i.jwv r' THE MORNING OEEGONIAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1900. Dh v$&onian I Entered at the:EDstotlicl-Eortland. Oregon, as sct3na-ctoss mnutr. Editorial Rooms. ... 166 Business Office... .067 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION- RATES. Rir Mail rrxvjtJipv yvrenalill. In. Advance Dai y, with Sunday, per month..... $0 85 Diu.y, Sunday excepted, per year. 60 i Da., -with Sunoay. per year. 00 iSunoaj, per year - The Weekly, per year...... 1 o jThe "Weekly, 3 months.. DaJy, per week.-aeUvered, Sundays excepteL15c x&u, per -week, aeuverea, sunaaje inauucu..vii News or discussion Intended for publication In I The Oregonian should be addressed Invariably i "Editor The Oregonian not to the name oi Lany lndhldual. Ttters relating to advertising. BUbecrlptlons or to any business matter should I be auuressed s'mply "The Oregonian.' The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn anj manuscripts sent to It -without soliclta- I tlon. Uo stamps should be Inclosed for this ! purpose. Paget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, i offloe at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 055, i Taooma postoffice. Eastern Business Office The Tribune build ing, New Tork city; "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special agency, New York. For eale In San Francisco by -J. K. Cooper, 746 Market street, near the Palace hotel, and at Goldsmith Bros., 23C Sutter street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, cloudy In after- jsoon. southeast winds. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25 TRADE "WITH SIBERIA. ' Count CassinI, the Russian ambassa dor at "Washington, tells the corre spondent of the Boston Herald that there are as great opportunities for American industry and trade In Siberia as In China, if not greater. Yesterday's Oregonian, in its shipping columns, had a very favorable account of present and prospective commerce between Portland and Siberian ports. What Siberia -w ill want from us is indicated fcy the cargoes already shipped, name ly: Lumber, flour, provisions, feed and Jtrults. Our Eastern states are filling for Siberian shipment enormous orders of steel rails, locomotives and miscel laneous machinery. Mining, in vari ous parts of that vast country, will, it is believed, soon have very extensive I development. Count CassinI says that Siberia is i eo.ua! in area to Canada and the United States, and he adds that the country offers the most alluring inducement to capital to assist in its development. It jnust, however, be remembered that so ivast a proportion of the country lies ; Within the frozen circle that no devel ; or ment like that which has taken place I in the United States and Canada will ever he witnessed there; though doubt- lless localities will be found as favora ble to development as even the best parts of Canada. Of course, the resem blance between large part of Siberia and the great northern portions of Can ada iS very close,, and no large popu lation can ever exist in either. To what extent Siberia may become a w heatgrowlng country Is yet a mat ter of conjecture, and therefore of dis pute. It seems probable, however, that Siberia at some time not distant will begin to contribute considerable quan tities of wheat and barley to the out side world. This, if it prove true, will interfere with our shipments of cereals, tut it is probable that increasing ship ments of lumber will be steadily want- : ed. Yet it is admitted by Count Cas- Blni that while encouragement is now freely offered to American enterprise and to importations from America, these privileges are likely to hold good only until such time as the Husslans in Siberia are prepared to undertake in earnest the industrial development of the country. ""Open door ' privileges then w ill probably be withdrawn. This statement, from such a source, may suggest to us that we should not bank too heavily on the permanence of Si berian trade; for we shall probably see the time when Siberia will apply the doctrine of protective tariff in a very rigorous way. The Russian minister indeed is entirely frank about this; hence his statement that there are at present great opportunities of trade wAh Siberia which the United States ought to Improve Is subject to a some what discouraging limitation. But he says our people ought to go there, take leading part in the industrial develop ment of the country and get the bene fits of the protective policylhat is to c me. This invitation is -not alluring encugh to attract much attention in America unless there should be great gcid discoveries, and perhaps not then. fr the Russian government might be expected to outdo even the masterful policy of Uncle Paul Kruger, in absorp tion of the proceeds of the mines. It is British policy alone that sup ports open trade in Asia that is, Great Britain alone, of Old World nations, stands for the "open door" in Asia that is essential to the Pacific commerce of the United States. Of Russian exclu slveness we have, indeed, no right to ceir plain, since the like policy has long been our own. But it will not be ad vantageous to us to find, as the out- ccme of changes now going on in Asia, Russian policy ascendant there. An analysis of the Russian budget for 1900, made by the New York Journal of Commerce, shows that the ordinary and extraordinary expenses are esti mated at $905,006,000, or"$7,000,000 less than in 1898, and the ordinary and ex traordinary receipts are $822,000,000, maldng a deficit of nearly $83,000,000. This is an advance over 1898, when the deficit was $51,262,457. As the famine grews and much of the Siberian rail way will need to be rebuilt, owing to defective material and bad location, the deficit estimated for 1900 will, in the Journal's opinion, be largely exceeded. Hence the indisposition of capitalists to lend more money to the czar's gov errment, the idea being that the Rus sian debt is already heavier than Rus sia can safety bear. M. Witte, the finance minister, attributes the mone tary stringency and difficulty he en- c unters in getting money to a general apprehension of war, which, he thinks, would not exist if other governments shared the czar's pacific sentiments. M, Witte has personally done much to counteract the ambitious schemes of the military element in Russia. He is a friend of peace and orderly finance. He is probably aware, though he can not say so, that Russia's enormous armaments are the cause largely of Europe being today an armed camp. If the pacific sentimenisf.of the czarf" says the Journal, very correctly, "would cn-y restrain Russia from adding to its already large forces in a locality where they menace China and Japan, and from pressing forward its slow absorption of Persia and from threat ening Afghanistan, they would have very much greater value for the world at large. Nothing would so much pro mote the peace of the world as a sub stantial indication that Russia had sus pended for a time her policy of expan sion in every part of Asia, from the Bosphorus eastward, and in the Balkan peninsula, where she cannot expand without menacing Austria and the whole Mediterranean region." A STAGE IN SELF-GOVERN3IENT. A serious5 proposal" in "congress that federal judges shall hereafter be elec tive Instead of appointive leads on to many speculations. The proposal Is sufllciently sure of rejection to excite no alarm, but it may serve to remind us that popular government is a thing of slow growth rather than an act of special creation. It is a process in which we are moving towards a goal yet unreached, in as true a sense as the Cubans are, or the Filipinos. We are in advance of them, but we are not at the end of the journey, at the sum mit of the ascent. When the constitution of the United States was adopted, it became a mat ter for careful consideration how far the American people had advanced on the way of self-government. Upon the answer to this question the grand old statesmen of that day divided. Some, like Jefferson and Wilson of Pennsyl vania, had almost unlimited faith In the capacity of the masses for self-government. Others, like Hamilton and Mor ris, distrusted them. Some wrere for lodging powers in president and con gress that would permit little popular Interference; others were for the wid est possible application of popular sov ereignty. We know, without looking, what the result of such differences inevitably must have been. It was a compromise. The people could elect representatives to the lower house of congress, but they were not trusted with election of the president. They could not elect the senators, as this was a very important matter involving all executive appoint ments to office and all treaties with foreign powers. Between the people and the senate were interposed the legisla tures, and between the people and the presidency was interposed the electoral college, which was created for no other purpose than to serve as a buffer be tween popular feeling and the moment ous responsibilities of the presidency. Time has shown us that the people can be trusted to elect the president. Half the truth would doubtless be that the aristocrats of 1787 were too distrust ful of the people, but the other half Is that the people of today are more fit for self-government than those of Washington's time, when a popular vote might have resulted against the war for independence. Time now be gins to show us that the people can also be trusted to elect the senators. Their fitness in this respect seems to be the subject of general conviction among thinking men today, and the realization only waits upon removal of obstacles set in the way by red tape and political machines. As to the judiciary, however, progress has not been so rapid. It was recog nized at once, when our government and the separate states themselves were formed, that the masses of the American people could not at that time be trusted to select courts that were to interpret laws. It Is only in the most highly trained community that discre tion can be guaranteed to withstand the appeals of demagogy and the arts of popularity. Clamor might remove the just judge and elevate the unjust. Progress has been made, and now it has become the rule rather than other wise for state judiciary to be elective instead of appointive. Public opinion has been enlightened to the importance and profit of continuing good judges in office. In every community the names of elected judges in supreme and circuit courts, retained till death or honored retirement, are household words. In these narrow local circles, where char acter and attainments of incumbents can be known of all, popular control of the judiciary can be relied upon to an extent that is manifestly impossi ble in wider political subdivisions, where votes are controlled by partisan impulses. Whenever the day comes that the masses can bo depended upon to select the judiciary with care, and con tinue judges during life or good behav ior with the same certainty that now obtains under appointment, the change will be made. There will be no resist ing it. These interesting phenomena of race development are instructive to all who realize that human institutions, self government among them, are products of slow evolution from rude beginnings up to a beautiful, harmonious prime. They have no concern or value to those who hold that self-governing communi ties are miraculously born, complete in stature and mature in powers, from the womb of time. They are unintelligible to those who hold that a congeries of semi-civilized tribes in the Philippines can, through a form of special crea tion, be made a republic by simple bestowal of a name. GENERAL BULLER'S 3IOVEMENT. General Buller's movement against the Boer army on the line of the Tugela river is reported to have to come to a halt, even as that of General Methuen did after crossing the Modder river and suffering severe- repulse In attacking the enemy's intrenched line at Magers fonteln. This movement was really be gun on the 11th inst., when a British mounted brigade seized the Springfield bridge and Potgleter's "drift. On the 16th inst. a British brigade crossed Potgleter's drift in the evening, and the remainder of the column crossed the next day. The British met with little or no opposition from the Boers in their passage of the Tugela river, the latter retiring about five miles from the river to positions already fortified or easlly"intrenched. Gfeneral Buller's forces consisted of General Warren's division, on the extreme left, which crossed the Tugela river at Trichard's drift, about six miles west of Potgle ter's drift, where Lyttleton's brigade had crossed, followed by Hllyard's at the Springfield bridge. . This turning movement ot General Buller's, directed against the Boer right, flank, wras sound strategy. General Buller planned to have General War ren's division envelop the right of the Boer position while they were at tacked in front by the brigades that crossed at Potgleter's drift. The plan was sound and prudent, and probably would have been successful If executed by infantry against infantry, but, exe cuted by infantry against equally well armed mounted infantry, it was fore doomed to difficulty if not to failure. The Boers offered no serious resist ance to General Buller's advance across the Tugela, because their tactics were to remain on the defensive In positions already selected, and from which in case of defeat they could fall back on the forces south of Ladysmlth for sup port. The Boers have made just resist ance enqugh to allow them to concen trate their forces at the critical point of attack, and there they have stopped, leaving General Buller the gloomy al ternative of making a hopeless frontal attack or of beginning his flanking operation all over again. General Puller has done as well vas p6Ssible for a "man whp undertakes to turn an enemy out of a? position that is at least as well armed as he is, and presents a front of Intrenched mounted infantry against his army of infantry supported by not more than 3000 mounted men. General Buller has been sensible and prudent, but the British will never win in Africa until they have a mounted force of 25,000 British Cape Colonists, as well mounted and as well armed as- the Boers. Given equal arms and equal steadfastness under fire, and superior mobility will win the day every time. The Englishman is a brave man, but he cannot expect to beat an intrenched army of mounted men equally well armed with himself, with an army of Infantry not greatly supe rior In numbers. BURNS. Tonight our Scottish fellow-cltlzens will celebrate the memory of Burns. No other Christian people on the globe cherish the memory of any poet as do the Scotch that of Burns. England has no national poet whose memory is pas sionately reverenced by both peer and peasant. America's nearest approach to such a poet Is Whittler, who fed his young poetic impulses chiefly on Burns. Ireland did not find a true national bard in Moore, who was a bit of a tuft hunter, which Burns never was, either in his days of transient sunshine or his last years of degradation and sorrow. The truth Is that while Burns is easily Scotland's greatest poet, he is loved' and worshiped by his countrymen not so much for his poetic genius as for the fact that his muse was so Intensely Scotch. If Burns had devoted his great powers to the celebration of high poetic themes that were not essentially in stinct with the provincial life and color of Scottish history, social habits and traditions, he would not be the pet poet of the Scottish people today, any more than Pope or Gray or Cowper or Wordsworth or Tennyson Is peculiarly dear to the heart of the whole Eng lish people. It was because Burns was a great Scotchman, who from first to last always worshiped Scotland, that all Scotchmen worship the memory of Burns. The Scotch are an intensely intel lectual people, but they are not pecul iarly a poetlc-mlnded race. Many Eng lishmen and Americans are more en thusiastic admirers of the astonishing versatility of the poetic genius of Burns than the majority of Scotchmen, but English and Americans admire simply Burns, the warbler of beautiful, brook like songs, the great humorist, the trenchant satirist; while to Scotchmen Burns is passionately dear because he was a great-hearted Scotchman, first and last and always, subordinating his great powers to the glory and praise of Scotland. Burns' heart was always as responsive to Scottish life, sympathies and memories as was the Highland brigade at the battle of the Alma, when stern old Sir Colin Campbell rode along the line of battle and cried "Old Scot land forever, boys." That Intense pa triotic feeling was always expressed eloquently by Burns, and because of this he is as dear to the heart of Scot land as if he had fallen at Flodden, sword in hand, fighting for his country and his king. In other words, if Burns had been less of a Scotchman, but even a greater poet, he would not have been so enthusiastically worshiped by the Scottish people. It was because Burns sang Scotland so tunefully and eloquently, and sang nothing else so nobly and so long, that Scotland in its intense patriotism wor ships today and always will worship the memory of Burns. Burns was a well read man in the poetic literature of his day, without being a severe student or university scholar. It was fortunate for his fame that he was not a man of severe scholastic culture, like Milton, for If he had been he would probably have lost his charming spontaneity. Shakespeare, Byron arid Burns are dis tinguished for a certain rush, vigor and freshness of movement and manner which was pointed out to Wordsworth by Walter Scott when he wrote him: "You and I have to toll and work hard over our poetry, but Burns and Byron were born poets; they bubbled forth brook-like songs or wrote verses that make you think of a mountain torrent." This is not the exact language of Scott, but it is the substance of his thought. Burns was not unlike Byron, who was half Scotch, in some respects. He had the same mixture of strong, vigorous understanding married to a noble imag ination. Both were strong reasoners In verse; both keen and vigorous satirists; both were natural radicals at war with church-and crown; both were generous, loyal, brave and truthful men; open hearted, open-handed, affectionate friends. Burns was probably a man of sweeter and healthier mind and spirit than Byron, for Byron's paternal an cestors were aristocrats of vitiated blood, while his mother had a violent temper soured Ky trouble; so that Burns had the advantage at least of having had good parents on both sides, and he was not a man of morbid spirit. Had Burns been born a poor English lord ,he would probably have behaved neither better nor wbrse than Byron, and had Byron been born of pious Scotch peasant stock, he. would prob ably have been very much such a man as Burns. Byron's birth and breeding kept him from being a .vulgar tippler, and he was a man o sound business quality, which Burns was not. Byron made good bargains with his publishers for every line he wrote, while Burns, in a spirit of literary Quixotism, re fused to accept pay for a great deal of his best work in the matter of song writing. With Byron's business sense, Burns need never have been in pecun iary straits. The greatest glory of Burns is the brightest feather in By ron's plume, and that is that he dedi cated his genius to the defense and exaltation of the primitive rights of the people, as contrasted with the ac quired artificial rights of caste, class and aristocracy. Burns, like Byron, skinned and scalded the heartless, hypocritical hierarchy of his day, a daring act, for which he- not only never wras forgiven In his life, but it was remembered to his prejudice long years after his death. ' Oregon climate may generally be de pended upon to regulate Itself In the Interests ' of agriculture and hortiqul- ture. People who for some days past have been vexing themselves and wearying others with doleful prognosti cations of overlush gralnfields and pre mature budding of fruit trees were properly rebuked by the sharp frost of Tuesday night, succeeded by a chill atmosphere which has in it no sugges tion of sprng. They now content them selves by looking dubious and hoping the cool weather will continue until all danger to the fruit is oVer. It proba bly will. Dispatches from Birmingham, Ala., show that there was a great increase in the amount of pig-iron and cast-iron pipe shipped from the Southern iron field In 1899. The official figures, just published, show the total shipment of pig-iron from Alabama and Tennessee in 1899 to have been 1,571,570 tons, an increase over 1898 of 218,600 tons; from the Birmingham district' alone ship ments, were 945,969 tons, an Increase over 1898 of 86,690 tons. Cast-iron pipe shipments from Alabama and Tennes see In 1899 were 146,637 tons, an in crease over 1898 of 19,237 tons; from the Birmingham district alone ship ments were 57,239 tons, an Increase of 12,708 tons. Expert iron shipments from the Southern field (practically all from the Birmingham district) were 167,003 tons, a decrease from 1898 of 34, 675 tons. The decrease is very small considering the extraordinarily brisk domestic demand, and would have been much greater but for the booking of a large number of export contracts before the domestic boom set in. The insane rancher of Clatsop county goes to the asylum with a murder booked against him. There is probably no doubt that he is mentally unbal anced through hereditary taint, to a degree that renders him a dangerous man in the community. This being true, the opinion of Dr. Beckman, of the examining board, to the effect that this man should never again be al lowed his liberty, is strongly to the point. When the cause of insanity is one that it is impossible to eradicate, any recovery of the mental balance may justly be deemed temporary, and its victim may very properly be perma nently restrained of his liberty. Soci ety has an undoubted right to protect Itself, both from this man and his pos sible posterity, by keeping him in con finement during the remainder of hla natural life. The Pennsylvania Editorial Associa tion has been so affected by the deal ings of its members with the paper trust that at its annual meeting In Harrlsburg, on Tuesday, It adopted a resdlutlon declaring that "if trusts are honestly organized to reduce expenses and consequently the cost of products, they should depend on their own busi ness sagacity, and not upon protection given to them by the government," and appealing to congress to "repeal such tariff duties as seem to protect the trusts in their extortionate charges." The overwhelming republican majority in Pennsylvania is sufficient to stamp this utterance as of profound national Significance in tariff disousslon. The Indianapolis Journal recalls a paragraph In President Polk's second annual message to congress, December 8 1846, as follows: The war has been represented as unjust and unnecessary, and as one of aggression on our part, upon a weak and Injured enemy. Such erroneous views, though entertained by but few, have been widely and extensively circu lated, not only at home, but have been spread throughout Mexico and the whole world. A more effectual means could not have been de vised to encourage the enemy and protract the war than to advocate and adhere to their cauae, and thus arive them "aid and comfort." An excellent account of the proceed ings of our "antls" of the present time, and a very effective reply to them. Oregonians returning' from visits to San Francisco say that the grave of Senator E. D. Baker, in one of the cem eteries of that city, is neglected, and has been for two years. It is a natural result of the mistake that was made when interment of this distinguished Oregon soldier and statesman was made in California instead of Oregon. Self-government Is an employment for which only the trained are fit. It Is as logical to make a republic out of the Filipinos as to make a man a car penter, by putting a plane in his hand. Men like Senator Hoar denounce the establishment in the Philippine islands of the authority of the free government under which we live, as the creation of a despotism. Puerto Rico's population has gener ally been set down at'800,000. The cen sus, therefore, shows that the previous estimate has been too low by some 200,000. Anglo-Saxon-Celtlc Domlnancy. Toronto World. For now 500 years the Anglo-Celtic-Saxon race has preserved Its identity, in spite of all sorts of admixture from other races. It absorbs, It assimilates, but not yet has any amount of admixture materi ally changed It. The little leaven of that people which sent the bowmen to Crecy leaveneth the whole lump. The course of such a race is not like that of a purling brook rather It Is like a thundering torrent Often It has dashed Itself upon immovable obstacles: often It has spread desolation In its path; its his tory Is no more free from crime than 'is that of other races; It has done evil as well as good, and very likely it will con tinue to be human and Imperfect to the end of the chapter. But all such object tlons to It are beside the mark. This race was Invested by Providence with one Im mense mission,, and in the main It has been true to Its destiny, Is still true. No matter what may be said to the contrary, no matter What adroit appeals there may be made to the sentiment for the under dog during the present wars In the Trans vaal and the Philippines, the fact remains that the issue between the Ahglo-Saxon and the rest of the world, from the day of Crecy to the present hour, has been the maintenance of a stream of political tend ency which culminated In those Immortal words which declare that "government ot the people, for the people and by the peo ple shall not perish" shall not perish, no matter what his sins, so long as the Anglo-Saxon heads the world. n ii ft General Bnckner for Expansion. General Simon B. Buckner In interview at Chi cago. "The democratic party has no -future until the element now in control has been wiped out, and this promises to be done at the elections of this year. Expedlenoy not principle, is the motto of this ele ment; the energies of its leader, Mr. Bryan, are engaged in hunting for an lssuek, which he hopes will attract votes, and not In. the promulgation of those great principles on which the democratic party rests. With his defeat, which prom ises to be more overwhelming than in 1896, there Is reason to believe the con servative element of .the party once more will come Into power. The controlling element of the party today would com mit It to opposition to expansion, when expansion was the essence of Jeffersonian democracy. As a practical proposition, there can be no doubt in my mind as to the wisdom of this country retaining the Philippines." CLARK, OP THE OREGON. He Has Been Neglected by the Navy Department. Brooklyn Eagle. It 13 not two years since the eyes of the whole country were fixed upon the Oregon on Its wonderful trip around Cape Horn. The name oftenest in the hearts of Americans was that of Clark, its gal lant captain. Even the fall of Manila and the apotheosis of Dewey, which fol lowed, did not slacken Interest In Cap tain Clark's voyage up through the South Atlantic ocean nor lessen the prayers that he and his splendid ship might join the squadron patrolling Cuban waters In safe ty. Well, they got there, the ship In such fine condition that she did not need dock age and repairs after her long race against time. Her engineers said she did, but Captain Clark said she did not, and proved it by the speed she made in pur suit of Cervera's flying and fated squad ron. That was because not a gallon of salt water had been allowed In the Ore gon's boilers to crust the valves, although Captain Clark" had to keep his men on a 'short allowance ot fresh water to feed the ship. We were all singing Clark's praises then and glorying in his reported dispatch to the secretary of the navy not to confuse him with orders, and add ing that he was ready to fight the whole Spanish squadron If he met it. That was two years ago. What have we done for Clark, of the Oregon, in the meantime, and where is he? Other officers have been promoted, but he stands two numbers lower in the scale of precedence than he did when he sailed from San Francisco. We are talking about reviving the raitic of vice-admiral to reward two of the heroes of Santiago and to avoid the possibility of an ugly political quarrel. What is the matter with a commodore's star for the man who saw his duty and did it and who has left the politics of the navy depart ment to less war-like spirits? There was a conference of captains engaged In the battle of Santiago at the White House recently to discuss the proper award of honors for that victory. But the case of Clark stands apart from that of the others. They never brought their ships around Cape Hern In racing time and then did their full share of fighting, too. It is true, they did not have the chance, but they never did the work and that, as Lord Charles Beresford pointed out, Is the real test in the case. The matter is now before the house committee on naval affairs. For months Captain Clark was a naval hero second only In the popular mind to Dewey. Once let the notion pre vail that he has been overlooked or under rated In the distribution of awards and the dissatisfaction would react powerfully upon the men responsible for such an In justice. This is not a plea for the pro motion of Captain Clark so much as It Is that the committee on naval affairs and the navy department do justice and give fair play, as much for their sake and the country's as for that of the gal lant captain of the Oregon. i a p ' A CHANCE TO KEEP STILL. And Thereby to Show "Very Good Sense. Hartford Courant. In this free country, where everybody Is at liberty to think as he pleases, peo .ple may sympathize with Boers or Brit ish as they prefer. The majority of those who have given the matter the most thought and study seem to agree that the best Interests of the world will be served by the success of the English. That is the firm belief of the Courant. But there are still other considerations for the honest and fair-minded American. Selfishness is stronger than sympathy and gratitude, considered sometimes a senti mental impulse, has often a quality of duty. When we fought Spain, we reached out and pushed over a corpse that did not know It was dead. Perhaps a corpse should not be expected to know anything. Now, suppose that, with defenseless coasts and old-fashioned guns and an in sufficient navy, we had had to face a live nation armed with the latest Invented arms and possessing ships and troops In plenty. Where would we be today? Probably deeper in trouble than ever before In our history. Everybody knows that this ex panding republic is not popular abroad. An excuse for intermeddling between Spain and us would have been quickly found, and we should have been Involved In a quar rel whose extent only the imagination can measure if It had not been for one factor, and that factor was England. She stood firm and by her attitude prevented foreign Intervention. With 'everything prospering here and with the American people standing as spec tators of the great struggle in which Eng land herself Is now involved, it seems In credible that so short a time ago it was our own country that stood on the brink of troubles far more serious even than are hers now. But so it was, and it was England that saved us. Watch the fight, have sympathy with the "struggling Boers" If you feel that way, but for your own self-respect, keep your mouth shut and avoid the expression of an ingratitude that is altogether dis creditable. f a t Imports and Exports. The following table shows the total Imports and exports In calendar years from 1869 to 1899, and at the same time furnishes an index of the industrial prog ress of the country: Year. Imports. Exports. 1 869 5438,455,894 $337,375,985 1870 461,132,058 403,of6 010 1871 573.111,099 46-,352,0S3 1872 655.S64.693 468 837 948 1S73 595,248,048 E67.S57.E67 1874 562,115,507 BW.&W.&S 1S75 503,152,936 510,947,422 1876 427,347.165 590,666.629 1877 480,216.300 620.302,412 1878 431.S12.483 737.092,073 1879 513,602,796 765.159.S2i 1880 696,807,176 889.683.422 1851 670.209,448 833,549,127 1882 752,842.507 767.E8l.945 1883 , 687.066,216 795,209,316 1884 629,281.860 749.366.42S 1885 5s7.868.673 88.219,7P8 1886 663,429,189 713,404,021 1887 708,818,478 715,301,044 1888 725.411,371 691.761.055 18S9 770,521,965 827,106.347 1890 823,398,726 857.502,548 1891 1222Q.24Z 970,503,616 1892 840 930.955 938.420.660 1833 7:6.548,924 876,108.781 1F94 676,312,941 825.102,248 1S95 801,669,347 824,860,136 189G 681,579,556 1,005,837.241 1897 742,595,f 29 1,090,709,0-15 1898.. .. 634,9:58.?29 l,? 1899 799,834 620 1,273,416,641 i a o ' Wit and Hmnor. Louisville Courier-Journal. Washington. The professional humorist never had any standing in congress in the American congress. Tom Corwin, "Sunset" Cox and Proctor Knott were anything but professional in that behalf. They were spontaneous. So is John Al len. John Randolph was a wit; So Is Thomas B. Reed, and the critics say there is a difference between wit and humor. One day Springer came marching down the aisle like a whirlwind, and, In terrupting Thomas B. Reed, exclaimed: "I'll inform the gentleman from Maine that I would rather be right than presi dent." To that Reed replied, quick as a flash: "But you will never be either." That was wit. Tears ago, Gurley, a preacher of the Unlversalist faith, a mem ber of congress from a Cincinnati dis trict, made a speech criticising General McClellan, who was then about to set out on his campaign against Richmond that collapsed In the seven-days' battle. S. S. Cox answered him in a speech that kept the country laughing a month. Among other things Cox said that Gurley had faith to believe that the pearly gates of heaven would be wrue enough to ad mit the rebel General Humphrey Mar shall, who weighed 400 pounds, but he could not find sufficient faith, though less than In the estimation of a grain of mus tard seed, in bulk, to place in the only Union general who had yet achieved a military success of moment. That was humor. o i TACITUS AND GIBBON. Selected From "History," by James Ford Rhodes, In February Atlantic. We approach Tacitus with respect; we rise from reading his annals, his history and Germany, with reverence. We know that we have been in the society of a gentleman who had a high standard ot morality and honor. We feel that our guide was a serious student, a solid think er, and a man of the world; that he ex presses his opinions and delivers his judg ments with a remarkable freedom from prejudice. He draws us to him with sym pathy. He sounds the same mournful note which we detect In Thucydldes. Tacitus deplores the folly and dissoluteness of the rulers of his nation; he bewails the mis fortunes of his country. The merits wo ascribe to Thucydides, diligence, accuracy, love of truth, impartiality, are his. The desire to quote from Tacitus Is Irresistible. "The more I meditate," he writes, "on the events of ancient and modern times, the more I am struck with the capricious uncertainty which mocks the calculations of men in all their transactions." . . . From a, thinker who deemed the time "out of joint," as Tacitus obviously did, and who, had he not possessed great strength of mind and character, might have lapsed into a gloomy pessimism, what noble words are these: "This I regard as his tory's highest function, to let no worthy action be uncommemorated, and to hold out the reprobation of posterity as a ter ror to evil words and deeds." The mod esty of the Roman is fascinating. "Much of what I have related," he says, "and shall have to relate, may perhaps, I am aware, seem petty trifles to record. . . . My labors are circumscribed and unpro ductive of renown to the author." It Is more than a strong probability that In diligence, accuracy and love of truth. Gibbon "Is the equal of Tacitus. A com mon edition of the "History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" Is that with notes by Dean Milman, Guizot and Dr. Smith. Nlebuhr, Vlllemaln and Sir James Mackintosh -are each drawn upon for criticism. Did ever such a fierce light beat upon a history? With what keen relish do the annotators pounce upon mis takes or inaccuracies, and in that portion of the work which ends with the fall of the Western empire, how few do they find! Would Tacitus stand" the supreme test better? There Is, so far as I know, only one case in which we may compare his annals with an original record. On bronze tablets found at Lyons, In the 16th century, is engraved the same speech made by the Emperor Claudius to the senate that Tacitus reports. "Tacitus and the tablets," writes Professor Jebb, "disagree hopelessly Jn language and in nearly all the detail, but agree in the general line of argument." Gibbon's work has richly deserved its life of more than 100 years, a period which I believe no other modern history has endured. Nlebuhr, in a course of lectures at Bonn, In 1S29, said that Gib bon's "work will never be excelled." At the Gibbon centenary commemoration, in London, in 1894, many distinguished men, among whom the church had a distinct rep resentation, gathered together to pay hon or to him who, in the words of Frederic Harrison, had written "the most perfect book that English prose (outside its Action) possesses." - d o Where to Begin. New Tork Journal. President Hadley Is a wise man, but In teaching the Tale Idea to shoot in this direction he is not doing Justice to his own wisdom. From what particular things would President Hadley ostracise the trust kings? From church? Look at the bald, bowed heads In the Fifth-avenue houses of God on Sunday. They are all worn bare with trust schemes. Do nations from trust magnates support the ministers. From social enjoyments? Go to the assembly ball, the Patriarchs, the Ma triarchs, the high and howling functions at Delmonlco's or Sherry's or the privato palaces along the Appian way. Trust magnates bob and skip and smirk and beam In mutual regard. How, then, would President Hadley ostracise the trust rulers? Will the colleges cast the first stone by refusing to accept donations from trust sources? a t. From a Debtor to a Creditor Country New Tork Tribune. Tho most remarkable annual statement of commerce ever made by the United States treasury has just been issued. In 1899 the exports were not only larger by about 520.000,000 than In any other calendar year, but were larger by about 544.000.000 than in any fiscal year of the country's history. The nation hung out no red flag to Invite cheap buyers last year. It sold only what other countries wished to buy strongly enough to pay more than the most active domestic trade, and the lar gest home consumption ever known were paying for the products of industry. It is to this fact mainly that the record of 1899 will owe the distinction which In com mercial history it will have of definitely changing the relation of the United States to the rest of the financial world and transforming this from a debtor to a cred itor country. a e Fish Killed by Lightning. Indianapolis News. The Pennsylvania fish commission had heard tales that the brown trout with which some of the streams of the state were stocked were particularly susceptible to destruction from lightning, so they be gan an Investigation, and they now an nounce that the stories are true. It Is the habit of the brown trout to swim closo to the bottom of the stream It frequents, and though he is not literally struck by lightning, the electricity Is conducted to the bottom of tho Streams which have rocks containing a considerable amount of iron In them, and so reaches and kills the trout, while it does not affect the fish that swim higher in the water. a Why News Dribbles. Cincinnati Times-Star. To understand the complete silence In South Africa it must be remembered that Kitchener Is there. The correspond ents who accompanied him to the Soudan were permitted to publish their obser vations In book form after the campaign was over, one correspondent cabling hi3 book from Cairo, but the newspapers had to accept the mere announcement of the final victory after maintaining men with the forces for months. His railroad to Omdurman was well under way be fore he disclosed to the war office his In tention to build It. e A Feat of Mnemonics. The speech of Senator Beverldge, of In diana, was a remarkable feat of memory. It contained about 8000 words, but Mr. Beverldge repeated It entirely without notes, and so thoroughly had he memor ized It that, although he spoke for Over an hour and a half, he rarely departed from the text of the printed copy pre viously supplied to the press. At no time, however, did the effort seem to be other than extemporaneous. ' o-g It Is "Very Trne. Kansas City Star. But the fact remains that If the ad miration of Senator Hale, of Maine,, for the Boer republic should tempt him to take Up his residence in the Transvaal he would not be permitted, to vote or to exercise a voice in the government of which he has become the advocate and defender. NOTE AND COMMENT., General Warren has a name that ought to make him a game fighter. Aguinaldo Is noted for speed, but he has never been able to stand fast. The sultan of Sulu may lead a happy life, but he will never get to congress. Senator Mason, It is said, Is a poor man. Everyone knows that he is a poor thing. St. Louis Is on the road to fame. Hence forth she will be known as the largest city on the Chicago sewer. If President Hadley succeeds In abolish ing millionaires It is to he feared that there will be fewer students at Tale. Now Kipling has been accused of writ ing "David Harum." It 13 singular that no ono has charged him with the author ship of "Hamlet." It Is better for the public to leave a man a candidate, for then he Is supported only by his friends. Elect him and all the tax payers must support him. Having all the prosperity tney can stand and no taste for anti-imperialism, the Southern senators are obliged to jump once more on their colored brethren In order to get support. As showing the Increased ccst of plumb ers' supplies, a local firm seeds The Ore gonian a statement received thl3 week from one of the largest manufacturing "oncerns at the East, as follows: The following percentages shew tho actual Increase In costs of raw material. Which enter largely Into the manufacture of cur llnee over prices current, spring- of 1S0O: Per cent.) Per cent. Plar-Iroa 125jBolts ..Ill Steel 100 Asbestce 31 Copper 81 Pipe -. 1S4 Tin-plate 7Plpe flttiegs .......111 Wire ....13i3IUvete ....110 Nails 17WOI13 ... . ...100 Lumber .......... 87f Nothing has been heard thl3 season of the wood trust, doubtless oving to the mildness of the winter. A year ago tho fact was freely stated that all the wood dealers, even Including the slalwood men, had combined to raise the price. The wood-choppers, however, grumbled more than usual, alleging that the city handlers received all the benefit of the increase and the producer was left out In the cold. This winter, so far, much lees fuel has been required to keep a house comfortably warm, and the dealers appear satisfied to sell all they can at the best price obtain able, everyone on his own hook. Every spring, when a few sacks of early potatoes from California, and, perhaps, some early onions and vegetables are brought to this market, cutting remarks are heard about the lazy, shiftless Oregon farmers, who do not raise potatoes enough to supply the home demand. For the past three months every steamer leaving Port land for San Francisco has carried away an average of between 6000 and 7000 sacks of potatoes, and a corresponding quantity of onions, and Monday night the steamer took away about 10,000 sacks of potatoes and 1000 sacks of onions for the Califor nia market. There are thousands and thousands of sacks more to go, and pretty nearly almost always It is ever thus. It would be In order for Callfornlans to be rate the laziness ot their farmers, If it would do any good, for not raising po tatoes enough to supply their own state, but the fact Is that even Jn fiavoraWe Seasons, good potatoes can only be raised In a few sections of that state, and the potatoes raised along the river bottoms there are not to be compared with tho Oregon product, either for eating or keep ing. The Oregon farmer, like everybody else, has his faults, but the amount of potatoes and wheat he manages to turn out yearly brings an amount of money Into this state which might serve as a mantle to cover a multitude of sins. On the whole, tho Oregon farmer W at least as much sinned against as sinning. And when It Is remembered that "the farmer feeds us all," and also all the cattle and pigs and poultry, and the birds of the air, he ought to bo spoken of with rsspect. p EpltnpbH. Gentleman's Magazine. The following Is to a member of OrIeIr college, Oxford: Randolph Peter Of Oriel, the Eater, Whoe'er you are, tread softly, I entreat you For If he chance to wake, be sure he'll eat you. On John Adams, of Southwell, a carrier, who died of drunkenness: John Adams lies here, of tho parish of South well. A carrier who carried his can to his mouth wellj He carried; so much, and he carried so fast. He could carry no more so was carried at last; For the liquor he drank, belnff too much for one. He could not carry off eo he's now carrf-on. e ' Manila's Nautical School. Philadelphia Telegraph. An Important movement has been start ed at Manila to educate a portion of the native population for a seafaring life. It seems that the Spanish government was maintaining a nautical school when the first native insurrection broke out. The Institution was then closed and has so remained. Now it is to be reopened on practically the original lines, but It la to be under American naval control, of course, and after June 1, 1901, a knowl edge of the English language is to be re quired on the part of the students. ia ' i Mr. Kipling: Explains. New Tork Commercial Advertiser. In reply to a letter from a woman at New Haven, England, asking for a, deflnl- tion of the term "Absent-Minded Beggar," Mr. Kipling's secretary writes: "Mr. Kip ling desires me to say, in answer to your letter, that the term 'Absent-Minded Beg gar' is one used by private soldiers them selves when they have rorgotten any small duty, and beggar Is a generic term of en dearment." o Canada's Small Immigration. Philadelphia Times. Though Canada has been making special efforts to Increase her population by means of Immigration, they seem to be In vain. The last census showed that emigration for the period covered by the enumeration exceeded lmmgration 300,000, and the papers are Inclined to admit that the next census will not show much Im provement. t o " Thirty-Six Mills. There's many a sold and stiver mine, And some details of trade are noater, But for a trade that's extra fine. Commend me to the say taxeater. lie breathes the air with head up high. While poor taxpayers breathe a plgh. He seems to us by heaven sent To train our nerves when rascals fire- at Our Patience on a monument. That's smlllns at a. smooth-faced pirate He ernlles and smiles while men cry "foul," And honest farmers raise a howl. Are these the fabled mills of Zeus ( That grind so fine and srlnd bo slowly? Ah, no; they're real, it Is no use. We toas the sponge, we're vanquished wholly. Then we Insist, take all for grist. And let the landlord but exist. Now Portland furl your royals free At anchor near the rlverrf junction, 111 send, ere you will wed the eea. My P. P. C. before the function. When taxes drop and splendor flares. I shall have climbed the golden stairs. Portland, Jan. 24. H. F. Bodney. vJ jkri.-,; to. -.!&