30 TRF, MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1900. MASONS' CATHEDRAL Its lExtorkw May Be of Pure White Marble. PERFECT INTERIOR ARRANGEMENTS It Will AcceraiBedate All Tortlnnd Bedies e ManoHX and the Orc- gB Grand Lodcrc. have the creamery oompleted and in oper ation within a few weeks at the least. Doubt was expressed as to -whether ho could secure the milk and proceed -with the work, but he has set at rest all doubts on that subject. Mr. Kern has succeeded in contracting for the milk of over 200 cows in that neighborhood, which Is con sidered sufficient to start with, and he has no doubt but he wllj be able to gft murh more :n the course of a few months. He is thoroughly familiar with the business The fanners in that district express them selves: as greatly pleased over the pios pects of a near market Tor their milk and a steady cash income. Some time during the present month the plant will be in shape to commence taking milk from the farmers. i e AN IRISHMAN SPEAKS. A Inmnlr of spotless white, fashioned with armboHc art. and affording every convenience for the work of the most po tent secret and fraternal order of the country, is the project Scottish Rite Ma sons of Portland contemplate in the new structure at Morrison and Lownsdale street. Already the Pacific Coast Marble Company has offered to donate sufficient of the pure marble found in their quarries near Spokane, for the building, and the -watte will be ele?ntly set off by the use of material equally spotless for coverlag the great dome. Aluminum has been sug gested for the dome, and will doubtless be ueed In connection with the marble. If constructive science is able to utilize the plates advantageously. But It is not in the exterior that the Ma sonic cathedral of Portland will command widest attention, although beautiful as. planned. Spacious halls, well-appointed property rooms, social quarters, balconies for orchestra, hidden lofts for "profane" choirs, quarters for grand officers, libraries and. every other accommodation for ob servance of the mysterious rites of the Maeonlc order, together with ample pro vision for purely social functions, is where the proposed cathedral will surpass all other;. This splendid adaptation of envi ronment to order work is not the idea of a. firm of architects, whose knowledge of what is wanted consists of hasty inspec tion of needs poorly communicated. The whole is the slow, gradual growth of ex perience, of life-long work by one whos& devotion to the end has been proven by years of constant, unremitting service. Religtoos worship commands many stately edifices in Portland. Ardor of devotees enlists large capital in the work of adorning the temple where souls com mune, and where the principles of correct living are expounded. The growth of se cret orders, most of which have some car dinal element of human ethics for corner stone, naturally inspires those enjoying this modern method of social instruction to attest their loyalty in similar manner. What the Masons propose is a structure expressing their devotion. The strength of the order, both in numbers and finan cial power, leaves but little doubt that whatever is undertaken will be pushed to completion. After determining upon the building, one of the most important features in such an enterprise is the location. Fraternal orders meet In all parts of the city. Some have top-door halls of office buildings. and some are more thoroughly separated from the uninitiated. Convenient ds tanoe. freedom from noise, pleasant sur roundings and sightly grounds are the conditions sought. In the location at Mor rison and Lownedale streete they seemed admirably combined. It is the heart of the resident district, and not dis tant from such as are tied to the busi ness center. A quieter spot could not be found near street traffic. It is in the direct path of business extension, so that as an Investment it is commended. Like the b'g churches, the cathedral that promises so much for Masonic life of the state, has sought a beautiful retreat. The guiding genius of interior arrange ments Is Philip S. Malcolm, who has long stood at the head of Scottish Bite Ma sonry In the state. This signifies to these acquainted with the order that he started from the bottom rung of the ladder, and has missed none in the upward cl.mb. In choosfng those for the top. Masonry does not Invert natural order of things, which permits no skips in upward progress. Mr. Malcolm adds to his long experience a pro found love for the order, that has led him to study every need in every depart ment through which he has parsed, until he now embodies Masonry as none other wise situated could. The plans of the cathedral are h. and in them, perhaps-, will be found a more devout labor of love than is often given to fraternal work. Ample provision Is made for the Masonic orders on the Wort Side of the river, besides the grand bodies of the different branches found in the state. The Scottish Rite bodies, blue lodges. Royal Arch Chapter and Commandery of Knights Templar on the Portland side of the AV.l lamette all will have space. Then there will he provision for the grand lodge A. F. & A. M. and the grand chapter of the Royal Arch Masons of the state. In every respect the symbolic side of art will be illustrated, and any Mason looking at the cathedral will not need a transparency wttk wo-te across It to inform him to what purpose the building is devoted. The entrance Is through a wide portico by one, two and three steps into a ves tibule. Thence by five steps to the land ing, opening into the apartments on the first floor. From this landing rises the grand staircase of Ave. seven, nine and 16 steps up to the anteroom, of the main halt. Entering the vestibule on the left is the office of the grand secretary of the grand lodge of Oregon, and behind that the grand lodge library. Back of the office and library extends the banquet hall a very large room, with a fireplace at the rear, over wMch Is a balcony for musicians. On the right of the first floor is a large reception-room, back of which is the library of the Scottish Rite, these Jtwe rooms be ing separated from a cardroom and a smoktog-room by a brick partition. The main hall is two stories in height, with a dome ceiling, and adjoining this Is another hall, separated by sliding pan els, so both may readily be turned into one. The main hall te,4x72 feet, and the adjoining hall 21x72. "There is a passage completely around these two halls, which Is divided Into property-rooms for the various bodies. The second floor also has an armory for the Knights Templar and Scottish Rite. Over the secondary hall, winch is but one story high, is an additional hall KxS7 feet, intended to be ueed as a wdgeroom when the main hall is occupied. This lodgeroom also has the nice ary ante-rooms and property-rooms. Plane of the building have been sub mitted to eminent Masons all over the TnKed States, with the result of being universally approved. More than one in authority has pronounced them superior to anything of the kind In the country, for It Is believed no other structure af fords equal facilities for the workings of all deatita of Masonry. Immediate construction of the cathedral hs not contemplated. Structural material, particularly iron. Is very high at pres ent, and those in charge feel that a delay of a year or so will be fully Justified. The generous offer of the Pacific Coast Marble Company rests upon but one doubt as to whether it will be accepted that betas; freight rates. If they are not pro hibitory, the cathedral will be a monu ment to the beaut) of Northwest marble. Other matters of the same nature will be adjusted before work commences, fot a building Intended as a type for national admiration cannot be hastily begun. Light ing will be by electricity, and so arranged as to give one person complete control. Toattlatton wfll be of the latest indirect A Relative of John Mltchcl, and an Upholder of Enprlfiml. MEHAMA. Or., Feb. S. (To the Editor.) I have read the letter of Mr. D'Arcy in your issue of today with much pleasure. BANKRUPT PREFERENCES TEXT OF A RECEXT DECISION JUDGE HANFORD. BY Xo Difference Between Preference Given and Received Ueiiclit Determines the Effect. A recent decision by Judge Hartford, of the United States distriot court of "Wash ington, on preferences in bankruptcy. In tent of parties giving and receiving pref erences, and the rights of preferred credi tors, having several distinct claims, Is of great Interest to bankers, business men and ethers, whose affairs are affected by , the bankruptcy act. It was rendered in the case of Charles Conhaim, a bankrupt. The decision follows: SyllnbuH. The attempt to draw a distinction be- SliBSffl RTffil 1 13 fin SI? FROJkT ELEA'ATIOX, PROPOSED MASONIC CATHEDRAL. the amounts of the several payments made by the bankrupt on account of his indebt edness to said bank. The facts of the case are as follows: On January 1, 1SS9, the bank held four promissory cotes, gven by the bankrupt for loans made to him by the bank. Between January I and Feb ruary 20, 1E99. the bankrupt made several payments to the bank on account of his in debtedness on said nutes, amounting In the aggregate to 53150. the last payment being on February 14. The petition to be adjudged a bankrupt was filed In this court on February 20, 1899. The payments when made were not applied on all of the four promissory notes', but were so ap plied as to extinguish two of them, and the surp.us was all applied on one of the notes now held by the bank, leaving a small balance unpaid, and the fourth note, amounting to 1500. with accrued inter est, remains wholly unpaid. At the time the payments were made the bankrupt was in fact insolvent, but there is no evi dence tending to prove that the officers of the bank had any reason to suppose that he was in that condition, or that they were receiving a preference over ciner creditors. THE PROGRESS OF MAN the very prince of dreamers Jesus of Nazareth. He pictures a. humanity so ideal, a life so unselfish, a eatheitctsm so broad, as to make all the world mte- ' read his thought and to believe he must EVER HELPED BY DREAMERS AND . " "J111 toT othjr world than l this. Not so, however, for his dream was THEIR DREAMS. j or tjje multitudes who moll and sweat and j battle In field and market, and Mood- t drenched plain. The place for its reallaa Road Has Eccn Lone and Toilsome , tlon was rlsat here in this stern and rug- bcu niiuciticea fc nw, j& jrvu wH iTUi and Bloody, Bnt Results Have Been Achieved. SALEM. Or., Feb. 8. (To the Editor.) In the evolution of the race, it must have always happened that improvement was made In spite of strenuous opposition. Be ginning with the ftem.haman types, we may faintly conceive the antagonisms which the innovations of the more ad vanced members of the race-wou'd arouse In their slower and more animal kin. They would be met with tooth and claw with blind unreason. Every step toward the only is his dream of this humanity and of this earth; but it is the forecast of the things to coma, and he himself is its pro phetic voucher. If one man may rise out af selfishness into a perfectly spiritual that Is, a per fectly unselfish life why may not hun dreds or millions so rise? If one such finds more real, profound, Immeasurable satisfaction, more joy, in such a life than In Us opposite, why may not multitudes find like fullness of joy In thus living? He !s the crown of evolution, its finished product, a perfect man, and beyond all controversy he proclaims in his own per son what the race is to become. The "Will you kindly give me space for a few! tween preferences given and preferences remarks on it? As a native-born Irishman and a rela tive of John Mltchel (not Mitchell), I be lieve I am qualified to speak. To almost all of Mr. D'Arcy's indictment of Eng land's attitude towards Ireland in the pat I make no defense, nor can I wonder at the lretense hatred of England manifested by the exiled Irish or their descendants. But I do claim that England's attitude has entirely changed within the last 50 years, and the present British nation should not be judged as if it were acting a did Lie Tory government of the famine yar! For a fact, the Irish tenant-farmer of today has more security and oppor tunities than anj' European peasant, and more than a tenant in Oregon. An Irish landlord nowadays has merely a rent charge on the property, and that rent Is fixed by a court notoriously favorable to the tenant In fact, all rents have been reduced about 50 per cent in the last 20 year.". Whatever may have been the out rages committed by her in the past, Eng land's present attitude towards Ireland is fair and square. Bui what of Ireland's attitude towards l.r.gland? Read the nationalist press and learn. Open and avowed treason preached to the more Ignorant people! Racial hatred stirred up on all occasions! were an Oregonian to speak of the United States army as these foul-mouthed agitators speak of the British army, what would be th result? Mr D'Arcy does General BuPer an in justice. General Duller resigned his post In the south of Ireland because it wa. distasteful to him as a man and a soldier to asfisl In harrying a distressed peas antry That was nearly 20 years ago. Why cannot Mr. D'Arcv and educated men like him take a broader view of the matter? England's downfall means the setting-up in her place of some other EurtiTEn power. "Will Imperial Germany and her war lord be an Improvement? Or a-itrcratlc Russia and her seml-barbarlan hG-dos? O- hstcrical France? As a sptwdor of civilization, England has led the way No country has she touched without it bpcomlng better. Now the he Irish are no longer op pressed and have gained their proper po sition as the equals of the rest of the kingdom, such language and behavior as that of the Redmonds, Healys. Dillons et al. is out of dace and makps the name of Irishman a by-word for all that Is sedi tious and "ag'ln the the government." Not all those born in Ireland are an tagonistic to Great Britain. J. TV. IRVINE, B.-A., I. C. D. received, saying that when an insolvent debtor disposes of Ills property so as to benefit one creditor and knows that his other creditors must suffer a loss, the ben efit so given Is as to the debtor a pref erence, but if the creaitor who receives it does net happen to know that he Is gaining an advantage over the other creditors of the same debtor, then as to him there Is no preference, cannot be sus tained, for the word "preference," xas used in the bankruptcy act, must be given Its full and ordinary definition, and it means exactly the same thing whether connected with the word "given" or with the word "received." Seotion 57 (g), providing1 that "the claims of creditors who have received preferences shall not be allowed, unless such creditors shall surrender their pref erences," was not Intended to impose a penalty, but merely to give creditors who receive such preferences an option to keep what they have received and to take no dividends from the estate, or to sur render their preferences and share equally with the other creditors in the general distribution. It Is the benefit or advantage which one creditor obtains over the others and not the purpose or Intent of the parties, which determines the effect and consti tutes the transaction a preference. When the creditor on January 1, 1899. held four promissory notes, given by the bankrupt for loans made to him, and be tween January 1, and February 14, 1S99, the bankrupt made several payments to creditor on account of his Indebtedness on said notes, aggregating $3150, the last pay ment being on the said 14th day of Feb ruary, and the petition in bankruptcy was filed by debtor on February 20, the pay ments having been so made as to wipe out two of the notes and the surplus being applied on one of the others, leaving- a small balance unpaid, and the fourth, with Interest amounting to $1500, remaining wholly unpaid, the creditor should be deemed, under section 00 (a), to have received a preference, a payment be ing within the term "transfer," and the payments having been made after the pe titioner became insolvent, leaving other creditors unpaid, the ease is brought within the purview of section 57 (g). and the creditor is, therefore, required to elect whether to account to the trustee for the $3150 received in payment and share with other creditors, or to retain said amount in lieu of any dividends from the estate. Where a bank holds several notes of a bankrupt, and payments have been made within four months before the filing of the petition In bankruptcy and after the pe titioner became insolvent, and those pay- goal would be hotly contested. This an "Section 57 (a-) of the bankruntcv act tagonlsm to the new Is so prominent in forces that wrought so thoroughly and proviaes mat 'tiie claims of creditors who have received preferences shall not be allowed un'.ess such creditors shall sur render their preferences.' "The attempt is made to avoid the ob jection to allowances of this claim, by insisting that the bank has not received a preference, and in the argument there is an attempt to draw a distinction be tween preferences given and preferences received: that is to say, when an Insol vent debtor disposes of his property so as to benefit one creditor, and knows that I1I9 other creditors must suffer a loss, the benefit so given is, as to the debtoi, preference, bu if the creditor who re ceives it does not happen to know that he Is gaining an advantage over other creditors of the same debtor, then as to him there Is no preference. This appears to mo to be in truth a hair-splitting ar gument; it seems to me that when a pre lerence Is given, there is necessarily a preference received. The word prefer ence as used in the bankruptcy act must be given its usual and ordinary defini tion, and It means exactly the same thing, whether connected with the word given or with the word received. This section of the act was not intended to Impose a penalty, but merely to give creditors who leceived preferences options to keep what they have received and take no dividends from the estate, or to surrender their preferences and share equally with other creditors in the general distribution. It is the benefit or advantage which one creditor obtains over others and not the purpose or intent of the parties which de termines the effect. Section 60 (b) pro vides that, In cases of preferences re ceived within four months before the til ing of a petition, or after the filing, with reasonable cause to believe that it was Intended thereby to give a preference, such payment or transfer of property shall be voidable by the trustee and he slons the dreamer : he mnj Uc and unreal dr ims' Over as wild fantasy has be?" wttten m less, man being in honor and ur tag not. te Hbo the be 3 tha Surety, we might concent oir retegace here and thero one lions to the ranks of the dream - that the arena to crowded nigh cation already. It can hardi. b fruitless employment of time an to dream splendid, iridescent i what man may become, and he r as may be toward such, becon "S te join la the bead-splitting . ' claw" chaos which engages th zr . m hot emulntlen of their man-e i of the rrimv oast. B J RaUl EUROPE'S ALARM. HI o k- r--? I 7 I MAIN HALL, MASONIC CATHEDRAL. modern life as to argue Incontrovertlbly Its pronounced and aggressive activity in the earlier stages of development. The student cannot fail to note its presence In recent times among the most advancsd people, and will be forced to recognize it as indicating the dull and obstinate Ignor ance that must have greeted the first in ventors, discovers and reformers. Yet, from the first, there must have been in dividuals of this type, men more alert of brain, keener-eyed, mere progressive than well In hie behalf are as potent in ours. And If in our behalf, why not in that of all the race? Surely It is not as far from the mass to Jesus as it is from that same reeking, sweltering mass back te our anthropophagous fathers. The road hither baa been a long one and needlessly toilsome and bloody, yet It has been traversed, and we are now somewhat clothed, and if not altogether sane, still giving hints and traces of san- mav Miwr tC lrtvTrh.inV tho mass. whose thought would quite out- " i." e y no means discouraging, may recover the property or Its value. ,-', ,1,,. rAiwB ,, p,rrv th May we not then "thank God and take thinker into a region of fog and fancy courage, seeing tlmt we are really placed that would lender him to his contempo- i a,an appreciable distance from our un rarles nothimr less than a vls.onarv . savory ancestry? In view of the progress Inqnlrc of Juclcre Boixe. DALLAS, Feb. 8. (To tho Editor.) Is P H. D'Arcy, whose eloquent letter, de picting the wrongs done to Ireland, ap- the notes is left wholly unpaid, the bank r BffF1MMtafjrJwgM . C b jf lljlll tr:l iH Ufa This is a distinct provison of the law and in my opinion it does not control the Interpretation of section 57 (g). The law which docs govern is found In section 60 (a), which provides that a preference shall be deemed to have been given when an Insolvent person ehall have made a trans fer of his property, and the effect of such transfer will be to enable any one of his creditors to obtain a greater percentage of his debts than any other of such cred itors of the same class. Referring to the first section of the act, we find that a definition is given to the word 'transfer,' giving it a comprehensive meaning, in cluding a payment. So it is made clear by the express terms of the statute that In making payments to the Washington National bank, after the petitioner had become insolvent, and leaving other cred itors unpaid, the case was brought within tho purview of section 57 (g), and the bank is therefore required to elect whether to account to the trustee for the ?3150 re ceived In payment, and stand upon a plane of equality with other unsecured creditors, or to retain said' amount in lieu of any dividends which it would otherwise be entitled to receive from the estate, "The argument that the bank may as sume the position of an unpreferred cred itor as to the ?1SOO promissory ,note and retain the payments which were applied on the other votes, is, in my opinion, con trary to the spirit and letter of the stat ute. The prohibition contained in section 57 (g) Is not limited by the terms of the section to the particular debt or chose m action on account of which a preference has been received, but it refers to cred itors who have received preferences, and provides that the claim of such creditors shall not be allowed, unless they shall surrender the preferences received. In the very excellent treatise by Frank O. Loveland, the following commentary is made upon this section of the statute: TTe language of this provision is much broader than that .contained In. the fornrer bankruptcy acta Under the act of 1867 such creditors were prohibited from proving only the debt or claim on account of which the prefer ence w made. Under that provision the court held that where a creditor had. two disconnect! debtf, and had receied a fraudulent preference as to one only, he might prove the other and roceUe dividends upon it. It may be doubted, however, under the present statute. If a. creditor who has received a preference can prove any claim until he has "iurrerjiered his preference. "Let an order be entered disallowing the entire claim of the Washington Na tional bank as to both of the promissory notes mentioned unless said bank shall elect to surrender to the trustee the en- f tire amount of payments which it has re ceived, and present a new claim for the amount which the bankrupt owed, on Jan uary 1, 1S99." dreamer. The man, for Instance, who first thought of roast pig as a substitute, more or less satisfactory, for human flesh as an article of diet, what a dreamer he was! The probabilities are that his friends quietly dined off of him a few days later, In or der to discourage any such foolish notions. There probably followed, also, a numerous company, first and last, of h!s followers whose minds were somewhat poLsoned by his dreaming before the danger of his thought was discovered and he was duly baked. To the practical men of his age, that was the only use he could be put to. To them he was an Impractical and probably devil-possessed lunatic, who, if permitted to run at large, would overturn, or at least seek to overturn, all the ven erable and praiseworthy customs received from the fathers. To us he hardly seems so very much out of the way, but we perhaps are enjoying some of the harvest from his eed-sowlng the harvest for which he was thoughtfully baked. Nothing "but the customary, the usual, the long-established, seems obviously true to the nonreasonlhg mass. Any sug gestion of possible improvement Is met with 'ronic derision, and. If persisted in, encounters force and bloody antagonism. That has been the reception accorded the dreamer In all history, and it is safe to assume was his experience before history was born. Now, if all must consent to the dead level of the practical man, who is intent only en getting the most possible out of today, with scant regard for any one but himself, we had as well double-lock the doors of advancement and drop the keys into the deepest abyss of the Pacific, for out of his thought will come nothing for the "betterment of the race; Progress in the future, as in the past, must come out of the lives, the dreams, of men who see, where their fellows are altogether sightless. Nor need these dreaming vis ionaries expect any different treatment from that accorded, their fellow-servants, the prophets. The world's real advance ment hitherto has bpen by way of its dungeons, its headsman's ax, its Calvaries, and not otherwise. That the dreamer of made thus far. are we altogether wrong in concluding that If so much has been achieved with such slight vantage at the beginning, we may fairly hope to see much more rapid advancement, now that we are actually under way? If from the hideous nightmare of the unrecorded past. In ut most blindness and with scarce conscious groplngs, we have attained the present height, what may not be reasonably ex pected when conscious, purposeful effort is being made tirelessly for the produc tion of the Ideal? Nor may It be lightly assumed that p-rs-ent social conditions are ideal. No one has the hardihood to affirm that such a conclusion would be to consent that th crude thinking of the past had produced a perfect state from the antecedent chaos Our institutions, our social structures, are of yesterday, and bear plainly enough the marks of inexperienced workmen. Not to their discredit, for they wrought doubt less quite up to their possibilities. But to assume that forms of government, so cial economics, and all the interlacing relationships of men have received their final and perfect adjustment is so utterly gratuitous and foundatlonless as to ad vertise the utterer incapable of any valu able thinking. Now, if the dreamer sees more in hu manity than mere self-seeking, if he real ly sees, what some of prominent name, it seems, have not seen, that the most per manent work is not done for self-interest at all, and that thp moat mighty impulses are not born of self In any sense, may be not give forth his dream? May he not proclaim it on the housetop, that sooner or later perchance. Inter, God pity us all the race may come to know the su preme glory of doing Its best work under the stimulus of unselfish love? True, in the past, when such dreamer voiced his thought, there was no lack of sturdy hands to throttle him. It seemed the proper thing to stone and beat and shamefully entreat. Nor yet may be quite unscathed set his hand to the taek of stimulating the dormant natures around him, that they may open wide eyes to the possibilities within their reach. Not yet Consorted Aetlon te Arrest Growth Weald Not e Strang; Baltimore Son. Tho increase of oar exports of mi tures In the calendar year l9 t & v ee, together with the expert .o 000.000 worth of agricultural proiv-' ttfr.OM cf minimi products and $1 of forest products, cannot bu. impr:-": rope with our productive vigor ar 3 ca some soUctt-de as to our ability Europe's place In the world s kets. We have virtually reductd t - vi of agricultural land throughou i:l by one-half or more. Our g: a n m t sell at prices which Vhc cruen? 1 ri of the Old World cannot meet "U o rr said to have ruined the agricultu" rope and to have impoverished ar r influential class of the landed ar -Thjs in Itself tends to produ " r conscquences, which are he ped f r the spectacle of our prosperity una -ocratle institutions. The weak g landed aristocracy tends to wet.c forces pledged to monarchy W : agncnlture was impoverished b V competition the European sa I .8 their attention to manufactur s a ping. They have given great jf these provinces of Industry, no - f left in und'sturbed possession United States. Canada, Arg ' Australia supply- the world v grain, meat, wool, hides ard - products. 2UTcpean labor . ap p ably employed in manufactuiirg a- porting the finished articles of na ture. There Is something left D L to live upon even if trs farrru- 1 z deserted. The crowding of the 3 farm laborers has signified tn i r m which It was hoped that futi ' " i " was to be made. Europe was : American farmers with all sorK " ! factured articles, to the advantacr continents. Feverish effort- v. a'so to win a living on the wi 1 Irg the Investment of cap ta Norway. France, Austria. Cemi. and England have all locked t as a field upon which the Amei. a vf not soon be competitors A? r : markets. Russia. France and Gr- have looked to China as a rrg'oi they would obtain more or less ex advantages. Now the United States rom 3 t; front a a power likely to sicu - tl hopes. Our Increase of export factures to over W,flC00 show- t" zi may soon inflict on Europe s mi" 'j the same defeat we have Lrifl t I agriculture. Is Europe to st.j " L and see Its occupation gone7 Cjrg' before it a proposal to ha. n Air competition in the shipping f 1 means of subsidies and. as if t : not enough, our state depart me1 ' 1 : cently asked ail the great powers c" rope to pledge themselves not t c exclusive privileges in Chinese f possess great natural advantages a reaching out for others, so t tia' a rope especially the Contlnenta r may well look upon our dev?1 r apprehension. An Austrian c' a year ago gave expression to a : which is becoming general on f" nent namely, that there should ; eerted action to ptaaerve the H ! t ing Continental Industries from ex' by ruthless American competi r suecess seems to portend their ml II para.yae Europe s manuf in shipping Irt3rests as effort have paralysed her agriculture h v crowded population to live' I strange, therefore, that Europe s' disposed as It undoubtedly is come any event that will arrest o - perlty and deprive us of fr n Ts the nations. The attitude auwr l r outbreak of the Spanish Ha- v. as c expectancy, but the disaster d.d r thanks to Spain's weakness TI necessity for us to walk war!!; k : that our existence Is regarded as a ace and that our downfall would .' ' many nations a joyful deliverance 4 0- PHELPS IN ENGLAND. FLAX OF FIRST FLOOR, MASOXIC CATHEDRAL. peering In this morning's Oregonian. the same D'Arcy who attempted to "queer" the Judgeship of the third judicial district in Oregon during the last election? C. STANLEY. Building: the Creaiuerj. Mr. Kern, who had been looking over the Meaaant Home d-rtrtct for several week, wtth a view to estabttsalng a large creamer.- plant at that place, nas succeeded In wouarlna. a central location on the Powell road, ad has tho binKHngc for the estab MMMftORt voder construction. He hopes to ol Cnffcry's Loplc, nnd Its End. New York Commercial Advertiser. Men of the intellectual equipment Senator Caffery should leave defense of the proposition that congress lias no con stitutional power to create a legal status for conquered territory to the Masons and J cannot assume the position of an unpre ferred creditor as to this wholly unpaid promissory note, for the prohibition con tained in section 57 (g). Is not limited to the particular debt or choice of action on account of which a preference has been received, but it refers to creditors who have received a preference, and pro vides that the claim of such creditors thall not be allowed unless they shall surrender the preference received. Judge Ilanford'n Decision. Judge Hanford's decision follows: "This is a case of voluntary bank- the Pettlgrews. Senator Spooner and Sen- . ruptcy, in which the referee has certified ator Piatt yesterday forced him to admit . to the court for decision a question as to iimv m iirc i i, jjui7tvu m rut,. .i wM.m- , iw ligut uj. me a5iiii: urn raiionai skm, would have left Californ'a outaide of t Bank to prove against the bankrupt estate the United States, and would leave Puerto and have allowed debts due to -the bank. Rica out now. They were merciful and upon two promissory notes, one of which did not press the point home to Louisiana, has been partially paid. The trustee con None is caught so fatally in the web of a tends that the claim of the bank as to logical dilemma as the incautious possessor both of said promissory notes should be of a logical mind. rejected, unless the bnk will surrender As Minister He Did Sot Rench the Level of James Russell LoTrell. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. E. J. Phelps, who has been having such a hard struggle with pneumonia lately, has received a very gracious message from Queen Victoria, expressing regret for his Illness. Mr. Phelps left many warm friends in England, and th!s message re minds one of the fact. As minister of the United States, he did not reach the level of Lowell In distinction, or vogue, yet he made a place of Ms own that was worthy of American diplomacy and cul ture. Robert Browning said he liked Phelps, but in a different way from Lowell. "If a man marles twice," remarked Brown ing of the two ministers, "you don't neces sarily expect his second wife to remind you of his first wife, do you?" Lowell once carried literary and aristocratic Eng land by stcrm although he was a firm be liever in democracy by a brilliant impro vised epigram on Gladstone's sudden turn about to Irlrti home rule: His greatneso not so much in genius lies As in adroitnrro, when occasions rise. Lifelong convictions to extemporize. They were not seriously meant as a final criticism of Gladstone, but to the tory mind the lines said the last word of the great commoner. And' such things made Lowell, who was a brilliant wit and lit terateur, distinguished in English society as such men as Phelps, cr Bayard, or Hay, or Choate, could not hope to be. i e Suez Canal Improvements. The Suez canal is being constantly Im proved "by widening it and adding sidings so that ships can pass each other. It re sults that the pacsage can now be made in 17 hours instead of 4S hours. The elec tric light enables progress to be made by night as well as by day. There is to be an immediate increase of depth to 27 feet 10 Inches, and an ultimate deepening to C2 feet 9 inches, so that the largest ves sels may use the canal. There has been rapid Improvement in the management since the English still In a minority ?ot the'.f directors increased from three to ten. Lord Beaconsfle'.d gave the khedive $20,0 0 -000 for his 176.6C2 shares, which are now worth In the market $132,500,000. n a A Crittcnton rescue home is to be opened In Spokane this week. It cost about $jooo. Jja-i-fEWjiaL'ltj)-l'fl-.aw-i hi i mm , M ji jy',-! "j j i i 1 f M'n HM 1 1 1 1 1 .:f n i J - fl L.777;...i M B Eg - rf Jreyt-li ftoornt i IS i- H T B '"' I 7"t I I ' 1 tt t ' ?.ay L,el,(iT Ipi 1 m m d PLAX OP SECOND FLOOR, MASOXIC CATHEDRAL. today Is less hardly dealt with than his prototype, is due to the emergence of the race, thanks to its scorned dreamers, from the rank animalism of Its beginnings. may he prophesy of some golden age, hid den In the cloudland of the future, with out being hailed a babbler of strange things, a dreaming visionary, an imprae- It has come to pass, from time to time. , tical thinker, or worse. a ureamcr naa scmeu sume iimgui. un trodden by the mere plodder .n the plain below, and has thence caught a glimpse of the infinite beauties and poss'bliitles of the race, and has, perforce, reported as clear ly as he might the' vision thus unfolded. Some kindred natures have fel the stim ulus of his thought, and have, wi h grater or less success, essayed to embody the thought In their lives; to incarnate and render visible some of the beauty the dreamer dreamed. Thus the dream has become a vital, an Integral part of the race's heritage. Such extraord'nary men are more than mere dreamers; they are the prophecy of that Ideal to which they point; the cer tain index of the future of the race i Contrast is drawn between the dream er's unbusinesslike Utopia and the stal wart realism of the man of action, who to day bends himself to the prosaic task of doing. He, it is assumed, makes con tributions of enduring value to the sum of the world's possessions. But ts not this weighing with a false balance? Who are the men whose lives prove a perpet ual enrichment to the race? Are they these practical, hard-headed men of ac tion? Are the princes of commerce, the ' mighty men or war, or the consummate organizers, the men wboeeworks live af ter them? In downright truth, are they not one and all the sorrkat lot of foeHsh , dreamers the world ever held? Are they AmerleaR Seheel In Itonir, New Terk Times It Is some five years now 3lnrp t'iT established the Amer'can schon rf r a" studies In Rome. As It is not f1' of cur country to support lnstit -. -his sort at the expense of tho pu1 ury a wise policy undoubtedly fi ? was necessarily something oc a ci ment, and planned on a modest '- has been singularly succesrul in t r qi lty and extent of its work aM a Its graduates are ergaged in am In more than a dozen cf the college " land, Including Columbia. Tale M " Dartmouth, Bryn Mawr and C-iig It Is now proponed by the irrha 3 Institute, with which the school -, r affiliated, and by the president ? o" various colleges that have enc ura I aided In the work, to raise a fund t j t the school on a solid and nermann The following statement Is suffle doraement of the school, and evldn the contributions asked for will sr proper purpose: It la our belief the th pchnot rt r i-, rtudiee m Bonce sttppnes a nrftlvA -ifeT -n its companion schocl m Xt'i'ns It 1- j bond of anion ta the Wfrtie't pursuit our American unlrerp'ttes' and priiog 3 offer opportunities ft"" advai"- stur'lcq i ! of claseka. Christian archaeelogv 1 1 Kenalseence, soeh as crniwt be pro 1-1 this country L-cltl Mt sMidy m student and tener Of myje nranr lf3 learning cannot eqoal - of Knfrlai the Continent. We believe It to be an rv tant addition te the urces of the i . etiaea ttea m America. Charles "W. IMot, prwdent of Harvarl verelty. Arthur TwMk Madr. president of TS untveralty. Francis L. Fttn president of Prince university. Daniel C Olhnaa. president of the Joli Horktns wnlwltj. Wlltta-i R. Harper, pnetdent of the verstty of Oite-wo. Scth Low. pcpdet ef Cchrabla ttnK?rlj Ctmrle- C. Hani-m, provost of tl-e univJ sity of Feaaaytvaala. James B. Angell. praeHent of unHerslt Mteftfean- Jacob O. Sfclmiw. president of C jn 1 j varsity. Facts and Flcure Abo at the Ieal agraa Canal. Here are a few Interesting facts aboi the Nicaragua canal, concerning wh h t3 British-American treaty has been s gn at the state department. The figures ai gathered from various official report? aii from private sources of in'ormaf.on Total cost of canal (estimated) $125 HO CI Vcumr lry "Mat or Jiarttlrae Canal Company 3 136,4 Total distance from ecsoa to ocean, miles Length of proposed ditch, mi In Length of natural water way, miles U Proposed width of canal, feet Proeceea depth of canal feet QoantHy of earth to he xcaated and dredged, cable yards. 1'- 41 Excavation proper, cwbtr yards Jit JOT Highest elevttloa of canal from lev el of awe. feet ... . Plata nee saved for ships sotng from coast to coast, miles 8. Time saved .'at wainhip Oregon 0 rate of sailing) daj . .. Increase lit ocean traffic since 1881, tn .. 16 000 Distance from New -rk mites 2 1 Distance frr 1 an frin aco mtl9. 2 Distance from Tii i jp'a-t islam?. mile I Hi If m ii - tl . I... f Take the foremost man among them all, not the ylotlma ol the; mot t stupid lllu- I Thne required r oo-tructlon. years