 years, at work cleaning the cross walks of the town. Their education in the line of being made useful was neglected in Albany, the place from which, it is believed, the boys came; otherwise, they might have been hon orable juniors of that community. The plan of putting idle, vagrant boys to work is one that commends itself to a practical, sober-minded people as being far better for the boys and the taxpay ers than the ever-ready commitment to the Reform School. Russia's long-coveted opportunity In Persia seems likely to be hastened by a revolt in Kurdistan, the seriousness of whlchj it Is held, calls for the presence of Russian troops. A Russian army once quartered in Persia, the dream of Peter the Great of Persian conquest will soon be realized. Luckily for Rus sia, England's back is turned and her hands are extended in quite another direction just now. Certainly the bullpen in Idaho, where the rioters and murderers were confined last year, was an unattractive place. But it was even better than they de served. A harder lot of villains never was seized by the hand, of long-outraged law and justice. The latest amendment which Is re ported to be seeking attachment to the shipping subsidy bill is offered by Sen ator McBride. It provides that 30 per cent of the moneys appropriated for subsidies shall go to ships on the Pa cific Coast. The Senator thinks that such an amendment would at once give the Pacific Coast an advantage over the Atlantic, and would be of vast im portance in speedily building up the commerce on the Pacific. This matter of "advantage" is the objectionable feature of the subsidy bill. The entire taxpaylng population of the United States Is asked to contribute to a sub sidy fund, which Is to be presented to a few wealthy shipowners and ship builders, in order that they may have the "advantage" over men In the same line of business who are forcld to build Under the stimulus of the high price of wool, the number of sheep in the country is rapidly Increasing. The De partment of Agriculture gives the num ber of sheep now in the United States at 41,883,065, an increase over last year of 2,708,612; still hn TiPrfiri Trrtvt!rtn rnfltmice: Vts, J Galllngar's bill is of vast Importance i and sail ships on the merits; of the in- j enacted laws which permit Carnegleand The Roberts Gnnrd. New York Tribune. In picking out a squadron of 100 Irish men for special service, Lord Roberts acts from experimental knowledge of that people; and It Is a safe forecast that they will be heaTd from In a way credit able to their skill and courage. The home staying or expatriated Irishman whose only thought is to throw a stone at the struggling Empire presents nothing of the dignity or patriotism which will shine around the Roberts Guard, lighting them on Into history, the muse of which will give them a welcome as generous as that which she has bestowed on a long procession of their fighting countrymen baptized on all the world's battle-fields, Including a few of their own. a Profits Tvro Millions n Month. Toledo (Ohio) Bee. According to Frick, who has managed the Carnegie properties for years, the net profits of the Carnegie Company last year were $21,000,000, and he estimates tha profits for 1900 at 540,000,000. And this Is one of the Infant Industries which the great Republican party In its wisdom "protected" from the competition of the "pauper labor of Europe." Carnegie himself owns nearly 00 per cent of tho stock, and his profits last year were over $13,000,000 $1,000,000 a month. This year his profits will be about $2,- 000,000 a month, or $500,000 a week. And The Case of Mncrnm. The moral of the Macrtm case Is clear enough. The consul at Pretoria instantly became of governmental size. He knew it and a little more. Brooklyn Eagle. Ex-Consul Macrum's statement shows that a lightweight statesman Is all right until he faces a heavyweight proposition, when he goes down and out in the first round. St. Paul Pioneer Press. His statement neither justifies nor ex cuses him, but shows that he was alto gether unfit for the position he had ob tained, since he collapsed utterly on the first real test of his character. Philadel phia Press. Macrum's whole statement bears ear marks of being an afterthought and an at tempt to shift upon the State department the blame for his own weakness and lack of judgment, discretion and courage. Min neapolis Tribune. The evil of allowing such a man as Mac rum In the Consular Service is made self evident by his talking about state affairs after he has left the service or rather, after he has been kicked out for incom petency. Philadelphia Inquirer, His statement shows him In the unsa vory light of one who has lost office through his failure to measure up to the required standard In time of emergency and who now resorts to innuendo and ac cusations to justify himself. Washington Star. He says that "American Interests in South Africa were in that condition which demanded that the Department of Slate should be cognizant of them." Yes, they undoubtedly were, so long as they were In the hands of Mr. Macrum. New York Tribune. He may still have something up his sleeve to defend his action, but his first and long-delayed statement of the case but emphasizes the wisdom of the State de partment In granting him permission to come home, and in sending his successor with all possible promptness. Kansas City Journal. What he says enables us to dlsmles the theories of personal cowardice and of In ternational treachery, and to see In his conduct merely a display of that talent for making mistakes of judgment which is so often the not unpardonable accomplish ment of youth and inexperience. New York Times. i a Stntemcnt From Mr. nammond, PORTLAND, Feb. 23. (To the Editor.) This morning's Oregonlan contained an article on the 12th page, under the head of "Rate War About to End." The writer of the article claims that his report came from "good authority," and in attempt ing to set forth the trouble between the Astoria Railroad and the O. R. & N. Co. states that the explanation Is furnished by an "interested party and may .be of public interest." The correspondence be tween the President of the O. R. & N. Co. and myself should certainly be good authority for the cause of tho trouble be tween the two .transportation companies; and If The Oregonlan considers it of suffi cient "public Interest," I am quite willing that It should be published, providing, of course, that the management of the O. R. & N. Co. will give consent. I shall bo pleased If you will kindly publish this note, as the article above referred to en tirely misrepresents the position taken by the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad Company, and I know well that It Is not your Intention to misrepresent or do In justice to any one. A B. HAMMOND. i o Lord Roselerys Speech. Brooklyn Eagle InL, Dem. In his speech in the House of Commons, Lord Rosebery described the fighting In South Africa as "a life and death crisis," and compared the need for raising Brit ish soldiers to that in our Civil War. That was not the only allusion to this coun try In his speech. His other remark will not bring comfort to those Anglo-phobea among us who shout themselves red in the face over a "secret alliance" with Great Britain and who are preparing to use that as a campaign cry against the re-election of President McKlnley. Lord Rosebery said: Last December tbe Government made vigor ous overtures to two great powers, Germany and the United States, for an alliance; but those overtures were not received with such cor diality as to encourage the Government to pur sue them. That frank statement ought to kill all talk of an alliance here, but It will not. There are politicians and newspapers that would ratner believe Macrum than Rose bery and who would continue to shout anything calculated to embarrass tha President, even If they bad not so much foundation for it as a Consul out of a job. o The Concord Conch. The failure of a carriage building com pany at Concord, N. H., which made the first Concord wagon in 1S33, will call to mind the "Concord coach," which did so much to help the Star of Empire on its Westward way. More enterprises, ex pansion, movement and territorial ag grandizement is associated with the Con cord couch than with anything else that ever ran , on wheels, with the possible exception of the Roman chariot. DIARY OP THE AFRICAN WAR. The most remarkable thing about Lord Roberts' tactical victory over the Boers is that to. an aRfriendly country, like North Cape Colony, where every man sympathizes with the Boers, but will sot risk the loss of his farm, he should have been able to execute his plan aad sur prise the enemy, as he clearly did Gen eral Cronje. Of course if Cronje had suspected the design of Roberts he would not have been caught in the disadvantag eous and seemingly hopeless position that he occupies today. Tbe Boers ordinarily can make 39 miles a day. Cronje made 33 miles in a single night's march; which Indicates that he made a forced march and was ignorant of the nearness of Lord Roberts' main column. It Is extraordinary that the Boer spies, who are omnipresent in North Caps Col ony, should have been so dull, while Lord Roberts massed 50,000 men for the Inva sion of the Orange Free State. As early as February 10, Dr. Layds, the Brussels agent of the Transvaal, divined the third attack on the Boer lines on the Tugela in Natal as a mere "bluff to divert at tention from the projected invasion of the Orange Free State. What Dr. Leyds divined General Cronje ought to have known. On Monday, the 12th, the action began, which was an attempt to turn the Boer position by a march around its left or eastern flank. On this day General French's cavalry seized the fords of Rlet River, southeast of Jacobsdal and was at once followed up by two Infantry divis ions. Jacobsdal, It should be remarked, is a point where a wagon road leads off to Kimberley from the main road to Bloemfontein, and It was therefore a nat ural advanced base of supplies both for Cronje's main army and his outpost be sieging Kimberley. On Tuesday, the 13th, French moved north and seized the fords at the Modder River, the infantry follow ing close at his heels. On Thursday morning, the loth, when one division of In fantry was on the Modder and the other close behind It, the cavalry of French moved forward to Kimberley. This same day the British Infantry In the after noon entered Jacobsdal. In other words, Locd Roberts' movements were so rapid ly executed that his flying cavalry column under French entered Kimberley about the same time that his advance division of Infantry entered Jacobsdal. General Cronje's surprise must have been genuine, for Lord Roberts telegraphed the war of fice that General Kelly-Kenny captured on the 16th part of General Cronje's train which the British artillery shelled all that day. Since the British Infantry over took Cronje's rear guard on the 16th, and forced him to turn at bay on the 17th and fight all day on the 18th In a most dis advantageous position, it Is clear that Cronje must have been surprised by Lord Roberts dash upon his lines. Other wise he would have withdrawn hte forces from before Kimberley and Magersfon teln so rapidly that he could have fought his battle from a position of his own choosing. It looks as If Cronje never appreciated his danger until French dashed through his communications, and that he proba bly did not begin his retreat from his lines at Magersfonsteln before the morn ing of the 15th; so his forced night march of 33 miles availed him nothing. He Is a very gallant man, but he Is not a good general, or he would not nave been caught "In his pajamas." The success of Lord Roberts Is a fresh illustration that no matter what changes are made in modern warfare of tactics, or magazine rifles, or rapid-firing cannon, other things being equal, brains Is the chief essential in a general. Methuen and Buller have a Ann record as bulldogs, but Lords Roberts and Kltchner with comparatively small loss have won a great victory. ' o Be Fair to Puerto Rico. New York Mali and Express, Rep. Possibly the advocates of a tariff bar rier against Puerto Rico will find some difficulty In the House of Representatives next week when they endeavor to recon cile their present attitude with that which they assumed, "In common with the whole country, when our soldiers took forcible possession of the little Island and assured Its people that henceforth they were to be under the protection and the bene ficent Influences of the Stars and Stripes. Nothing was said to them of making Puerto Rico a possession, but not a part of the United States. Nor was there any suggestion at that time of a 26 per cent tariff upon Puerto Rican Imports into this country. The Puerto Ricans then were hailed as fellow-Americans, and am bitious plans were projected by enter prising merchants here for Increased sales of American manufactures to the Inhabi tants of the Island. What a policy it is for a Nation like this, prosperous, enterprising and com mercially strong beyond comparison, to hold a tariff club over these people whom we have forced under our flag and say to them, In effect, you are one with us only so far as It is to our advantage to permit you to be; whenever there Is the slightest prospect that you will get as much out of trading with us as we will get out of you whenever that line Is reached it is to be the line of separation between us as a common country! That was Spain's selfish policy in Puerto Rico. Is it to be ours? o NOTE AJflD COMMENT. General Croat aught to be Things are soaring fe war test BOW. happy, enough " Tie fee ssert Is buntf te hunt '.bwt when the Hon turns to hunt ysu, Mnetfa different.' Oom PauL Now Is the thse fr General KMCeasher and Judge 0Day to swat a saca sCani and comfort to the She (laughing t an slimnsh statues of some Boers) They're Jnst kUasjg. He So I have always understood. The poets will not worry Crenrje tor a wane at least. Nona of tbm hams yet learned how to pronoanes his Jeaquhi Milter has pubHsuad a booklet entitled "Chants for Am Boar." Trow, tho present outlook the Boars havo no shane. Before Congress adgourns it showM pass aa appropriation lor a few hundred gal lows and aseut a thousand jafls In Lussa. And so we are not to have Sue aftor all. What wfil Utah da far an argument the next ttm she wants to sen a Hi law i in 1st to congress? The actress va la mr 3fw Yaric Mast stFaJgbtwajr ga an get a play There Is one way to avuM the honors of a bsll pen, and that te to withhold support from dynamhors, and abstain from dynatttng. What is ssM to be the torgast Wast ftr naee la the world has just bean started, at Youngstown. O. It Is )M tost high, K feet in cruelMa and 2s fast to. bosh. The capacity of the furnaoa Is W9 tons every 24 boars. Tbe Ashland Tiihagu has Issued a erastt abie special edition showing the progress of Ashland and the Bogus Btvor Taney. Half-tone views of pobUe bwtlolawa, resi dences, landscape and mates, and wahV written descriptions nuke an attractive souvenir. A Mntter of Honor. New York Sun, Rep. As surely as in the year 1S9S the state of Cuba was a scandal not to be endured by a civilized country In the position oc cupied by the United States, so are the existing relations between the United States and Puerto Rico scandalous and unendurable. To end tho first we were required to make war; to end the second It Is neces sary to pass an act of Congress waiving or modifying the tariff. The best way of facing the new situa tion would be to abolish the tariff between the United States and Puerto Rico en tirely. In accordance with the original rec ommendation of the President, But a simple modification would be better than what It Is. Congress sullenly leaving Puerto Rico out In the cold, the victim of war, is like a troop of soldiers .that refuses to bring In the wounded, from the battlefield through unwillingness to diminish the common share at the mess table. i a For the Guidance of Shoppers. San Francisco Call. Clerk (to employer) What shall I mark that new lot of black silk?- Employer Mark the selling price $3 a yard. Clerk But it cost only $1 a yard. Employer I don't care what It cost, I am selling off regardless of cost. 6 H The Garrulous Instates. Chicago Tribune. The jawsmlth3 who were chiefly in evi dence at the late antl-truet conference were exceedingly sever on the newspapers. How many of them would ever have been beard of If It had not been for the news papers? I o John Rnkln. F. W- Bourdllion in the Speetatar. Quenched Is the lamp, ev'n In Ma fltakerlnff dear. - , "We miss the light: we would sot have lite hare; No carping littlenesses lift their head "Where he la, 'mid the great uajealoas dead. He thirsted aa a thirsty laad fr rate For Beauty, and for Good as men far gala; Now mar be drink of tbe Immortal tide. Ever atblrst and ever eatisaed A new dramatic star Is In the armament. A paper in Arkansas aays: "A Hot Sortnga girl who has been told that she peottes pathetic pieces with the artist's sob In her throat, will go Bast in May to study, though ber mother realty needs her on wash days and her father can't afford the money." A correspondent wants to know how much gold there Is In ctreuhvtton. , Ws don't know; bnt we do know there Isn't as much as everybody wants, never was, never will be. Thar a the reason why people are going to rash, off for Caoa Nome m the spring, buying: their outfits In Portland. A citizen of Portland has tost serfested a burner for using coal on, gasoline and air for heating and cooking surpssae. He says It will save the cttteens of the City of London $a09,MA,s90 In one year. If they adopt tbe burner right off, they win save the expenses of the Boer war and hava money enough to Indulge In another ssrap with some one else. It Is fairly startling to see how. axaotiy the ideas of the Port Towns and Leader and The Oregonlan agree on many sub jects, and how tbe two papers express themselves in Identical terms. The only thing that removes tins constantly re curring eoineidoneo from tha realm of tho supernatural is the fact that the Tart Towneend paper's bright Mass sea day light two or three days Mtor than The Oregonian's. Just what the result of the decision of the School Board to enforce payment of tuition fees for nonresident nupUs In the public schools is to be, cannot yst be folly determined. So far. It has resulted In a shower of applications for free tuition. and the receipt of bnt little money aa tuition fees. All sorts of reasons for ask ing free tuition for nonresident pupils are given, and in some eases It is vary hard to refuse. To grant free tuition to some non residents and refuse It to others Is vary difficult, and the only way out of the di lemma appears to be to draw a line and ad here to It. As one of the directors re marked yesterday, the public schools are not charitable institutions. They are sup ported by tbe taxpayers, and however strongly the sympathies of the otreetors are appealed to by deserving cases, thsy should bear In mind that thsy have no right to exercise their benevolence at the expense of tbe public. Tf," said he, "tho directors were required to pay the tusnon fees of nonresident pupils, there would ba very few of thera in the schools." I. a Filipino Army- Scandal. Washington Star, "I suppose thera Is a STJto deal of Jealousy among your Generafe?" "A great deal," answered the Fmpteo chief, gloomily. "We have an army soan dal at hand. The man who claims to hold the record for long-distance retreats is accused of violating the rales of such contests and using a paee-mahar." t a Gives Heed to syxasaple. Boston Transcript. Mummsec I notice that you sttok to one kind of wine whan you dins at Chasa blay's and never touch any of the ethers, Brutwln Neither does tbe butler. Truth and Falsehood. Kansas City Independent. List to a tale wn worth ft ear Of all who wit and sense aamfce Invented It Is very clear Seme ages prior to Matthew rler. Falsefeeod aad Tmtk "upea a. tteve," Ooe day is Jane's dellctou weather ("Twos )n a. distant age and ultmc). Like slaters, teek a walk together. On. on their merry way they teak, Threagh fragraat woo aa vnaaat meadow. To where a heeeh beelde & break InvHed reet beneath H ahaoew. There, altuag- Ja the pleasant i IlDoa the margin's grar , (A velvet eosWoa ready maaafc The young cempanJooa fell to aaatttog. New, when m vetoMe aueoanie Ob thla asd that tbetr toagasp were raantag. As haWt hWa each epeafc aertoMe The oae la frank, tfce otaer Falsehood at Iengtb, impatient grown With acandale of her own areattas, Bald: "Since we two are anhe aleaa, Aa-i nicely screened from ofcgeivatlea, "Supiaee to this dellghtfal rtn, While all around la so graatneas. We take a hath!" Said. Troth: "I wfH A bath, I'm rare, will be aaHatoaof' At this ber robe she oast astee. And in the stream that ma baler 8 her She ptaiwed like Oeeaa'a haaar hrlae As naked as her mother bare hert Falsehood, at leisure pew aadreeeed. Put off her rases her limbs that, homseiy And having denned Troth's snowy vest. Ran off aa fast as she ooakt soamser. Since then the swfetle maM, In ssoth, Bxpert In nee aad shrewd In ftvaatsesv Has borne the heaeet name aC Tram, And wears her atothwi on all poena! efts, "While Truth, dtofatntoc to : In Falsehood's petticoat ana boosts, EMU braves all esea from year to yeak .jj As naked as a maxWe gossoon.