THE KOENING OEEGONIAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1900. te regomoit Watered t the PostoJHce -at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial SooJns...i 1601 Easiness office 85? UEVISED SUBSCRIPTIOJT SATES. 33y Stall (postage prepaid), la Advance DtL&y. with Sunday, ptr month.. ........ -..$ 83 OeJly, Sunday excepted, per year.......... " W OaUy. with Sunday, per year 8 00 Eunday, per year ................... ...;.. 2 CO Sne weplcly, per year .. ...... -... 1 M ffhe Weekly, 3 months. ....., .... BO To Qty Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays excepted.J6a Daily, per -week; delivered. Sundays included."20c Xews or discussion Intended Tor publication In JThe Oregonian should be fcfl&refesed Invariably '.Editor The Oregonian," sot to the oame of any Individual, lettera relating to advertisings fubeeriptions or to any 'business matter ahould ce addressed .simply ""The Oregonian." The Oregonian does not buy paeas or staries from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It withoct solicita tion. Ho stamps should be Inclosed for this sub pose. Puget Sound Burean Captain A, Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box 855. .ffiacoma postoffiee. Eastern Business Offlcej-Tbe Tribune building, Kew York city; "TheRookery," Chicago; the B. C Beckwlth special agency. 2?ew York. For tale in aa Francisco toy J. K. Cooper, TiQ Market street, near the Palace liotel, and at Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter street. Fcr sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co,, C1T Dearborn street. TOtfAYS "WEATHER Occasional Tain; brisk to high -winds from south along the coast. yOR.TLA2, STOXX3AT, JAJTUAKY S THE CROMWELL REVIVAL. There is remarkable increase of In terest in the study of Oliver Crom welL His career, like that of Napoleon, Js one of the perennial themes. It is not merely hero -worship; for as a mere Jiero each of these great men and every great man has very sad limitations. EDhe interest arises from perception of the fact that in the modern world the games of Oliver Cromwell and Napo leon Bonaparte stand for popular right jagainst ongarchicairule. And this is true, though Cromwell overturned throne, church and parliament, and be came sole master of the British realmt land though Napoleon Imposed his sin Sift despotic "will -upon nearly the -whole of Europe. Each in his "way stood for Ithe fundamental doctrine that all just powers in the state are derived from She people; and this is the explanation of the career of each, and of the peren nial interest in their careers though 5t he easy to assert and even to prove, upon superficial view and argument, that each was the head or center of as complete a despotism as ever existed. Mr. John Morley, who has had some thing te do hitherto with Cromwell, has turned aside from his task of pre paring the authorized life of Gladstone to a new study of the career of the Great Protector. Recent numbers of the Century Magazine carry the fruits of this new inquiry. In ScrTbner's Mag azine for December Governor Roose "Yelt, of New York, began a series of illustrated papers on Cromwell. Last November a majestic bronze statue was xmveiled in front of "Westminster hall, in memory of the great man to whom partisan animosity had denied such rec ognition in England for the space of two hundred and fifty years. Yet it 5vas as late as 1894 when Samuel Har den Church wrote in his ""Oliver Crom w .11 A History"; "He has no monu ment in England, and he can have none with the sanction of the govern ment, because a monument to Crom well would be an official acknowledg ment of successful rebellion." Move ments of public sentiment often seem slow, and so tihey are In the formation; but in their consummation they are often surprisingly rapid, and it Is not too much to say that, with the excep tion of an extreme tory and high church element in England, -whose numbers comparatively are not large, the mind and conscience of the nation bas gone over to a just view of the life of Oliver Cromwell, and to a clear and broad recognition of his supreme agency in making the British nation and empire what they are today. First of living English historians is Dr. Samuel R, Gardiner. No writer 2ias unfolded the Stuart epoch as he 3ias done in his twenty-odd volumes, or given so comprehensive and impar tial an account of the civil war and the -commonwealth. Tet Dr. Gardiner, in his "Lectures on Cromwell's Place in History," delivers the opinion that the work of Cromwell was not positive, but purely negative, and he holds that mothing that Cromwell did survives liim. This seems a narrow view for o able a man. It shows the tenacity -of old prejudice and traditional opinion. For, while Cromwell's government was unstable, simply as an expedient of the time, and while it was so soon to fade away, his work must endure while merf Inhabit the earth. Queller of parliament as he was, lie yet made the conditions under which parliamentary government could be established and maintained as the government of a free and sejf-governlng people. After Crom- well, there could, be no return in Eng land to the doctrine of the divine right of kings. Above all else, Cromwell de stroyed the dangerous theory of a fun damental union between church and state, whereby the rulers assume the Tight to coerce the consciences of dis senters! and he broke in pieces an ec clesiastical system which promised to be as Intolerant and. tyrannical as that which he had displaced for it was Ms might that made effective Milton's indignant declaration that "New pres byter Is old priest, writ large." It was under the nourishing and zealous care of Oliver Cromwell's government that the absolute freedom of conscience and equality before the law which are so largely the principles of modern civili sation, Wherever they have had their birth, have flourished into healthy and permanent life. "What then if his gov ernment did not last? The throne was, indeed, restored, but the monarchy could not be the same as before. In "Past and Present," Carlyle writes: "Await the issue. In all bat tles If you await the issue, each fighter has prospered according to his right. His right and his might, at the close of the contest, are one and the same. He has fought with all his might and in exact proportion to his right he has prevailed. His very death is no victory over him. He dies, indeed, but his work lives, very truly lives. A heroic "Wallace quartered on the scaffold, can not hinder that his Scotland become, one day, a part of England; but he does hinder that it become on tyran nous, unfair terms a part of it." Again: "Oliver Cromwell (quitted farming; un dertook a Hercules' labor and lifelong Tprrestle with that Lernean hydra-coil, -wide as England hissing' lieaven-high through Its thousand-crowned, coronet- ted, shovel-hatfod quack-heads, and he . did wrestle with It, the truest and ter riblest wrestle I have heard of; and he wrestled It and mowed It and eut it down a good many stages, so that its hissing ever since ias bejen pitiful: In comparison, and one can 'walk abroad, in comparative- peace from It; and -his wages, as I understand, were burial under the gallows tree near Tyburn turnpike, with -his .head on the .gable? of Westminster "hall, and two centu-" rles now of mixed cursing and ridjcule from all manner of men. His dust lies under the Edgeware road, near Tyburn turnpike, at this hour; ad his mem ory Is Nay, what matters what "his memory is? His memory, at bottom, Is or yet shall be that of a god, a ter ror and horror to all quacks and cow ards and insincere persons; an. ever lasting encouragement, new memento, battle-word and pledge of victory to all the brave. Its"the natural eourser and history of the Godlike, In every place. In every time. The regular way is to hang, kill, crucify your gods, and execrate and trample them under your stupid hoofs for a century or two; till you discover they are gods, and then take to braying over them!" "Which seems sufficiently prophetic of the pres ent Cromwell revival I Cromwell's severities in Ireland are sure to come forward with every men tion of his career and character. Ac cording to the "standards of the presentH day they eannot be defended. No writer attempts 1t Such excuse as they can have must be sought in the spirit of the times and In the usages J of war, which continued in their sever ity till long after Cromwell's day. Even Dr. Gardiner admits that the severity of the Protector at Drogneda and Wex ford was strictly la accord with- the law of war as it-stoOd up to the time of "Wellington; and in a footnote he reprints from Wellington's dlsp'atches the statement that "it was always un derstood that the defenders of a for tress could have no claim to quarter," but "the French have availed them selves of tie humanity of modern war fare and have made a new regulation that a breach should stand one assault at least" So he says, regretfully, "The consequence of this regulation was the loss of the flower of the army at Ciu-dad-Rodrigo and Badajoz. I certainly should have thoHght myself justified in putting both armies to the sword; and Jf I had done so to the first, it I Is probable I should have saved 5000 men In the assault on the second. I mention this In order to show that the practice of refusing quarter to a gar rison which stands an assault is not a useless effusion of blood." What Crom well did, then, was the law of war, atrocious as it was when judged by modern standards. He" acted in the spirit of his times, in war, even though he was in many things far in advance of his times; and Wellington admits that he would have done the -same thing In the nineteenth century, but for the law of war having just been changed when his necessity arose. Be sides, according to the morality of that time, the terrible massacres of English and Scotch that had been perpetrated In Ireland a short time before were be lieved to call for vengeance; so Crom well, when, he went to Ireland, said: "We are come to take an account of the innocent blood that hath been shed," in "the most unheard-of and most barbarous massacre." The low est estimate of the victims of these massacres was 40,000 persons. Not yet, nor till long afterward, had the world Tid itself of the idea that .justice required bloody retaliation.. It is as unfair to judge the actors in war in former times by the humanity of the present times as it is to judge the church of today by the unspeakable atrocities perpetrated In its name in former centuries. That is not the way to read history or to use history with any profit. Men at the Jiead of affairs must be expected to act, on the whole, in accord with the spirit of their times. These remarks, begun with the thought of producing only a paragraph, have run to some length. We add only the single remark, that there clearly is deep significance In the new interest which the English-speaking world is taking in the historic mission, charac ter and career of the Great Protector. Who could have supposed he would see the time when a majority of Eng lishmen would join Milton in hailing Cromwell their "chief of men"? WORSE THAJf ROBERTS. It is one of the evidences of the sa gacity with which the United States constitution was framed, that the strict constructionists usually find themselves wrong. When the neces sary and inevitable thing to do seems in conflict with the constitution, there are always those who see in the letter of the law an Inhibition of that neces sary and Inevitable thing. But the pro cession does not stop for them, and in cidentally somebody Indulges the in tellectual diversion of proving them technically as- -well as practically wrong. This is what Senator Lindsay, for one, did for anti-Imperialism's pro test that we cannot conquer and an nex territory. Another Interesting illustration in point is the impatience of certain sound-hearted and ---practical-minded people with ther&efense made by Rob erts, the TJtah claimant in congress. The claimant is disposed to argue his case as a matter of interpretation of written forms, but his opponents ex press a diverting indignation that he seeks to ignore the main point, perhaps the only point, MrT Tayler for es ample, understands It, "wnether or not Roberts is a polygatnlst." But just there's the rub. If he is a polygamist, out he must go, maUger all his fine points about the rights of members and the limitation of the powers of the house, the purposes of the Edmunds' act, the appointments of presidents. It begins to look as if the senate might itself have to take some such short cut to the goal of right. It is certain that the Quay conspiracy and the Clark investigation will develop public opinion to- a point undreamed of months ago, when the foundations of these scandals were being laid, at Har risburg and Helena. The senate is not a popular body. It prides itself upon its distance from the people and its answerableness to nobody. But It will perhaps find itself not so impregnable to the general conscience as it has fan cied. The Montana business and the Pennsylvania iniquity may beget a popular Indignation that will not be so easily Ignored. Which is worse, Roberts or the pair of senatorial claimants? One has transversed the letter of the law, the others have set at defiance no less a thing than popular government Itself. The enthronement of resourceful and J unscrupulous bosslsm that Is Quay. The embodiment of the Idea that the! senate is for the highest bidder that is Clark. It makes no difference that one comes from a 'mining camp, and the other from unworthy descendants of Penn .and Franklin, if there is any degree in the odium, Pennsylvania's fall Is the greater. If Quay and Clark were at the bar of the house, they would be sent home along with Roberts. The senate, from tradition and self-cencelt, Is disposed to make more of written and technical Impediments In the way of what is right and true. This time they may hesitate to Ignore simple justice. The committee's report on the one case and the determination to probe the other to the bottom are hopeful signs. So, also, Is the reflection that unrestrained Clarks and. Quays are the most effect ive possible arguments for eleetion of senators by popular vote. 4 THE TREATMENT OP VAGRANCY. A problem that Is always with us a "by-product," so to speak, of civiliza tion Is found In the above words. Va rious methods have been applied to its solution imprisonment; the bitter pen alty of enforced labor; cheap boarding- houses; missions that supply the gos pel of encouragement and strive to pro mote the gospel of cleanliness; relig ious influences, arid, finally, all failing, the authoritative order to "move on," have all been applied and singly or combined have failed to give a satis factory answer. The great army of the thriftless, the indolent and the desti tute shows no diminution in numbers. The most discouraging feature of the case is that the vagrant, born and bred, is well content with his lowly, degrad ed estate, literally "owing no care, and fearing no ill." A bivouac in his' mal odorous blankets wherever he can find room to spread them has no discomfort for him, and prison means shelter and food during stress or storm. Work is his only dread, and he isian expert in managing it so that it becomes a dread as well to the municipality that im poses it upon him. Maud Ballington Booth, whose name is a synonym for earnest endeavor in the treatment of this moral disease, says: "I cannot see that we have yet found any remedy for vagrancy that will do more than afford temporary re lief." She and her coworkers, as faithv ful, self-denying an army as ever strove persistently to subdue the hosts of evil, have found through experience that the plan of colonizing the idle and the destitute of the cities, with the ex pectation that they will remain per manently in the country and become contented and thrifty, is not practical. Even the houseless wanderers feel iso lated when transferred from their pop ulous haunts in the city to the quiet life of the country, and become gen uinely homesick to return, regardless of their bettered physical and moral condition. It follows that they return to their old life and take it up again, with its squalor and destitution, its shifting and dodging of vagrancy laws, and are relatively happy. City shelters as a scheme for curing vagrancy are equally unsuccessful. Having thoroughly, conscientiously and laboriously tried this plan, Mrs. Booth Says: "I realize that the great pro portion of the lodgers utilize the shel ters for temporary convenience, and that this plan merely relieves and does not effect a permanent cure for va grancy." Summing up the phases of this perplexing question, this compet ent authority says: "The class under consideration, in my judgment, should be treated as individuals, not in bodies. A large proportion of them have known no other manner of living, and have followed In the idle and vicious ways of their parents. Religious advice, In the form of addresses, no matter how forcible or eloquent, has no effect on such people. They are too deadened to realize its meaning. Only individual effort will benefit them." In the light of this advice and the experience upon which it is based, the waste in money and energy that has ensued from the attempt to lift vag rants as a class in urban community life out of the idleness and squalor in which they prefer to pass their lives, is appalling. The effort to give them something they do not want and can not appreciate must, in the very na ture of things, represent mistaken en deavor and Tesult in disappointment. The best, apparently, that can be done is to keep the vagrant class on the move, thus equalizing to some extent the expense which they entail upon thrift and industry, without increasing the menace which their existence en tails upon organized society. This method, though at variance with the principle of the Golden Rule, is the general resort of municipalities the au thorities of which have found it utterly Impossible to solve the problem of va grancy and have felt compelled in self defense to accept this means for tem porary relief. SMAI.li HOPE OP ABATEMENT. The melancholy reflection whieh al ways follows discussion of the gross abuse of our pension legislation is that things are likely to be far worse be fore they are better. The pension roll today demands an annual appropria tion of over $140,000,000, with the pros-J pect that it will reach $200,000,000 be fore its Increase is Anally checked. Of the 25,000 Spanish war pension claims already filed, most of them are sub mitted under that calamitous law of 1590," which never ought to have been enacted and ought to be repealed or at least radically amended. If the 25, 000 Spanish war claims alread3- filed under this act are all allowed it would mean probably an addition of at least $3,000,000 to our pension expenditure. Ultimately probably ninety per cent of all oUr volunteer army enlisted for the Spanish war will be borne on the pen sion roll, but this is not all. The worst prospect before us is the passage at no very distant period of a service pension to every Union vet eran. This measure was advocated by General Alger when the G. A. R. met in national encampment at Boston a few years ago, and he carried the ma jority of his comrades with him. Log ically It is not easy to see how con gress can refuse to pass such an act in face of the utterly 'indefensible act of 1S87, granting a service pension to all survivors of the Mexican war who had served sixty days in Mexico or en route thereto. With this ugly precedent of a service pension for Mexican war vet erans it is folly to expect that the vicious disabilities pension law of 1890 will ever be disturbed; it is far more likely to be supplemented within ten years by a service pension to Union veterans This worst of all our pen- slon acts, the Mexican war service pen sion swindle, has the solid South be Tilnd -it. It 'was devlsted W the demo cratic party and was enacted under j President Cleveland. Even the repub lican party shrank from the enactment of the very dangerous precedent of a general service penBlon bill, but Grover Cleveland signed it, hvpiteof his rec ord as a pension reformer. There is small prospect that any of the present pension acts will be repealed. Revision of the lists without radical recasting of the present pension laws would probably not greatly reduce the roll; but the publication of the pension roll might drive some well-to-do pensioners into surrendering their pensions. Pres ident Cleveland's evil pension act of 1887 will probably bear fruit at no dis tant day in another service pension bill. The position of The Oregonian Is to day what It has always been, that no man should receive from the govern ment a pension to which he cannot Bhow a moral title of poverty or disa bility that compels dependency. But under our pension laws, a rich man is allowed to establish a technical right. to a pension for wounds in battle or Inability through age or Infirmity to support himself by manual labor, while in all moral equity the people ought not to be taxed to pay a pension for wounds 6r disability to a veteran am ply able to support himself and his family. There are some kinds of serv ice that cannot be paid for; there are some favors like the kiss of true love, that no money can buy and for which no money can be offered or accepted on either side. The Intent of pension leg islation, its spirit, is not that of a bounty. It is clearly intended to ex tend help to those veterans who need help, either at present or are likely to need It in the near future. It was never expected that a rich man would claim a pension, for his situation is not that of either present or prospect ive dependency. The sordid disposition to accept help from the government that In principle and in spirit was nev er intended to be sought for save by the helpless, has not only brought such veterans Into just contempt as para sites with the people, but, what is far more deplorable, has brought indirectly into disrepute and contempt the whole mass of Union veterans, who inevitably suffer something by the satire deserv edly shot at these black sheep. Up to conclusion of the year 1863 the battles of the Union were fought by the million of men which Lincoln ob tained by volunteering, men who en listed for nothing but the small month ly pay and the 'government bounty of $100. The enforcement of the draft be gan in July, 1863, and the clause of the conscription act which permitted j the famishment of a substitute cre ated a class o' mercenaries who re ceived enormous bounties from towns short of their quota and from drafted men financially able to bid for substi tutes. The result was that between October IT, 1863, and February 4, 1S64, there were furnished over 369,000 of this quality of eleventh-hour patriots. Un der the call of March, 1864, we secured over 292,000 of these bounty-"seeking and bounty-jumping mercenaries. We mus tered into service for 100 days over 83, 000 militia, who were never on the fir ing line. Under 'the call of July, 1864, we obtained over 386,000 men; and un der the call of December, 1864, over 212,000 men, Then there were nearly 186,009 colored troops enlisted during the war; there were over 106,000 three months' men, few of whom ever stood on the firing line; there were nearly 88,000 nine-months' men, the majority of whom saw little or no service, be tween October, 1862, and July, 1863. There were a few nine-months' men who fought well in the Chancellorsvllle campaign and at Gettysburg, but for the most part they never saw the firing line. Then there were o'ver 16,000 six months' men who never saw any field service. These figures indicate that un less we believe in the theory that of the Union, veterans none but the fittest have survived, there must be a deal of very worthless trash on the pension roll today. J. W. Cook has given substantial aid to the project to establish a technical and industrial school by the donation of seven acres in a high and sightly part of Alblna as a site. The. location is not only within a city that is coming into industrial prominence, but is with- f in easy distance of industry Itself. Close by, so close that the hum of the machinery can be heard, are some of the principal manufacturing establish ments of Portland. Almost at the base of the rise on which It is proposed to build the institution flows the Willam ette river, always alive with Portland foreign, domestic and inland commerce. Mr. Cook wisely makes it a condition of his gift that distinction of race, color or religion shall have no place In the school. His observation that the best citizens are those from whom racial, religious and color prejudice Is absent is worthy Of a patriotic American. The industrial school project has been given a healthy start, and should now be taken up by public-spirited people and pushed to completion. "It is said that Napoleon was inor dinately fond of fried onfohs. This statement throwB a new light on why he was banished to a lonely Island." Thus the Kansas City Tlmtes. But there's no joke about this. After the great battle at Dresden, where he had won a triumph that dismayed his ene mies, Napoleon had for his dinner a shoulder of mutton stuffed with onions. It gave him an acute Indigestion and made him so violently ill that he was unable to direct operations for support of. his lieutenants, who in the absence of orders failed to co-operate and were crushed in detail. It is the belief of many that the course of the history I or1 Europe was changed by that Indi gestible meal. It will make little or no difference, in Great Britain's future wars with pow erful enemies, what course she takes now as to contraband of war. If she allow now that foodstuffs are not con traband, her enemies in future wars will not be bound by the precedent, if they believe they can starve her out by intercepting her food supply. She may as well go ahead, then, with her seizures of provisions destined to the Boer states. In her future wars her enemies will stop her importations of food, if they can. The Oregonian Is asked whether it has considered that free sugar from West and East InSIa is to be a coh sequence of the policy of expansion, and the result on b'eet-sugar produc- 1 tion In the United States. It has; and it thinks that even If sugar should oe- cbme cheaper, which perhaps would be realized after a while, the consumers of sugar that Is to say, the whole popu lation of the U.nlted States would find a way to stand it. Political trouble Is brewing in Ken tucky; civil war perhaps, for there Is every probability that an effort will be made to put Taylor out of the govern or's office and to put Goebel into it. But people of other states may as well refrain from hot controversy over it. j Kentucky no doubt will be able to see it through. Her quotas in both armies were kept full during the civil war, and everything turned out well enough. As to expansion and consent of the governed, the Florida Times-Union says: "Senator Hoar stands today where Southern statesmen stood in 1860, and President McKinley where Jefferson stood in 1804." In which re mark lies much truth. It is settled that our government Will not tender Its services as mediator be tween the belligerents in South Africa, unless both parties Intimate a desire or willingness that It should do so. Till then we shall do well to mind our own business. From the accounts of the war in South Africa it would seem that the British, not the Boers, were In need of the sympathy of mankind. THAT QUESTION OF TREASON. Hold That It Was Settled by the Pol icy of Reconstruction. Florida Times-Union and Citizen. The article in the current McClure's on the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson con tains an admission of vital interest to the South, which has attracted no special at tention, so far as we have observed. The impeachment proceedings marked a divi sion In the republican party and the tri umph of legal technicalities with which we have nothing to do, but Congressrnan George S. Boutwell, who was selected as chairman of the managers o the proceed ings, says in the article: "The controver sy with Mr. Johnson had Its origin in tho difference of opinion as to the nature of the government. That difference led him to the conclusion that the rebelllonhad not worked any change in the legal rela tions of the seceding states to the na tional government. His motto was this: 'Once a state, always a. state, whatever might be its conduct, either of peace or war.' " The republican party naturally took the opposite ground that the South was con quered territory; Mr. Stevens held the Southern states were "enemy's territory" Mr. Sumner that the states by surrender became territories subject as such to the government of congress, as if they had been annexed from Mexico or Canada. Under Mr. Johnson's conception, a state could not secede, and could not levy legal War on the nation therefore Davis and Lee were traitors. But several states re served the right to secede when they en tered the Union Massachusetts declared that the annexation of Louisiana was a breach of the original compact, and there after any state could withdraw. This view was accepted by the nation Davis and Lee were not punished because their states had Seceded, and they had only obeyed legal authority. Therefore, the war between the states was held by the republican party itself xo have been no rebellion, nor civil war, but a struggle between sovereign powers, each fully capable In law of governing Itself In peace and war. Therefore, the Southern states must re turn as territories, and did, but this put a negative forever on any possible charge Of treason it established forever the claim of Southern statesmen that a slate had a legal and moral right td withdraw from the Union at its option, and It should have left the two peoples without more bitter ness than is inevitable between foreign nations that have fought each other fairly to the death. The article of Mr. Boutwell Is the first authoritative expression of this Ylew from the other side, and, therefore, is important historians and teachers should immediately govern themselves ac cordingly. By the decision of the high court of Impeachment, as well as by the supreme court of the United States, wo may now conclude that this view 1s the legal and accepted one. i i . o 1900. New Tork Sun. Dec. 31. At midnight of tonight, the close of the year 1S90, there will begin a special function in the Cathedral of St. Patrick, to usher in the year 1900, declared by the pope a holy year, a year of jubilee. As many people have acquired the erroneous impression that the universal decree ap pointing the celebration gave the authority of the Vatican for regarding the coming year as the first of a new century, tne 20th, we will reprint here the portion o the text that touches that point: It to moat becoming that xve -who are about to celebrate the commencemsJit of the holy year, happily proclaimed by our Holy Father Leo XIII, should. In the depth of night, rise to greet the author of time and prostrate before his altars. Since, moreover, at midnight oi the last day of December of the coming year the present fbentury will come to an end and a new one begin, It la Very appropriate that thanks be given to God, by some pious and solemn cere mony, for the benefits recelvdd daring thb courts of the present cfentury. The decree goes on to say that the mass tonight is to be celebrated "fn order that the approaching year, 1900, may begin happily," and "that it may end, after a prosperous course, by ushering In a stilt mors happy century," The time for expressing gratitude for tho century wo still live in and hope for the century to come is not, therefore, in. the Roman Catholic church limited to a night, but is spread over a whole year, 1900, the last year of the 19th century. 4 0 1 Discourtesy, Isn't ItX. Boston Transcript. What an astounding and enlightening piece of news is this that Congressman Boutelle has been located! It has been a long and breathless chase for the reporters, but they have hounded the sick man down at last In spite of all the barriers thrown up by his family to preserve their right to privacy, and in -spite of the refusal of the physicians employed to divulge profes sional secrets! This information reveals a combination of news gathering, detectivo instinct and absolute lack of delicacy of feeling that 1b an up-to-date triumph in deed! If Congressman 38outello had never held public office, and never done anything to bring him a measure of fame, he might now, in his helpless days of suffering, be allowed to spend them in a different man ner than by dodging as for his life a paper chase of athletic reporters. Supposing him to be in heaven's mercy oblivious of it all, his family might at least be guaranteed that sympathetic and charitable letting alone that is at times one of the most precious gifts in the bestowal of frlend3. Lack of courtesy at the hands of those who would be disseminators of news pub lic meh have always experienced and prob ably always will, to a certain extent, but in a case of this kind making the family of the prominent one to suffer unwarrant ably and unnecessarily, Is nothing short of ruffianism, and stupid ruffianism at that. d 0 ICKBon Rrom the Charleston's Loss. Washington correspondent, Philadelphia Ledger. The loss of tho Charleston has set in operation on all the vessels In the Philip pine fleet a systematic charting of sounds ings in all waters that are suspected. The reefs around the Northern Philippine Islands are all volcanic, and the navigator has no warning nor means of Informing himself of their proximity. The Charles ton, acccbrding to the official reports, was one minute making headway in a roung ea, 400 feet deep. The next she had run one-third her length on a flat reef where the depth of the water was but 16 feeL This mountain'top, for that la what these volcanic reefs are fcr tho most part, was uncharted, and two miles from the near est charted shore. The Spanish have not been as good sailors in the 19th century a& In previous history, and their charts are grievously defective. To send our splendid cruisers over to the Philippines to do patrol duty close in shore is a risk that seems suicidal. The officers of the fleer, in their official reports, do not hesi tate to criticize Admiral Deweys course in sending more fine shlpa over there. Now every cruiser sent on patrol duty feels her way along, making records of soundings. By this course Intelligent and trustworthy charts will soon be provided and the dan ger reduced. In especially bad and sus picious water they put their boats out well ahead of the ship. The naval authorities agree that around the large islands of the Philippines lie some of the most danger ous coasts in the world. When Captain Wilde, of the Oregon, was ordered by Ad miral Watson to go on patrol duty In Cebu, on an almost uncharted coast, he made a protest in writing, which the admiral re spected, and the ship went to Lingayen gulf. A large amount of patrol work is done by launches, but there Is a scarcity of these boats in ManHa, and the navy buy3 as fast as it can those that are of fered in Hong Kong. This patrol system Is just at this time a feature of the service, which is much needed, and is receiving constant attention from the department. i B ' The Kind SIcKlnley "TaUes Care Of." Boston Herald. The United States has been recently again humiliated through one of Its for eign ministers. One W. Godfrey Hun ter, of Kentucky, represents the country In Guatemala. The wife of the Britlsn representative there gave a reception to which Minister Hunter was not lnvitea. The attempt was then made to convert this omission into a national affront, but it turned out that the character of Min ister Hunter was so objectionable that this English lady refused to receive him. Further inquiry developed that ha was odious to United States residents of this Central American capital as well, ana that they had almost In a body petitioned our government for his recall. This man Hunter had been" the republican candi date for United States senator in Ken tucky, but was detected in having given a private pledge to a populist member of the legislature of that state to support free silver as the price of his vote. This ex posure lost Hunter the election. He then appeared; at Washington, soliciting on ol fice from the administration, and recelvea it in the place at Guatemala, with the re sults that we have above noted. "Widely Extended Operations. The wide field covered by the Ameri can operations in Luzon Is shown by re cent events. Aguinaldo's wife and sev eral, rebel officers were captured at Bon toc, 253 miles north of Manila, and 150 prisoners ancL four rapid-fire guns were captured at Cabuyao, 67 miles south of Manila. The northern provinces having been cleared of armed rebels, the Ameri can troops are moving on the rebel forces in the provinces of Cavite and Laguna, south of Manila. In this last campaign against the rebels, the American troops are moving from Laguna de Bay on the east as well as from, the north. Cavite Is Aguinaldos native province, and It haij been the boast of the rebels that they would make their last stand In the rougn lands of their leader's home province. This plan has suited General Otis, because It has enabled him to aim tho last blow at the rebellion without sending his troops to distant provinces. i) c t i "When the Last Centnry Ended. Here Is a curiosity. A correspondent of the Boston Transcript writes: In reading Scott's "Life of Dryden." published in. 1S08 I .have just, happened upon a paragraph which seems almost too good to lose at this date. Scott says that Dryden was asked to write a masque tor the Drury Lane theater, adapted to the termination of tho 17th century, and adca the following note: "Upon the 25th March, 1700, It being sup posed (as Jby many In our own time) that the century was concluded so soon as tho hundredth year commenced as- if a play was ended at the beginning of the flftn act." 4 0 Lest We Forxret. Chicago Journal. The enormous benefactions of a Rocke feller, a Carnegie, a Pierpoht Morgan, the Stanford, or the Crocker estate, do not excuse nor should they blind the people to the methods by which the millions from which these gratuities are subtract ed were rolled up. Robin Hood, history tells us, dispensed his booty among the poor. Incidentally, it may be noted that some of these later freebooters have re versed the process and distributed among institutions Intended for the use of the rich or comfortable classes the largess forcibly collected from the poor. A Corurressman's Idea. Congressman BIbley In St. Louis Olobe-Demo-crat. "It has cost the people of the United States millions of dollars to have that roll called in the house of representa tives, and I hope to see the day when a man can sit at his seat in the house and press a button which will record his vote at the clerk's desk; when the votes will be added automatically, so that the speaker cah announce the result five min utes after the question has been put. It would cost us only $2500 or so, and it would simplify the work of the house a great deal." a o Great Britain's Trial. Boston Transcript. Great Britain's prestige will be greatly lowered if she does not bring the war to a triumphant conclusion. Her future may and probably will invite a long series or annoyances, Jf not assaults, from jealous Continental powers. The British race would be more than ever on trial for Its Imperial life, and it is a race that haa never yet shrunk from a fair field. 1 ' ti B Fine Point, Bnt Well Taken. Boston Herald. One of the fin points made by Mr. Godkin, In his reminiscences, Is his re mark that we have got Into a way ot taking material prosperity for good gov ernment, a delusion of which the bosses take advantage, and which, to most men, Is the sweetest delusion possible. There is no such fosterer of indifference to poli tics as a good bank account. i a The Chccrfnl Idiot. " Indianapolis Press. "Then the heroine," said the youngest boarder, who has a habit of telling about the stories he reads, "discovers that her idol has feet of clay." "And after that, of course, his name Is mud," said the Cheerful Jdiot. A Forest for Tea Chests. A large Glasgow (Scotland) tea chest company has purchased lO.CoO acres of forest land lit North Carolina, with 73, 006,000 feet of stumpage, to use the lum ber for venefiring of tea chests. A fac tory to prepare it will be built at Wil mington. 3 i Hainbnrc's Trolley Lines. Hamburg, Germany's first seaport, has adopted the American overhead trolley on its street lines. Eighty German cities are supplied with electric railways, and American appliances are admitted to be beyond comparison the best. 10 1 Sensitive Ah out Seclns Ghosts. New Tork Tribune. Mr. Edward Atkinson has written a let ter in reply to General Lawton's dy:ns message, which suggests that he is sensi tive about seeing ghosts. Note Am comment. Taking Aruinaldo for all in. -all, wi never shall look upon Mb Ilka again w hope. It looks now as lf It might turn out that the best British general will b French. Perhaps that cannon Is delaying Its ar rival In Portland, because It knows it will be bored when It gets here. Prisoners having grown scarce on tha firing line, the Boers are now trying ta get a few out of their corral. "Sometimes I find," observed the foot pad, "that in order to hold a man up It Is necessary to hold him down." "I've just finished my 20th century run," said the scorcher. And now he Is wonder ing why they set upon and beat hlra. Quay and Agulnaldo would be a team of presidential candidates which would at least have the approval of Senator Hoar. Perhaps now the Boers are anxious to get the blacks to fight for them, they will condescend to allow them to walk on the same side of the street. They say that when Aguinaldo's wife was t61d that the United States troops were coming' and would be right on her in a minute, she exclaimed: "Goodness! Is my hat on- straight!" Birds a alngln' In the trees. Sun a-ehlnln la the sky. People -wearia summer clo'eai Just the -weather for July. "Wind a-howlla roun' the roof, Drlvln eheet3 o' dnnchia rain, Slty a-lookln cold an Cray, People chasln heme again. Summer, winter, spring- an fall. Chunks o March, and chunk3 o Mayj Chasln one another past. All to Portland ysterda. A young woman of Portland, who takes a general interest In the welfare of babies, thinks the new style baby-carrlagesv with two little wheels In front, are not fit to trundle young babies about the streets in. These babies, she says, have little or no backbone, and should not be expected to sit bolt upright, as they have to In these little trundle carts. A strap in front holds the little one in, and over this strap the tired babe throws its whole weight, while the thoughtless nurse feebly realizes the torture the little one Is subjected to. Cheap and rapid transit and a 25-cent rate between this city and "Vancouver and Oregon City have practically made those cities suburbs of Portland, and enabled the women of Portland to place their friends In Oregon City and "Vancouver on their calling lists, and calls are inter changed regularly. NOW Astoria has been added to tho list of suburbs of Portland, and the women of Portland have placed the names of their friends in Astoria on their calling lists, and vice versa, and calls are regularly Interchanged, the dis tance of 100 miles cutting no figure while the fare is only 25 cents. Portland police have been reporting very few Infractions of tha laws by wheelmen this winter, and the sidewalk scorcher is said to have well nigh disappeared. This welcome change Is not due to any serious punishment inflicted on the bike riders, but rather to a sober judgment on the port of the wheelmen themselves. Early In the season the police stopped a good many scorchers and "read them the riot aqt," and the3elittlelectures, It is thought, have been productive of considerable good. Occa sionally some youth who does not realize his own danger Is caught riding the side walks at night without a light, but he always promises to behave better in fu ture, and most of them keep their word. Municipal Judge Hennessy Is still holding down that ?40 throne which he purchased on his own responsibility without author ity from tho committee on health and police. The furniture-dealer declines to exchange the chair for a cheaper one. and the committee has not ordered it paid for, and the judge is becoming so tired of the situation that even the softly-cushioned chair falls to rest blm. If the committee does not pay for the chair before long tho judge will pay for It himself. If he Is re-elected he can afford the luxury, and if not he will keep It as a souvenir of his judgeship. It would not be out of place for some of tha religious fortune-tellers who were upheld by the judge to make him a present of the chair. A citizen who lately returned from Ros land, B. C, and who chanced to bring along a number of Canadian silver coins in his pocket, complains of the discount made on them here. He says that in Spo kane and the Sound cities these coins pass at their par value, as does Ainerican silver on the Canadian side of tho boundary. Banks here discount Canadian bills 1 or 2 per cent, but a much greater discount Is made on silver, and a Canadian quarter passes hero for only 20 cents, a discount of 20 per cent, which Is outrageous. Of course, anywhere along the boundary line the silver coins of both countries pass on an equal footing, for there is very little difference in their value, and people keep crossing back and forth across the boun dary. Portland is so far from the boun dary line that it costs something to send bank notes or silver across the line and get American money in exchange. Ameri can money being worth a little more than the Canadian coins of the same denomina tion, pass freely on the British side of tfhe boundary line, but it would be well, in order to save loss and annoyance, for persons coming over the line into the United States to leave the Canadian money behind. A wonderful adjustable gunstock, which can bo arranged in a moment to fit the tallest man or the shortest boy has been Mnvented by O. O. Scripture, of Prescott, Ariz., and the Journal, of that town, gives it a highly commendatory notice. It is usually difficult fcr ordinary people to un derstand such Inventions, but the expra nation the Journal gives of this one Is so lucid that he who runs may read, and ne who never fired a shot may understand. Without entering into a detailed explana tion of the invention, the following in re gard to one of the points covered by the; patent is given for the Information oJ those interested in such things: The combination with the butt section or rear section havlnsr a concavity at Its forward end, of the barrel" section or front section having a convex rear end to fit the concavity ot the butt section, said convex and concave faces belnff formed with teeth adapted to interlock, a trans versa pivot in the barrel section, a connecting1 rod mounted on said pivot directly and extend ing rearwardly through the butt section, the rear end of said rod being ecrew-threaded. and a nut held to revolve on the butt section and screwing on the rear end of the connecting rod. Some may imagine that It would bo cheaper and less troublesome to have a patent, double back-action toggle joint put on one's neck to make It fit any kind of a gunstock. and the Invention Is open to this objection, but those who Imagine that their heads are put on right can patronize the adjustable gunstock.