THE 'MORNING OREGONIAN. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1901. Entered at the Poatofflce at Portland. Oregon, as seeend-dass matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Room IBS Business Office... CG7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mail tpostage prepaid). In Advance Duly, with Sunday, per month $ S5 JJally, Sunday excepted, per year. 7 BO Dally, with Sunday, per jear 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 CO The Weekly, 3 months 60 To City Subscribers Iaily, per week, delivered, Sundays excepted.l5c Daiiy, per .week, delivered. Stmrfays lncluded-20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 16-page paper Ic ltf to 32 page paper. ........................ .2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name or any Individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions er to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan.' The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, ofllce at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box CJ5. Tacoma Postfflce. Eastern BMsUess OBlce The Tribune build ing. New York City: "The Rookery." Chicago; tue S C Beekwlth special agency. New York. For sale In San Franeleco by J. K. Cooper. 746 Market street. Hear the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros., 2M Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1003 Market street. Foster & Orear. Ferry News stand. For sale In Los Angelrs by B. F. Gardner. 238 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 106 So Sprmg street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by H. C. Shears. 105 N. Sixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros.. 1012 Farnam street. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lako News Co 77 W Second South street. For sale In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On nie In Washington D. C.. with A. W. Dunn. 000 14th N W. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 1XW-912 Seventh street. i T )DAYS WEATHEB. Probably fair; east erly winds i rOUTLAXD, FIIIDAY, FEUIIUARY 1. The habit of dependence on the state grows everywhere, and It grows by what It feeds on. Multitudes are com ing: to think they can do nothing for themselves, any more. Growth of this habit is by no means peculiar to Ore gon, where man Is not disposed to kill the coyote any more, unless the state hires him to do it. In Massachusetts they are having an experience entirely similar. A million dollars have been spent within a year in the endeavor to exterminate the gipsy moth, but It persistently refuses to be exterminated, and members of the legislature are beginning to express the opinion that It Is time the people of the affected dis tricts, instead of calling for more ap propriations, were trying to do some thing for their own protection. It Is said they do nothing of the kind, but rely wholly on the state, entirely will ing to draw money from the treasury for fighting the pest on their own land. This habit forces legislation, and the legislation in turn feeds the habit. The state must be the guardian and sup porter of the Individual, in most of the affairs of his life. He is no longer able to cut his beard without the assistance or superintendence of the state, or to buy butter for his table, or to protect his fruit from winged or creeping pests, or his flocks from the ravages of wild beasts. No one now thinks of doing anything for his own education; and the citizen puts up incessant demand for enlargement of the functions of the state, in all conceivable ways, so he may "get a job," in which the duty is but nominal and the salary secure. He thinks his services as an old citizen, or his name as the son of an old citi zen, should entitle him to a pension. Next thing the state is to have is an inspector of horse-shoeing, and then perhaps next thing a state inspector of stepladders, so persons of the household may not fall and break their necks or limbs. Nobody can look out for himself any more, and we need a state In spector of rubber shoes, to see that we don't get our feet wet and gallop off into a consumption. This exercise of the care of the state Is capable of In finite extension, and it is clear that in the science of multiplying officials we have made but a beginning. From sev eral localities we hear that wild geese are in the wheat fields. What's the Btate going to do about that? Appoint a state commission to deal with the subject and give it power to hire the owner or the owners of the wheat fields to make war on the geese? Evidently it's "up to us," in ways innumerable. It Is to be hoped that the Northern Pacific's move toward the Nehalem Valley is undertaken in good faith, and not, as some profess to believe, for the purpose of scaring off another project to connect Portland with that country. But whatever the aim of the Northern Pacific announcement may be, it should cot be permitted to upset plans for di rect connection between Portland and Tillamook County. The timber of the Nehalem will afford a large trafflc. it is true. So, doubtless, will the coal of the lower valley. But Portland has more at stake than merely the hauling of timber or coal to market. Probably no corslderable development can take place in the Northwest corner of the state that will not to some degree benefit this city. We should not, how ever, be content with a portion of the benefits when a little energy will bring all to us. For example, we should not be content to see the Northern Pacific carry the traffic of the Nehalem coun try around Portland to and from the East, though we might get a little inci dental trade of the new community. Portland's interests and the interests of the Nehalem Valley and Tillamook County are identical, and they should be knit together industrially, com mercially and socially. Communica tion between these places should be direct and untrammeled by the exigencies of transcontinental traffic. P-Ttland is the natural market place and commercial center for all the country westward to the coast. The short rail haul to this market wuld be so inexpensive that the de mand for harbor improvements at Til lamook and Nehalem Bays might be done away with. Not the timber sup ply, or the coal, or the agriculture, or the manufactures of that region, but all of them, Portland wants. It will aid their development It will contribute Its advantages to bring to its best the native wealth of the region, and the benefits will be mutual. But this is not to be accomplished by roundabout, indirect transportation accommodations. Give Tillamook County a direct route to Portland for her products, and the mat ter of further shipment will take care of itself. Give the Nehalem Valley one road that leads around Portland to the East, and a large part of the advantage that ought to come to it through proper trafflc routes will be denied and Port land and the country will suffer from it. Portland should have a railroad di rect to the rich Nehalem country. A correspondent inquires when the offices of General and Lieutenant-General were created. George "Washington was created Lieutenant-General by Congress in 179S in anticipation of the United States becoming involved in a war with France. Major-General Win field Scott was made Lieutenant-General by brevet in 1840. U. S. Grant was appointed Lieutenant-General March 12, 1864, and made General July 25, 1866, and Major-General Sherman was made Lieutenant-General. On Grant's resig nation of the office of General in 1869, before his inauguration as President, Lieutenant-General Sherman became General and Major-General Sheridan became Lieutenant-General. Lieutenant-General Sheridan succeeded on the retirement of Sherman to the command of the Army, and was ultimately pro moted to the rank of General. On the death of General Sheridan in August, 1SS9, Major-General Schofield, as the ranking Major-General, took command of the Army, but was not appointed to the rank of Lieutenant-General until February 5, 1895, and was retired with that rank in September of that year. The present law provides for but three Major-Generals, and gives the senior Major-General the temporary rank and pay of a Lieutenant-General, but the? pending Army bill provides for one Lieutenant-General, six Major-Generals and fifteen Brigadier-Generals, Instead of six, as now. Under this new law General Miles will be assured of his present rank of Lieutenant-General, as the bill forbids the reduction In rank of any officer because of the changes brought about by its provisions. When the offices of Lieutenant-General and General were successively given to Grant, it was not expected that they would continue beyond the retirement of his successors, Sherman and Sheri dan, but General Schofield, In the last year of his active service, finally suc ceeded In becoming Lieutenant-General, and now his successor, General Miles, Is likely to secure the same honor. KOT A FAIR MEASURE OF THE MAX. Professor Goldwln Smith, in the cur rent number of the Atlantic Monthly, expresses the opinion that such a man as Lord Rosebery, who has been Prime Minister of England, and who may again be Prime Minister of England, oight to be in better literary business than making a book out of "the petty miseries of Napoleon at St. Helena, his squabbles with Sir Hudson Lowe and the bickerings of his little household." The criticism of Goldwin Smith is In teresting as that of a very able writer and historical scholar, whose estimate of Napoleon is as bitter In its complete denial to the great Corslcan of any moral sense or humanity as if it had been written by Sir Walter Scott or Lockhart, or some other English Tory contemporary of the prisoner of St. Helena. Goldwln Smith thinks that while Lord Rosebery is veracious he Is evidently under a spell, and "feels that in dealing with th'e great conqueror he Is dealing with something more than human." The critic of Lord Rosebery's book makes much of the fact that on his way to Elba Napoleon was more than once in peril of his life from the fury'of the people against their fallen tyrant." This is not true, only in the sense that his carriage was surrounded by a mob, which was no more the peo ple of France than the English mob that stoned the Duke of Wellington's carriage and smashed the windows of his London house were the people of England. The mob in any country is always a cowardly, cruel brute and a fool. The same French mob that hooted at the Royalists, the Girondists and the Dan tonists as they rode to death hooted at Robespierre and the "Terrorists" when their turn came. The same French mob that threw up their caps for the returning Bourbons hooted Charles X out of France and In less than twenty years hooted his successor, Louis Phil ippe, still more derisively oft the throne. If Cromwell had failed and been dispossessed by force of foreign arms of the throne of Britain, would1 there have been any lack of mobs to hoot him on his way to the scaffold or to deportation to a place of exile? Goldwin Smith charges Napoleon with the murder of Pich'egru, of Toussaint l'Ouverture and Hofer. PIchegru had every motive to commit suicide, and doubtless died by his own hand. Napo leon had no more motive to order hl3 assassination than he had to direct that of Moreau. If he could afford to sub mit the fate of Moreau to public trial, he certainly could afford to let justice take Its course with Pichegru, who was detested by his old comrades of the French Army becauseof his treasona ble correspondence with the Austrian enemy. Napoleon had no motive to murder Pichegru, while PIchegru had every motive to murder himself. The negro liberator of St. Domingo died in prison; his capture and death in prison was discreditable to Napoleon, but it was not a wflit worse" than the seizure of the Seminole Chief Osceola under a flag of truce by General Jesup, United States Army, and his confinement In Fort Moultrie, where he died. Our Gov-i ernment, under President Jackson, treated Osceola as treacherously as Na poleon did Toussaint. Andreas Hofer was a Tyrolese Insurgent leader, who after surrender again took up arms, was captured and shot by sentence of a military court, just as a Boer leader who took up arms after surrender would be liable to execution by military court if captured. The shooting of sev eral thousand prisoners of war at Jaffa was justified by the laws of war, as they had repeatedly broken their pa role. Wellington, in his dispatches af ter Badajoz, laments the mistaken hu manity whloh spared the lives of the garrison of Ciudad Rodrigo, saying that if they had been shot Badajoz would not have cost him 5000 men. Welling ton held that a fortified town refusing to surrender and forcing- the attacking party to storm it forfeited life and pro tection of property. Wellington's army in Spain was guilty of far worse ex cesses than any French army under Napoleon's eye. Measured by his capacity for per sonal gratitude to his companions in arms, or his conduct of war, Napoleon's character for humanity and sensibility to human suffering does not suffe"r,by comparison with that of the Duke of Wellington, and rises far above that of either Marlborough or Frederick the Great. Napoleon must be measured not only by the standard of the politi cal morality of bis time, but by his enormous opportunity and the tempta tions to which he was subjected. He had all Continental Europe at his feet for more than ten years; he command ed supreme power, and he was con stantly tempted to use it despotically and selfishly. Men fawned upon him at every hour; his public life was a long struggle with his own worst passions. He was a man of affairs, not a poet, and his struggles and his conquests, his success and his failure, made up the stern conflict of life with life, of man with the world. Measured by his enormous temptations and his oppor tunities, Napoleon behaved with far more moderation than any man of his time. As a diplomat, he was sometimes tricky, but so was Metternich and so was Bismarck. His military and polit ical career was entirely just and patri otic up to the peace of Tilsit, in 1807. His war with Spain was a very great blunder, and his Moscow expedition was an act of madness. A very able Frenchman, M. De Blowitz, the Paris correspondent of the London Times, in a recent article confesses that since Napoleon "no man has seemed a suffi ciently energetic pilot to steer the French bark toward a port where it could find shelter from the storms and anchor in safety." In heither personal nor political morals, in personal hu manity neither in peace nor war, does Napoleon suffer by comparison with any of the statesmen or soldiers of Europe of his day of glory or defeat. HISTORICAL FALSEHOOD. The denunciation of the reign of Vic toria by the United Irish-American So cieties at New York City as one in which "greater injustice, more cruelty, grosser wrong, were Inflicted upon hu manity in general, and upon the Irish In particular, than in the reign of any other English monarch," is a very gross falsehood. The truth is that every im portant act of reform in the govern ment of Ireland, with the exception of the Catholic emancipation act of 1829, was enacted In Victoria's reign. It was In Lord Melbourne's administration, from 1S35 to 1S40, that the tithe system and municipal corporations were reformed in Ireland, and Ireland was given a poor law. This first administration un der Victoria commanded the support of the great Irish "liberator," Daniel O'Connell, who confessed that the Mul-grave-Drummond administration under Lord Melbourne's Premiership gave Ireland a good and deservedly popular government. It was an English House of Lords that, in 1844, on appeal, 'reversed the judgment pronounced by the Irish court against O'Connell. The coercion bill of Sir Robert Peel was defeated by the British House of Commons In 1846, and O'Connell was on cordial relations with Lord John Russell's Ministry, which succeeded that of Peel. He welcomed the appointment of Lord Duncannon as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and sup ported the Ministry in Parliament. Since O'Connell's day there has been steady progress In the reform of the government of Ireland. There Is not a distinguished English statesman of Vic toria's reign that has not advocated a more liberal treatment of Ireland than was tolerated in any previous reign, save the few years that an Irish home rule Parliament was extorted from England by Grattan. From 1868, the year of Gladstone's first great reform administration, down to the present date, there has been steady progress to better government of Ireland. The dis-establishment of the Irish Church and radical reform in the peasant land tenure was the work of Gladstone and Parnell. Gladstone did not succeed In enacting home rule for Ireland, but the Conservative Ministry of Salisbury has not hesitated to en large the scope of the reforms secured by Gladstone. The insurrection of the "young Ireland" party of 1848 was bit terly denounced by O'Connell; and Its leaders, when convicted of treason and sentenced to death, had their punish ment commuted to banishment. Most of them escaped to America, and those who did not were pardoned and re turned to Ireland. When we recall the horrors of 1798, the execution of Emmett In 1803 and the brutal policy wnlch prevailed under George IV and William IV, It Is a gross historical falsehood to say that Vic toria's reign has been conspicuous above that of all other English mon archs for cruelty to Ireland. The steady abatement of misrule in Ireland has been one of the glories of the reign. A FOREGONE CONCLUSION. Rural postal delivery can scarcely as yet be said to have fully passed the experimental stage, though It has taken a place in the postal service that gives promise, not only of permanence, but of expansion. It is freely predicted by some members of the House committee on postal affairs that a systematic effort will be made In due time by those specially Interested to secure a more liberal sliding scale of wages for those who serve In the capacity of mall cir cuit riders. Thus far rural mail-carriers receive a maximum rate of only $500 a year, and oat of this they must care for their own horses. It has not been found difficult, thus far, to get reliable men to ride the rural circuit, but the statement that this pay is "not enough" has been freely made, and It meets with the ready indorsement of the large number of persons who think that Uncle Sam should be made to pay not only all that service performed for him is worth, but as much more as he can be made to pay. It Is cited In this connection that city mail-carriers begin work at $600 per annum and work up to $1000. The ad vantage thus far is with the city car rier, but, on the other hand, it costs more to live In the city than in the country. City carriers have protective organizations, which have from time to time urged Congress to increase their pay. Their efforts have been handi capped by their inability to interest representatives from the rural districts in their cause. From $600 to $1000 and a position protected by civil service rules is considered by country folk gen erally quite good enough. With the rural carriers working In conjunction with their city brethren, however, the case will be strengthened, for the coun try representative cannot afford, politi cally speaking, to be Indifferent to the demands of his constituents. This view foreshadows the organiza tion, a. little further on in the expan sion of rural mail delivery, of the Amalgamated Order of Urban and Rural Hall-Carriers, the wage scale of which Congress will oe practically forced to indorse. No time Is set for this concerted move upon the Nation's source of salary supply, but members of the committee on postoffices and postroads see in the course of time an army of rural carriers 40,000 strong, joined with a force of city carriers numbering 25,000, marching on Congress for an Increase of salary to ?1500 a year. While conceding that everywhere and at all times the laborer is worthy of his hire, it may behoped that the postal service of the country will necome self supporting before so formidable an ad dition to its expense is demanded cer tainly before It is allowed. The obsequies of Queen Victoria will be marked by a military pageant the like of which the world has never seen. Though a woman of peace arid a mon arch whose long reign was compara tively free from devastating wars, the late Queen is said to have expressed a desire for a military funeral, the idea being possibly more to emphasize the power of the nation than as a tribute to her personal greatness. With all due respect to her memory as a woman, and all honor to her as a wise and benefi cent ruler, It may be said that the world will breathe a sigh of relief when all this pomp and display is of yesterday. The strain of the paBt fortnight upon the English people has been severe In many directions, while that upon the royal family has been Intense. Already the heir apparent 'is seriously ill with nervous exhaustion, and will be unable to Join the funeral procession, while the women of the family are on an emo tional rack, the tortures of which can readily be imagined. One and all will no doubt be glad to take up the burden of life- again, which, as compared with tho burden of death, will, for a time at least, be easily borne. As pointed out by the Army and Navy Register, the delay in the passage of the Army reorganization bill has cre ated a great deal of embarrassment to the Government, and under the most favorable circumstances the adjustment to new conditions, including the with drawal of volunteer, regiments from the Philippines, will "be attended with great expense an amount not less than ?1.500,000, and probably $2,000,000. It will be necessary to charter additional transports to bring home within the necessary period about 12,000 volun teers, and it is estimated It will cost $115 per man for water transportation from Manila to San Francisco, and this feature of the situation alone makes the additional cost fully $1,380,000. Only two of the twenty-six regiments to be brought back from the Philippines have thus far sailed. After 9000 men have been sent home there are to be no fur ther embarkations at Manila until the arrival of the regiments from home, which cannot be before April 1. These new regiments of regulars, of course, will be little better than undisciplined mobs of recruits. Perhaps if Representative Eddy looks deeper Into the project for bonding pub lic officials he will find that his objec tion to it is based on a misapprehen sion. The beneficiary in this matter is not so much the guarantee companies as it is the public treasury. Bonds signed by citizens are often found im possible of enforcement when treasur ers fall. These guarantee corporations can always be made to pay. This county and city would be some hun dreds of thousands of dollars better off If their Treasurers, Sheriffs, etc., had been bonded by a security company. Banks and express companies have long ago learned the wisdom of looking to guarantee companies Instead of their employes for reimbursement on defalca tions. Why must the public be forever behindhand in the methods approved by business experience? Testimonials from thirty or forty Senators at Washington, as to Mr. Mc Brlde's mental, moral, physical, politi cal and legislative vigor are printed by a sheet at Salem. They are amusing, as a woman's attempt to establish her character by affidavits would be. "Me thlnks the lady doth protest too much." It must have been felt that there was grave room for doubt, or these testi monials from Washington as to abili ties never discovered .In Oregon would not have been solicited. Supposing them genuine, that they were solicited for use In Oregon is plain upon their face. This will scarcely strike any one as a judicious expedient. One of the real needs of Oregon Is a state mining bureau. Under proper di rection It would devote Its attention to Inquiry Into the mineral resources of the state, furnish information about them and be of great assistance In their development. We have a Fish Commis sion, a Dairy Commission, a Fruit Commission, all of them Important In their spheres; but the mining Industry, whfch Is destined perhaps to greater Importance than any other, as yet re ceives no such attention. It seems to The Oregonlan that the Legislature might well consider this subject. In order to meet such expenses of the state as are just and necessary, we must avoid those we can get along without One of these is a residence for the Governor. There Is no more reason for the state to buy the Gover nor a house than there Is to buy the Treasurer one, or the School Superin tendent. The White House at Wash ington Js an office, and as such a neces sary part of the public buildings. No such need exists at Salem, as the Ex ecutive chambers are ample for the Executive business. The Oregonlan does not at all wish to be or to become mentor or prompter to the Legislature. But it will say once more that it trusts the memorial to Congress In favor of The Dalles-Celllo canal will not be overlooked. The Leg islature of Idaho has taken action, through a strong memorial, accompa nying it with an address of high eco nomic value. We beg once more to so licit the attention of the Legislature of Oregon to this important subject. It is positively painful to read in the dispatches that, owing to the small de mand for silver dollars, it is proposed to coin them over into smaller coins. What an awful revelation of National turpitude in shaking the dollar of the daddies! Twenty-five Senators voted against the bill for rfclnfordement of our Army in the Philippines. That is a sort of patriotism which the country will esti- j mate at its value, GRAIN INSPECTION A FRAUD. The Tacoma Ledger Is much distressed over the alleged interference of The Ore gonlan in the matter of wheat Inspection in the State of Washington. The Ledger says: "Washington certainly keeps inside Its own jurisdiction, pnd may reasonably request that Oregon dp the same. The advice of Oregon U not wanted, particularly as It Is not disinter ested advice and Is tendered for the benefit of Oregon. The facta are that Oregon Is Jealous of Washington, betraying this circumstance every time there Is a Webfoot yawp against, wheat Inspection. In the latter state No. 1 wheat must weigh 68 pounds. In Oregon the standard la 50. The advantage to the Oregon grower In this. Is obvious, and Oregon would like to have the standard annulled. To abolish Inspec tion would be to permit the exporter to do the grading, and there is no possibility of be lieving be would do it so fairly as a disinter ested party. The farmer shipping 10,000 bush els to Tacoma would be forced to accept the estimate of the buyer, and If ever' bushel were No. 1 and the buyer chose to grade It as No. 2. or even lower, the farmer would be help less. "Washington is made up largely of farm ers. Their representatives at Olympla are not there for the purpose of doing these farmers & wrong. Therefore they will pay no attention to The Oregonlan, so ardently engaged In the attempt to befooL them. The Ledger displays considerable Igno rance regarding the wheat business and the Jurisdiction of Oregon concerning it. The grain committee of the Portland Chamber of Commerce establishes the grades under which all of the wheat ex ported from the State of Washington Is shipped, and Portland exporters with branch houses at Tacoma export over half of all of the wheat shipped from that port, and Portland supplies the finances for moving nearly all of the crop of the State of Washington. Including the amount of wheat exported by Portland shippers from Tacoma, Seattle and Port land, the Oregon metropolis Is shown to control the distribution of considerably more than two-thirds of all of the wheat produced In Oregon and Washington. Tak ing these facts into consideration, The Oregonlan feels disposed to claim a slight jurisdiction in territory In which Oregon's commercial interests are so vitally con cerned. The Washington State Grain Inspector established a grade of 58 pounds per bushel for No. 1 wheat. He thus adver tised to the world that the State of Wash ington had a poor crop, and 5S-pound wheat was the best It would average. This is the "obvious ad vantage" which the Ledger claims for the Washington farmer. Fortunately for the latter, the grain committee of the Port land Chamber of Commerce refused to permit the quality of Washington wheat to be discredited-by any such grade, and It was raised to 59 pounds, and every bushel of No. 1 wheat that has been ex ported from Tacoma this season has been shipped under the c9-pound grade of tho Portland Chamber of Commerce, and not under the lightweight standard of the Washington Grain Inspector. The Wash ington state grain inspection service is a farce, and gives the farmer no protec tion whatever, for the simple reason that no attention Is paid to the Inspector or the grades which he establishes. The Ledger proceeds on the hypothesis that all exporters are thieves, and an honest man like the Washington State Grain Inspector is required to prevent their robbing the farmer. The farmer shipping 10.000 bushels of wheat or any qu'antlty of wheat co Tacoma does accept the grade of the buyer, and that grade Is uniform all over Oiigon, Washington and Idaho. The grain business does not differ from any other business, so far as honest dealing is concerned, and any dealer or exporter who steals from the farmer by failure to pay No. 1 prices for No. 1 wheat will be forced out of the business by his own actions In very short order. Tacoma Is becoming quite a shipping point for wheat not tributary to Portlnnu, and the Ledger might avoid a repetition of the ridiculous misrepresentations which it has been making by gaining a little actual knowledge of wheat grades and the manner In which the wheat-exporting business Is conducted In its own port. THE PRIVATE GRAFT. They Have It In Chicago and They Don't LHce It. Chicago Journal. The criminal conditions of Chicago are unsparingly laid bare in the February number of McClure's Magazine, by tho well-known writer, Joslar Flynt (Mr. J. F. Wlllard). It Is a narrative that is startling In Its array of facta and an In dictment of the Police Department of this city that Is utterly shameful.' Do the people of Chicago know that hen Is the criminal center of the United States, the thieves; paradise and the thugs' haven of security? Are they aware that there are 50,000 thieves, tramps, swindlers and other criminals who make their home here, most of whom are known to the police, and, by reason of that fact, live here with Impunity? Is It any wonder that crime Is rampant when the police stand In- with the crimi nals and share the spoils? Mr. Wlllard gives the names of pickpockets and hold up men who have "operated" here for year,s under the protection of the police, and he relates cases where thieves have been actually ordered to steal by police officers so as to be able to pay up for pro tection These criminals flock to Chicago be cause they feel safe under the Harrison rule. One of them told Mr. Wlllard that they like Harrison. "I like him and the 'push' likes him, 'cause he gives us rope." Certainly he give them rope, for he 1 not only "the friend of the worklngmen," Dut tne iriena of tne nonworkingmen. The lnttor are his undeviatlng and most faithful supporters. They fill the lodging-houses, and, when out of jail or the bridewell, as they usually are at election time, they vote for Harrison. It is Idle to say that this vast horde of criminals cannot bebroken up and scat tered. They will fly like frightened sheep from the strong arm of the law when they know that that arm will strike, and strike In earnest. Put an honest, incorruptible, courageous business man In the office of Mayor, and the railroads leading from the city will be crowded with men and women fleeing from the wrath to come. There is no use in mincing this matter longer. Mr. Harrison either will not or cannot cleanse the city. His Police De partment does not intend to do it, for it is hopelessly corrupt, as Mr. Wlllard ab solutely proves. As one thug said to him. "wherever you see thieves and grafters as thick as they are here you can put It down that the police force Is grafting." How much longer is Chicago to endure a grafting police department? A Winter Sonar Washington Star. When the wind stahts in a-blowln An de snow Is drlftln deep. An' the snow keeps on a-snowln' White de sunshine goes to sleep, Yob-splrlta dey gits glummer An It's mighty hahd to smile But you knows It will be Summer, If you'll wait a little while. An' when de wind Is shrlekin' It will soften now an then. Like some gentle voles were seekln' "oh to cheer us cullud men. Oh! dls cabin needs de plumber, n' as move Is out o' style; But we knows it will be Summer, Xt W$ ITOIU a little while. THEY ARE SIMPLY AXTI-AMERICA. St Paul Pioneer Press. When Judge Taft announces that the Filipino insurrection Is on its last legs, and General MacAfthur asserts that there is still need of a large army, the New York Evening Po3t proclaims Judge Taft to be a liar, and General MacArthur to be a true man. But when Judge Taft characterizes the drink evil In Manila a.s "disgraceful," and General MacArthur that there is no more drunkenness than in a city of like size In America, the same paper proclaims the General to be the liar, and the Judge to be a true man. It is the way with your antl-lmperlallst. He that does not say something that can be distorted into a text for one of their snarling editorials is incapable of truth, and utterly untrustworthy; won by place or pelf to utter things contrary to his convictions. Be he as pure as snow he cannot escape calumny. From the most obscure corporal to Judge Taft. who. thougn an anti-lmperiallst, gave up his life place on the federal bench because he felt there was work to do In the Phil ippines, not one who has ventured to con tradict the preconceived notions of the Evening Post or the Springfield Republi can has escaped Insult and slander. In their zeal to Justify their course they have forgotten that honest and conscien tious men, even with the same set of facts before them usually differ. They have attributed to the nation mere lust of territory and selfish desire for ag grandizement In nil that preceded and all that followed the Spanish war. Encased In their own narrow self-righteousness they did not recognize in 1S33, and have not yet recognized, that not since the first crusade has a war been waged on such high ground as was the Spanish war In the grandeur of tho motive that lay back of that war and that led to the assumption of sovereignty over the Phil ippines there la not a wa7 In history, not even the crusades, that can equal It. Intolerable Injustice and inhumanity cried for succor, and the whole nation, with the exception of a few self-wrapped the orists here and there, heard the cry. The nation rose, as it wanted to rise to the rescue of the Armenians. Humanity, pure and simple dictated the war itself, and humanity dictated the taking of the Phil ippines. The editors of the papers in question, if their sluggish, cynical pulses were capable of being stirred, need only have talked with earnest, conscientious, peace-loving men anywhere outside of Massachusettes and New York to have found that it was humanity alone that led to that war. And there is not an act nor a sugges tion in the whole history of this affair that to candid, honest men has not been palpably dictated by the same generous spirit. That the Filipinos, either because of self-seeking leaders or because of their failure to comprehend that "benevolent assimilation" meant exactly what it says chose to meko war upon this country has been unfortunate. But in no sense or degree whatever has it been Justified by the spirit which has actuated this Government. That mistakes have been made is probable, but no one lias yet stepped forward to suggest any better way. In fact, from the standpoint of practical policy and true humanity ft Is possible, and to many just and peace able men it seems probable, that tho country has been altogether too gener ous and humane, and that had it dis played a tithe of the malignity with which these papers charge It or practiced a half of the severities and deceits laid at the door of its officers, military and civil, much blood would have been saved and the islands would have been farther along on the road to liberty than they are today. Our leniency and desire to conciliate rather than punish seems to have been the weakest link in the policy. It is not that the anti-lmperiallsts be lieve that the country has no mission In the Philippines, or that they belive it unwise for this country to attempt to govern peoples of alien race, that they are obnoxious. That is a matter of opin ion and open to debate. If they believe this, it Is their unquestioned right to express their opinion and to supporo It with such arguments as they can com mand. It is because they persistently If not wilfully refuse to recognize the sincerity and nobility that have actuated and continue to actuate the nation and its high officials In this matter; because they label them hypocrisy and cant; charge the basest motives where the pur est exist, and because they indiscrimi nately accuse all that do not agree with them with dishonesty and wilful cruelty, that they are obnoxious. If they ever come to recognize that they have misun derstood the spirit of the affair, that they are not the God-appointed judges of the conscience of the nation, nd that other men are as honest and as conscientious and perhaps as wise as they, they may gain a larger audience But until they do recognize these iings and argue the matter temporately and charitably, we venture to say that the cause of antl expanston or anti-Imperialism, or what ever they may choose to cnll It, will lose ground. It Is rooted in dishonesty and uncharitableness and cannot flourish. Portentous Day In Lincoln. New York Sun. All day yesterday an enthusiastic but a reverent crowd filled the wordrooms of the Weekly Bryan. The Peerless glowed with hope and speech. The Boy Absalom and Bryan Chorus Club sang silver and anti trust hymns. Telegrams of congratula tion were received from Coin Harvey, Cy clone Davis, Web Davis, General Jim Weaver, Tobe Schrutchlns, Hez Lung and other eminent Bryanites. Seven letter-carriers broke down under their weight of registered letters, and had to be carried off In ambulances. The cash ier, who has been counting out the money for weeks, had an acute attack of cash ier's cramp and a substitute had to be pro cured. At 3:17 P. M. Lincoln Hose Com pany No. 3 was called out to extinguish a batch of Colonel Bryan's manuscript, which had set the composing-room afire. At 4:12 P. M. the eilver pen with which the Colonel wrote the leading articles for the first number of his paper exploded with a terrible slat of thunder. Nobody was hurt, but the heart of Dr. John H. Glrd ner, of this town, to whom the pen had been promised, was broken. When the Colonel went to bed. a tired but a happy man. at 2:35 this morning, he eaid that nothing in the world both ered him except the fact he had to buy his raw paper of a corporation. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS "Rubber, spun-glass, steel, and Ivory are tho most elastic substances." The writer of this seems to have forgotten the human conscience. Boston Transcript. "Boohoot Johnnie Jones has moved away!" "Were you so fond of your little playmate?" "Naw! but. bcohool He was de only kid on de block I could lick!" Brooklyn Life. Still More Impressive. So she refused you?" "That's tho Impression I rocelved." "Didn't she actually say nor "No, she didn't. All she cald was 'Ha-ha-ha!' " Cleveland Plain Dealer, Small Boy Mamma, does God sea every thing? "Tea. dear." "Does he know I'm going to say, 'Now I lay me'?" "Yes, dear." "Woll, I ain't. I'm going to say the other one." Brooklyn Life. Depends on the Victim. "There are two kinds of grip going round." "What are they?" "The kind a person gets who can afford to stay in bed, and the kind a person gets who can't affordto stay In bed." Chicago Record. The Cake Fell. Mrs. Newlywed "I had hor rid luck with my cake. Mrs. Binthare Too bad did It fall? Mrs. Newlywed Yes. I placed It on the window-ledge to cool, and my hus band, either by accident or design, pushed It off. Cleveland State Journal. Those Dear Girls. Teas Mamma was rum maging through the attic today, and she found the cradle I used when I was a baby. She was going to throw it out, but I wouldn't let her. Jess I should say not. Antiquities are all the rage now. Philadelphia Press. "Polly, dear, suppose I were to shoot at a tree with five birds on it, and kill three; how many would there be left? Polly (aged 0) Three, please. Teacher No; two would be left. Polly No. there wouldn't, The three shot would be left, and th'e other two "WOUld be I (Ilea away.-Tlt-BlU. NOTE AND COMMENT. Kansas may be dry, but the' news from there Isn't. Riots are taking place In a Russian University. The hazing bug Is evidently circumnavigating the globe. There aro still a few commissions in the British Army which are not held by mem bers of the German royal family. The prespect of making good Indians of the Inhabitants of Oklahoma has materi ally lessened In the last few days. Judge Caples is coming home, and wo shall be reminded that Oregon Is tho brightest spot on "God's green earth." Th.s ha2lng inquiry throws light on ob jects hitherto shrouded in the densest ob scurity. It has found Admiral Dewey. Colonel Watterson says he never heard of the highball, which Is not surprising. They only take It straight In Kentuoky. England will be occupied somewhere in the next W0 years and that somewhere might just as well be South Africa as not. The lightning that-ls playing around the Capitol at Salem finds so many rods erect ed that It Is unable to decide where to light. Dewet keeps right on fighting, just as if he had never heard of the appointment of the new Field Marshal in the British Army. The chances that William Waldorf As tor will be appointed a Customs Inspector, a Postmaster, or & Baronet by the new King are not very bright. As soon as all the cash subscriptions have been received, Editor Bryan will go to Europe, and leave a "sub'' to collect the cabbages and cordwood. A man down in Alabama was killed by lightning while at a telephone. That Is rather a summary way to take a man off, and when his sins are so fresh, too. We may expect the Legislators to come home today and try their best to get tho third house to approve some of tho measures they hope tb pass next week. The asphalt fuss down In Venezuela reminds us of the fuss we had several years ago over the paving of Washing ton street. Everything comes to him who waits for nothing, but nothing comes to him who watts for everything. The foregoing is the resu.t of profound study, and there Is no appeal. It may be delicately possible that abol ishment of, one Circuit Judgeship in Mult nomah County is opposed by lawyers be cause It would remove a goal of ambi tious longing. Mrs. Nation has received an offer to star on the stage In "Ten Nights In a Bar room." One night would be sufficient. Besides that probably would be all the theatrical manager aould stand. Will Pat come under the category of the law whereby a bounty will be given for crow scalps? The next thing needed is a bounty on mosquito scalps. Let not a genius at Salem miss his opportunity. Several of the collages have decided not to bo represented at the inauguration of McKlnley and Roosevelt. It is under stood, however, that the graduates of the Electoral College class of '01 will be pres ent. Senator Simon has asked Senator Mc Brlde to help htm by telegraph in his endeavor to got recognition for the Co lumbia. Does the senior Senator have more influence away from, than at, Wash ington? An American who wa3 sojourning In Spain at the time says that on the very day when Dewey was destroying tha Spanish squadron at Manila a representa tive audience, including some of Spain's bravest and best, were attending a- patri otic bull fight in Madrid, applauding tho words of the famous matador: "With tho ease with whloh I have killed this noblo animal, the bull, will the glorious Spanish Nation uphold the traditions of the past and keep green the laurels of their il lustrious fathers by triumphing over the Yankee pig." The Rev. Mr. Sheldon, of Topeka, has this to say about the evangelical churches in England: "There is more formality there than here. I coAild not get used to this. The pulpits were high and open from the rear. There was a formality about the way the mtnlster Is treated. At one place the sexton and church offi cers wore full dress suits. They met In the vestry and ushered me Into the pulpit. I do not spsak in a critical way of this It Is their form and custom. The sing ing was beautiful. I never heard such singing before In churches as in England and Schotland, unless In Dr. Hillls' church. In Brooklyn. They have only the words, and do not use notes. There was more reverence In the churches. We have a certain Irreverence they have not. I never saw a person whisper In service all the time I was there. And everybody brings a Bible. I wish this were so here." Lapse of the Old 3Ian. Denver Post. Pa ust to go te ehurch an pray An In class meetin' have a say. Had fam'ly wushup ev'ry' night An' tried to raise us beys up right. The preacher called him "Brother Todd," An' said he was a child o Ged 'E'd bin an'inted 'mong the saints. An' cleansed from all his staful taints. An that same preacher ust to be At our house purty frekently To read a chapter o' the "Ward An' pray ontll I bet they heard His supplications flyin 'round Clear to the other end o town. An then he'd stay fur dinner. My. But how he'd make the chleken fly. An praise ma's eookln', an' she'd smile An' on his waltin plate'd pile Mere provender, an' he'd jes" flop His Jaws an never holler "Stop," An never break away ontll He hadn't no more space to All. But, as I was sayin', pa "Was Jes' a Christian up to taw. But since the time he got to be A polertlclan, somehow he Thinks more o gittin' office placd Than of the means o savin graee; Don't never ga to chureh no mere. Nor kneel down on the fam'ly floor "With us around, an' ask the Lord To temper the avengln' sword To us thorn lambs, an' shed the light O' graee upon us day and night. Ma says he's backslid from the fold, That on the throne he's slipped his hold. An" he Is that way 'cause she knows No polertlclan ever goes To heaven, an" she's skeered that ho la founderln' In the sinful sea. But I've a sort o Christian hope He's ylt 4-hangln to a rope. To pull back to the fold again When he has got his fill o' sin; The rope a-bela rather slim For slch a hefty fish as him. But be hangs to It as true as steel He asks a WessUV tvery meal.