THE MORNING OREGONIAtt, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1900. Jw ssgomcm Jtnteraa; at the FeeteSee at Portland, Oregon, as seeead-etess matter. TELEPHONES. SOttorial Booms....leBusiBes8 Office.. ..667 RKVISBD SUBSCRIPTION HATES. By Mall (pestage prepaid). Ja Advance IUr. with Sunday, Jer nMBta f 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year T CO Daily with Sunday, per year 9 Sunday per year 2 Tbe Weekly, par year -... x w Tbe Meekly t months M To aty Subscribers Xtelly per weak. delivered. Seadays ezceptea.lSc Daily, per weak. delivered. Sundays lacleded.20c Xews or dtscuectea Intended far publication In The Oregonlaa should be addressed Invariably Editor Tbe Oregonten." not ta the name af any lndluduaL Letters relating te advertising, eubecrlpttons or to any baetnecs matter should be adureesed smalv The Oregealan." Tbe Oregonlaa sees sot bay poems ar stories trom individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts seat to It without solicita tion, No stamps should be indoeed Xor this purpose Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson. office at 1111 Pacific avenue. Taooma. Box 953. Taooma poetoffiee. Eastern Business Office The Tribune band ing New York city; "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C Beckwtth spectcl agency , New Tork. For sale in San Fraadeoo by J. K. Cooper. 6 Market street, sear the Palace hotel, and at Goldsmith Bros , 236 Sutter street. Tor sale in Chicago by tbe P. O. News Co.. 1T Dearborn street. TODAVS WBATHSR. Fair; decreasing tem perature, probably frost in moraine; west to north winds. PORTLAND, "WEDNESDAY, FED. 7 ' PRESIDENT 31'KINL.EY. The republican state league takes pride in the record of the McKlnley administration, and well it may. The mistakes of the president are so many and so plain that he who runs may read, but he has been the head of an administration that will live as one of the most noteworthy in American annals, and in the main his course has been correct and laudable. The presi dent's lack of courage and decision as a leader is measurably counterbal anced by his almost miraculous dis cernment in interpreting public opinion as a follower. His most grievous of fenses have sprung from an excess of amiability. Kind and generous to a tault, President McKinley has lacked firmness to withstand appeals for un w orlhy aspirants for office, and he hes itated in the Philippines when he ehould have gone boldly forward. Many, perhaps most, of his mistakes he lias faithfully sought to rectify, and a 2io small portion of his effort has been expended in endeavors to atone for blunders so execrable that, though they may be forgiven, can never be forgotten or condoned. The political shrewdness which Presi dent McKinley has manifested in a degree truly wonderful has enabled Llm to command most admirable selec ting in his advisers. He has laid the fcc-st brains of the country under trib ute fur counsel and assistance. His Paris commissioners and his Philippine commissioners have attested their "w orth in the high character of the work they have left behind. The peace com mission "was wise and firm enough to compel the president himself to modify bis original Instructions to take Manila cn.y from Spain, so as to Include the "vh!e Philippine archipelago, and the Philippine commission has performed a remarkable service that would have t en impossible for any men except Just such as went there, as Schurman and Worcester did, opposed to "imperi alism," but honest enough to see and declare the truth as they found it So with his cabinet. Every change has strengthened it. Time has em phatically approved the elimination of Sherman, and Secretary Hay Is busy adding one triumph of diplomacy to amlher Secretary Gage has loyally and efficiently served the cause of the E.id standard and currency reform. The change from Alger to Root was lati but abundantly justified in its re sults. Secretary "Wilson has done much ir a practical way to advance the con dili n and enlarge the markets of our farmers, and Pension Commissioner Etans has proved to be the right man lr the right place. No better appoint ments could be made than those of Ru'us Choate at London, Andrew D. White at Berlin, and Horace Porter at Paris. We were as ably represented as any power at The Hague. In the var with Spain our best military conn ed "was promptly availed of in Gen eral Schofleld, our best naval authority, Capta'n Mahan, was promptly ordered borne from Rome, and the best equipped working diplomatic student, I'r fessor JB. Moore, was taken from O umbia university, was put to work . Washington and subsequently at l'uis With all the handicaps of Al E mm, our generate managed somehow t aoid a single reverse, and if the admirals are quarreling. It is never i responsibility for defeat, but al- " s for the honor of victories. The quality of extreme mobility, Y e display has humiliated us more than once, has enabled the president t i adapt himself with felicitous celer 1 ti every change in our national si uatlon. With steadfast republican lrvalty he berated Cleveland in 181 for E diking down one of the sacred metals cf the constitution, but today he will freak as good a word as anybody for the gold standard. He stood for years 1 the public mind as the Incarnation tt only one idea high protection and 1 s speeches show that if he has such t rings as convictions at all, he must 1 &n e orehlped protection as second c in gacrednoos to deity itself. But 2 he is enabled to write his mes sages to congress without reference to I uxtion, and unreservedly asks con- r to enact free trade with Puerto Zi He seems to have unlearned c mpietely ate old ideas about the r nie market, and to have been taken X session of by the wider conception c the markets of the world. Through r i amiability of temper, extreme sus ceptibility of purpose and singular dis cernment In taking counsel, President McKinley has been enabled to steer his course in the mala so correctly that those Taho have opposed his general I icies. as distinct from his weak r esses and shortcomings, have been ch.iged to put themselves in the most oic red! table and impose! We situations. or the necessity of the gold standard, fd on our plain course of duty in the Philippines, the mala points of contro- erey between the administration and 1 e antagonists, the opposition has no eiai ding whatever. Tbe qualities that have made Mr. M Kin ley far from an ideal but in the i aii a successful president, are not fit- highest qualities. They would not f ii d comparison with those of Wash r Jefferson or Lincoln. But they ex-1 as; comparison with his chief op- ponent for his place. If the Boy Ora tor of the Platte, with his cross of gold and crown of thorns, his "enemy's country" and his 16-to-l idol, has any qualifications whatever for the presi dency, they have not yet made them selves manifest. MORTGAGE! TAXATION AGAIN. A bill Is before the legislature of New Tork for Imposition of a tax of one half of 1 per cent on mortgages. It is urged as a sort of compromise meas ure, between the position of those who want to levy the same tax on mort gages that is levied on property In gen eral, and those who maintain that a tax on the mortgage Is merely a tax on the borrower, and therefore should not be levied at all, since. In the first place, the lender cannot be reached by any tax law, and second, that a debt is good for nothing unless there Is prop erty behind it, and if the property Is there, then that already Is taxed and It is all that should be taxed. But the familiar plea Is heard now, In New Tork, as it has so often been heard In Oregon, that it Is not right that the money-lender should escape taxation. Let that be granted; yet the statement remains an utterly barren one. The lender never can be made to pay the tax. He will make the bor rower agree to pay it, or the borrower will not get the money. Then if the law shall declare that the lender, not the borrower, must pay the tax, the lender will advance the rate of interest to cover the exaction. Terms are made by those who have the money, not by those who want it. The patent office has long been waiting for an invention that would relieve the borrower at the expense of the lender. The only possible consequences of a mortgage-tax law are the confusion of business relations, the imposition of further burdens upon those who need money, and an additional clog upon en terprises that require the assistance of borrowed capital. If deduction of debt be allowed, further Inequalities of tax ation follow. The deductions wipe out valuations far in excess of the mort gage assessment; the public revenues suffer, and mortgage indebtedness is manipulated in ways that throw un equal burdens upon those who keep out of debt. There is nothing practical or rational in It, from any point of view. Tet the singular fact Is that in spite of all experience mortgage taxation Is still advocated under the belief that the lender can be made to pay the tax. Though exploded so often by argument and refuted everywhere by experience, It persists as one of the strange delu sions harbored in befogged minds. It is, in fact, a question nowise debata ble; for it is as certain that the bor rower pays the tax on the mortgage as that the buyer pays the tax on trade, the depositor the tax on savings bank deposits, and the borrower the tax on bank discounts. The truth cannot be masked in the least degree from the man who opens his understanding to simplest and plainest facts. Every mortgage tax is a tax laid on the bor rower of money, who Is compelled to pay It directly by agreement with the lender, or Indirectly by an obscure but not less certain movement in the mar ket for credit, diverting lendable capi tal to other investments and putting up the rate of Interest on mortgage loans by diminishing the supply. But the indignant inquiry Is, "Are you going to let the man who owns and lends money escape taxation?" He escapes, without your permission. He can shift the tax, and he will do it. There is the property on which the mortgage rests, already taxed. Tax the mortgage, and in effect you make the owner of that property pay two taxes upon it, for he must pay the mortgage tax also, either directly or In directly; and if you allow deduction of the debt, the door is open to extraordi nary abuses. The state should leave the affair between the borrower and the lender alone. It is their contract and solely their business. No effort to tax Invisible and intangible property can be effective. Such effort only con fuses business relations, injures those whom it Is meant to serve, and intro duces disturbance and disorder into the revenue system of the state. "THE SAVING POWER OF OCR IN STITUTIONS." As an offset to the figures furnished by practical farmers, both of Eastern Oregon and the Willamette valley, showing that the expenses Incident to putting a bushel of wheat upon the market absorb, or very nearly so, the profits of wheatraislng at current prices, It is well to urge the absolute independence of the out-of-debt farm er's life as compared with that of the artisan or small tradesman. The chief points In this Independence are a shelter, the right to which no landlord can dispute; the comforts of a home which household thrift and economy can certainly secure; a table spread with plenty In spite of prohibitive prices In dairy and poultry products; an abundance of fruit for home con sumption, even in a year of scarcity; wholesomeness of environment, based upon ample space; an abundance of fresh air and pure water, and an abil ity to wear comfortable clothes, quite as good as one's neighbors wear and suitable to the vocation, even when crops are short. In other words, the income being restricted by short crops or low prices, the individual and house hold expenses can be restricted accord ingly without trenching upon family comfort or f amilypride a thing which, as every one who has tried it, or who has looked on observantly while oth ers have tried it, knows to be impossi ble to the wageworker when the labor crop his dependence Is short. Hezekiah Butterworth contributed recently an article to the Review of Re views on "The Future Value of the New England Farm," In which he gives as a reason for agricultural decay In rugged districts once peopled by a sturdy, free-handed. Independent peo ple the simple word, "extravagance." The ancestors of the farmers who first mortgaged their farms and then al lowed them to run down "knew well the duty of simple living and were proud of honesty, even if it kept them poor," says Mr. Butterworth, adding: "They lived before great fortunes were made by legitimate robbery to give oharitles to the paupers they had made. Their conditions in life were not hard. Their farms provided them with almost everything. In their cel lars were bins heaped with all kinds of natural vegetables, barrels of beef and pork, and many barrels of apples and some of cider. Their cribs swelled with corn, their meal chests were full of meal ground at the mill. In the garrets were looms, reels and hatchels, strings of sausages, dried apples, peppers. bunches of sage and herbs. The cheese room was well stored, the cupboards were solid with jars of preserves; the eggs and poultry paid for the 'West Injy goods; the butter and spring calves paid the taxes." It is scarcely necessary to add that these people "worked, throve and were happy." It is said that such conditions of life are not possible today. It may be an swered that they are possible, intensi fied and Improved to meet the changed conditions exemplified In the word "progress." The simple basis of pros perity and independence, then as now, can be defined in obedience to the In junction, "owe no man anything." A revival of the hand loom and spinning-, wheel is neither desirable, possible or necessary. But the possibility of mak ing the outlay for manufactured goods conform to the income is still with us. The cultivation of this spirit, together with an intelligent determination to di versify the products of the farm so that anxiety concerning the price of wheat will" not rob the farmer's life of the serenity that is its due, are the ele ments upon which agricultural inde pendence rests. Nowhere has nature contributed more graciously to this end than in the Pa cific Northwest. Neither climatic rig ors nor unfruitful soil has here to be contended against, and the narrow market the despair of pioneer agricul ture In Oregon is now wide and con stantly widening. Figures showing that It costs 42 cents a bushel to raise wheat in one section of the state and 35 cents in another, present a condition which wise farmers will seek to im prove not by joining in the political outcry of demagogues against trans portation corporations, capital, the gold standard and what not, and by seeking relief in debased currency, but by look ing carefully to the details of their vo cation, the most ancient and honorable in the history of civilized mankind, and turning its many opportunities afforded by a widening market to their advan tage. The study of the soil and how to make it yield its resources to the best advantage promises returns that will, if intelligently pursued and practically applied, restore to the farmer the Inde penQencehat was his heritage from his New England forefathers. As Mr. But terworth says, if you have a farm, keep it; if not, get one, for the time may come when this country will be largely divided into monopolists, dependents and farmers, and the farmer will be the most Independent of all men, and the saving power of our institutions. There can be little doubt that the re lief from the perplexing problems of time is a simple, honest, faith-sustaining life on the soil. There is promise in the attentive bent of the agricultural population as witnessed in farmers' in stitutes and congresses, fruitgrowers' conventions and government experi ment stations, that this relief is being systematically, intelligently and per sistently sought. "THE WINTER'S TALE.'. "The Winter's Tale" keeps the stage not because of its general merit, but because it includes two of Shakes peare's most lovely women, Hermlone, the wronged wife, and her charming daughter, Perdlta. Every one of Shakespeare's women talks a different note, and her note, with true artistic sense, is subordinated to her environ ment. Leontes is a kind of jealous man that always inspires disgust, not sym pathy, because he is a thoroughly stu pid, sullen fellow. Othello excites sympathy because he has been imposed upon by a most subtle villain, a man of positive genius for duplicity, for the villainy of Iago is suspected by nobody but his wife. He Is "honest" Iago not only to Othello, but to Cassio, Roder igo, and all his comrades. Othello is duped by a man of Satanic craft, who cozens everybody, so that when Othello in his dying speech asks that he should be spoken of as "one not easily jeal ous, but being wrought perplexed in the extreme," he asked but justice, but Leontes is naturally a sullen, stupid, harsh, exacting man, who had no rea sonable excuse for his jealousy. Leon tes is a thoroughly mean man nat urally, utterly unworthy the noble woman he repudiates without reason, and whose child he stigmatizes as ille gitimate and dooms to death by expos ure. So utterly repulsive Is Leontes in his commonplace, mean, unjust, cause less jealousy, that he is a figure of no dramatic power, like Othello; he is a creature capable of intense bitterness, and heartless cruelty, but is utterly without the generous passion that makes Othello's lips, even in his wildest moments, a bubbling spring of com manding eloquence. In the dire calamity that befalls Othello we sympathize with him, for we know him to be a good and noble minded man gone wrong; but we de spise Leontes as a cold-blooded, petty minded cur. who put away his wife and disowned his daughter without ex tenuation or excuse for his injustice. "The Winter's Tale," but for the ma ture beauty and noble temper of Her mlone and the charming vivacity and delicate 'grace of Perdlta, could not hope to keep the stage. Hermlone suf fers the same wrongs that the lovely Imogen does in "Cymbeline" at the hands' of her husband, who Is a better man with more excuse for his jealousy than had Leontes, but Hermlone is a much older woman than Imogen or Desdemona or Hero, and bears her cross with a superior dignity and calm ness befitting her years, making her next of kin in quality to Katherine of Arragon when she nobly pleads against unjust divorce. The versatility of Shakespeare was never so wonderfully shown as In his capacity to 'make all these women suffer the same calamity, and all meet it nobly, and no two of them talk or act in the same way. Imogen and Hero bear some superficial resemblance in age and quality to Des demona, and yet how different they all are in temperament; and how differ ently they all meet the same worst mis fortune that can befall a good woman who continues to love a grossly jealous husband. Tou cannot conceive of a fine woman of the type of Olivia in "Twelfth Night," or Cordelia in "Lear," or Be atrice in "Much Ado About Nothing," or Rosalind or Juliet, enduring pa tiently what Hermlone, Hero or Imo gen endured. Ophelia might have en dured It at Hamlet's hands, and possi bly even so grand a woman as Isa bella in "Measure for Measure" might have patiently played the part of Her mlone, for the sake of an unjust hus band she loved; Miranda might have done it for Ferdinand, and Viola for the duke, but we suspect Perdlta could not have played her mother's part in her mother's place. The most i eloquent eulogy ever spoken of a woman is spoken of Hermlone in the famous lines: Women will love her, that Bhe la more worth. Than any man; men that she Is The rarest of all women. Beatrice, Viola and Olivia stand for three very different types among Shakespeare's women; all charming in their distinctive quality, and yet there is another type of women more charm ing still found in Perdlta, who is to "The Winter's Tale" what Rosalind Is to "As Tou Like It," a charming shape, that most winning of all women, a woman spontaneously, irrepresslbly mirthful, witty, vivacious and withal sweet, modest, affectionate, tender, courageous and true. There have been many great writers among men who have been able to de lineate correctly a bad woman and a heroic man; there have been many great writers among women who have been able to delineate a noble-spirited, fine woman, but only the great English writer whose brain was ambidextrous, who could draw a bad woman or a noble woman, a bad man or a. noble man, with equal facility and accuracy, was Shakespeare. Byron, Dickens or Thackeray can paint bad women, but when they try to paint good women we always get a wooden figure. Even Walter Scott painted but one great woman, Rebecca the Jewess, and even the artists of the Greek drama fall when they attempt to picture a noble, natural woman. The only ex ception is the picture of Nausicaa in the Odyssey, who is drawn in as fine womanly lines as Rosalind or Perdlta. Senator Caffery is one of the few men in public life whose utterances always command respect, however mistaken his views appear in the light of facts. He is a man of convictions, and fear less in their advocacy. In the politics of all time there have been few more Impressive episodes than the response given by him to the demands of his state that he vote for protection to its sugar interests, that he believed pro tection wrong and could not violate his conscience by voting -f or it, though it cost him his seat in the senate. His position puts to shame the equivocation of Lindsay of Kentucky, and goes back for its counterpart to Burke's address to his Bristol constituents. It resem bled somewhat the celebrated refusal of Senator Dolph to obey the silver platform of Oregon republicans. Sena tor Caffery is wrong on expansion and wrong on the Nicaragua canal. But, what Is of vastly more consequence, he has moral convictions and is true to them. It is to be feared Mr. Caffery is too good a man to be kept in the senate of the United States. It is a matter of real regret that the desire of the people of Oregon to re ceive and Inter within the limits of the state the bodies of the soldiers of the Second Oregon who fell in the Philip pines is so difficult and apparently so Impossible of achievement. If these bodies were not to be returned to the state that sent them out, there was no special reason for returning them. It is hard for a people accustomed for long years to the ways of peace to un derstand and accept the arbitrary rul ings of military management In mat ters that touch their personal feelings and interests. Hence no stone will be left unturned to compass this, the nat ural desire of the citizens of the state, to secure the return for sepulture of the bodies of their soldier boys. "As well have allowed them to remain In Manila," says Colonel Summers, and this sentiment finds echo in the heart of every loyal Oregonian. Mr. Watterson's statement about af fairs in Kentucky was not a complete one. It Ignored the real cause and whole gist of the controversy, namely, that the democrats, having obtained a majority in the legislature, proceeded to oust the republican state officials who had been elected, and to put the defeated democratic candidates in their places. For this purpose the Goebel law was made. It has been clear from the first that there was no remedy for this outrage, short of revolution, and this was not practicable. After this, every election in Kentucky must be merely a farce, for opposition to the party in power can avail nothing. Tet in many Jocallties continual bloodshed may be expected; for there are many men in Kentucky who will fight, even If they know they fight hopelessly. The disarmament Idea has evidently not spread to Sweden. The new budget calls for nearly 150,000,000 kroner (about $40,000,000), with whch King Oscar pro poses to purchase forty-six new batter ies of artillery, 100,000 rifles and cart ridges to correspond. In contrast to this expenditure for war is an item of 20,000,000 kroner for railways, these be ing under government control in Swe den. Such an expensive armament looks like supreme folly, since the state cannot hope to contend with its power ful neighbors in the game of war. It is no doubt intended, however, as prep aration for the conflict which threatens Norway with her twin sister of the dual kingdom. The country barely escaped the con sequences of a strike on the Great Northern railway. We have only to recall the serious Inconvenience and great loss to which the public was sub jected by the great railroad strike of 1894 to realize the full value of the fourteen negative votes by which the threatened strike was prevented. It may be hoped that the terms upon which the differences between the rail road company and its employes were settled are those of fairness, since only upon this basis can anything like a permanent settlement between these elements, each of which is necessary to the activities of the other, be made. The new president of the Republican State League, like his immediate pre decessor, is a man of affairs, and was a gold-standard man In days when sound money needed every possible support in Oregon. The defeated can didate is likewise a man of standing, and would have received a heavier vote had not the idea gotten abroad that he was the representative of Senator Mc Brlde's Interests Thomas B. Reed has rendered his country many eminent services, but perhaps none so great as getting out of the way for the passage of the Nica ragua canal bill. It begins to look as if a bill might get through the pres ent congress authorizing the construc tion of this long-delayed important en terprise. It is not necessary to read an alliance into the Hay-Pauncefote treaty in or- 1 der to gnaw pnn r-prmq ta F,ti gland, The semi-official declaration that Great Britain gets absolutely no quid pro quo is a palpable untruth. The concession is in the neutralization of the treaty and the application of "the open door" to the canal. Maybe we shall want to do this very thing; but congress will not agree to it in a hurry. Mr. Hay has too heavily discounted future de velopment of public opinion. Advance agreements as to the status of the Nicaragua canal in time of war are not worth fighting about. The ca nal in war will, be for" those who can hold It. That Is why we shall need for tifications. Taylor was elected. Otherwise, the argument seems with the Goebelltes. NOTE AND C03IMENT. They seem to have burled the six-shooter in Kentucky. It takes a very, very old friend to shake hands like a politician. Sometimes a knot at politicians covers more ground than a league of clubs. A French judge has decided that French poets are mad. aa they undoubtedly are- This has been such a mild winter that even the sun has spent most of his time In Oregon. This senatorial contest bids fair to re duce the number of reputations In Mon tana to the lowest terms. For the wholesouled brand of patriotism, the Republican Editorial Association is the next thing to an Afro-American league. Full many a stranger has arrived "Within the cityo gates. And some are holding' office sow And some are candidates. If Senator Peffer does not succeed in getting promised any job in Kansas, his whiskers will bo a strong recommenda tion for a commission as a Boer general. Xilvea there the man "Who wields a rhyming' pen "Who has not Bald That Culler and his men Marched up a hill And then marched down agalnf Hush thee, my baby, though trusts would undo thee,. By hoisting the price of thy cab out of sight: Don't lift up thy voice when these monatera pursue thee; Just wait a few months and 'twill turn out all right. For daddy has purchased to plant of the Ice man, A red-painted cart and some tonga built of steel. So walUtlll next autumn and he'll be a nlca man, And baby will ride In an automobile. The prize-ring Is vigorously denounced by the pulpit, yet It furnishes it with force ful phraseology, as the following, from one or the sermons of J. Q. A. Henry, of Chicago, will show: "There is a finish fight between the church and the saloon." Mr. Henry might have added that the church, thus far, is doing most of the rushing, the saloon contenting Itself with an occa sional counter, and an uppercut now and then. He undoubtedly was reaching for the wind with that sermon, and the chances are he landed. But though the hairs of one's head are numbered, the rounds in this great mill are not, and probably will never be as long as whisky Is distilled and pews rented. Mr. Henry is known In Portland, where he filled the pulpit of the First Baptist church for a time. There is a strong belief here that his first three names are John, Quincy and Adams. The open season for tops has arrived some time ahead of schedule, owing to the absence of winter. Marbles will soon be here, and will be followed by kites, If March winds Justify the trouble of build ing the paper-flyers. Just what has regu lated the seasons for these important amusements is not clear, but they follow one another as regularly as the days of the week. And It is so all over the coun try. No one ever sees marbles in top time, nor tops in kite time. Kites, of course, depend to some extent on the wind, but they are seldom borne on the strong wings of the November gales, and only In March are they the thing. Law regulates the time for killing game, necessity the sea son for enjoying the fruits of the earth, weather and Paris the time and style of dres3, but who shall eay by what unseen hand is guided the destiny of these boyish pastimes? The Bostonlans have gone, and Helen Bertram did not sing, "My Home Is Where the Heather Blooms," the gem of "Rob Roy," and "Rob Roy" Is a gem among operas. Mr. Warde left us without play ing "Belphegor," and Mr. James will be here almost a week with all those mar velous scenes he has created as the jester in "Francesca" unacted. These pictures in memory are, perhaps, the greatest bless ing the stage has for us. Long years after their seal was first set, its impress Is fresh and clear. We wish sometimes It could be renewed, and, perhaps, for Bome of them, the original pleasure might be repeated. Others can have no renewing except In memory. Booth's "Hamlet," Barrett's "Lanclotto," Emma Abbott's "Arllne,"the drolleries of "OldHoss" Hoey, the singing dolls of Harry Kennedy these are treasures of which the stage has been forever despoiled. Tet other delights are just as irrevocable, for the play, like the great oration, Is partly in the audience. To be thrilled with Minnie Maddern's "Blue Alsatian Mountains." and to- stir with sympathy for Armand In his Infatu ation for Modjeska's "Camllle" could hap pen In one's 20th year, but not again for graybeards who have grown, along with the actor of that time, no longer young. Pictures of glorious nights let them hang undisturbed on the walls of memory! They cannot be made over, they shall not be replaced by any new. There are no plays like the old plays, no actors like the old actors for the old-timers. But 20 years from now your blase first-nighter will sigh heavily, Just as we do now, when he recalls Beatrice Cameron In "The Ser enade," and Frank Campau as "Tom Driscoll." o Sir. Edmunds' Memorial. New Tork Sun. The Philadelphia American League, a graft of the Antl-Imperlallstlc League, has sent to each member of congress a memo rial asking that the fugacious Washing tons and Hampdens of the Tagals be as sured by law of the Intention of the United States to help them set up a free and independent government in the Phil ippines. The memorial Is said to have been written by the Hon. George F. Ed munds, who showa the demoralizing influ ence of anti-expansion by splitting his in finitives. An extract: We respectfully submit that It is due to tha ever-living principles of our government' that an effort be mada to Immediately terminate the great destruction of human lives, both of our own gallant soldiers and sailors and of the people of the Philippines, and also terminate the great drain of the money of our people, of prolonged and Indefinite duration under existing conditions, if this can be done by conceding to the people of the Islands ouch a system of self government and Independence as they shall prove capable of maintaining and by assisting and protecting them in the same. As to which we respectfully submit: I. The war In the Philippines Is about won. H. It would have been ended before had not the rebels been encouraged by the an-tl-Imperiallsts, who are still feeding them with false hopes and misrepresenting the will of the United States with regard to them. IH. Congress can be depended upon to provide for the Inhabitants of the Phlllp- J pjn-&t.ihs. pxonsr time, such, a system of self-government as they shall he capable of maintaining and as will best serve thea and the rest of the United States. We respectfully submit, also, that a man like Mr. Edmunds might employ hie time to better advantage than ia encoaragteg rebels against the United States. 4 a ' DEMAND FOR FREES TRADE. Republican Josrnnl Stands Loyally by President McKlnley. Chicago Times-Herald. The senate committee which has the Puerto Rico bill in charge has decided to report favorably on the provision for a reciprocal tariff of 26 per cent between the island and the mainland. This It has done despite the protests of the Puerts Rlcans, who desire free trade, and It is Intimated that its policy will have the support of congress. In their attempt to thus commit the country the politicians have been influ enced, It is said, by the tobeceo-growers of Connecticut, the cane-sugar-growers of Louisiana, and the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association. Some comparisons which are suggested by the interests that are Involved follow. Puerto Rico contains but 348S square miles. The imports which have exceeded the exports include coal, iron, meat and vegetable produce and manufactured to bacco. The exports, according to the lat est complete returns at hand (189S) were: "7 sugar) d,iti,oax, UU11CJT, (UI,I1Q. Coffee, which is not produced in the States, has no effect upon the tariff ques tion, and honey has not been represented in the lobby, so that wo shall confine the comparison to tobacco and sugar alone. The year that Puerto Rico's tobacco ex ports amounted to $$46,556 our crop of that article was valued at $35,574,220. The same year, when the Puerto Rico sugar output was 54,861 tons, the cane sugar grown In our Southern states was about five times as much in quantity. At that time the production of beet sugar here was small, but it Is increasing rapidly. In 1803 It amounted to nearly half the Puerto Rico output of cane in 1886. What, then. Is the reason for the exces give fear of the small island? Manifestly the free import of lt3 tobacco and sugar would hardly affeot our producers, and having our other new possessions in mind there Is little danger from the establish ment of a precedent, unless it Is proposed to knock out the Hawaiian territorial bill as It now stands. Though the Philippines produce nearly as much sugar as our cane sugar states, they export comparatively little of It to this country, and their total tobacco crop In 1804 was valued at only $1,750,000. Moreover, a large part of the crop is always consumed on the Islands. It would look, therefore, as though we were engaged In a picayune business when we deny Puerto Rico free trade. The Poor. J. Sterling Morton's Conservative. The Conservative, by request, publishes the address of the supreme council of the American equal wage union. "The poor are neglected or considered only inci dentally," salth-the address. But pov erty and wealth are relative terms. Who is a poor man? Who Is a rich man? Preachers and politicians denounce the rich In one breath and in the next ask them to give to the poor. The rich, from the press and pulpit, are pounded for their wickedness every week. The poor are praised for being poor and congrat ulated upon their Increased chances of getting Into heaven easily, while the rich man is assured that a camel stands a better chance of trotting through the eye of a needle than a rich man has of entering the kingdom. But the rich seem to enjoy being abused and to give all the more generously after a sound drubbing from the pulpit or a roast from the press. If all were poor and there were no accumulated riches in the country, how would taxes be gath ered; how would government be sus tained; how would hospitals, free col leges, homes for the indigent, aged and the Incurably diseased be established and maintained? The poorest "are the proper and legiti mate objects of our first concern," salth the circular again. Whose concern? Who are the "poorest"? a England's Necessity. Philadelphia Times. England has now no choice but to sur render South Africa to the Boers or make South Africa an English colony. None who have studied the English character can for a moment doubt what choice Eng land will make, and when her choice is made, she has the power to carry it to Its consummation. The Boer war now promises to be a long struggle, and none can hope for Its termination for a year, and it is possible it may last for several years. England la equal to all the exactions that this war shall make upon her, and this country will profit by the conflict just In propor tion as the war shall be Increased in mag nitude. e Anxious to Please. Harlem Life. "Pat, I thought I hired you to carry bricks up that ladder by the day." "Te did, sor." "Well, I've been watahlng you, and you've only done It a half a day today, the other half you spent coming down the ladder." "Ol'll thry to be doln' bether tomorry, sor." oi A Hlerh-Toned Affair. Judge. Mr. Hlghcollar Mrs. Cash just told ma that our church entertainment is to be a very high-toned affair. No tickets will be sold. Mr. Shlrtfront No tickets sold? How do you expect to make any money? Mr. Hlghcollar We shall allow patrons to purchase cards of admission. ' a As One Sees It. Philadelphia Record. Tommy Pop, what is vulgar ostenta tion? Tommy's Father Vulgar ostentation, my son. Is the display made by people who have more money to do It with than we have ourselves. 4 o Change of Plan. Chlcaso Record. "The Folderols have recalled their re ception Invitations." "Anybody sick?" "No; Mrs. Folderol changed her mind and concluded she would rather have the house painted." a Brave Ilnller of Britannia. (Kipling's "Bobs".) Brave Buller of Britannia Had fully thirty thousand men: He marched them up oa Spkmkep, And marched them down again; He crossed the big Tugeta. And at dark he crossed again. Brave Buller of Britannia And his thirty thousand men. Brave Buller of Britannia Has en train four thousand earta And Studebaker wagaoe Filled with bagpipes, cheese and charts; With strategy he moves this train Wherever he can get. But Brave Buller of Britannia Is strategizing yet. Brave Buller of Britannia Is deep In Afrte mud: He' studying tha topagraphy Across Tugela's flood: With thiry thousand Britishers Again he will attack. Brave Buller of Britannia Wires, There'H be bo turning back." Brave Buller of Britannia This message daily seat To Chamberlain and Woteeley And te his parliament: "Tbe troors behaved most splendidly; The Boers' loss, severe; We retired In perfect order. Fnrta your own, Sir Redevere , 3IC2ia&OB. GOSSIP OF THB NATIONAL CAHT&L WAEINGT05f. Pes, 8. The hlmotaHia amendment reported fey the naawee esm mfttee teeay Is for tbe pnraaao emu lating tbe republicans whe rename with, the party, but who a8! represent free silver states. It is a aonseooloa wMeh. when adopted, as It will he. will enable, these men to vote for the Mil seen tha ground that it hoMs ewt a MmalaMla pledge to them. It m new welt under stood that the flnaneml Wll will he prac tically made In conference between tbe two bouse, and that the bill whisk the senate finance committee reported vM be amended very materially before It la finally adopted. There aaamo to be ne doubt that this Wnwtalnc amaadwoDt re ported today will be enmtaated from the measure m conference. Some TepwMteans say, however, that it means nothing, ami will remain practically moperattvs, trie, same as the little rider that was pat neon, the repeal of the sitver-pwrcaaee mw. This little amendment also pleased the government to bimetallam, and many gold men voted for It with the naderatamitng that it was a sop. as tbe btmetaWo amendment reported today seems te be. Republicans think that this amassment may save WoJcott, Carter, and Bwous m Colorado, Montana and Idaho, and as K means nothing. It may be amended. Canal Bill's Prespeets. Representative Hspbnrn, who Is seeh ing the Nicaragua canal Mil in the heuee, says that he has no devbt that It wilt pees at an early date, though he bas net yet received the guarantee from the speaker or the committee oa rales that the Mil shall have conaWecatton, The Puerto Rico Mtl and the Philippine and perhaps the Hawaiian Mil may be passed in ahead of the Nicaragua canal Mil hi the senate. A close canvase of the sen ate shews that there Is not now more than eight or ten members who are op posing the canal Mil, and if the friends of the measure make a fight they can get this Mil la ahead of even the Puerto Rico or other Mtts for the government of the various Islands. Serieas Blow te Clarlc. The decision of the committee oa privi leges and elections, refusing to admit tes timony tending to impeach the testimony of Whiteside, Is a serious Mow to Clark and his ease. Wh!teide Is the main wit ness for the prosecution. It Is upon his testimony that the case against Clark: rests. If his testimony or his character is not impeached, the case against Clark will have a standing such as to give the sitting member much concern. The decis ion arrived at today would mdteate that the committee believes Whiteside. For Sale of Umatilla Lands. Representative Moody today Introduced Mils s'mtlar to those recently Introduced by Senator Simon, providing lor the sale of the unsold portion of the Umatilla In dian reservation, and confirming the title of mixedt-blood Indians to all entries or allotments of land m severalty heretofore made. Naval Cadet Jehas ten's Standing. As a result of the semiannual examina tion held at the Annapolis naval academy, Huntington Johnston, of Oregon, came out In the 31th plaee. which Is his stand ing among the graduates of this year. Bills by Shonp. Senator Shoup today Introduced a bill appropriating $lM0O for staking artesian wells in various sections of Idaho for the purpose of ascertaining if there is a suf ficient pressure of water under ground to Irrigate successfully needy sections of the state. Senator Shoup offered amendments to the Indian appropriation bill paying an agent at the Nez Farces agency $M09 per annum, raising the pay of the physician, there from MN to $, and extending to July 1. nm, the time In whmh set tlers who purchased and settled en ceded, Indian reservations may make payments. Mining: iMxrtt for Nome. The pubnc lands eommltee of the house, which is giving Its entire attention just now to Alaska, Is much In doubt as to which way to move. So far, the testi mony before the committee has been di verse on most questions, especially with regard to the Cape Nome country. As heretofore stated, the Lacey bill will be defeated, and the scheme that now meets with the greatest favor is to extend to Alaska the placer mining laws of the United States, which are practically in force at this time. There Is much uncer tainty, however, as to whether or not to reserve a St-foot roadway along the beach and exclude miners from this. It Is point ed out that at Nome this beach 1s very rich, and to prevent Its being rained would work a hardship oa many miners. At the same time, the proposition to preserve this roadway, but first allow It to be mined, provided this Is done in a seasonable time, meets with much favor, and this plan will likely be amended. Hearings will coottmte for some weeks befere a satisfactory Mil is finally framed. D " Mr. Bryan's Cenfessloa. Neetaotat Stele JrMl I aa the greatest aa ea ear. My greataaas to m three perte. GaH, gall. gall. 1 sever read. 2 HCVQZ JmwmrKa I aever men te adv. I just say a bg la so. And thea it is. My greaes te asyriM. It seems to be a sttparsatsral gift. Tou canaet aaaJyae K- A , It's nke the wM wMeh It Is ereatedV- It comes whan It dara pleases. Tou bear the sewad ef K, Bt you cannot ten Where It cornea ftem. Nor where It gees te, Nor where lf at. Waehtngtoa? He was all right For these early tmtes. Bat he cowldB't make a speeeh. OraiW.7 Grant made seme ggedmeves war. But Grant was a ettsnt mas. And what's a attest maaf Webster? Tes, Webster was an orator. .,,.. Bat he made only ave or stx speeefees te ms whole IMetlme. I've made nw thousand ha ave years. What do yea tmwt of Mwt7 Tes. Ltaeem did very wen aa a starter: Be was a sort of John the Seettst Of BM. He made ene Mttle wfc at SetKjwbsrg mat was very good. Uaeota was Mfc me la ae respeet The eouMBon peopla loved Mm. That is, yoa understand They U sot dote oa mm Aa they o . Bet they liked hhn Ufclr wem, I've Helped h iepuaniw Nt I print his peatare side by sMe Wtthmtne' Oast Mt for XJnesml When may see Ms ilsnira they eaeai When they see mm They yen. When they seams The roafsaes C Teas Joftarooa was stever wh, Ms pen. He wmte the Beemratma at maoDosdencs. That is the gieamsl pea pmiwetioii, Saeaet my "Flint BaStfe.- Washmgton. Webster, mrant, Jefferses aid XJaesia Were alt geed mas, Thry had m read and dig hr mats, Asdtbtok. I Just swett we with hitulMsa, Thea eeea vtf mouth and let er Teffl 3feMhr af these seals ran Mr presMest Tflr'WmmHiC & AOffHlMWlQB I Jeet ran on my awn heek. Neither ef these esuM make mere man One great speeeh m leer yean. I tan make forty ta mar hours. Wasblagma worked without pay. I gat gate rem tpta In every town. Bat What's the see? gverybsdy watwihn There's only esc great mas, $ Just one. . And that's me.