--T JWI m if-sr-sryvgr- - f - "T VitV'' fcl 10 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1900. waisK- op - j THE -GREAT -ANTI -SLAM CRUSADER (Copyright, 1000, by SsyroourEateS " f 1r f I B , GREAT AMERICAN STATESMEN Owrtrifeutow to tbi cwiwe: Prof. Albert Bush Bell Kut PreC Jeha Bach JIcMiurter, Prof. Charles H. SeatUk, Dr. Frederic "W. Spelifc, Pref. Andrew C. MoLaugatin and otters. Is in all probability the very broadest thins In the world and great enough to embrace In It3 consideration the -whole of humanity. I3. nofarge enough to hold In reverence and, love a husband dU ' vlded by three, and no woman capable of THE OREGONIAN'S HOME STUDY CIRCLE: DIRECTED BY PROF. SEYMOUR EATON j ff Roberts" rilwbSerrhai- 1 lng defied the law of God and man, and no woman could, with any degree of rea son, expect him to live up to promises" made to her, except those of course which pleased him. If meh of today lived up to the divine obligation as taught by every breath of American civilisation there would be such a change in the order of human affairs as to make the souls of Martin Luther and Jeanne D'Arc send up a shout which would be heard through all Christendom. In regard to the much-married aspirant for congressional honors, the people should consider Tiow annoying this must be to the Mistresses Roberts. Think of those two or three or four female links, that bind Mr. Roberts to hisjiearthstoue! My sympathy has gone out to them, but now that they have" a notoriety that rivals either Mrs. Dewey orKhe Interest in Lady- XVI. CHAUIiES SUMXEH. BT JAMBe ALBERT WOODBURN, PH. D. There are those who believe that a na tion's history is involved in the lives of its greet men. The life of Charles Sum ner certainly very largely embodies the history of the anti-slavery conflict in America. To study that life Is to study the causes, the issues and the results of the great struggle for emancipation and union, and to know the merits of that straggle He must needs know something of the life and service and character of Charles Sumner. SsmBer, the Scholar and Jurittt. Little need be said of Sumner's early Mfe. Born in Boston, January 6, 1811, he became a graduate of Harvard in 1830. Like Motley, he enjoyed early affluence and advantages, and succeeded in spite of them. In 1881 he entered the Harvard law school, where he studied under the renowned Judge Joseph Story. He con tinued for several yeurs to apply himself to study in classroom, office and library. bringing to his books a marvelous mem ory and extraordinary Intellectual Indus try. He spent the years from VTi to 1840 abroad, as a student and observer, in Lon don, Paris, Rome, Berlin and other Euro pean centers, becoming acquainted with the leading public men of Europe. His studies and taste led him toward poli tics and the law. His legal studies were not such as would develop the shrewd practitioner at the bar; for as his eulo gist, Mr. George "William Curtis, after ward said of him, "He was not formed for a Jury lawyer where the Jury was less than a nation or mankind," and, hi sport ing language, "though he had a fine eye for country, he had a poor scont for the trail." His tastes drew him rather to public and constitutional law the law of peace and war and of nations and in these he had a preparation that stood him In good stead in the years to come. In these W years of study and travel and re flection we find developing Sumner the scholar a scholar whose attainments were admirably manifested In his first notable public oration, delivered July 4, 18, on "The True Grandeur of Nations," a magnificent plea for peace, a severe de nunciation of war. Sumner, , the Free-Soiler. But of greater interest is Sumner the anti-slavery senator and moral reformer. The inspiration of Sumner's early public career is found in the cause of free soil. He became interested very early in the anti-slavery movement. He was a sub scriber to the Liberator in its early years, and he was a friend of Garrison, Phillips and Channing. In 1S41 he critclsed Web ster's correspondence in the "Creole case" as giving unnecessarily national support and countenance to the slave in terest He denouced the admission of Tex. as, and he held the war with Mexico to be "unconstitutional In origin, unjust In character and detestable In object." and, above all, he held that If additional territory be forced upon us "from all such territory slavery should be forever ex cluded." At the conclusion of the Mexi can war, with the prospect before us of slavery extension toward the south and west. Sumner felt that the time had come when men of all parties should unite against slavery. In politics he was a whig. But lie understood that a party was a means, not an end, and if his party would not serve his purpose he w ould find an organisation that would. Sumner and the Fnsrltlvc Slave Lair. On November 6, 1869, In Faneuil hall, soon after the passage of the fugitive slave Jaw of that year, Sumner spoke on "Our Immediate Anti-Slavery Duties." This was a remarkable speech. He de nounced the fugitive slave law and de liberately counseled resistance. "I will not," he said, "dishonor this home of the pilgrims and of the revolu tion by admitting nay, I cannot believe that this bill will be executed here. Among us, as elsewhere, individuals may forget humanity In fancied loyalty to law, but the public conscience will not allow a man who has trodden our streets as a freeman to be dragged away as a slave." This is the speech that is said to have made Sumner senator. It sounded the keynote for the free sellers of America in the face of the "finality" legislation and compromise of 1860. The speech was denounced as treasonable by Southern men and apologists f or. slavery, and It Is certain that more than anything else it determined Sumner's selection by the free soil party as Its candidate for the senate. In the election of 1850 there was a coali tion in Massachusetts between the free Boilers and the democrats in the choice of state senators and representatives, with the understanding that the state officers chosen by the legislature should be dem ocrats and the United States senator a free soller. Sumner was chosen senator In April. 186L after a long contest. "He was not a member of either of the great parties. He was pledged then, and ,always and only, to his sense of right. He stood for no partisan end whatever, but simply and solely for uncompromising re sistance to slavery." Curtis. In the senate it was with difficulty that Sumner found an opportunity to speak upon his "one idea." It was not until August 36, 1862, that by a parliamentary maneuver he gained his chance. He then made his celebrated speech for the "Repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law." This is recognized as the masterpiece among Sumner's anti-slavery orations. Mr. Curtis pronounces it "the most sig nificant event in the senate since Web ster's reply to Hayne, and an epitome of Sumner's whole career." In maintaining his fundamental thesis "that freedom was national and slavery was sectional" Sumner held that wherever there was na tional power there was national respon sibility, and that this responsibility could not be discharged unless that power were used In restraint of slavery. Therefore he demanded the inEtant Tepeal of the fu gitive slave bill, the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, that congress should prohibit slaver in the territories, that the domestic slave trade be re strained, especially on the high seas, un der the national flag, and that the na tional government should go to the limit of Its constitutional power to relieve It self front all responsibility for slavery. This was, substantially, the free soil plat form. The conservative character or Sumner's speech is seen In the fact that in Us constitutional argument against the fugitive slave bill he fell beck, on the compact theory of. the constitution in that he held that the fugitive slave clause of that document was not a power-conferring clause, but merely a compact agree ment among the states. Its enforcement must be left to state comity. "BWYery." he mM en a farmer occasion, "where we are parties to It, wherever we are t uafimHrte fur H. everywhere within our Jur Mtcttoo. Mart be otae-4 br ever Inrtru ment cf tfce poMttcal powr-r It is a mis take to eharg-e that w seek to interfere through concrete with wJaverv In the states. Our retttteat aim well as eur political duties' are eeextenatve est) with our political respoaetMlMes." Such was the message that Sumner gave the senate and the nation in 1862, and such was his constant, uncompromising platform in the great anti-slavery con flict. SsmBcr'i Inflexible and Uncompromising- Character. In MM Sumner made a plea against the Douglas repeal of the Missouri compro mise. eaMtog the repealing bill "at the same time the worst and the best bill in the aanak of congress," for while It broke down an historic barrier against slavery it at the same time placed the great an tagonists, Freedom and Slavery, face to face and bade them grapple. He was de nounced and buffeted and badgered in the senate as a fanatic, a. traitor and a per jured vlolater of his oath, on account of his public utterance aga.nst returning the fugitive slave. "Is thy servant a dog?" he answered, in the words of the prophet, "that be should do this thing?" Against his assailants, Butler of South Carolina, Mason of Virginia, Douglas of Illinois, Pet tit of Indiana, and others, he defended the principles of the Declaration of Independ ence, and facing, as Jackson faced, an ad verse supreme court decision, he quoted Jackson and Buchanan as good demo cratic authority for the position that when a public official swears to support the con- FILIPINOS NOT WARLIKE IXTERVIEW-WirHVN EX-MEMBER OF AGUIXALDO'S CABINET. Future Pence of the Philippines De pends on Course Pursued by the "Washington Government. fHfesw roflt v ilk 1 vwjbW- " f Me iff tit ii I vaTfiww t iMfif 11 ni AmS -'- "TimiiT ' w " mmm? wrkmsu &&'Mi Idffiivi' a&w viy riESrellkJBwfaaSfc sa 7&&emms&m mmwzmmi (w vzvmzF mrxsmz: w wmJl ' T i- chari.f suanv'ER. making the trip of 36 miles, which is at the rate of about two miles per hour. As to his preference for stage or steamer travel, Captain Hans Is of opinion that wfhlcnever way a man went he would Tylsn that he had gone, the other. e ANGLO-BOER WAR. American History ns a Source of Anti-British Feeling. stltutlon he swears to support It as he un derstands It. not as It is understood by others. On May 19, 1S36, Sumner delivered his celebrated speech In the senate on "The Crime Against Kansas," the speech for which he was assaulted by Brooks. Sum ner's speeches were very offensive to his opponents. When he assailed slavery its advocates felt themselves to be personally Insulted. The passage In this speech to which exception was taken was certainly In bad taste, and It shows personal offensive ness, if not coarseness. Mr. Rhodes, the historian of the period, finds no " apology for Sumner's bitter personal attack on Sen- ator Butler. But Sumner did not trans gress the bounds of parliamentary deco rum, and he was not called to order by the president of the senate or by any sen ator. In Sumner the uncompromising Southerner met aggression, boldness, defi ance, denunciation, equal to his own forms of speech to which he had not been accustomed. Brooks' bludgeon merely re vealed the spirit and weakness of slavery. For four years Sumner was absent from his seat In the senate, under medical treatment in Europe. He returned to his seat in 18C0, and in the notable session of lSCO-1 he was a strong opponent of any form of compromise: he held that the slavery question did not admit of compro mise; it did not come within the domain of expediency. "To be wrong on this Is to be wholly wrong. On this question there is no other side." In this convic tion, therefore, when at the opening of the war, as Miss Martlneau relates, every public man Jn the country with whom she talked agreed that silence upon slave ry was the sole condition of preserving the Union when in this crisis Sumner was appealed to to vote for the Crittenden compromise and save the country from war, he answered: "I must do my duty; I can vote for no concession to human slavery." In this he spoke more as the moral reformer than as the statesman, more like one who has been well described as "conscience Incarnate." In other phases of Sumner's public ca reer he filled an Important place in the history of his country. But these, in the story of his life, will always be subordi nate to his career as an anti-slavery ad ocate and statesman. From 1SG1 to 1872 he was chairmar of the senate committee on foreign affairs, and In that position. so entirely in accord with his tastes, he contributed materially to the literature of international law. His great speech on the "Trent Affair," January 9, 1S62, is ono of his ablest productions, and It placed the surrender of Mason and Slldell on the most acceptable ground on ground sounder and more tenable than that as sumed by Secretary Seward. That the country was ready to acquiesce In the surrender of the Confederate envoys. It has been said, was due to Sumner, who made It clear that the action was In ac cordance With principles always main tained by the United States and in ac cordance with our humane and peaceful traditions of neutrality. The war over, Sumner spoke for concili ation and amnesty. He harbored no re sentment or revenge. But he never wa vered In his devotion to the cause of equal civil and political rights for all men, regardless of race, color or previous condition of servitude, and when he died, in 1874, It may be said that the struggle for the protection by national power of the South ern freedmen In their civil and political privileges came to an end. To Sumner's mind politics was an en nobling pursuit. His life forcibly Illus trated his maxim that "politics Is but the application of moral principles to pub lic affairs." He brought to his political life profound conviction, supreme con scientiousness, great resources, careful training, unselfish devotion to the public weal, and the Indomitable martyr spirit of the reformer. In times like these It Is well that the American people should turn to the contemplation of such a life. Indiana University. smith, I am Inclined to weep with the man from Utah. When we consider the responsibility of looking after one wom an, just think of a man who buys "tailor-made gowns" for .several. Then think of what a power ho would bo In attack ing any of the three or four-sided ques tions that are driving our senators to matrimony and the grave. However, we ought to "wake the echoes" when It comes to a question of principle just as we must lull to sleep the conflicts that arise In our own house holdsfor are we not rocking the cradle of our infant government? F. M. H. a THE PRO-BOER MEETING. Here In a Correspondent Who Rises for Information. GOOD-BY, ROBERTS. Pence .Go AVith nim to Ills Labyrinth of Woes antl Wives. REPUBLIC, Wash., Jan. rr (To the Editor.) After a play that was hardly a sucess from a dramatic standpoint, con gress has found that Roberts Is a poly gamlst. There were several wagon-loads of petitions lying at Washington, and Roberts Is denied a seat In the hall. One thing the case has done it shows how eager the average congressman is to as sume a virtue he does not necessarily possess. In deference to public opinion, they voted the Utah man out. To the sentimentality that tries to find somo excuse for Roberts in his labyrinth of woes and wives, and thinks him hon est when he claimed to be making the row out of "loyalty to women" because "they are good and true," and sought to hide behind "some diviner right than even that of the church, it should be remem bered that though the soul of a woman PORTLAND, Feb. l.-(To the Editor.) It was my good fortune to attend the pro-Boer meeting last Saturday night, and to be most highly edlfld and entertained by the astute and scholastic speakers. Es pecially did the observations of the Hon. Judge O'Day strike me when he stated what a thorough American citizen he was, and that the United States, through Its executive and legislative branches In Washington, D. C., should send some tan gible evidence of Its sympathy with the Boers In the shape of resolutions of con dolence. I do not wish to discuss the merits or demerits of such proposed action, though doubting Its dlplomacj and expediency; but, when a brilliant orator like the Judge assumes such a conspicuous and pro nounced attitude before an Intelligent Portland audience, our minds naturally re vert to the time when Cuba was having her trouble with Spain. When Cuba was in distress, why did-we not hear words of commiseration from such a learned man as Judge O'Day? Why did we not hear from these distinguished speakers ear lier? The judge Is a fine talker, and, no doubt, Is entitled to credit for the patriotic (?) stand he has taken; in fact, we ought to be proud that we have such a frank, out spoken man In our midst; but, for the sake of consistency, why did we not hear from him at the time before mentioned? To be candid, the meeting at the Metro politan theater Saturday night was but little more than a democratic dodge to catch votes. To a man viewing the sit uation from a broad-gauge standpoint, this conclusion is not only logical, but irresisti ble. There be but few Cuban votes In the United States, but votes from the German and Dutch element are in abundanoe, and must be catered to in some wise. Without drawing this communication to an undue length, allow me, as good an American citizen as any one can be, to state that the declaration of war in Africa was not a despairing struggle for liberty, but a bold bid for empire. It was not to preserve what the Transvaalers had, but to get what they had not Their desire was to make the Orange Free State and the Transvaal a separate, Dutch-speaking paramount power, and to exclude forever the Britisher from any dominating Influence in that part of the world. Our word for It, If the union jack'waved over the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, the only result would be that hence forth good government and justice would prevail, and If prosperity followed, that Great Britain would share It, as was Its custom, with the whole of the civilized world. D. C. WILSON. 0 The Roberts Cnse. ADNA, Wash., Jan. 29. (To the Editor.) While reading In The Oregonlan today the way a woman criticised Roberts" de fense, which he made in congress the other day, I am struck 'with "horror to think that there is a woman In this re public who will denounce the Bible and Martin Luther, when taken as a basis for defense, and furthermore Is afraid that such an assumption will cast a shad ow and disgrace the American people. I want to know whether slavery disgraced the American people, and still will for years to ccme; If so, then of all wrongs we have done or crimes our ancestors have committed, we should be ashamed of such. In other words, If a father com mits a crime and is convicted, and not let to enter the halls of congress, any more, then his son, the product of American soil, should be convicted and deprived of such privileges. Any sound-minded person that claims that Roberts held up polygamy surely misinterprets his lan guage, because the last thing Roberts safd when ne left congress was that polygamy was dead, and. If not, Is dying as fast as it can, and he does not hold it up. FRANK RADMAKER. t a Advice Gratis tt Salem, Albany Democrat. takes money and action to build WASHINGTON, Jan 27.-tfhe of the Western senators has just-ieceHed a co. y of the Manila Tribune of December 0, m which is printed an exiendtd interview with Senor Mablna, foimetly a member of the cabinet of the rebel chief, Agui naldo, and who, according to the paper, is considered to be one of the braln.es t diplomats among them. In the curse of his interview he make3 several state ments, which, if he can be taken as a rep rescntatKe Ull-pino, would lnalca.e that spurring them on, might readily be Induced the natives, without their wanike leader to accept the terms that are offered thm. by the United States. Tne statement or benor Mablna is. as follows: J. cannot give the number of Flilp:no soldiers who have been arrayed against jou during the present insurrection, be cause my duties as a cabinet minister had little in common with the military side of our government. I once asked for information concerning our forces, but it was not given me, for what reason I co not care to state. "For the same reason I am utterly un prepared to name you the number of our casualties up to the date of my discon nection with our government. "Since last May 1 have been removed from political life. After my leaving the cabinet I made my home a Rosales, a town in the province of Nueva EcIJa, sit uated between Tayug and Bayomboag, "From my own personal observations, I believe that the future peace of the Phil ippines depends entirely on the course pur sued by the Washington government towards the Filipino people. "If the United States gives us a free. liberal government, one that will satisfy my people, under which they may l.ve happily and contented, I do not foresee a repetition of past events. "In fact, the main thing ,'s to sat'sfy the people In the form of government estab lished; then there will be enduilng peace. If the people are happy, they will lend no aid whatsoever to future Insurrection, and without the support of the people any revolut.onary movement will prove a fail ure. "Discontented, the people will give sup port to- the men In the field, who arc fighting to obtain a liberal form of gov ernment. Contented, the people will be faithful to the regime and there will be no trouble. "Remember, I am speaking strictly from a personal standpoint, and not as a rep resentative of the Filipino government "We maintained the rebellion against American authority not with idea of ob taining our actual Independence, for we soon recognized that we were too weak a people to cope with a power like the United States of America. Our idea was to force the Americans to eventually give us a government that would prove satis factory to all concerned. "I confess this much, that we failed In our effort, because we lacked food and ammunition, and because we sadly mis managed our own affairs. But the ideas we fought for are not forgotten, and never will be. "We have Impressed upon the United States the mode of government we want and need, and If it is accorded U3 we will prove loyarcltizens; if not I believe that there will be much dissension In the fu ture. Mf a revolutionary movement has the sympathy of ttie people It will prosper to a certain extent. "The guerrilla warfare, which has fol lowed the disbanding of our troops, will be easily terminated If the guerrillas fail to secure the sympathy and support of the Filipino people at large and this help will not be accorded them if the people find that the Americans have the welfare and Interests of the Filipinos at heart. Other wise, I believe that .guerilla warfare can be kept up for an Indefinite period by the natives, who are well acquainted with the wild mountain country. "The American congress, I understand, will determine the form of government for the Philippines. I do not believe they can do this with equity and justice unless they first consult the foremost men among us, and act to a great extent in accord ance with their council." INSPECTING COOS BAY. Captain Harts Finds Improvements Progressing; Well. It creameries. Tceihutter will never come j live churning," until after some Persons suffering from sick headache, dizziness, nausea, constipation, pain in the side, are asked to try one vial of Carter's I Little Liver Pills. Captain W. W. Harts, United States en gineers, who has charge of government work on the coast of Oregon, having been unable to get down to Tillamook bay, went on a tour of Inspection of the works at Coos bay and the Coqullle river, from which he has just returned. He took pas sage on the steamer Homer, which Is run ning In place of the Alliance, and was four days on the trip. Off Taqulna bay they encountered a violent blow against which the steamer labored for 24 hours without making more . than five miles headway, and of the 12 or-15 passengers, Captain Harts and a commercial traveler were the only ones who put In an appear ance at every meal. Captain Harts inspected the jetty work at Coos bay and found it making very satisfactory progress. The tramway has been extended 115 feet, and the delivery of stone is very satisfactory. The stone is brought from the government quarries and an adjoining new quarry, 20 miles up the Coos river, and about 500 tons. In fine, large blocks, some weighing eight tons. Is delivered daily. It is impracticable to deposit the stone on the jetty directly from the barges, on account of the con stant swell, so It Is carried out on the tramway on trains of five cars at a time, and dumped, and thus the enrockment proceeds rapidly. A visit was made to the upper bay, where a number of beacons have been placed to mark the channel. They have proved a great convenience to navigators, as now vessels have no trouble In getting out on a single tide, while formerly it used to take two tides. The people are much pleased with these aids to naviga tion, which have materially Increased the shipments of coal. Captain Harts then proceeded to the Coqullle, where he found- that the con tractor for the extension of-the jetty had made a fine start on the job, the tram way having been extended 100 feet, or about one-third of the distance contract ed for, and the jetty being partially en- rocked for that distance. The channel at the mouth of the Coqullle Is better than It has been for a long time, there being 10 feet depth of water, which Is three feet more than Is called for. There is a very large business being done in shipping lumber, from just above Bandon. Captain Harts will send a. dredge over to the Coqullle In April, to remove a very awkward rock, which Is an ob struction to the entrance of the liver, af ter which she will go to the upper river, to remove some snags and deepen the channel on some bars, which obstruct navigation there. From Coqullle Captain Harts proceeded to Port Orford, where he had not been before," as he wished to see the place and the port, in case he may be called upon to make a report In regard to it He found a pretty little village situated on a beauti ful and picturesque bay, and says the scenery; there reminded him more of the Mediterranean than any place he has be fore visited on the1 toast He returned home by stage across the Coast range to Drain, and found the road In very bad condition, worse than he had ever before seen it They had one breakdown and a narrow escape from going over a grade, and were from 4:30 A. M. till 9:C0 P. LL in PORTLAND, Jan. 3L-(To the Editor.) Many persons ar saying a few words some are saying a great deal on both sides of the question in the matter of the position Americans should take In the South African war, and If you can sparo space" I would be glad to express my views on this subject In the first place, this war would prob ably not have been so earnestly discussed In this country, had It not been for the attitude of our high officials and that of many papers published In the United States. The fact that we speak what is called the English language needs have no influence on our sentiment for while we were at war with England ourselves we spoke thls same language. Then, again, all Americans are not descendants of Eng lish people, even If they do speak the tongue, and none In this country have any reason to feel they owe sympathy or alle giance to Great Britain because of cur language. Do we owe England sympathy or alle giance because of the fact that she Is a large buyer of our products? I think not. England buys our products because she has use for them and needs them not be cause of any maudlin sentiment or broth erly love. It has been said. In clippings printed in The Oregonlan, that we should support England In this war because we need her to help us hold the Philippines against the powers Interested In Asia, also, that If England falls In this war, we will be at the mercy of European powers, who, it Is alleged, are planning the partition of South America in a way something simi lar to the operations In China. Now, as to the first assertion, I believe that if the United States has any territory which it cannot hold without the assistance of Great Britain or any other foreign power. the best thing we can do is to get rid of such territory. In regard to the other ar gument, that we need the success of Eng land In order to keep other greedy Euro pean nations from violating the Monroe doctrine, It may be said that we have struggled along pretty well for oyer a century now without any outside assist ance. And it may not be out of place to add that an American president, about four years ago, found It necessary to notify England that the Monroe doctrine "went." Right after our rebellion, France was put out of Mexico, and it may be re membered that at that time England was not our best friend. Still we were able to take caie of ourselves and I believe we always will be, notwithstanding there are some in the land who seem to think we are still an English colony. The United States fought two wars with Great Britain. We need not argue why we came to blows. The record the British made In the methods of carrying on her wars In this country are matters of his tory, and do net shine with particular splendor. The war of 1812 was forced upon the United States by England for the pur pose of regaining her lost colonies. The case looks nearly parallel to England's conduct in the preliminaries to the present war. In 1812 she forced the United States to declare war, and in a similar way she forced the Transvaal to open hostilities and for about the same reason. And the Boers are doing about as well as the Americans did. It Is claimed we should support England because she was our friend in the Spanish war. The fact that she upheld us in a worthy cause Is no reason that we should be bound tq support her in everything sho may undertake especially when she at tempts to repeat the history of her wars against us. It Is a fact and all Americans know It who have studied history or who have at tended our public schools that the United States does not exist by the sufferance of Great Britain, but In spite of her. It Is another fact that our citizens are not all English descendants, and that one citi zen if he is a law-abiding, good, honest man is as good as another. And it is quite possible there are more citizens of the United States who are not English born than there are English-American cit izens; and it is just as well not to consider too lightly the sentiment of the citizens of this country who hall from other coun tries besides England. Besides, there are American-born Americans (and It Is pos sible there are millions of them) who, from their school training In the history of the United States, have no love for Great Britain, and their sentiment is cer tainly with the people of South Africa not because they are Dutch, either and they cannot be blinded by this talk of the "promotion of civilization" by the Eng lish. It Is claimed that the Boers are uncouth, slow, unprogresslve, and, in fact, barbar ous and uncivilized. Why? Because they have no large cities? Then to be a farmer must be a crime against civilization. Is it because the Boer doesn't speak the Eng lish language? There are other languages. Is It because he is a heathen? He Is re puted to be a good Christian. Perhaps It is yes, it must be because his clothes don't fit him; he probably doesn't copy his style from the Prince of Wales. I believe the large majority of our peo ple are against Great Britain in this war, and I believe they are more in earnest in their opposition because of the effort of the press to make it appear otherwise. H. WAGNER. 9 production of the higher animals, direct follows." Were all men ef the mental capacity o Darwin and Spencer, this had been excel lent pabulum for the masses. The worl would have been uplifted by such teach lng and broadened. But as men cannot b made to think deep.y by mere precept, thli passage, which In the mouth of Darwin was a divine message, when formed by unworthy lips becomes. "Procuraes to the Lords of Hell." In their mad search for the "soul of good in things evil," the rabble, little skilled In that fine acumen which betok ens the philosopher, confound the sense of this theorem and use it as a weapon to degrade the human race and defeat the purpose of its great enunclator. Evolu tion, in the mind of a primitive thinker becomes blatant, unblushing atheism, and there is nothing more hideous In nature than the "Blastoderm" who dluternally vaunts his noxious principles in defense of ail the brutalizing tendencies of human nature, in the guise of "natural selection This Is applloable to nations. We talk glibly of the advance of civilization, the "survival of the fittest" (than which no more damnable phrase was 'ever coined) and of "manifest destiny," yet we blind ourselves to the fact that the moral con cept of a great people, committed in re straint of a vicious tendency, is the voice of God. I am not pessimistic enough, however, to concede that such hideous spectacles as the French revolution, the Napoleonic wars, the "Great Rebellion" or the pres ent South African slaughter, are neces sary to the reform of abuses. Some Di ogones wHl cite the facts as they live In history to confute any argument I might put forth in support of my belief, and as usual the mob will applaud his jeu d' esprit and cry as of old, "Not this man. but Barabbas!" for such is the perversity of humanity. Therefore, I will let the question rest with mere predte&tfon of my faith In the ultimate triumph of good. Today, two groat hosts are eon tending in South Africa for possession, of the soli. The victor is destined to drink the "wine of Thrasymene" when the strife is con cluded, for men are being mangled, slaugh tered and broken in mind and body by thousands. It Is probable that a few weeks will have seen this swelled to tens of thousands. In England. Ireland, Scot land. Canada and Australia there have been teara and breaking hearts and homes blighted and ruined. Land Is be ing laid waste, towns and cities desolated, great works of engineering skill, the mighty fruits of human energy and intel ligence, destroyed. The minds of men are belntr Inflamed wltn the lust of war. Their nostrils have caught the odor ot human blood and God alone knows where the end Heth. And this Is being con doned in the holy names of liberty and civilization. The deeper portent that hints of crashing empires and of tottering thrones Is lost in the dulclloquy of Idle phrases that bespeak the moral Inaptitude of their authors. Let us, as a people, "pause to pray," for though we be but atheists, we shall, at least draw from the elements, as tt were, a certain calmness of mind that will give our madding brains an Interval In which to Tegain their moral equilibrium. C. LEOVERT SETES. THE PALATIAL mm h mm H IB'i 1 Efll EMU hi 19 liilil 398! wtl4IP!ir Sot ft dark eflce la the balldlni nbaelntely- flrepreeft electric I and artesian vraterj nerfeet aanitl tloa and thuretiirk catllHioa. b.u vnters run dtt- aatl Bttfht. TO CURE A COLD IX ONE DAY. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drug gists refund the money If it falls to cure. E. W drove's signature Id on each box. 25c NO PAIN! NO GAS! III W I JLIa No charsrs for potatoes extraction: when teeta are ordered. All work done by graduate den tints of 12 to 20 years' experience; a specUUat to each (Jepartmenrt. v7e will tell you In advance exactly what your work will cost by a free examination. Give us a. call, and you will find we do exactly as we adrertuw. Set of Teeth .$5.00 Gold Filllnir fl.OO Gold CroTTn ................. $0.00 Silver PilllBE .00 E. C Dr A.I fJO PLATES WvkU SOUTH AFRICAN WAR.' An Equation of Right and Wrong to Baule the Most Astute Casuist. PORTLAND, Jan. 3L (To the Editor.) A question Involving the immolation of a natiori could not fail to elicit world-wide Interest and criticism. The Transvaal and Natal are today the amphitheater round which the nations gather, awaiting the signal, "Habetl" from the victor's lips. And it is a certainty that the thumbs will be turned down when the victim lies pros trate. The merits of the case have been exhaustively discussed, and It is not my purpose to dwell upon them. The passion-distorted features of the writers gleam through every line that ha3 been pffered for publication. I have read the fustian of one whose emotional prejudice led him to quote such phrenetic rhapsody as Cowper, the insane hymnist, effused In one of his wildest deliriums. This in lieu of logic. I have perused with some amusement the fulmination of the "fiat crank" who found In this terrible clash of nations a pretext for venting his fa vorite hobby; and I have viewed with sympathy the efforts of the partisan re ligionist who saw Jehovah perched like a victory on the banner of his principal and the devil poised like an ominous cloud upon that of the other combatant. Lastly, I have decided to view the question as one presenting those perplexing points of logic, to which Kant has given the name of "antinomies." It Is a case wherein Ahriman and Ormuzd assume protean aspects of good or evil an equation of right and wrong which baffles the most astute casuist. Anent the controversy Itself, therefore. I have nothing to offer, but there is ap parent a phase of the criticisms which cannot but be viewed by reasonable ob servers as an epiphany of the moral cal lousness of this civilization and era, the atavism of the soul, which history teaches us has ever signaled the approach of great social convulsions and dissolutions. I al lude to the materialistic tone of press and public There 13 a passage in the conclu sion of Darwin's "Origin of Species" which might have been taken as a text by all these commentators. It reads: ""From the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the All work examined by professional minartr, Dr. J. B. Walter, registered dentist. New York Dental Parlors R. E. Cor. FoartiJ aaj thrrissa SfritU Lady always in attendance. Hours, i to 8. Sundays, 10 to 4. Hundreds of Thousands Involved. Are Trouble in nn Important Part of the Organization Affects All the Rest A Perfectly Harmonloua Sys tem Easily Thrown Oat of Order. Organized labor has reached such a stage that anything affecting a particular branch of it draws all the rest into the difficulty. It is exactly the same way with the dif ferent organs of the human body. Work too hard, eat too much, drink too much, exercise but little, be a little irregular in any way, and the liver quits work. Then the bowels became eonstlpated and the stomach goes on strike. The heart is affected, the brain follows suit, and every part in the body is dragged into the trouble. The only way out of it is to go at the source of all this the liver Square your self with the liver and all will get baek to regular natural work. Cascarets Candy Cathartic make things right with the liver. They perfume the breath prevent food from souring on the stomach, give tone to the bowels, strength en the Intestinal muscles, while they are cleaning and stirring up the liver to re newed activity No matter how long a case has been in curable, Cascarets are guaranteed to put things right as they should be, and set the whole machinery a-going. And you can get them at any drug store or by mail for price 10c, 25c. or 50c. Address Ster.lng Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. nils is tne CASCAKKT tabi-i Every tablet of the only genuine Cfescarets bears the magic letters "CCC." Look at the tablet befor you buy, aad beware of frauds, Imitations and substitutes. 1 Ely's Cream Balm has completely cured me of catarrh when everything else failed. Many ac quaintances have used it with excellent results. Alfred "W. Stevens, Cald well, Ohio. Hooi AXDKRaOCf. OUSTAY. AHmT-at-Law AJSOCIATSn PHEW; JS. L. Powell Mg- BAXKXftS LIFE ASSOCIATION, of " i Motaeo. la.. C A. 3fcCursr. Sta:e Asztn SH BKHXXB. H. W. Tt'n. Ternla shor-fland I BENJAMIN. R. W.. Deatfct. . BIN3WA.NOER. OR O. 3.. Pays. & Sur V. BRPKWC. DR. a K.. rtydan 4i2 -tl, BCSTEKD. RICHARD. Ant Wilson &. M Callay Tobacc Co . t : CAUXKf. G S. Dtotrtet Agent TraTienj lMaraHw Co . ..... CARDWILL, Da J. B CLARK. HAROLD. Deatfet .. CLEX, B. A. CO.. Mmk Proper les 3 5-1 COLUMBIA TKLBPlKXtlB COMrxNT ew-aes aoe-eo- gu a. CORJOtLirS. C W . PtG-i. at4 Surg-on COVKR. r. C. Costlier Billable Life COLLIER, f T. PnWIeiwr. P Medu.re Manager 413 DAT. J O ft I. K DAVIS. NAFOLBON. Frettoent Ca.jnbiai Telephone Ce DICKSON. DR. J. F . FBrteian . ' JJ DRAKE. DR. H B,. Fbystotan . 812 3i DUNHAM. MRS OHO. A. DWYER. JA8. T. Teeaccoe EDITORIAL ROOMS Elirt EQ'TITABLE L1FZ AS0URAX( F" SO ICTT L. Samuel. M&itager; T C Coier ah r EVENING TELEGRAM... 3 A ic tli FALLOWS. MRS. M. A.. Manager Women il Dept. Mutual Reserve Fund Lite of Net) York FENTOK, J. D.. Fftystrtaa and Surgeon 309- FRNTON. DR. KICKS C Eye and Ear FENTON. MATTHEW F.. Dentist FIDELITY MUTUAL LIFE ASS N Stark. Manager FRENCH SCHOOL Iby eeverMtlon) MbneretU. Manager .. 6ALVAJ!. VT. K.. Bngnuer and Draught j- man ., OIART. DR. SDWAMD- P, Phjstclar stII Ssrjreen 2 GIBST. A. J.. Pnystete and Surgeon GODDAXD, S. C CO.. Footwear g-undl floor "a - x "GOLDMAN WILLIAM. Manager Manna LKe Insurance Co.. rf New York I'.O-i ORANT, FRANK S., Attorney at law QRENIER. MISS BEATRICE. Dent.st HA.MMOND. A. B HEIDINGBR. GEO. A. A CO , Pianos a Ji Orgaw 131 - KOLLISTBR. DR. a C, Phys. ft urg W IDLEMAN. C. M , Attarney-at Law 4 KADT. MARK T.. MowHMT fa- flc Nor west Mutual Reserve Fund Ufe Aaso Oo-I LAMONT JOHN. THee-Pr Mtnr and- i5tt-S eral Manager Columbia Telephone Co L1TTLEFIELD, M Ra. Ptijw. and Surgem MACRUM, W. S See. Oregon 1 amera 1 MACKAY, DRA. E., Phys. and Surg MAXWELL. DR. W B., Says ft -a s McCARGAR. C. A.. Stale Agent Bankers' LKe AseeelaMea ........ C02 MeCOT. NEWTON, Attorney at La v McFADEN MISS IDA E.. " eno'ap1er MeGINN. HENRY E.. Attorney a Law 21 II McKSLL. T. J.. Manufacturers RPreec a-j live MILLER. DR. HERBERT C. Dent s Oral Surgeon .. . GlSf MOSSMAN. DR. E. ,P , Dentist 512 3.31 MANHATTAN LIFE EBCTINTF CO New York. W. Goldman. Manager 2utt McELROT. DR. J. G.. Pays, ft Surg 'CM - ji McFARLAND. E. B., Secretary co.umbu Telephone Ce McGUIRB. S. P.. Manager P F Col lerj Publisher 4131 McKIM, MAURICE. Attorney-at-Lavr MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. of Vevi York; Wm. 3. Pond. State Mgr 40-t03l MUTUAL RESERVE FUND LIFE A33 Nj M. T. Kady. Mgr. Pacific Northwest 6041 NICHOLAS, HORACE B , ttorney-a' Law NILES. M. L.. Caehler Manhattan Life In-. surance Co.. of New York . ORBGOX INFIRMARY OF OSTEOPATHY! Dr. L. B. Smith. Osteopath - 408 OREGON CAMERA CLUB 214-215-r( PKRNIN SHORTHAND SCHOOL. H. Wi Betmke. Prtn POND. WM. 3.. State Manager Mutual Uti las. Co. of New York. . . PORTLAND EYE AND EAR INFIRMARY . ... .... ... ... .Ground floor. I3B Slxt sd PORTLAND PREPS CLUB . PROTZMAN EUOSNE C. Superfntendeal Agencies Mutual Reserve Fund Lite New York PUTNAM'S SONS, O. P. Pulltebers QUIMBY. L. P W Game and Forestr warden 71 S REED ft MALCOLM OprtefaR 138 Slxti REED. F C . FM Cofmpl1oner RYAX, J. B., Attorney-art-law bALKBURY. GEO N . Section Director S. Weather Bureau SAMUEL. L., Manager Equitable Life SANDFORD A C . CO Publishers' Agts.1 KRIBNBR'S SO3. CHAS.. Pubitahenl Jfnte Hobwi Manager. . SlffTtC SHERWOOD. J W Deputy Supreme Con mander. K. O T M SMITH. DR L B . Osteopath "Orw OF THE AMBRKAN REVOLrTTOxJ STARK E C. Fteeuttve Special Fidel!: Mutual Life Asrtton of Phlla. Ps "TTARR ft COLB. Pyregrapey , ,. STEEL. G A . Forert Inspector VTTART DELL. Attorney-at-La t 815-nH TTOLTF DR. CXAS. B.. Dentist SURGEON OF THE S. P RY AND N P TERMINAL CO 3TROWBRTDBE. THOS H Kxerutfy Spei eta! Agent Mutual Life, of Now York "rr-pFTtlNTFXDRMT'S OFFK'E TUCKER. DR OBO F . Dentist 1C H S. WMTKW BfTREAU SOR-90T 1 U S LTOHTJKWWS ENQINFERS 1TI DIST.. Captain W. C. Langfltt. Corps o Engineers. V. 9, A, U 3. BMCHrtSBR. OFFICE. R1VFH ANt HARBOR 1MC90V3MENT3 raptain a Laagittt. Carps of Engineers, USA WALKER. WILL H. President Ores Camera Club . 2!-215; WATERMAN. C. H.. Cashier Mutua Lif of-Jw York. . ....... W ATKINS. Miss R. L., Purchasing Agimry WEATHEKJtED. MB& EDYTH. Graad retary Native Daughters WHITE. MISS L. BL. Ast See. Oregon ram era Ch WILSON. D. BDWAJtD N . Phys ft Sur WILSON. DR. OB F.. Ptsys A Surg "u WILSOK, DR. HOLS a. PHys. ft Sun' WDJOX 4 MeCALLAY TOBACTO RVaartf; BuMeed, Agent WOOD, PR. W. L.. Physician 412 WILLAMETTE VALLEY TELEPH. -0 Cream Balm la placed Into the nostrils. spreads over the membrane and la absorbed Relltf la Immediate and a cure follows. It la not drying 4oes not produce sneezing. Large Slit. 0 cents at Druggisty or by mall: Trial Size. 10 csnts by malL ELY BROTHERS. Cn-Warren Street. NewYerk. WRIGHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS Are acknowledge by thousands ef peasosa who have used them for over forty years to cure a SICK HEADACHE. GIDD1NES3, CONSTIPA TION. Torpid Liver. Weak Stotaaca. Pimples. j and purify the blood. A fevr mere elegraat ofRcen nutTl had 3y aRplylasr te Portland Ti Company ef Oregon, lot) Third at to tfee rent elerlc In. thr bnlldlnar. J"..T x 'V ' U t0 PAY - THE M.Da APPLIANCr A posl way to perfect tnanr EvenrtMax fail. The TACT "M TRI KENT CURB6 you without medicinal all Bervous or diseases of the generative nra HMfe as tost manhood, exhausting IraMs. va esM, anpntescy. etc. Men are quic j rwor aerfect hmlth aad strength. Write for circulars. Correspondence conf Mai THE BKALTH AfTUANCS J) 17-18 Safe Deposit balldlfl. Sean Wash.